-Page -Two THE MIGHIGAN DAILY Thur°sdoy, January 22,.1976' Page Two THE'MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, January 22, 1 976~ .oPREPAREFOR: ****************** ,f** ECFMG-FLEX NAT'L MED.& DENT. B'DS! FLEXIBLE PROGRAM and HOURS S" ANN ARBOR, MI. 48103 1945 PAUL.INE, SUITE A ., " E'er NL C><662-3149 " L14Southfield-354-0085 . e TEST PREPARATION SP.CIALISTS SING .1936 *10,0 *000 90 BANC(HESIN MAJOR O.S. (ITIES 0* 9099 0* iss. caucuses to Palestinians, Moslems control test Carter's strength mo JACKSON, Miss. (") - Mis- also has been campaigning for Leb anon* V t RSke. ssippi Democrats will hold a share of the Mississippi vote, Si precinct caucuses Saturday, launching their delegate - selec- tion process and testing the Deep South strength of Geor- gia's Jimmy Carter against Alabama Gov. George Wallace. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of Texas ~IIE~iUIt tlUEUII 111 FlUrnt ENJOY T HE FINEST Cl IINESE FOOD WEST OF NEW YORK AND EAST OF SAN FRANCISCO IN A Q111ET ELEGANT SETTING LUNCH @ DINNER SNACKS . COCKTAILS 'eo 1111111111111111 Illlllli p l iiu iu uiu 1 6161a '' IIIIIIViiiaim ' IIIUII iiuu hoping for a one-third share that would establish him as a formidable Wallace rival. For- mer Sen. Fred Harris of Okla- homa and Sargent Shriver, the 1972 vice-presidential nominee, also have been actively seeking support. THE WHOLE situation is clouded by the long intra-party dispute between rival factions in the Mississippi party, a leg- acy of civil rights controversies of a dozen years ago. Newly in- augurated Gov. Cliff Finch hopes the caucuses will help bring together the party's two feuding factions and unite the state's Democrats so as to en- hance their influence - and his own -- in national party affairs. The precinct caucuses, which will be held at 2,133 voting places, will be the first step. in selecting the state's delegates to the Democratic national con- vention. Mississippi will have only 24 of the 3,008 Democratic national convention delegates, but the Sfive candidates for the nomi- nation who have campaigned hard here say success in Mis- sissippi's caucuses, which are vreceded only by Iowa's, would boost their prospects in other, .larger states. BEIRUT, Lebanon ()-Pales- tinian guerrillas and Moslem private armies took over most of Lebanon yesterday and Egypt's official Middle East News Agency said Lebanese Christian leaders accepted a Syrian proposal for a cease-fire. A spokesperson for the right- wing Christian Phalange militia denied that his side had accept- ed the Syrian peace plan. THE NEWS agency reported Moslem and Christian combat- ants were expected to sign the cease-fire agreement today, with the terms calling for an equal share in Lebanon's government for they Moslems. The Phalange spokesperson said the Christians and Syrian mediators would meet this morn- ing but any predictions about acceptance or rejection of the terms were premature. There was no confirmation of the cease-fire from Damascus. THE Egyptian agency said Lebanon's Christian president, SuleimanFranjieb, accepted the Syrian cease-fire proposals after he was given authority by other Christian parties to talk with Svrian Foreign Minister Abdul HAlim Khaddam. Thie aL encv said Tnterinr Min- sources said the Palestinian in- cursion into Lebanon was in- tended to back Moslem demands for an equal share of political power andtfor economic develop- ment in poor Moslem areas. THE NO. 2 man in the Popu- lar Front for the Liberation of{ Palestine, Abu Leila, said that Lebanese Moslems would accept. no cease-fire without first ob- taining their political goals. Lebanese Christians now have, the edge in political power and control most of the economic wealth. King Hussein of Jordan met in, Damascus with Syrian President Hafez Assad, apparently in sup- port of the Syrian mediation. WESTERN Beirut was shaken explosions and gunfire for near- ly two hours before midnight. A security force spokesman said the noise was from a fierce battle in which leftist gunmenIlars from Syria. overran the barracks of the ' Both American and Israeli of- select anti-riot internal socurty ficials discounted' the claims of squad. a massive new influx of Palestin- The attackers seized lai ge !ians into Lebanon from Syria. quantities of weapons, ammuni- tion and other military stores' ISRAEL, though saying it had worth more than $1 million, the no indication that Syrian troops spokesperson said. were involved in the fighting, Lebanese state television said sent a message to Damascus yesterday the nation was in "a warning against such interven- state of total armed anarchy," tion, diplomatic circles in Tel with fierce fighting "from one Aviv disclosed. end of the country to the other." A Syrian mediation team led Ailh EARLIER, the force cf Leb- anese Moslems and Palestinians --some of whom crossed the bor- der from Syria to join the fight -pushed Christians into a moun- tainous one-fourth of Lebanon along the coast north of Beirut and claimed they were irch- ing on Beirut. The Lebanese army said the force, included 3,500 to 1.000 Palestine Liberation Army regu- by Khaddam met yesterday with Franjieb and Moslem leaders, including Rashid Karami, who resigned Sunday leaving Leb- anon without a government. The Syrians stayed overnight in Beirut for today's meeting, a presidential palace spokesperson said. Former ;third basemen Ken Boyer will manage Tulsa in the American Assn. next season. U.S., Soviets move toward agreement on nuclear arms .. I 'S 1 ^ c i a a r ' w" Il 111. uV11~y cil 1it~l~jrLvlll- (Continued from Page!1) ister Camille Chamoun, a power- that while the Soviets had re- Pil leader of one of the Chris- a hl heSveshdpr- ft leade ofaone of i the risented some positive, additional tion factions, was against the ideas, a breakthrough could not{ agreement. Earlier in the week, be taken for granted. Chamoun accused Syria of send- SOVIET Foreign Minister An- ing its own troops into Lebanon. drei Gromyko underscored in a In D a m a s c u s, informed luncheon speech, his country's f ==>c-=>c<>a< = ,-=> "very strong desire to see this = accord negotiated, prepared and UTHURSDAY, FRIDAY sinned. "I would like to take this op- AND SATURDAY portunity to re-emphasize that our state and the Soviet leader- NIGHTS: -ship will do all in their power to ensure that all these accords are implemented in full and in I A *j' osall their parts. ^| dl5 We know at times that one agreement or another has be- come the target of criticism. at te 1) . . The Soviet Union believes *-at the at the leadership of both the Ugnited States and the Soviet Union should remain strong- w illed and display their determ- ination to give no one the chance to shake or topple these agreements." WITHOUT giving specifics, U.S. officials said the bartering and movement toward a com.. Promise centered on -the Soviet MONDAY NIGHT: A;Backfire bomber and the Amer- Iden Cruise missile, the two Sorincinal hangups since Presi- dent Ford and Brezhnev agreed c Vr omin November 1974 that each ncoutry should be limited to 2,400 long-range bombers and amissiles. TUESDAY NIGHT: Last week Kissinger conveyed to Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin the basic outline of a comparison. The swing-winged, medium-range Backfires would be exempt, provided they were c0Av positioned beyond easy striking 314 S. FOURTH AVE" y THURS., JAN. 22 [Across from the new BLUE CARPT LOUNGE- Federal Bldg.]Alice Lloyd OBdSPEAKER: 9- <