4 Page 8 - The Michigan Daily -Friday, July 27, 1984 LIFE GOES ON IN BEIRUT DESPITE FIGHTING Park survives amidst turmoil BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - The soldiers carrying rifles don't draw a second glance as they line up to ride the bumper cars behind gleeful children clutching balloons and cotton candy. If asked, the fatigues-clad members of the Lebanese army's Moslem 6th Brigade grin self-consciously and say they visit the rickety Beirut amusement park for the same reason the laughing families around them come when the area is free of fighting: to have fun and to forget. TIME AND an occasional artillery round have taken their toll on Luna Park, but the creaking carnival on the Mediterranean shore has offered a tiny enclave of escape through nearly a decade of civil war. Built 20 years ago, Luna Park over- flowed with visitors until the fighting erupted in 1975, recalls owner Noured- dine Alrifai, a beefy man with bodyguards who also runs a profitable ferry shuttle between Beirut and the island of Cyprus. A giant ferris wheel serves as center- piece among the dozen rusting rides at Luna Park, spinning like a colossal pinwheel in the soft sea breeze. WHEN DARKNESS falls, it beckons as a fantasy in colored fairy lights, a carefree memory of a once-sparkling city now shrouded in violence and un- certainty. The ferris wheel hasn't changed since Maya Shadlue used to come to Luna Park "all the time" when she was a lit- tle girl growing up in the Lebanese capital before it was torn by war. Now, she brings daughters Rima, 4, and Nouhad, 6, "every Sunday, when it's not dangerous. Children need to have fun, and this is the only place to find it. Here, we feel we still have a life to enjoy," she said. TWO 6th Brigade soldiers wandering among the hundreds of rambunctious youngsters who flocked to the park on a recent Moslem holiday weekend claimed to be daily customers. "We normally come everyday, just to enjoy ourselves and watch the kids having fun," said Hassan Fneash, an 28-year-old soldier with traditional Arabic "worry beads" around his wrist. Wagdieh Badr, sharing a bag of cany with daughters Rima, 4, and Hikmar, 5, also brings his family on quiet weeken- ds. "WHEN THERE is shelling in our neighborhood, we go to the basement and the girls are afraid," he said. "I bring them here to forget wartime, to play and forget the sound of explosion." Luna Park sits in one of the safer neighborhoods of mostly Moslem west Beirut, but still comes under fire sometimes, usually after it is closed at night. Alrifai said he has spent 1 million Lebanese pounds $166,700 repairing war damage to Luna Park over the past decade. No one has ever been killed or wounded at the park, he added. REPAIRS, FEWER visitors and Alrifai's refusal to lay off any of his 40 employees - including five armed security guards - mean the park is operating at a loss, the owner said. Ask him how much, and Alrifai merely gestures expansively. But the ferry service supports the struggling amusement park, he added, "and even if I had no boat, I would leave it open." Alrifai said he enjoys looking out his office window and "seeing children happy during wartime. We want the children to forget." BUT REMINDERS of war nonetheless find their way into this fan- tasyland. Soldiers from the 6th Brigade man a sandbag post outside the park gate, just a few steps from the vendors hawking popcorn and sous, a drink made of raisins and nuts. Outside the park's House of Horrors, three handbills plastered on the wall depict a smiling young man extolled as a "martyr" for a suicide bomb attack against an Israeli patrol in southern Lebanon. One of the most popular attractions is a punching bag game, where youths test their strength. A wiry, 17-year-old named Ahmed Mousa explained that he was building up his muscles so he can someday "become a fighter in the south and kill all our enemies." s a Regents approve new telephone system campuses will be replaced with push button telephones. The phone numbers will stillibe five digits. "WE HOPE the disruption will be minimal," said Samuel Puice, director of administrative systems and financial analysis, adding that the installation of the telephones will require a lot of rewiring. Eac phone will have several special features - including call forwarding, hold, call waiting, call transfer, and conference calling. Each admin- sitrative telephone will.have a message waiting light that can be answered by a secretary or an answering service. Under the new network, an additional 55 telephones will be placed around campus for emergency use. The telephones will be full service units that permit a call anywhere in the campus area. THE NEW system will allow greater voice and data transmision as well as cheaper long-distance rates. The com- puterized network will be able to chan- nel a long-distance call along the cheapest route depending on the destination - whether through AT&T or one of the other long-distance telephone companies. The network will also enable more effective use of the ,%-m 41 MEC% % A desktop personal computer and linking them with other computers on campus. The new equipment is expected to last 10 to 15 years while the wiring systems are expected to last 25 years. The cost of the new system will be recouped in about 10 years, according to Brinkerhoff._ TheFlint odDearborn campuses will have the same capabilities as the Ann Arbor campus, although the main switching circuit will be located in Ann Arbor. The three campuses will be linked by microwave relay stations. The University has also made arrangements to provide the College of Engineering with special equipment to transmit computer graphic images through the network. The system will have a single large switching unit, housed in the School of Education Building, which will be equipped to handle 30,000 telephone lines. The University now has approximately 26,000 telephones. The University decided not to connect the three campuses with a video. microwave system because the engineering college was the only user and they are pursuing alternate arrangements, according to Brinkerhoff. I I 4 Buoyant UCK Showing velvet summer antlers, this young buck ignores a channel marker and hoofs it across the mouth of the Charlotte River in Michigan's Upper Peninsula toward the green pastures of Neebish Island, MI. Reagan takes campaign to Dems' backyard HOBOKEN, N.J. (AP) - President Reagan, battling Walter Mondale from the South to the industrial Northeast, said yesterday the race for the White House offers a choice between a strong America and "a nation that begs on its knees for kindness from tyranta." With tough rhetoric and appeals to patriotism and family values, Reagan wooed political support from southerners, women, Italians, and blue-collar workers at rallies in Atlanta and Elizabeth, N.J., and at a spaghetti supper at a Catholic parish just a cab ride away from New York home of Mondale's running mate, Geraldine Ferraro. To offset Ferraro's appeal in a heavily Italian-American neighborhood, Reagan enlisted hometown hero Frank Sinatra to accompany him to Hoboken for a festival and supper at St. Ann's Church, named after the patron saint of women. Appealing for a second term in the White House, Reagan told the Italian-American audience, "I have no reservations about throwing my candidacy on the mercies of the good people of St. Ann's church in Hoboken, N.J., and asking them to give a kida chance." The crowd cheered. As he left they chanted, "Four more .years." In Atlanta, Reagan slashed away at the Democrats and the legacy of native son Jimmy Carter at a suburban shopping mall rally. Reagan painted the Democrats as the party of despair and complained their "great dramatic rhetoric" has ignored his achievements in correcting economic and Carter's foreign policy failures. Alluding to his career as an actor, he said: "In 1980, they tried to make me 'Reagan the Barbarian.' This year, it looks like the sequel is 'Reagan the Destroyer."' Reagan strategists believe the election will be won or lost in the South and industrial Northeast. a a