Pan 2-Saturdav. July 18, 1981-TheMichigan Daily Largest Israeli raid since '78 1 S From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon.-Israeli jets raided Yasser Arafat's command posts in Beirut and southern Lebanon yester- day in the most punishing strikes against guerrilla strongholds since Israel's 1978 invasion of Lebanon. Police reported 115 dead, and the. Palestinians claimed at least 123 were killed and 469 wounded. "It is a barbaric bloodbath, but we shall avenge it," vowed a Palestinian spokesman who said the casualty figures were expected to climb because: rescue operations were still continuing from the morning and afternoon raids. "COME SEE the people killed," a boy yelled to reporters at one bombed- out site. "There's more, there's more," rescue workers screamed as they dug through broken concrete and smashed furniture. Lebanon requested an urgent session of the U.N. Security Council to deal with Israel's first air strike on the capital in more than three years and its fifth raid in seven days. Attacking in three waves, the planes bombed a university, two refugee cam- ps and several apartment buildings containing both guerrilla offices and civilian residences in the heart of Beirut. OTHER JETFIGHTERS struck Palestinian targets in the south for the fifth time in a week, blasting three bridges and destroying a guerrilla headquarters in the biblical port of Tyre. The Palestiniar 'ews agency Wafa said 36 people were killed and 90 injured in those attacks. The casualties were the highest for any single day since the Israeli invasion of south Lebanon three years ago. The toll was expected to rise. "The civilian population caught by surprise. Casualties are very high," Wafa said. IN JERUSALEM, Prime Minister Menachem Begin said the raids were Israel's revenge for a string of Palestinian rocket attacks on northern Israeli settlements that killed three people and injured 27. They in turn were in reprisals for Israeli air strikes earlier in the week. Arafat appealed for arms, saying in telegrams to Arab heads of state, "I need your swords, not your belssing." The hardest hit guerrilla faction, the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, blamed the Reagan ad- ministration for the Israeli attack and called for an Arab economic and oil embargo against the United States. "IF THIS IS not done, we shall take it upon ourselves to hit U.S. interests in the Middle East, especially oil in- terests," the front said. In Washington, the Reagan ad- ministration postponed a decision on whether to lift its five-week suspension of F-16 jet fighter deliveries to Israel. "The United States deplores this in- tensified violence and deeply regrets the civilian casualties and the loss of innocent lives," the State Department said. The Egyptian government also condemned the Israeli strike. Today Dr. Diag update D R. DIAG, THE stand-up philosopher who, before he left Ann Arbor under mysterious circumstances a couple of years ago, entertained many an audience of disciples in the Diag, has been spotted again-this time on the West Coast. Dave Meader, an '80 University grad now living in San Francisco, wrote to us yesterday the following eye-witness account: "Just thought your readers might be interested in knowing that Dr. Diag is alive and well and living in San Francisco. I spotted him atop a pigeon-covered statue in San Francisco's financial district gazing out over the lunchtime crowd and loudly reciting the Greek alphabet." If this most recent account is accurate, that would mean Dr. Diag has traveled from the East Coast to his new residence. Several observers had earlier sighted Dr. Diag several times in Washington, D.C. over the past year or so. Just before that, Dr! Diag sent the Daily a post card postmarked in Maine. Thankfully, all witnesses report that Dr. Diag is faithfully sharing his wisdom and his alphabets with the citizens of all his cities. ie Todav's weather Mostly clear with temperatures rising to the low 80s. Happenings ... SATURDAY Films AAFC-Images, 7 p.m.; Don't Look Now, 9 p.m., MLB 3. CG-Lady and the Tramp, 4, 7 & 8:30 p.m., Lorch Hall. C2-King Kong (the original), 7:30 p.m., Zardoz, 9:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. CFT-Annie Hall, 3, 7, : 10:45 p.m., Blume in Love, 4:45 & 8:40 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Miscellaneous Arbecoll Theatrics-Summer Dinner Theatre, "Wait Until Dark," 7 p.m., League 2nd floor Banquet Rooms. SUNDAY Films CFT-Oliver, 1, 4 & 7 p.m., Michigan Theatre. The Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 43-S Saturday, July 18, 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 Oaily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service. Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and Field Newspaper Syndicate. 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Karen Green, Fred Scill, RJ Smik Widow says vigilante mob slew husband From APandUPI SKIDMORE, Mo. - A woman who saw her husband shot and killed by a member of an angry vigilante mob said resterday police had refused to arrest anyone even though she had identified the gunman. Kenneth Rex McElroy, 47, described by residents in this rural northwestern Missouri town as a brawler and the local bully, was shot twice in the head last week with a high-powered rifle as he and his wife sat outside a tavern in their pickup truck. ALTHOUGH there were more than 60 witnesses - including herself - Trina McElroy, 24, said the man she saw shoot her husband is still at large. "We're finding out that people in this area had no love for McElroy," said Hal Riddle, a member of the Northwest Missouri Major Investigation Squad. "We can't go on just say-so, and no one seems to be cooperating with us." The widow charged that townsfolk had been planning for some time to do in her husband and said she did not ex- pect an arrest because police - like the townspeople - "never liked my husband." TRINA, WHO has fled the tiny north- west Missouri community, said Friday that women in the crowd told her McElroy had to be killed. The FBI confirmed yesterday it was entering the case to conduct a preliminary investigation into whether McElroy's civil rights had been violated. Authorities said McElroy, 47, had several scrapes with the law. He had been convicted June 26 in the wounding of the town's 70-year-old grocer a year ago and was out on bond awaiting ap- peal in that case. HE HAD been acquitted previously of shooting a farmer in the stomach and had been charged with assault in- volving a weapon at least four times, according to Highway Patrol Trooper Jim Rhodes. "The Bible says that there should be an eye for an eye," said Mrs. Ernest Bowencamp, wife of the grocer. "Those who live by the sword die by the sword. Ken McElroy lived by the gun and that's the same way he died." "He was right back in town, free as can be, telling everyone he was back and bragging about it," said a farmer who would not give his name. "That's what got everybody so mad, the way the police would just keep arresting him and the courts just kept letting him go." ON THE morning of July 10, Nodaway County Sheriff Danny Estes said he attended a meeting of 60 town- speople in the Skidmore American Legion Hall.