B elievers wait for June 28 ascension TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - John Vickers sold his home. Dr. James McCullough donated a Porsche. Former award-winning bodybuilder Bert Seelman cut his training. They are among 50 members of a Tucson religious group who say they expect to be physically lifted to Heaven to be with God on June 28. "0000, GLORY, I get bliss just thinking about it," said Bill Maupin, spiritual leader of the fundamen- talist Lighthouse Gospel Tract Foundation. Maupin and others said Bible study has convinced them that the second coming of Christ will take place in 1988. They, however, saidihey believe they already will be in Heaven. "We're not just going to some mountain hideaway; we're leaving the Earth," Maupin said. "This is known as rapture. And when rapture takes place, the people not saved will be able to see us being saved. There's no such thing as a secret rapture," Michigan Daily-Wednesday, June 3, 1981-Page 11 w f7 Maupin said. IN PREPARATION for the event, the 50 members have quit their jobs and disposed of some of their property. "I've never known such peace, such joy," said Mc- Cullough, a Nogales doctor who was brought into the group by Seelman, who said he is cutting his training to save his strength for the lifting of spirits. Using biblical references to events expected to precede the rapture, Maupin predicts that, after a war in the Mideast, the world will be dominated by a multinational power headed by an American "anti- Christ" until Christ returns in May 1988. BUT BEFORyF then, Maupin said, believers will be transported to Heaven. According to Maupin, those remaining on Earth af- ter June 28 will have to decide between going into league with the devil - thereby assuring their eter- nal damnation - or professing faith in Jesus. BEGIN TELLS HABIB RAIDS WILL CONTINUE: Israeli jets hit Lebanon From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon-Israeli jets pounded Palestinian bases in Labanon yesterday for the second time in five days and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin said he told U.S. envoy Philip Habib the raids will continue. Syria warned the at- tacks must stop if Habib wants his mission to suc- ceed. Israel said the jets destroyed a costal guerrilla base but the Palestinian Liberation Organization said they missed and hit civilian targets. IN BEIRUT, Syrian and Christian militia gunners traded more artillery and mortar fire but both sides seemed to be abiding by a new agreement not to shell civilian sectors. A police source said 15 people were killed or woun- ded in the latest Israeli air attack along the Mediterranean coast near Tyre, 53 miles south of Beirut. The Palestinian news agency WAFA reported only six civilians wounded. WAFA said six U.S.-made Israeli Phantom F4s pounded and strafed the coast for 45 minutes, while Israeli long-range artillery shelled the Lebanese towns of Nabatiyeh and Nabi al-Taher, both 8 miles north of the border, and the city of Sidon, 28 miles south of Beirut. THERE WERE NO immediate reports of casualties from the artillery attacks. The Israeli military command said its planes destroyed an Al Fatah base 6 miles north of Tyre and returned safely to base after reporting "accurate lits on the designated targets." An hour after the raid, Begin said in an interview with CBS-TV that Israel told Habib that Israeli forces would continue attacking Palestinians in Lebanon despite the crisis over Syrian missiles in eastern Lebanon. BEGIN SAID Habib was told "an uncountable number of times that we are going to continue preventive operations against the PLO terrorists." He said there was "nothing in common" between Habib's mission to resolve the missile crisis and Israeli attacks on Palestinian bases. Begin said the attacks cause "disarray" among Palestinians and "this is the most effective way of defending our people, and I told Mr. Habib and everybody else concerned we are going to continue with this defense." IN WASHINGTON, State Department spokesman Dean Fischer said: "We have consistently from the beginning urged on all parties that any escalation of military activity of any kind is not helpful to the peace process. There have been absolutely no green lights given to any of the parties for any military ac- tivity." On Thursday, Israeli jets swooped down on an area a dozen miles south of Beirut, killing 33 people, in- cluding four Libyans, in an attack aimed at Libyan- manned missile sites. That raid prompted protests from Syria and other Arab and Islamic nations and warnings of the possibility of a new Mideast war. Syria moved anti-aircraft missiles into Lebanon on April 29, a day after Israeli jets downed two Syrian helicopters attacking Christian militiamen. SYRIA HAS REFUSED to remove the missiles, -and the Syrian government newspaper Tishrin said Tuesday that for Habib's mission to succeed, the U.S. government must recognize that Lebanon must not be "penetrated, attacked, violated or be the scene of any practice of sovereignty by outsiders." In Amman, Jordan's King Hussein criticized Israel's military campaign, saying: "We are at a danger point, and I believe it is hard to accept, in dealing with the matter, a particular emphasis on the so-called missile crisis yet total silence on Israeli at- tacks on Lebanon itself and those who live there." Meanwhile, Christian militiamen and Syrian troops. continued to snipe at each other across the line that splits Beirut into Moslem and Christian halves. An agreement between militia gunners to end random shelling appeared to be holding after three days of bombardment left 37 dead and nearly 400 wounded. Lefever confirmation faces Senate filibuster (Continued from Page 10) replied. He said the president's position "remains the same as it has always been." Speakes said the administration has found no "legal conflict of interest" by Lefever in connection with his in- volvement in the controversy over the marketing of baby formula in poor countries. The Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee has called Lefever back for more questioning Thursday on whether $25,000 in contributions from the Nestle Corp. led Lefever's Ethics and Public Policy Center to distribute an article supporting Nestle's marketing of baby' formula. Lefever has denied there was any connection between the contribution and distribution of the article. HOUSING DIVISION RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATIONS FOR 1981-82 ACADEMIC YEAR AVAILABLE STARTING JUNE 3 ,1981 IN 1500' SAB POSITIONS INCLUDE: 4 RESIDENT ADVISORS EACH IN BURSLEY AND MARKLEY HALLS ALL ON MALE CORRIDORS. 1 ASSISTANT RESIDENT DIRECTOR IN FLETCHER (MALE CORRIDOR) 3 GRADUATE STUDENT TEACHING ASSISTANTS IN PILOT PROGRAM ALICE LLOYD. Resident Advisor and Assistant Resident Director positions require the comple- tion of a minimum of 55 undergraduate credit hours by the first day of employ- ment: graduate status for Graduate Student Teaching Assistants in Pilot Program. Graduate Student Teaching Assistants teach courses of their -own design in Alice Lloyd and have corridor counseling duties. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a resistered U of M student of the Ann Arbor Campus during the period of employment. (2) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in resident halls at the University level for at least one year. (3) Undergraduate applicants must have a 2.5 cumulative grade point average in the school or college in which they are enrolled by the first day of employment. Individuals who have an application on file must come to the Housing Office to up-date their application. DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION-JUNE 12, 1981-3:30 P.M. A NON-DISCRIMINATORY AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER