The Michigan Daily-Saturday, June 19, 1982-Page 3 AT U.N., BEGIN CALLS FOR WORLD PEACE Israelis call for PLO surrender From AP and UPI Israeli troops and armor rumbled through Christian east Beirut to the Green Line boundary with Yasser Arafat's enclave yesterday and Isreaeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon said the Palestinian guerrillas should realize "their struggle has no change." Reporter said the Israeli units moved through streets in the Christian half of Beirut and examined several sites in what appeared to be a prelude for set- ting up positions at key crossing points to the Moslem sector, controlled by Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization. AT THE UNITED Nations, Arab diplomats walked out as Israeli Prime Minisger Menachem Begin, leaning on a cane, addressed a General Assen- mbly session on disarmament, calling self-defense the "most sacred duty .of man." t 'to Led by theSoviet and Arab blocs, 94 of the 157 General Assembly member nations boycotted Begin's appearance. "Let us meet, let us shake hands, talk peace to each other, make agreements 1 T., and all of us will change the course of history of our nations," Begin said. AT THE SAME time, in a veiled reference to Israel's war with the PLO, Begin called self-defense "the noblest concept of the human mind." He gave no indication of Israel's ultimate objec- tives in the 13-day-old conflict. In Beirut, one Israeli armored per- sonnel carrier with three troops strayed inadvertently into west Beirut and traded fire with Syrian or Palestinian gunmen before withdrawing to Christian-held territory, the Christian Phalange militia said. The-incident occurred at the Galerie Semaan checkpoint. A Phalangist spokesman said the Israeli personnel carrier drove through successive con- trol posts of the Phalangists, the Lebanese army , and the Syrians without noticing their signals. A LEBANESE army vehicle pursued the personnel carrier to wrn the driver he'had crossed into west Beirut, and the Israeli driver turned back some 300 See ISRAEL, Page 4 ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER Menachem Begin addresses the United Nations General Assembly yesterday. Arab and Communist bloc countries boycotted the speech, during which Begin called for world peace but made no mention of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon. Museum a of Art cuts hours to avoid layoffs The University's Museum of Art will - reduce exhibition hours next month in an effort to tighten its budget, museum officials report. "We, like every other department, had to take cuts," said Jacquelynn Baas, assistant director of the museum. "We either had to cut one salaried position or cut back hours. We decided to cut hours so we could provide the same services." THE MUSEUM will cut six hours from its schedule beginning July 1, Baas said. New hours will be 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on weekends. The museum hopes to save $12,000- three percent of its $400,000 budget- with the cut and with a voluntary reduc- tion in staff, Baas said. The University provides the museum with operating costs and salaries, while special exhibitions and acquisitions are funded by individual donors and federal agencies, she said. BAAS ALSO reported that federal funding for museum exhibits has decreased dramatically. The museum, for example, will receive only one- quarter of the federal funds requested for September's exhibition of Frank Stella prints, she said. Despite the cutbacks, admission to the museum will continue to be free of charge, said Robert Nuismer, a museum employee, "because we're an educational institution. We don't feel that we should charge for admission. We don't even take donations at the door." Dny rnoto by uLAb M ETHCOui Cut it out A local youngster finds a haircut at the Dascola barbershop on E. Liberty an excruciating ordeal. Regents pass new hospital bid policy (Continued from Page 1) policy would aid state firms. "It sounds like it should be effective," he said. "It is about time we do something of a positive nature." JOHN FARNHAM, associate executive director of Associated General Contractors of Detroit, agreed with Brunvand. "I don't know if it is going to solve the problem totally, but it will go a long way toward it," he said. Roach's proposal was adopted as a substitute for a plan submitted by Regent Gerald Dunn (D-Lansing), who wanted the University to accept "in- state" bids within one percent of the lowest bidder, if that bidder was an "out-of-state" firm. "I WOULD prefer five percent," said Dunn, "but on the basis of compromise, I propose one percent." The other Regents, however, voted for Roach's proposal, with only Dunn opposing. Also at yesterday's meeting, the Regents authorized the remodeling of several North Campus buildings for use by the School of Engineering. The project marks the start of the school's plan to completely relocate on North Campus. During a presentation to the Regents, engineering school Dean James Duder- stadt said that the remodeling phase, combined with plans for a new building on North Campus, would enable 75 per- cent of the school to be located on North Campus by 1983, and 100 percent by 1985 or 1986. Currently, engineering school buildings are divided between Central and North Campus. Duderstadt said the approval marked the end of the "crippling division of the College of Engineering that has haun- ted us for years."