Join The Daily-Meeting tonight. at 7:3 MILITANT FREED See Editorial Page L A60P 4Aitr4t a n :43 i1 FLAKY High-29 Low-11 See Today for details / Latest Deadline in the State Vol LXXXVI, No. 94 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, January 20, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages Repots claim Palestinians invade Lebanon * * * * * * r } ~~if rLSEEfVW&S K t AIf At Mass meeting Want a head start in the world of reporting, writing or business? The Daily is holding a. mass meeting for new persons tonight and tomorrow night at 7 p.m. in the Kuenzel Room on the first floor of the Michigan Union. Daily staffers from the news, editorial page, sports, arts and business departments will be there to answer your questions and enlist your help for the months (and years) ahead. The Daily is both an exciting and chal- lenging place to work, and now is the best time to join. See you there. Pulln' up stakes The Women's Crisis Center has moved to larger quarters at 325 E. Summit St., near the corner of N. Division and Broadway. Volunteers at the Center will continue to answer phone calls and see walk-in clients. Their telephone number is 994-9100. Happeings... ..center around social and political issues today. Clinical Psychologist Susan Golden discusses preschool families and work at 328 Thoipson St. at noon . . . Rosb Nichols, Rape Counselor at the Women's Crisis Center, talks about Susan Brown- miller's book on rape, at the public library at 12:10 p.m. . . . The Coalition to Stop S-1 meets at 7:30 at 332 S. State . . and the Michigan Women in Science hold a panel discussion concerning women who've gone back to work or school after raising families, at 8 p.m. in the East Conference Room at Rackham. O Kennedy revisionism It seems the lurid stories about JFK's past never stop. Now, The National Enquirer says Kennedy was transferred from Naval Intelligence to sea duty in 1941 because he was having an affair with a Danish woman journalist suspected of being a Nazi spy. The Enquirer says Ingo Arvad, a former Miss Europe, was suspected by the future President's superiors to be a latter day Mata Hari. One source said "their concern was that this woman was using Kennedy to find out all she could about what was going on in the Navy Department and the Office of Naval Intelligence." Arvad interviewed Adolph Hitler, who called her a "Nordic beauty," three times in her career. As for Ken- nedy, he once wrote Arvad a note saying " . knowing you has been the brightest part of an extremely bright 26 years." O On the inside... Edit Page takes a critical look at Local Motion in an article by Michael Beckman . . . Arts has a review by Andy Zerman of "The Robber Bridegroow" . . . and Tom Duranceau tells all about the hockey team for Sports. 0 On the outside ... Looks like snow again! This morning skies will be cloudy with a chance of snow flurries. Later in the day snow flurries will change to snow, end- ing Wednesday. High during the day will be 26 to 31. Lows at night will be 8 to 13. Wednesday will be slightly warmer. Prisoners riot in Officials say 5,000 troops N.J.; 2 said killed Homemade bomb sparks disturbance TRENTON, (P) . Two priso- ners were killed and several persons injured, including a guard hit with a "homemade bomb," when gunfire broke out last night in Trenton State Pri- son in the heart of the city, au- thorities said. The inmates peppered the streets around the century-old prison with gunfire and tried to shoot out spotlights beamed on the prison. At one point they traded shots with city policemen who tried to invade the wing where they were holed up. THREE GUARDS were in- Studeats allegedly recruited by CIA A knowledgeable source told The Daily yesterday that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) plans to interview Uni- versity students today as part of a recruiting drive. The interviews were not pub- licized, and it' is believed that the CIAacontacted the individ- ual applicants personally . ANOTHER source, an em- ploye with the University Of- fice of Career Planning and Placement, admitted that in- terviews had been scheduled for today but added that there was some uncertainty. She said she later heard that they might be cancelled. A CIA official in Washington denied that the agency would he recruiting at the University today. Associate Directors of CPP, IIhrold Fowler and William Au- das, both denied knowledge of the interviews. CPP emplove Virginia Stegath said the CIA does not interview directly See CIA, Page 2 jured in the shooting. A spokesman for the Depart- ment of Institution and Agen- cies said it first appeared that three inmates were killed. He said three prisoners were seen lying on a tier of No. 7 Wing, a "segregation section" reserv- ed for troublesome prisoners. The spokesman said none of the three prisoners moved for some time and it was believ- ed all were dead. However, he said, when they were finally brought out it was discovered that one inmate was only founded in the arm. He was hospitalized. EARLIER ATTEMPTS to re- move them were thwarted by gifire from rebellious inmates. The spokesman said one guard was burned when he was hit in the chest with "some sort of homemade bomb." One handgun was recovered but at least two more hand- guns were in the possession of the prisoners, the spokesman Armed with shot guns, police said. He said the weapons. ap- TrnoStePisnley! parently had been smuggled Trenton State Prison late yel into the prison. Corrections of- ports, three prisoners and t ficers normally are not armed. shot. Prisoners reportedly sei Ford proj1 billion ta:/ WASHINGTON (") - President Ford proposed last night a $10 billion bonus tax cut effective July 1, in a campaign-year State of the Union message that pledged frugality and a drive to put jobless Americans back to work. In effect, Ford reassembled the $28 billion tax-and-spending cut plan the Democratic Congress refused to buy, and put it back on the political agenda for 1976. HE DID SO by proposing a new tax reduction of $10 billion to be added to $18 billion already approved by Congress. Those are annual rates. At the same time, the President said the budget he will send Congress Wednesday will total $394.2 billion. He had asked Con- gress to impose a $395 billion spending ceiling next year, but that By AP and Reuter BEIRUT, Lebanon - In- terior Minister Camille Chamoun accused Syria of sending troops into Leban- on yesterday and a police spokesman reported a "massive" influx of- Pales- tinian guerrillas into the country from Syria. The police spokesman did not mention Syrian troops. Unofficial estimates said as many as 4,000 or 5,000 Pal- estinians may have grossed the Syrian border into Leb- anon, which has been torn for nine months by civil war between Moslem and Christian factions. U.S. officials said in Washing- ton last night that Palestinian forces appeared to be moving into Lebanon from Syria to join M o s I e m s fighting rightwing Christian factions in the Leba- nese civil war. They said the State Depart- ment was checking reports that Syrian troops were also march- ing into Lebanon. "We have information there have been some Palestinian re- inforcements entering Lebanon from Syria but we have no way of ascertaining the numbers in- volved," one official said. Reports from Beirut said that between 5,000 and 15,000 Syrian or Palestinian Liberation Army (PLA) forces had entered Leb- anon.. "We have no evidence of any Syrian military units entering- Lebanon," officials here said. "We have of course been closely cross border following developments in the Lebanese situation and are look- ing into these reports." Chamoun claimed that Syria had invaded his country with 15,000 troops. The former Lebanese Presi- dent, in a statement released to reporters by a spokesman for his National Liberal Party, said the Syrian troops backed by tanks moved into eastern Leb- anon yesterday afternoon, occu- pying the whole of the Bekaa valley except for two towns, Zahle and Deir Al-ahmra. There was no immediate Sy- rian reaction to the allegation. Earlier, Syrian Information Minister Ahmed Iskander Ah- med denied reports that Syrian- based troops of the Palestine Liberation Army had entered the Bekaa valley. Observers in Beirut said there was no evidence of Syrian in- volvement in the fighting in east- ern Lebanon although Christian towns such as Zahle and Deir Al-ahmra were under attack from Moslem gunmen yester- day. Israel reaffirmed it would re- main out of the fighting unless Syria intervened. Such interven- tion might bring about Syrian occupation of northern Lebanon and retaliatory Israeli occupa- tion of the southern half, split- ting the country in two and pos- sibily spilling over into a wider Israeli-Arab conflict. In Cairo, Arab -League Secre- tary General Mahmoud Riad proposed an Arab summit to avoid disaster inside Lebanon and to prevent Israel entering the fighting. "Such intervention would ex- pose the entire Arab nation to danger," he said. AP Photo prepare to storm New Jersey's sterday. According to police re- hree guards have already been zed guns from their guards. ~zcut $28 for I July. was rejected in December. There were no startling new proposals in the message Ford took to a nationally broadcast and televised joint session of Con- gress. TIE REPUBLICAN President told the Democratic Congress -home to a corps of presidential challengers - that he has the nation on course. "Add up the separate pieces of progress in 1975, subtract the setbacks, and the sum total shows that we are not only headed in the new direction I proposed 12 months ago, but that it turned out to be the right direction," he said. Ford said he means to stick to that "steady course" in the economy and in general. See FORD, Page 8 Faculty group likely to approve DNA research Carter takes lead A4 By MARGARET YAO A member of the fac'ilty committee ex- ploring the ethical and moral implications of recombinant DNA research told the Sen- ate Assembly yesterday thot the panel will in all likelihood recommend that such re- search proceed under federally prescribed guidelines. History Professor Shaw Livermore told the assembly that Committee B, appointed by Vice President for Research Charles Overberger last summer, will "most likely" give the green light to the research as long The danger of contamination from a po- tentially toxicborganismproduded in this research has been a cause of growing con- cern among scientists, and led 18 months ago to a national moratorium on recom- binant experimentation until federal guide- lines were developed. NIH guidelines for the research, which will deal with minimum safety standards, are expected to be released next month, according to Ernest Chu, chemistry pro- fessor and NIH member. in Iowa. caucuses DES MOINES VP) - Former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter took an expected early lead last night in early scattered returns from Iowa Democratic caucuses, the first step in selec- tion of 47 presidential nominating delegates. With 123 of 2,530 Democratic precincts re-, porting, Carter led the field with 42 per cent while Sen. Birch Bayh of Indiana, the ex- pected second place runner, had 14 per cent. Among other Democratic challengers who campaigned extensively in Iowa, Ariz. Rep. Morris Udall had 5 per cent; former Okla- homa Sen. Fred Harris, 3 per cent; Sargent Shriver, 2 per cent and Sen. Henry M. Jackson of.Washington. 1 per cent. : NEW=a