Page 10-Saturday, July 26, 1980-The Michigan Daily PROTEST KILLING OF GUILD CHIEF Beirut newspapers close BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Beirut newspapers stopped their presses yesterday in a two-day demonstration by journalists over the assassination of the head of their professional guild. The protest consituted a rare display of national unity, banding together lef- tist and rightist journalists who suppor- ted rival sides in Lebanon's 1975-76 Civil War. RIYAD TAHA, chairman of Lebanon's Press Syndicate, was the latest victim of a wave of terror direc- ted against local and foreign news media correspondents in conflict-torn Beirut. The government of President Elias Sarkis admits it is unable to guarantee the safety of reporters in a city that, before this nation's civil war, enjoyed the greatest press freedom in the tur- hulent Middle East. "It is agonizing to see Lebanese jour- nalists falling one after the other without being able to punish the culprits," lamented Information Minister Youssef Jubran. THE NEWSPAPERS' shutdown nalists. Speculation about who may be behind the various incidents is ram- pant, but even the most outspoken jour- nalists consider it dangerous to write about their suspicions. "I am muzzling my pen voluntarily," 'It is agonizing to see Lebanese jour- nalists falling one after the other without being able to punish the culprits.' - Youssef Jubran, Lebanon Information Minister closely followed a one-night walkout by state television employees to protest a five-hour abduction of their general manager, Charles Rizk, in Beirut's Christian sector Tuesday. Rizk resigned his post after his release and decided to leave the country. None of the kidnappers and gunmen has been apprehended, and no clear pattern has emerged in, the wave of said a Lebanese columnist, who asked not to be identified. "life is dear." TAHA WAS THE second prominent Lebanese journalist to be slain this year. Editor-publisher Salim Lawzi of the London-based Lebanese magazine Al Hawadess, was abducted at gunpoint on the Beirut Airport highway last March before boarding a plane to return to days later. Last year, Robert Pfeffer, a West German correspondent who formerly worked for Stern Magazine of Ham- burg, was shot and killed outside his Beirut apartment. He had been working on a book about terrorism in the Middle East. BERND DEBUSMANN, Beirut correspondent of Britain's Reuter news agency, was shot and wounded on a street of the Lebanese capital on June 9. He left the country under armed guard after his discharge from a hospital. A week after that assassination at- tempt, a Syrian journalist and poet, Assem el Jundi, was shot and wounded in a Beirut suburb. Jundi had serialized the life story of international master terrorist "Carlos." Three other Western correspondents were reported to have left Beirut after receiving death threats. Among them was Tim Llewellyn, Middle East correspondent of the British Broad- casting Corp. Taha, 53, was shot while riding in a car along a crowded coastal highway Wednesday. Milliken expected to veto strike bill LANSING (UPI) - Gov. William Milliken is expected to end weeks of an- ticipation and veto controversial right- to-strike legislation for public em- ployees early next week - probably. Monday. Milliken was going over staff recommendations at his summer residence on Mackinac Island yester- day while his advisers in Lansing were putting finishing touches on a proposed veto message. MILLIKEN AIDES said the delay in acting on the measures approved earlier this month does not reflect any indecision on the part of the governor wh has consistently voiced grave reservations about the bills. The package - a product of months of hearings and behind-the-scenes negotiations in the legislature - grants teachers and other local government workers a qualified right to strike. It imposes financial penalties to discourage school strikes, allows judges to halt walkouts which threaten the public health and safety and provides for binding arbitration to set- tle some intractable disputes. Milliken has said he believes the anti- strike penalties are not stiff enough and opposes provisions on binding ar bitration and union coverage for super- visors. 6