The Michigan D ail y Vol. XCII, No. 53-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-August 3, 1982 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Mideast cease-fire ignored From the Associated Press Israel moved tanks and artillery to the edge of battered west Beirut yesterday as exchanges of rifle and ar- tillery fire threatened to dissolve the latest Lebanese cease-fire. In Washington, President Reagan told Israeli foreign minister Yitzhak Shamir that there must be "a complete end" to the fighting by all parties to allow negotiations for a settlement of the Leanese crisis to proceed, Reagan said, "the world can no longer accept a situation of constantly escalating violence." SHAMIR TOLD reporters that Israel believes the PLO will not leave Beirut Hinekley should remain in hospital doctors say WASHINGTON (AP)- Doctors at a federal mental hospital said yesterday that Presidential assailant John Hin- ckley Jr. should remain in- stitutionalized because he is a danger to himself and others according to sour- ces. The first evaluation of Hinckley's mental state since he was found in- nocent by reason of insanity June 21 of shooting President Reagan and three others was sent from St. Elizabeth's Hospital to U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker. A hearing is scheduled for next Monday to deter- mine whether Hinckley should be released. PARKER ordered in advance that the report be kept secret for the time being. But the sources said that the report told the judge that Hinckley remains af- flicted with most of the same per- sonality disorders described at his trial by psychiatrists Sally Johnson and Park Elliott Dietz, who testified for the government. Johnson works at the federal correctional institution at But- ner, N.C., and Dietz at Harvard. NO MATTER what the doctor's opinion, only Parker can order Hin- ckley released. In a telephone call to Washington Post reporter Laura Kiernan after his trial, Hinckley was asked if he was ready to be released. "I certainly would not be a danger to myself," he said, "and I honestly don't think I've been a danger to society ... I certainly would not be a danger to the president, I'll say that for sure." R ea11an "THE ISRAELIS tried many times calls forE a on Sunday to take all of the west Beirut suburb of Ouzai and couldn't," a young guerrillas, Abdel Kader, boasted to AP correspondent Nicholas Tatro during a cot end' tocriss tour of the front. 'We are ina strong position,"the head "unless they are convinced they have accused the guerrillas of being the first of the PLO's political department, one choice before them: To leave by to break the cease-fire. Farouk Kaddoumi, said in an interview negotiations or by other means." He There was no evidence that the with a Kuwait newspaper, Al Qabas. said any cease-fire must be "absolute Israeli armor reinforcements or ar- Kaddoumi said the PLO's guerrillas and mutual." tillery fire were intimidating the would evacuate west Beirut only under Neither of those conditins prevailed Palestine Liberation Organization. The the conditions laid down in an Arab yesterday as Israeli 155-millimeter guerrillas said they were encouraged League proposal pubished :last week in cannons lobbed shells into west Beirut. after taking the worst the Israelis could Saudi Arabia. Those conditions include The Israelis said they were retaliating dish out Sunday and yielding relatively an Israeli pullback from the Beirut ara. for shelling from the Palestinians and 6little ground.See PLO, Page5 Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT LOCAL HARE KRISHNA devotees, Dasarath, Candrasekhara, and Barry play and chant at the city's art fair last mon- th. Members passed out free literature and discussed their philosophies and lifestyles. Hare Krishnas return to city By JERRY ALIOTTA Shunned by some as a religious cult, praised by others as true seekers of spirituality, the Hare Krishnas are back in Ann Arbor - to mixed reaction from the community. The local Krishna culture center, which shut down four years ago after losing its manager, re-opened last mon- th at 606 Packard, according to Dasarath, the center's current president. THE KRISHNAS, Dasarath said, are glad to be back. "There are many open-minded people in this city," he said. "Ann Ar- bor hasa friendly atmosphere." Some members of the community have welcomed back the group with open arms. "I don't think there is anything wrong with people trying to satisfy their spiritual needs," said local resident Avi Erlich, of the Kirshna's return. "One has to respect the freedom of choice of other individuals."' OTHERS, however, have been shar- ply critical of the group's eccentric habits and lifestyle. "I think the Krishna religion is a cult; dancing around and chanting in public is so different from the norm," said Craig Halberstadt, an LSA senior. "I think they can be categorized in the same group as the Moonies." The shaven-headed, colorfully robed Krishnas are not troubled by such critics. The members of the group, whose flamboyant manner of dress, diet, and public chanting consistently has aroused the public's curiosity, point to the 5,000 year-old Indian tradition of their lifestyle and the contentment it brings them. DASARATH, a former member of a rock band, said he joined the group 12 years ago after experiencing a "high" from chanting. "From chanting I experienced real pleasure that links me up to God. The pleasure received from sex isn't an- ything like it," he said. See KRISHNAS, Page 2