The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 19, 1982-Page 5 FACES DEFEA TIN NO-CONFIDENCE VOTE Begin loses parliamentary majority TEL AVIV, Israel (AP)- Prime Minister Menachem Begin faces possible defeat in a parliamentary no- confidence vote after two legislators defected from his coalition yesterday and left him without a majority in Parliament. Amnon Linn and Yitzhak Peretz quit Begin's Likus block and aligned them- selves with the opposition tabor Party just 24 hours before Parliament was to vote on a Labor Party motion of no con- fidence prompted by rising inflation. THE FATE of the government depended on the five votes of two splin- ter parties which have not announced their position. The defections put Labor ahead of Likud by 50 seats to 46 in the 120- member Parliament, or Knesset. Begin's coalition was pared from 61 to 59 seats. He rules with the backing of two religious parties and an ethnic-based faction. The largest faction, the National Religious Party, has six seats; the Agudat Israel faction has four, and TAMI has three. LIKUD OFFICIALS sought to assure the votes of the right-wing Tehiya Renaissance party, a three-member faction that advocates annexing the oc- cupied West Bank of the Jordan River. Israel radio said Likud was offering Tehiya promises of increased Jewish settlement in the West Bank in return for their votes. Likud also hoped the two-man, right-of-center Telem faction would vote against the no-confidence motion Wednesday. There were three possibilities for the political future: " Begin loses the vote, forcing his resignation. He can then-try to form a new government, calling an early elec- tion, or step down and let the Labor Party try and pull together a coalition. Labor is unlikely to succeed because the six-member National Religious Party.refuses to join a Labor gover- nment; * Begin wins the vote and goes on governing with a minority, while trying to draw the two-man Telen faction into the coalition and re-establish his majority; * Begin wins the vote but concludes that he cannot go on fighting constant no-confidence motions-he has beaten six in the past 10 months-and sets an early election date, about three years ahead of schedule. Opinion polls say he would increase his majority. In any case, the 68-year-old Begin would remain in office as a caretaker prime minister until a new government is formed. - Linn said the religious minority was "dictating to a huge secular majority how it should live its life." ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER Menachem Begin faces a worrisome no-confidence vote after two legislators defected from his Likud coalition, leaving him without a majority in Parliament. Nuclear plant's reopening put to a vote HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - Residents of three. cilman who said voters were turning out in force on a primary elections were being held for governor, U.S. counties surrounding the Three Mile Island nuclear hot and humid day to vote to keep TMI closed: "I'm Senate and statewide offices, was expected to be only power plant voted yesterday, in a non-binding pro-nuclear, but they've lied to us." about 25 percent of the state's 5.6 million eligible referendum on whether they favor bringing the plan Nuclear Regulatory Commission chairman Nunzio voters. back into partial service, Palladino has said the vote, although non-binding, The plant is in Middletown, a rural community of TMI's Unit I has been shut down for three years sin- would have an impact on future decisions by the 9,000 where nearly everyone has an opinion about the ce its sister reactor overheated in the nation's worst NRC, which will ultimately decide on any restart. nuclear plant. But in the heat of the referendum, commercial nuclear accident. The three counties have 222,091 voters. Nancy Up- campaign, few agreed to give their names when The yes-no question on the ballot in Dauphin, deraff, an election judge in Royalton, a town nearest asked about the vote. Cumerland and Lebanon counties was: "Do you the plan, said the turnout there was better than usual One woman fumed about spending $200 on gasoline ,. favor restarting TMI Unit I, which was not involved for a primary election and said TMI probably was the and lodging during the accidnet when many residents in the accident on March 28, 1979?" reason. left temporarily. "And they don't tell us the truth ABSOLUTELY not," said Jim Grim, a city coun- VOTING ELSEWHERE in the state, where either," she said. University to protest M NRC fine (Continued from Page 3) been developed to replace the method that led to the violation, according to John Jones, manager of the Phoenix Memorial' Radiation Laboratory on North Campus, where the new process is conducted. "We have revised the procedure to do manufacturing and dispensing in a closed system throughout the whole process," he said. Currently, NP-59 cannot be obtained anywhere else in the country, Price said. It was developed by University researchers in 1975, one of whom is Dr. William Beierwaltes, chief of nuclear medicine at the University Hospital. The drug has not been approved yet by the FDA, Price said, but currently is being used experimentally to treat glandular disorders ....~- ew Summer Fashions From See Them All at The Bivouac z {BILJOUf 330 S. State Street Ann Arbor, Mich. 761-6207