Page 4 The Michigan Daily Sunday. August 12, 1984 Reagan signs access bill for religious groups N BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) - President Reagan yesterday signed the so-called "equal access bill" which will allow student religious groups to meet in public high schools during non-school hours. At the same time, Reagan accused the House Democratic leaders of failing the test of "new realism" set for the Democrts by Walter Mondale, the par- ty's car-.lidate for president. REAGAN SAID in his weekly radio address that the Democrats had ap- proved only the equal access bill out of six pieces of legislation he thought were vital for the future of America. The House, Reagan said, failed to act on legislation to mandate a balanced federal budget, create economic enter- prise zones in depressed areas, allow spouses to have investment retirement accounts, authorize tuition tax credits and undertake a comprehensive anti- crime program. By passing only one of the six pieces of legislation, the House should receive "a failing grade, a red-letter F" he said. "When the Democratic leadership keeps saying 'No to America,' they showed how far they are from 'new realism' and how far they have drifted from mainstream thinking," Reagan said. Mondale had declared at the Democratic convention that the party would get behind a program of 'new realism,' but Reagan said Mondale should have asked House Speaker O'Neill (D-Mass.) to "give democracy a chance." Reagan said the equal access legislation will give student religious groups the same rights to hold meetings in public high schools that other student groups have. This was a "right they have too long been denied," he said. But critics contend the legislation would compromise a constitutional separation of church and state, and also could open the schools to use by fringe groups which claim a religious orien- tation. Legislature may launch Midland investigation Polish ship strikes mine in southern Red Sea A Polish cargo ship struck a mine near the southern end of the Red Sea yesterday and the explosion stopped the ship dead in the water, the of- ficial Polish news agency PAP reported. It said the strong blast ex- tensively damaged engine room pipes, but caused no injuries. The Jozef Wybicki hit a mine- about 1 a.m. EDT, shortly after passing from the gulf into the Red Sea on its way to the Saudi Arabian port of Jeddah, the official Polish news agency PAP said. Fuel tank explodes in Fla. MARATHON, Fla. - A fuel tank exploded at a dock on this island in the Florida Keys yesterday, setting fire to nearby houses, cars, and a boat and injuring four people, of- ficials said. The fire at the Pinellas Oil Dock. was reported at 1:40 p.m., said Raye Liu, a dispatcher at the Monroe County Sheriff's Office. She said it' was not immediately known how the fire started. Witnesses said the blaze occured as a truck was pumping fuel into the docks' tanks. Mass. town to-continue curfew LAWRENCE, Mass. - An overnight curfew brought peace yesterday to a neighborhood shattered by two nights of violent skirmishes between Hispanics and whites, and officials of this old mill city voted to continue the curfew another night. About 70 police officers patrolled the four-block-area when Friday night's curfew began at 8 p.m., and community leaders drove around with loudspeakers, urging residents to remain indoors. By the curfew's end at 6 a.m. yesterday, "very, very few officers" were still on the scene, said Alder- man Raymond Johnson, city direc- tor of public safety. Twenty-eight people were arrested overnight for violating the curfew and related charges, and one man was taken into protective custody, but police said there were no major disturbances. Khadafy regime executes four LONDON' - Col. Moammar Khadafy's regime has executed four men expelled from Britain after a policewoman was killed by gunfire from the Libyan Embassy, setting off a siege of the mission and prom- pting London to break diplomatic relations with Tripoli, a newspaper reported yesterday. The Daily Express, citing an in- telligence report, said the four men were executed in Tripoli following a secret trial "for crimes against the state." Poland releases 7th Solidarity official WARSAW, Poland - Jan Rulewski, the last of seven senior of- ficials of Solidarity held by authorities since the December 1981 military crackdown, said yesterday he had been freed from prison under the government's general amnesty. "I simply left a prison with bars, and right now I'm staying in a.prison without bars," said Rulewski. He complained during a telephone interview with The Associated Press that he has been under close police surveillance since his release Friday from Warsaw's main Rakowiacka Prison. Rulewski spoke from his home in the northern city of Bydgoszcz. He formerly was chairman of the now outlawed trade union movement's Bydgoszcz chapter. Beirut officials consider more troop deployments BEIRUT, Lebanon - President Amin Gemayel and Prime Minister Rashid Karami yesterday discussed deploying government troops in the tense Shouf mountains, where Christian and Moslem militiamen fought briefly in the latest of a week of clashes. "The decision for salvation is marching forward and there is no turning back," Karami said after the weekly private meeting between the two Lebanese leaders. Divisions among militia leaders in the Cabinet have stalled the deployment in the mountains. LANSING (UPI) - House Speaker Gary Owen says it's time for a legislative investigation into Con- sumers Power Co. and many of its ac- tivities, including the cancelation of its Midland nuclear plant. Owen said Friday he planned to in- troduce a measure when the Legislature reconvenes next month calling for an investigative committee to look into the scrapping of the project last month. THE YPSILANTI Township Democrat said he wanted to assure that the "Public is protected" in the future,. He said the probe would be part of a larger investigation into the role and structure of the State Public Service Commission and Michigan utility laws. Rep Alma. Stallwort (D-Detroit) would head the panel, he said. "WE WANT to look at the entire Con- sumers Power operation: the Algerian gas purchase, the operation of the board, Marysville and Midland," Owen said. "We want to determine the level of competence that went into those decisions." - 'If Midland taught us anything, it's that the overseer responsibility of the state did not function in that case." Owen denied the committee was launching a "witch hunt" against Con- sumers. "Anytime you're talking about in- creasing rates.I by 60 to 70 percent; anytime:-yop're talking about the PSC chief of staff calling for resignations, and anytiie,you're talking about a major utility talking about bankruptcy, there is a legislative responsibility to look into this," he said. The Midland plant - about 85 percent complete - was shut down last month after the Jackson-based utility failed to reach a rate-increase agreement to finance the $5.63 billion project. The utility has asked the PSC to ap- prove an annual $472 million rate hike over 15 years to recover its investment in the project. After the plant was scrapped, PSC chief of staff Roger Fisher called for the resignation of Consumers Chair- man John Selby. Another subject of the probe would be the mothballing in 1979 of Consumers' Marysville gas reforming plant. Israeli gov t faces crisis (Continued from Page3) THAT WAS in 1967 when Israel faced HEDGING their bets in case the impending war with neighboring Arab Labor-Likud talks broke down, both states and lasted until August 1970, Peres and Shamir counted key centrist when Likud bolted to protest a U.N. and religious parties in hopes of resolution prposing a land-for-peace forming a narrow, go-it-alone coalition. trade that was accepted by the late The arithmetic favored Shamir in Labor Prime Minister Golda Meir. such a battle because the four main Yehezekel Dror, a political science religious parties were more professor at Hebrew University, said on ideologically attuned to the Likud Israel Radio it was difficult to arouse "Greater Israel" policy of keeping the same sense of unified purpose to occupied territories. deal with the threats of 400 percent But to get a majority in parliament, inflation and a mounting foreign debt of Shamir would have to compromise with $22 billion. Ezer Weisman's centrist Yahad "Israelis have always been better at Together party, which controls three uniting when there is an internal seats and opposes broadscale threat," he said. settlement building. .femher of the Associated Pres.s Vol. XcIV-- No. 36-S The Michigan Daily ISSN 0745-967X ) is published Tuesday through Sun- day during the fall and winter terms and Tuesday, Friday, and Sunday during the spring and summer terms by students at the University of Michigan Subscription rates: September through April-$16.50 in Ann Ar- bor, $29.00 outside the city: May through August--.$4.50 in Ann Arbor. $6.00 outside the city Second-class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily. 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor. Michigan4 9PHOTOSTAFF CarolFrncovillo.RebeccTKnight. Ed"ors .. 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