Page--Suturday, ue 19, 1982-The Michigan Daily Senate passes voting rights extension bill From AP andUPI WASHINGTON - The Senate breathed fresh life yesterday into the landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965, approving 85- 8 a 25-year renewal of enforcement provisions designed to guarantee free access to the polls for millions of blacks and other minority voters. Overcoming the tenacious opposition of a small group fo filibustering Southern conservatives, the Republican-controlled Senate handed civil rights groups their only major success in the97th Congress. THE HOUSE approved a similar measure 389-24 last October, and minor differences are certain to be worked out without controversy. President Reagan, who opposed the measure as it was initially proposed by civil rights groups, has said he will sign itinto law. The 10-day fight on the Senate floor was in many ways reminiscent of the civil rights battles of the 1960s, although it had neither the duratibn or the inten- sity of those battles. ALTHOUGH 77 senators publicly supported the voting rights bill when it came to the floor, Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) vowed to block it until the Senate accepted changes lessening or eliminating federal authority to challenge state election laws as discriminatory. The act, extended in 1970 and again in 1975, bars discrimination in voting nationwide and requires nine states and parts of 13 others to clear proposed election law changes with the Justice Department. The new extension would effectively overturn a 1980 Supreme Court decision that said only a state's or locality's in- tent to discriminte was a reason for fin- ding violations - not the results of elec- tions in which blacks and other minorities felt their voting power was diluted. Helms led a filibuster which blocked action for a week, but gave up under pressure from fellow Republicans and Senate leaders Thursday. Federal judge nullifws Haitian re e policy In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Jury to decide Hinckley's fate WASHINGTON- John Hinckley 's fate was handed yesterday to five men and seven women, a jury instructed to deliberate "not with sympathy, pity or compassion" its choice between convicting the man who shot President Reagan or declaring him innocent by reason of insanity. The trial was in its eighth week, the 39th day, when the jury was led by a U.S. marshal from the courtroom. It had heard seemingly endless hours of testimony about the mind of the assailant, who wounded Reagan and three others on March 30 last year. Hinckley followed the departing jurors with his eyes as they filed from the room, but he betrayed no emotion. The testimony had consumed nearly 9,000 pages and there were more than 300 exhibits for the jury to study, including the tormented poems that the defense said are guideposts to Hinckley's insanity. Haig meets with Gromyko NEW YORK- Secretary of State Alexander Haig opened his third meeting in nine months with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko yesterday with "no expectations' that their talks will achieve any dramatic results. "There are a lot of problems and we have a lot of serious talking to do," Haig told reporters before the meetings began. The talks between Haig and Gromyko, the latest in a series that began in New York last September, opened against a backdrop of urgent U.S. diplomatic efforts to hammer together a durable cease-fire in Lebanon. But U.S. officials in the Haig party said there was no sign Gromyko was prepared to offer Soviet cooperation in that effort. And they said they would be surprised if the meeting resulted in the setting of a date for a summit between President Reagan and Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev. Shortly before the meeting began at the U.S. mission to the United Nations, Haig described as "old hat" the promise voiced by Gromyko before the U.N. General Assembly special meeting on disarmament that the Soviet Union would never be the first to use nuclear weapons. Personal income rose in May WASHINGTON- Americans received their biggest boost in personal in- come in six months during May and spent it all and more, the government reported yesterday. Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige suggested that the economy is expanding for the first time since last fall. The Commerce Department reported that a healthy gain in wages and salaries helped push total personal income 0.7 percent higher last month than in April, the biggest gain since last November. And personal consum- ption spending rose an even sharper 1.3 percent, the most since last August. Baldrige spoke of "income prospects and consumer confidence brightening." He said he thought the inflation-adjusted gross national product-the broadest measure of U.S. economic activity-was rising at an annual rate of 0.5 percent to 1 percent in the April-June period after falling substantially in the previous two quarters. Official GNP figures for the current quarter aren't due for more than a month. If they show an increase, they likely will be seized upon as a sign the 1981-82 recession has ended. Author John Cheever dies ASSINING, N.Y.- Pulitizer Prize-winning author John Cheever, ac- claimed as the Chekhov of the suburbs for his penetrating tales of American life in five novels and more than 100 short stories, died yesterday. He was 70. He died at his home here after a long illness, according to Jack Kelly of the Waterbury and Kelly Funeral Home in Ossining. The Stories of John Cheever, the seventh collection of his short fiction, won both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award in 1979. Bullet Park, his third novel, was a Book-of-the-Month selection in 1969 and the publication of Falconer in 1977 was the occasion of a cover story on Cheever in Newsweek. GOP convention to be in Dallas WASHINGTON - The Republican Naional Committee voted unanimously yesterday to hold the 1984 GOP National Convention in Dallas, the city of President Reagan's choice. The Republicans, making their selection about a year earlier than usual, picked one of the few major American cities that tends to vote Republican consistently. Once the president expressed his preference, there was no doubt that Dallas would be the convention site. The RNC made it official on a voice vote yesterday. the GOP convention, opening Aug. 20, 1984, is expected to pump tens of millions of dollars in the local economy. Evans told the committee the Dallas convention center, the largest in the world, will offer ample facilities and city officials arranged for 26,000 hotel rooms to be made available within 16 miles of the convention center and another 4,300 rooms in nearby Fort Worth. iIAMI (AP)- A federal judg- yesterday nullified a policy that is keeping 1,910 Haitians in detention camps while they seek political asylum, but he denied that the policy is discriminatory and refused to free the refugees immediately. The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service began detaining Haitians and some other newly arrived refugees last year after President Reagan declared the United States was "losing control of its borders." "The court has concluded that the new detention policy was adopted in a procedurally defective manner and that plaintiffs' continued incarceration pursuant to that policy is unlawful," U.S. District Judge Eugene Spellman said in his 55-page ruling. HE SAID the policy adopted by the immigration service was illegally im- plemented, as lawyers for the refugees had charged, because the public wasn't adequately notified or given a chance to comment. He said the agency was unable to produce a clear policy on who was to be detained. The judge scheduled a hearing Wed- nesday to determine the future of the Haitians, who are being held in camps in five states and Puerto Rico as they await decisions on petitions for policital asylum. In Washington, Associate Attorney General Rudolph Guiliani said the decision was "a victory for the gover- nment on the most important aspect of the case." Israel calls for surrender; Begin talks peace at U.N. (Continued from Page 3) minefields around their camps. yards across the line when he realized Meanwhile, U.S. presidential envoy he was being fired upon. Philip Habib met with President Elias The personnel carrier returned to Sarkis in search of a political formula Christian-held territory, where the that could prevent Israeli forces from Israelis posted infantrymen at the overruning west Beirut. eatern side of the Galerie Semaan checkpoint. On the outher side of the line, Syrian Correction troops who ostensibly police Lebanon's In Wednesday's Daily, the wrong 5-year-old civil war armistice waved photograph was printed next to a story through the two-way traffic between about Ann Arbor artist Jon Lockard. Beirut's Moslem and Christian sectors. The photograph was of a mural in East An Israeli-Syrian cease-fire has been in Quad and was painted by an artist other. force for a week, than Lockard. It was not a photo of one PALESTINIAN guerrillas were erec- ofLockard.Sothwas stashthe ting earthen barricades and sandbag of Lockard's South Quad murals, as the positions around their neighborhoods, caption stated. The Daily regrets the near the Green Line and planting error,