Page 2-Friday, May 8, 1981-The Michigan Daily Syrian troops, cross 'red line' 4 From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon - Some 4,000 Syrian troops and tanks were reported to have crossed the Israeli-set "red line" in southern Lebanon yesterday in defiance of Israel's repeated warnings that Syria risked war if it violated the boundary. Syria also reportedly added a new surface-to-air missile to its force in Lebanon. THERE WAS NO comment from Israel or Syria, but Western diplomats in Beirut said the advance, if confir- med, would aggravate the explosive crisis generated by the deployment of Syrian surface-to-air missiles in eastern Lebanon April 28 after Israeli jets shot down two Syrian helicopter gunships. The action would present the Reagan administration with a major escalation of the Mideast crisis just as the President's special envoy arrived in Damascus to head off a Syrian-Israeli crash. Israel says the Syrian movement of SAM anti-aircraft missiles violates a tacit agreement forbidding such weapons in Lebanon and has threatened to move them out of the country by force. DURING ENVOY Philip Habib's motorcade from Damascus to Beirut, he had the opportunity to see at least two SAMs. Witnesses said the Syrians had also moved several Soviet-made tanks into positions near the highway, apparently to impress Habib with Syria's military muscle in Lebanon. It was reported that the long barrels of two tanks stuck out almost halfway across the highway at the last Syrian checkpoint before reaching the U.S. Ambassador's residence. In Washington, State Department spokesman Dean Fischer said he could not confirm reports of an Israeli promise to show restraint for the duration of the American diplomatic effort. He called the situation in Lebanon "extremely dangerous." THE SOVIET UNION, which sent a top-ranking diplomatic mission to Damascus Wednesday, kept up its at- tack on the U.S. Middle East policy with a charge that Habib was trying to harm Syrian peace-keeping efforts in war- ravaged Lebanon. Syria and the Soviet Union have a 20- year friendship treaty that provides for emergency consultations if either nation is attacked or threatened. There was no official communique of their talks but the visit was seen as a sign of possible cooperation between the Soviets and the Reagan Ad- ministration tokeep the peace. In Beirut, meanwhile, no major in- cidents were reported following a night in which heavy shelling of the Christian sector of the city by combined Syrian- Palestinian forces disrupted an unof- ficial nine-day truce. Today Shapiro among the Pandas Don't look for University President Harold Shapiro hanging out at the administration building for the next couple of weeks. The president and his wife left Sunday for a visit to several universities in China. The Shapiros and several University faculty members will tour China as guests of the People's Republic of China Ministry of Education, and hope to establish scholarly agreements between the University and universities in China. "The delegation is an exploratory one andwill investigate possibilities for all units of the University,' Shapiro said before his departure. The Shapiros and the faculty members will return to their posts at the helm of the University May 18. Rhino on the loose A 7,000-pound male rhinoceros roaming along a busy boulevard in a peaceful Dallas suburb ordinarily would be noticed right away. But one which escaped from the International Wildlife Park had the road to itself in the predawn darkness Wednesday and managed to get a half-mile away before being spotted. It took park personnel an hour and a half to coax the beast to retract its path, park spokeswoman Cynthia Scott said. "He's rather tired," she said. "He had a hectic day." Park officials believe the rhino got loose when a neighbor's cattle pushed through the park gate in search of the grain fed to the rhinos, Ms. Scott said. Signs at the drive-through Inter- national Park already warn visitors to "Yield for Yaks" and "Halt for Hip- pos." Today's weather Mostly clear skies today with highs in the mid to upper 60s. E Happenings... FILMS Cinema Guild - Fame, 4, 7, & 9 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. CFT - Breaking Away, 2, 4, 7, & 9 p.m., Michigan Theatre. AAFC - The Rose, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB 4. Cinema II - Kramer vs. Kramer, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., Angell Hall Aud. A. MISCELLANEOUS Ark - Concert, Robin & Linda Williams, 1421 Hill St. Extension Service, NHC, Mi. Society of Architects, Conf. "Designing Bet- ter Housing for the Elderly," 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., 2107-8 AAB. Astrofest 98 - Life Beyond the Earth and the Mind of Man, Jim Loudon, "Are We Alone? A Coldly Rational Look at the Prospects for Ex- traterrestrial Life," 7:30 p.m., MLB 3. The nMichigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 3-S Friday, May 8, 1981 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily'Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates:$12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Doily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and Field Newspaper Syndicate. News room: (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY; Sports desk: 764-0562; Circulation: 764-0558; Classified advertising: 764-0557; Display advertising: 764-0554; Silling: 764-0550: Composing Room: 764-0556. 4 4 I I a Federal anti-rent control bill opposed WASHINGTON (AP)-A proposed federal anti-rent control measure that could force cities to abandon controls or lose federal housing aid is drawing furious criticism from mayors and other local officials. Nonetheless, congressional sources who insisted on anonymity said they Blelieve the measure, an amendment to President Reagan's housing bill, stands a fairly good chance of passage. THE MEASURE passed the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday but was defeated Wednesday in the House Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs Subcommittee on Housing and Com- munity Development. Still, its chances of eventually passing the full House are considered better. Backed' by conservatives in both houses, the amendment provides that cities with rent control would have to decontrol forever each housing unit as it became vacant, or else lose federal aid for new and substantial rehabilitation as provided under Sec- tion 8 of the 1974 Housing and Com- munity Development Act. Those sub- sidies will aid nearly 70,000 housing units in fiscal year 1981, and 54,750 more in fiscal 1982, assuming the Reagan budget proposals are passed. As currently worded, the anti-control sanctions apparently would not threaten other kinds of housing aid, in- cluding Section 8 funds for moderate rehabilitation and existing housing, which will extend to 187,000 units in fiscal 1981, and 96,250 in fiscal 1982. RENT CONTROL has been a hot local issue in many cities and states for years. Political conservatives and lan- dlord groups have insisted that controls have contributed to housing shortages by discouraging new construction. "Rent control reduces the supply of rental housing and accelerates the deterioration of existing apartments, especially low-income properties," said John O'Neill, a landlord spokesman in Washington, D.C., a city with rent con- trols where some 1,400 households a year might be affected by a Section 8 cutoff. Supporters of controls argue, on the other hand, that they have nothing to do with housing shortages, and that without controls, landlords all too often rent-gouge or arbitrarily evict tenants. REP. CHARLES Schumer, a Brooklyn, N.Y., Democrat who is a leader in the fight to defeat the measure in the house, said that without controls, the poor and elderly in New York and elsewhere would probably face harassment and eviction from landlor- ds seeking higher rents. Another long-standing foe of controls, Dr. George Sternlieb of Rutgers University who has advised Reagan on urban matters, says, "I think it's very clear the federal government is outside its limits. I am very much for decon- trol. But rent control has become a symbol to conservatives of all that's wrong with inner cities. It's too sim- plistic." I I 4 Editor-in-Chief. DAVID MEYER Musaging Editor...NANCY 5ILYEAU EditorialPage Director ...... CHRISTOPHER POTTER Special Supplement Editors .STEVEHOOK, PAMELAKRAMER Arts Editor........DENNIS HARVEY Sports Editor .........MARK MIHANOVIC Executive Sports Editors .MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE NEWS STAFF: John Adam, Debi Davis, An Marie Fazio, Lou Fintor, Mark Gindin, Sue Inglis, Susan McCreight, Jenny Miller, Doug Newman, AnnettelStaron BusinessManager.....RANDICIGELNIK Display/Classified Manager ..................,LISA STONE BUSINESS STAFF: Aida Eisenstat, Cyn- thia Katmus, Mary Ann Misiewicz, Nancy Thompson SPORTS STAFF: Barb Barker, Mark Borowski, Joe Chapelle, Martha Crall, John Fitzpatrick, John Kerr, Ron Pollack, Jim Thompson PHOTO STAFF: Jackie Bell, Paul Engstrow ARTS STAFF: Mark Dighton, FredlSchill