The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, May 12, 1981-Page 7 Beirut fighting; Syrian-Israeli crisis continues Rioting continues RIOTERS, HURLING ROCKS and bottles, clash with police and security forces yesterday in West Belfast, Northern Ireland. Rioting continued in Northern Ireland for another day yesterday in the wake of IRA hunger- striker Bobby Sands' death. lMS " inger Bob Marley di~es of brain cancer, From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon - Syrian soldiers'. and Christian militiamen blasted one another with rockets and artillery in Beirut yesterday, killing 15 people in both Moslem and Christian residential areas and wounding 115, police repor- ted. Two mortar shells slammed into the state television station in the Moslem sector, causing heavy damage but no casualties or interruption of tran- smission. Several buildings in East and West Beirut were on fire, police said. The rightist Voice of Lebanon radio station said the East Beirut Christian residential neighborhooda were heavily bombed and rocketed. In West Beirut, loudspeaker vans blared appeals to people to stay in- doors. They also called for blood donations as ambulances with wailing sirens rushed victims from Moslem areas to West Beirut hospitals. The Syrian-Christian fighting has led to a Syrian-Israeli confrontation. Israeli jets shot down two Syrian helicopters being used against the Christians on April 27 and the next day Syria moved ground-to-air missiles into Lebanon. The action prompted Israel to demand removal of the Syrian missiles and to threaten Israeli action if the Syrians did not comply. In Jerusalem, Prime Minister Menachem Begin appealed "enemy to enemy" to Syrian President Hafez Assad yesterday to "step back from the brink of the void" and remove the Soviet-made missiles from Lebanon. Begin said only bad weather and a U.S. appeal for time stopped Israel from at- tacking the Syrian batteries 11 days ago. The Israeli leader then met U.S. en- voy Philip C. Habib -- just arrived from Damascus, where Assad was reported adamant in his refusal to remove the Sam missiles from eastern Lebanon. Washington officials said Habib might extend his trip to a second round of Middle East capitals. Meanwhile, Palestianian guerrilla leader Yasser Arafat arrived in Bagh- dad yesterday for talks with Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. The state-run Iraqi news agency quoted Arafat as saying he would discuss "means of confronting the Israeli threats which require increased coordination between all Arab forces in the present dangerous stage of our history." MIAMI (UPI) - Bob Marley, 36, the i Reggae music star who helped popularize the upbeat Jamaican music in the United States, died of brain can- cer yesterday in Miami's Cedars of Lebanon hospital. Marley, the leader of Bob Marley and the Wailers, was flown to Miami last Thursday from West Germany, where he had been receiving treatment for lung cancer and a brain tumor, accor- ding to his record company. MARLEY WORE HIS hair in many long, braided "dreadlocks," the symbol of the Rastafarian faith, which has Ethiopia's late emperor, Haile Selassie, as its inspiration. The Wailers generally performed before a photograph of Selassie. The Rastafarians also advocate the use of marijuana, and Marley and other reggae performers were rarely onstage without their "Spliffs" - marijuana cigarettes the size of cigars. Marley was a controversial figure because of his obsession with black revolution, and four years ago survived an assassination attempt in Kingston, Jamaica. MARLEY WAS BORN in Jamaica in 1945, the son of an English army cap- tain and a Jamaican woman. He made his first record, a single, "One Cup of Coffee," in 1962, after Jimmy Cliff in- troduced him toa local promoter. The Wailers were formed two years later. Their first record, "Simmer Down,," written by Marley, was an in- stant success. Reggae music, from Jamaica, was touted as being the next big craze in rock 'n' roll a few years ago and Bob Marley and the Wailers were expected to be the superstars. But although critics liked reggae and liked Marley, the music never gained wide popularity in the United States. /_'1 ,.. A4 I -A. ul A oe-- X A 6t; N1wer buy anottw Bgausez Our SO-ServiCo~ Goo O t L S S "R C Al w ~, 6'9i SON SEALS the most exciting young blues guitarist and singer in years." -Robert Palmer, The New York Times TUES. M)Y_ 12. $4.00 at the door.