The Michigan Daily-Thursday, July 24, 1980-Page 9 WOULD MAKE IT ISRAEL'S CAPITAL Jerusalem bill acted on JERUSALEM (AP) - The Israeli parliament yesterday approved the fir- st stage of a controversial bill making Jerusalem, including the annexed Arab sector, Israel's capital. Prime Minister Menachem Begin left his sickbed to appear for the vote and lead a 65-12 majority. The bill now goes to a committee for final preparation for enactment. THE BILL HAS drawn strong criticism from Arab countries and other nations that maintain Israel has no right to claim sovereignty over predominantly Arab East Jerusalem, which it captured from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast War. The United States, Israel's main ally, is embarrassed by the bill because the question of who will govern East Jerusalem is one of the points to be worked out in the U.S.-sponsored Camp David peace process between Israel and Egypt. Introduction of the bill in May was one reason Egyptian President Anwar Sadat temporarily suspended talks on a form of autonomy for Palestinians living in Israeli-occupied Arab territory. EGYPT REGARDS East Jerusalem as part of the West Bank of the Jordan River, and wants the city's 100,000 Arabs to vote in elections for a Palestinian self-rule council. Begin told reporters the bill was meant to emphasize to the United Nations, meeting in emergency session to discuss the Palestinian issue, that Jerusalem "is the eternal capital of Israel and of the Jewish people, one city, an indivisible city for all generations to come." Begin ridiculed the United Nations, which he said had turned from a peacekeeping mechanism "to an aggression-promoting organization." THE KNESSET, Israel's parliament, has three more days of sessions before adjourning until October. Observers believed chances were slim the bill could go through the committee and win final approval before the recess. The action by the Knesset follows other moves by the government to strengthen its hold on the disputed city. Begin plans to move his office from the Jewish western sector to East Jerusalem. "The decisive answer on Jerusalem will come not from the dais of the United Nations, but in a law from the podium of the Knesset," said Geula Cohen, the right-wing opposition mem- ber who sponsored the bill. The United Nations over the years has constantly chastised Israel on Jerusalem issues. THE BILL formalizes as a basic law - Israel's equivalent to a constitution - earlier administrative orders declaring Jerusalem the capital. It says "the integrity and unity of Jerusalem as delineated after the Six Day war shall not be impaired," and stipulates Jerusalem will be the per- manent location of the government, the Knesset and Supreme Court. Opponents say Cohen's bill adds nothing to Jerusalem's status as the capital, which has been confirmed in several Supreme Court decisions, while it makes Israel appear more uncom- promising in the Palestinian autonomy talks. The government and the opposition Labor party hesitated to support the bill but found they could not vote against it because of a national consensus in Israelsnever to redivide or relinquish sovereignty over Jerusalem. On Monday, a Cabinet committee decided to move the headquarters of two government ministries from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, leaving only the Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv, the nation's business center. Shapiro says sixth-myear tenure review not custom Cont inued from Pagei- administrators were justified in ter- minating his contract because the out- spoken assistant professor's "abrasiveness" was detrimental to the department. SHAPIRO WAS CALLED to the wit- ness stand yesterday by University At- torney Robert Vercruysse as both an authority on University policies and an intervening administrator in Marwil's case. That intervention occurred in early Sellers, 54, dies of massive heart attack From APandUPI LONDON - Peter Sellers, the British actor of many voices who played roles from the bumbling Inspector Clousseau to the terrifying Dr. Strangelove, died yesterday without regaining con- sciousness from a massive heart at- tack, hospital officials said. He was 54. Sellers, whose comic genius was of- ten compared to that of film immortal Charlie Chaplin, lost his fight to heart disease, which had plagued him for 16 years, suffering his first heart attack in 1964. THE ANNOUNCEMENT from Lon- don's Middlesex Hospital said Sellers died at 7:28 p.m. EDT. "Mr. Sellers' death was entirely due to natural causes," a hospital spokesman said. "His heart just faded away. His condition deteriorated very suddenly." The spokesman said the full medical team of the hospital's intensive care unit was present during the last few moments and added: "Every effort was made to keep his heart going, but it just did not respond. There was a very rapid deterioration. It was not possible to restart the heart. It ceased to respond." In his film roles, Sellers created hun- dreds of memorable characters: Indian doctor, choleric general, power-drunk scientist, the bumbling Inspector Clousseau in the Pink Panther series. Each role displayed his mastery of in- spired satire and merciless observation of the foibles of his fellow men. But he once confessed: "I have no personality of my own whatsoever. No personality to offer to the public." Although millions stood in line to see his movies, Sellers confessed: "I writhe when I see myself on the screen. I mean I look such an idiot." 1979, when Marwil took his case to Shapiro following rejection by then- Engineering Dean David Ragone of a faculty grievance committee recom- mendation that a tenure review be granted. In May, 1978 the humanities depar- tment administative committee con- ducted a non-reappointment review of Marwil's contract and decided to allow it to terminate at the end of his sixth year-in May, 1979-without the per- formance of a tenure review. ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE members cited what they alleged to be Marwil's frequently intemperate behavior, as well as questionable scholarly production and worsening student evaluations, as reasons for the denial of a tenure review. Shapiro said that after studying the case, he directed the engineering college executive committee to conduct a new evaluation of Marwil to eliminate any doubts within the University com- munity that Marwil had been given an incomplete or unfair review. The College executive committee then instructed the humanities depar- tment adminsitrative committee to again review Marwil's contract. The administrative committee reaffirmed its earlier decision to allow Marwil's contract to terminate, a decision in turn reaffirmed by the executive commit- tee. WITH REGARD TO University policies on tenure reviews, Shapiro testifed although non-tenured professors have no right to a tenure review in their sixth year, they do have TANDEM, a two woman post modern dance company based in Oberlin, Ohio, will be in concert at DANCE THEATRE STUDIO, 711 N. Univer- sity on JULY 18 and 19 at 8:30 p.m. Admission is $2.50. Choreog- graphy and performance by Eleso Rbsosco and Kate Jacobs. Wilma Salisbury of the Cleveland Plain Dealer writes, "Provocative. sophisticated in content and disci- plined in performance." a right to an evaluation of their work before a decision is made on contract renewal. Under cross-examination by Mar- wil's attorney, Jerold Lax, Shapiro said he had "no general understanding of the term 'tenure review.' "We never used the word 'tenure review' in the economics department," said Shapiro, who is an economics professor. "I understood an 'evaluatioi= of work' took place when someone was: considered for promotion or tenure," he continued. THE PRESIDENT ADDED that as an assistant professor, he had only a 'vague idea' of the type of review he would receive when considered for promotion. Both Shapiro and defendant Steven- son testified yesterday regarding their opinions of the stigma attached to denial of tenure as a tenure review Shapiro said he believed the denial of a tenure review would not significantly impair Marwil's ability to obtain another job at a different university. Stevenson concurred, saying that it would have been much more damaging to Marwil had he been denied tenure af- ter a tenure review. Marwil has contended exactly the op- posite: that denial of a tenure review is more damaging than denial of actual tenure, because prospective employers might question the qualifications of an individual who could not even reach the tenure review stage. EVERY HT PM Pe 50 OFFCOVER GREATLY REDUCED PRICES ON ALL BEVERAGES E;or Sellers *..deadzt54