Join The Daily-Meeting tonight at 730 FOOD POISONING See Editorial Page IWPPF 4fi t43 1 ~IaiAi, MIDDLIN' High-33 Low--18 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol..LXXXVI, No. 95 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, January 21, 1976 10 Cents Ten Pages Ir tViSfE W-U '4CAL~L. -NtY Mass meeting Want a head start in the world of reporting, writ- ing or business? The Daily is holding a mass meeting for new persons tonight at 7:30 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 challenging place to work, and nowj is the best time to join. See you there. Resting up Auto bigwig Henry Ford II was reported in good condition yesterday after being admitted to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. A hospital spokesperson denied a report that Ford had entered the hos- pital with chest pains, and said that the board chairman of the nation's second largest auto maker was in only for diagnostic testing. According to the Hospital, the 57-year-old Ford will remain for sev- eral days, but will depart on schedule next week for a business trip to the People's Republic of China. 0 Happenings ... . are dominated by lectures today . . . the Center for Russian and East European Studies is sponsoring a brown bag with a talk by Olga Su- pek on "The Marxist Anthropology of Zaga Pesic- Golubovic" at noon in the Commons Room of Lane Hall . . . SGC will hold a coffee hour at 3 p.m. in its chambers in the Union . . . Dean Wilbur Co- hen of the Education School will speak on "A More Just Society" at 7 p.m. in the Kalamazoo Rm. of the League . . . Residential College lecture series presents Ed Egnatios on "Bureaucracy, Profes- sionalism, and the Crisis of the Residential Col- lege" at 7 p.m. in East Quad's Greene Lounge .. . there will be a discussion of Angola at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham Aud. . . . the Internatioial Center will sponsor a discussion of job possibilities abroad at 7:30 p.m. ...the Undergraduate Political Sci- ence Association meets at 7:30 p.m. in the base- ment of Dominick's, 812 Monroe . ., . the Ann Ar- bor Committee to Re-open the Rosenberg Case meets at 8 p.m. in rm. 122 East Quad . . Young toughs There's a tough new state's attorney in Mulberry, Florida, and he's decided to come down hard on criminals with guns. No copped pleas, no plea bar- gaining, just law and order. And so, a 6-year-old boy and his four-year-old brother have been charg- ed with burglary in the theft of a neighbor's pistol. The boys were charged with entering a neigh- boring home and making off with a .22 caliber pis- tol. The desperadoes were apprehended by vigilant police before they commited any acts of wanton violence, but the bullets from the gun were miss- ing, oficials said. Florida law forbids revealing the names of the street toughs, but set no min- imum age limit for charging law violators. The charges were filed by asst. state attorney Mark Orr, but his boss Glen Darty says the charge will be dropped. A police officer recounted the tale of their arrest: "The older boy was very frightened and the 4-year-old did not even know he had done anything wrong. When I advised them of their constitutional rights, they naturally had no idea what I was talking about." Arraignment for the pairis scheduled for later this month. May justice be done., Hanging in there Jack Kennedy may be an angel with a slipped halo, but he's still an angel in Burlington, Iowa. The Catholic School Board there voted 15-0 Monday to keep the former President's picture hanging in the library of Notre Dame High School despite re- cent reports that Kennedy may have led the bed- hopping life of "Jack the Zipper." A local busi- nessman and father of three students at the school first started the controversy by suggesting that it be removed from the library. But in voting to re- tain the portrait one Board member stated, "I would like to have Kennedy remembered as a President rather than as a Catholic. le belongs in the library out of a sense of patriotism." May- be Sargent Shriver can recover from his whomping" in the Iowa delegate caucus to stammer thanks on behalf of the clan. On the inside. . kSports features a Paul Campbell profile of hockey player Ben Krawa . . . on the Editorial Page Paul O'Donnell decries the factory-like face of the University . . . and the Arts Page presents the usual Wednesday feature, Side One. Classified By GORDON ATCHESON and CHERYL PILATEl The Research Policies Committee will today/ review a classified research proposal that may research project violate regental regulations prohibiting the Uni- Insamects versity from engaging in secret projects "the Zorn states that probable result of which . . . is to destroy human weapons enginee life or to incapacitate human beings." pwepo hen The project outlines a highly sophisticated tac- srt for the tical radar system to be developed by two Uni- versity professors and funded by the U. S. Air Zorn told The I Force. taken but I. believ tomarily used wi THE PROPOSAL, known as DRDA 76-815-KB1, has been questioned by Physics Professor Jens THE PROJECT Zorn, one of three persons who screen classified would take a yea research proj yviolateU'regulations s for the University. tained by The Daily yesterday, the proposal "appears to be a ing project that is more appro- industrial than the academic Daily last night "I could be mis- ve this is the type of device cus- th guns." T would cost about $80,000 and ar to complete. Zorn states in his letter that the radar an- tenna plan violates Provision 3 of the Regental Policy on Classified Research that declares: "The University will not enter into or renew any agreement or contract, or accept any grant, that clearly forseeable and probable result of which, the direct application of which, or any specific purpose of which is to destroy human life or incapacitate human beings." LSA Senior Elham Elahi, who also reviews classified'research proposals, said he questioned the project because he understood that the radar ect hit could be used on fighter jets. ENGINEERING PROF. Ralph Hiatt, one of the professors who authored the proposal, refused to confirm or deny Elah's claim. Thomas Senior, the other professor involved in the contract proposal, denied that the radar an- tenna system violates University guidelines. "I am in no sense offended that the commit- tee questioned this, but I feel it was misinter- preted," he said. Zorn, Elahi, and Medical School Prof. Chris Zarafonetis comprise the University's Classified Research Review Panel. The group must deter- mine if research projects meet the regental regu- lations approved in March, 1972. See CLASSIFIED, Page 7 ' Over 150 killed nias in Lebanoi fighting escalates By AP and Reuter B E I R U T - Leftwing forces overran the Chris- tian town of Damour yes- terday and a Palestinian guerrilla chief disclosed that Palestine Liberation Army units had crossed from Syria to take part in the civil war. A rightwing spokesperson confirmed claims by Pales- tinian sources that Dam- our, 12 miles south of Bei- rut, had fallen after being besieged for several days. HE SAID leftwing forces were burning the town house by house, and that 6,000 people, in- cluding 1,000 children, had fled to the nearby village of Saadi- yat which was itself being heav- ily bombarded. The spokesman said there was no word of the fate of 1,000 other people who lived in Dam- our. The capture of Damour is the biggest success in the civil war for Lebanese leftists and their Palestinian commando allies. It came as rightist Phalangists used bulldozers to level the Moslem district of Quajantina in Beirut, leaving thousands of Moslems homeless and with lit- tle food or clothing. A POLICE spokesman said communications were out with much of the country but that Moslem forces appeared to have added most of northern and eastern Lebanon to ' the southern area they already con- trolled. The "last messages received reported scores of tiny Chris- tian villages besieged by Mos- lem tribal warriors in the north and east," he said. "Hundreds of Christian families there have already fled to neighboring Sy- ria." Estimates at the day's death toll varied from 160 to more than 200. That raises the toll since Jan. 1 to more than 2,050, in addition to the estimated 8,000 killed last year. INTERIOR Minister Camille Chamoun, 76-year-old leader of one of the private Christian groups fighting Moslems and Palestinians, called for foreign intervention in the crisis after he was evacuated by helicopter from his besieged seaside man- sion south of Beirut. Chamoun, who as president in 1958 called in U. S. Marines to end another civil situation, charged Monday night that up to 15,000 Syrian army troops had crossed into Lebanon. The Syrian government and Pales- tine guerrilla leaders denied it, and U. S. State Department and Israeli military officials discounted Chamoun's charge. Large number of Palestinian guerrillas have been involved in the war for months, but only in recent days have there been reports of organized army units arriving. ISRAEL military sources said the Palestinian army could tip the balance to the Moslems in the battle for Beirut. They es- timated that Moslem and Chris- tian forces were otherwise about evenly divided with some 20,000 fighters each. Palestinian sources said that Israel was massing troops along Lebanon's southern border,, but Lebanese authorities denied it. Israeli Defense Minister Shi-' mon Peres toured the border and said the presence of large numbers of Palestinian guer- rillas in the neighboring coun- try had "direct implications on Israel's security." Ford social welfare plan draws support Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Dog Dad Afternoon Irish Setter Isolde's two week old puppies snug gle up to their warm mother. One pup may hit the big time as a heroin sniffer for the city police department. (CA ON CA MP US: WASHINGTON 4P)-President Ford had some success yester- day in winning support from governors and mayors for his block grant approach to social welfare programs, but did not win universal backing for the $394.2 billion budget he will send to Congress today, Spokespersons for a bipartisan delegation of seven governors and six mayors told reporters after meeting and lunching with Ford that they generally ap- plauded the idea of providing block grants rather than cate- gorical grants. IN MONDAY'S State cf the Union address Ford proposed See FORD, Page 2 The CIA yesterday confirmed reports that it is currently conducting job interviews on campus. Details of the interviews have not been released. The University's Career Planning and Place- ment Office said yesterday it had no knowledge of any CIA recruiting. The office usually coor- dinates the efforts of organizations seeking to recruit students. THE HUSH-HUSH atmosphere surrounding the interviews is unusual for the intelligence agency, hushed whose recruiting efforts are frequently well-pub- licized. However, the interviews scheduled last No- vember were postponed for undisclosed reasons. The postponement followed a campus protest of the CIA recruitment on campus. It is not known whether the cancellation was caused by the pro- test. It was not known how many students applied for interviews, but it was reported that the re- cruiter's interview schedule was full., Kissinger warns Soviets against continued involvement in Angola Budget scoop: But mum 's the word WASHINGTON (P)-Shhh! This story is being leaked to you. President Ford and most of his Cabinet met for 12 hours yesterday with a couple of hundred reporters to explain the administration's fiscal 1977 budget. The President himself conducted the press conference. It was a show and tell session for reporters who were under instruction not to tell for 24 hours. PRESS SECRETARY Ron Nessen warned that anything said was under the same restriction as information about the budget. If asked, you are not reading this until 10 a.m. today. The information inside the budget, its phone-book-size appendix, its statistical analyses and a book that focuses on 70 issues, has been available to a chosen few in Washington since Monday. THE LUCKY ones are hundreds of reporters, 535 con- gresspersons and their staffs, every government agency and department in town. Each copy bears a notice about the embargo for public release. Helping keep the secret secret a little while longer were a thousand or more persons who managed to sit in on the presidential briefing in the State Department's auditorium. Tr ernl++holr-, r -o -n- ; a s nfarnia n By Al and Reuter MOSCOW-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger arrived here yesterday in search of a breakthrough on arms talks, but warned that the United States cannot accept continuing Soviet involve- ment in Angola. "I've come here for serious talks," Kissinger said at Vnukoyo Airport, where he was greeted by Soviet Minister Andrei Gromyko and Soviet Ambassador to the U.S. Anatoly Dobrynin. KISSINGER,who was scheduled to meet Soviet Communist Party Leader Leonid Brezhnev for a first round of negotiations today told reporters during a brief stop in Copenhagen that the THE JOHANNESBURG Star of South Africa reported that Jonas Sivimbi, leader of Angola's UNITA forces, met with leaders of neighboring Zambia to discuss a peace settlement for the war- torn country. The newspaper quoted informed sources as saying 23 moderate black African states, seeking an end to the year-long Angolan conflict, have agreed the Communist-backed Popular Movement (MPLA) should take the leading role in a MPLA-UNITA coalition government. A senior official aboard Kissinger's Moscow-bound plane said continued Soviet spnnort of som e8. 00Cuhan troops in Angola