The Michigari Daily-Friday, June 5, 1981-Page 5 CHURCH LEADERS BATTLE AGAINST RE-ARMING AMERICA Clergymen invading board rooms ST. LOUIS (AP) - The rabbi was chairman of the board, David Lewis. ' splattered human blood- on a banner With the Reagan administration cut- persistent and the chairman of the And the answer is no." reading, "Repent the Trident." ting back funds for social programs and board of the nation's largest defense "But we only want to talk with you," Security guards dragged off a pledging to re-arm America, many contractor was obviously irritated. responded the rabbi. Methodist minister praying for the vic- clergymen feel the time is ripe for the "Please meet with us," begged Rabbi "While we appreciate your interest, tims of General Dynamic's armamen- sort of activism that characterized the Bruce Diamond, a minority we wish you'd go talk to some other ts. 1960s. stockholder, at General Dynamic's an- company," Lewis said. "Any other That confrontation on May 7 in St. "THESE ARE going to be terrible nual stockholders meeting. company." Louis came as more and more clergy times, and it will have to be the chur- "WE'VE ALREADY met, and we've AS THE MEETING abruptly broke men are invading corporate boar- ches that stand up to help the poor met. and we've met" snanned the up, two other minority shareholders drooms to deliver a message. people," said Monsignor John Shocklee, head of the human rights of- fice for the Archdiocese of St. Louis. Religious figures, of course, were in the forefront of the civil rights movement and anti-war demon- strations of the '60s. But activism has been overcome by apathy in recent years. Also, many churches found they owned stock in the very companies whose activities they deemed objec- tionable. IN 1974, THE National Council of Churches sponsored a group in New York City to coordinate efforts to coer- ce big business to be more socially responsible. "We attempt to educate the shareholders in these meetings and en- courage management to be concerned about social implications of their ac- tions," said Valerie Heinonen, director of the militarism program of the Inter- faith Center on Corporate Respon- sibility. The center has protested a variety of issues: corporate acceptance of apar- theid in South Africa, denuding of the Amazon rain forests, the marketing of baby formulas in underdeveloped coun- tries and militarism. MCDONNELL Douglas Corp., the aerospace giant which builds jet fighters in St. Louis, for the past two See CLERGY, Page 10 "Waiting for Godof' ""yP"h"bA "EN O Samuel Beckett would have found it absurd if he knew when he wrote his play that the title would one day be used as a caption for a picture of people waiting for a bus. Sadat blames Syria, wins Begin OFIRA, Israeli-Occupied Sinai (AP) - Egyptian President Anwar Sadat blamed the Lebanese conflict on Syria yesterday, but won a summit agreement from Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin to give U.S. diplomacy more time to resolve the crisis. . Sadat's pinpointing of blame was a forceful display of independence from the pro-Soviet Arab camp and coin- cided with Begin's view. However, the Egyptian leader failed to get Begin to agree to stop raids on Palestinian bases in Lebanon. "WHAT WE DO is an act of legitimate self-defense in the highest moral sense," Begin said, charging the Palestinians in Lebanon with planning "day and night to carry out murderous' attacks against our people." . Sadat spoke at a joint news conferen- ce after six hours of talks with Begin along the Tiran Straits, the Red Sea waterway whose closure pitted Egypt, Syria and Jordan against Israel in the Six-Day War exactly 14 years ago. Sadat told the joint news conference he blamed Syrian President Hafez Assad for starting the crisis in Lebanon, adding: "My view is that the Syrian forces should withdraw from Lebanon." SADAT ASKED Begin to give "ample time" to U.S. special envoy Philip H biW'Affortabidefusetherisis ver agreement Syria's deployment of missiles in Lebanon. Habib is to leave Washington today to resume his mission. Sadat said he also asked Begin "to end the raids on the Palestinians" in Lebanon. Begin said he accepted "the request of my friend President Sadat to give more time to Mr. Philip Habib to try to solve the crisis in Lebanon, caused by the Syrians, by peaceful means." BUT BEGIN indicated Israel was not planning to ease its attacks on Palestinians. Asked if the Lebanese crisis could af- fect the Camp David peace process between Egypt and Israel, Sadat said that he and Begin reaffirmed at the summit their pledge that the October 1973 Mideast War "should be the last war." Since Camp David "there have been dramatic changes in the area we live in. There is only one fact that prevails - the Camp David treaty and the peace process," Sadat said. He later departed for Egypt. Begin told reporters after his 90 minutes of political talks with Sadat, "We made important agreements and we reached serious solutions." Begin said those would remain secret for the moment. In Moscow, the official Soviet news media denouned hesmmit. In the Courts and on the Road' wihthe Crusaders A CONCERT FEATURING The Play of Robin and Marion (IN ENGLISH) by Adam de la Halle and songs by Walther von der Vogelweide Neidhardt von Reuenthal Le Roi de Navarre Richard Coeur de Lion Alfonso X de Castile Saturday,tJune 6, 8:00 pom. The Universifyof Michigan Museum of Art ADMISSION FREE Presented in conjunction with the exhibition The Meeting of Two Worlds: The Crusades and the Mediterranean Context