Page 4-Thursday, July 16, 1981-The Michigan Daily Begin accepts mandate to form gov't coalition I JERUSALEM (AP)-Prime Minister Menachem Begin accepted the official mandate yesterday to form Israel's next government and launched an in- tense schedule of talks with the parties he needs to form a majority coalition. While saying he hoped to assemble a new Cabinet by July 27, Begin sum- moned his outgoing Cabinet to approve an agreement with the United States and Egypt on a multinational force to monitor the Sinai Peninsula after Israel's final withdrawal next April. THE THREE countries are to initial the agreement in London Friday before it is submitted to their legislatures for ratification. Begin went immediately to the Wailing Wall, Judaism's most impor- tant shrine, to pray and kiss the ancient stones after State President Yitzhak Navon gave him the official invitation to form the next government. The 67-year-old Israeli leader held talks with the Liberal Party faction of his Likud Bloc and scheduled formal consultations today, Friday, and Sun- day with the three religious parties with enough seats to give him a bare majority of 61 seats in the 120-member Knesset, Israel's Parliament. THE CONSULTATIONS will lead to a division of Cabinet portfolios-an area where Begin acknowledged there is conflict-and to a declaration of gover- nment policies. In 1977 Begin's first coalition was bound by an eight-page policy statement, and the same kind of pact is likely to emerge this year since the coalition partners are virtually the same. The Likud's 48 Knesset seats will be buttressed by the six of the National Religious Party, the four of the ultra- Orthodox Agudat Israel and three of the TAMI North African faction which broke away from the NRP before the June 30 elections. Cicago Transit loses poker ace CHICAGO (AP) - The room looked muters were choking subway and bus like "the dice tables in an old World fare boxes with dollar bills, rather than War II movie" - hundreds of thousan- tokens. More commuters have been ds of uncounted dollars scattered on using the bills since the basic fare and tables, near garbage cans and all over transfer was boosted to $1 on July 6 in the floor. an effort to provide more money for the But the setting was the counting room system. Maurer said he was "astoun- of the Chicago Transit Authority, which ded" by what they found. has been down to its last dollars in Dollar bills, he said, "were in the recent days. And officials of the finan- corners, under machines, where people cially struggling agency say up to $1 walk. There were even shredded bills in million may have been lying unrecor- the parking area. . . It looked like the ded in the office. dice tables in an old World War II "It was just a security disaster," Jim movie." Maurer, director of the Mayor's Office Maurer said he was not accusing any of Municipal Investigation, said yester- employees of stealing but he said, "You day. could easily pass money out of a The piles of money were found during second-floor window if you want. The two inspections conducted Tuesday by opportunity is just glaring." Maurer, CTA board member Howard He said in one of the two visits, he Medley and other investigators. walked through an unlocked door and Medley had complained that com- was not stoppedshy anyone. A CTA spokesman, Hill Baxa, said that the agency has its own security at TONIGHT the building and protection is adequate. SECOND AHe declined further comment. Since the visit, the Police Depar- PSn t vsEe oetment temporarily has assigned two of- A" Eficers to guard the facility on the out- 56 E. Liberty 9944535 side, but Maurer said that will not help inside. VIDEO FREAKS-GET EXPOSURE In the Liberty St. Video Festival held in Liberty Plaza 7-22 to 7-25 (ART FAIR!) For your original video work to be shown, please send to: Public Access c/o Street Festival 107 N. Fifth Ave+ Ann Arbor, MI 48107 At the Video Festival there will be % and % inch decks. Tapes will be shown continuously from 11 am-2 pm, during the Art Fair. Interested in becoming involved? Call 665-4901. Spon- sored by Public Access of Ann Arbor. In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports California fruit flies spread as pesticide spraying lags LOS GATOS, Calif.-Destructive fruit flies spread closer to rich California farms yesterday as the effort to destroy them by spraying pesticide from the air fell further behind schedule. Officials of a joint state, federal and local eradication program had expec- ted to spray 45 square miles with the pesticide malthion by early yesterday. But after two nights of spraying, only 7/ square miles had been covered with the sticky mist while the area infested by the Mediterranean fruit fly grew by twice that much. Aerial spraying of malathion, a commonly used backyard pesticide, was begun in the hopes of halting the medfly in the residential neighborhoods of the Santa Clara Valley, south of San Francisco. If it spreads to nearby commercial farms and south to the fertile San Joaquin Valley, some agriculture officials predict doom for the state's $14 billion farming industry, which produces half the nation's fruit and vegetables. Senate opens debate on taxes WASHINGTON-The Senate opened debate on President Reagan's tax bill yesterday with a key Republican predicting that efforts to load it down with amendments opposed by the ad- ministration will be defeated. "I think we have the votes lined . up already to defeat the amen- - dments," Sen. Bob Dole (R- Kan.), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, told repor- ters. Senate leaders hope to finish work on the bill within a few days-well before the measure is to be taken up by the Democrat- dominated House. All sides want a bill passed in time for the first individual tax reductions to take effect Oct. 1. At the White House, deputy, presidential press secretary Larry Speakes said Reagan called House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. yesterday morning House Budget Committee and elicited from O'Neill an ex- Chairman Jim Jones, left, talks pression of "willingness to have with Senate Budget Committee Congress complete action" on Chairman Pete Domenci at the both the tax and budget bills start of a joint committee before the summer recess next meeting. month, "even if it means staying in town for a few days." Vatican urges local churches to help share annual costs VATICAN CITY-The Vatican, running deep in the red with a $25 million annual deficit, is urging local churches around the world to share the cost of running the Roman Catholic Church's central administration. After a two-day meeting of a special commission of cardinals, the Vatican yesterday announced the single year's budget deficit for 1981, some $4.8 million greater than the $20.2 million annual deficit announced in 1979. Mother-in-law, mistaken for raccoon, slain with hatchet VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. - A Texas mechanic told police he mistook his mother-in-law for a large raccoon when he hacked her to death in her garage, according to a detective's testimony yesterday at a preliminary hearing. Orvall Wyatt Loyd, 33, of Dallas, told police, however, that after he struck the woman once with a hatchet he realized it was his wife's 49-year- old mother, Margaret Wise - and then he hit her again. "I . . . snapped or something," Loyd said in his statement to police. Under questioning yesterday by Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney Robert Morecock, Chappell testified that Loyd said he awoke at 5:30 a.m. and went with his wife's grandfather to find a raccoon that had wandered in- to the garage. When he couldn't find it, he went back to bed, Chappell quoted Loyd as saying. Two hours later, Loyd said, he went into the garage with his mother-in- law, picked up a small hatchet from a bucket, and hit the woman before realizing who it was. 0 6 6 6