DISMANTLE CIA See Editorial Page 11 ii"F :4a it PIERCING High-30 Low-20 See Today for Details Latest Deadline in the State (of. LXXXVI, No. 101 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, January 28, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages -- - - - - J - Fizzle About 20 people rallied on the diag yesterday at noon, protesting the covert presence of CIA re- cruiters on campus. The demonstration was spon- sored by the Revolutionary Student's Brigade (RSB). Don Alexander, RSB member and a speak- er atatherally ,attributed thessparse turnout to the fact that "not too many students are being screwed by the system now. They haven't found out that the system is rotten." Alexander added that the right of the American people to be free outweighs the right of an individual to join the CIA, "which was designed solely for the purpose of denying people their rights." 0 Happenings ... ... are abundant. The Ann Arbor Tenants Union is meeting tonight at 7 p.m. on the 4th floor of the Union, and anybody is welcome . . . The Ann Arbor Weekly People Club will begin its weekly discussion meetings at 7:30 this evening in Rm. 3209 of the Union . . . U-M Flyres are holding a membership meeting at 7:30 in the Union Assem- bly Hall . . . The RC Lecture Series this evening will feature English Prof. Bert Hornback speak- ing on "The Function of the Imagination" at 7 p.m. in East Quad's Greene Lounge . . . There's a Women's Commission meeting at 12:00 in 2724 Fur- stenburg Hall on the subject of security . Music lovers can listen to a piano concert by Max Lifchitz at 8 p.m. in the School of Music's Recital Hall on North Campus . . . There is also a special orientation to the Black Christian Nationalist Church today, for further information, stop by the Trotter House on Washtenaw Ave. near South University. Say it ain't so Outgoing CIA Director William Colby has, for what it is worth, denied that his agency had manipulated Reuters new stories, as was alleged in a draft report of the House Intelligence Com- mittee. Reuters is a British-based news agency used by many U.S. papers, including The Daily. "We have no manipulation and no management of Reuters news," Colby said yesterday. The com- mittee report said CIA had acknowledged planting news articles in foreign newspapers and with news agencies. Colby said this was an example of the committee taking "a side reference and making a major statement of it. Colby called it "a purely hypothetical example put when we were discuss- ing the difference between American news media and foreign news media, and someone else used the example of Reuters." 0 Oh Henry Secretary of State Henry Kissinger once de- scribed Egyptian President Anwar Sadat as "a fool, a clown, and a buffoon," according to a still unpublished book by an Israeli journalist. A story in yesterday's Chicago Sun-Times said it had ob- tained portions .of the book entitled, "From Con- frontation to Disengagement," by Matti Golan, a diplomatic reporter for the Israeli newspaper Haaretz. The Sun-Times says the book was re- portedly repressed on direct orders from Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, but that a rewrit- ten version has since been cleared with Israeli censors. Kissinger is quoted as telling former Is- raeli Prime Minister Golda Meir: "Who is Sadat? We all thought he was a fool, a clown. A buffoon who goes to the stage every other day to declare war." Wet and ild A British electronics firm hopes it can lure the Loch Ness monster into view with an extreme- ly seductive sonar signal. Videomaster Ltd. has been testing a new sonar device in the Scottish lake since last August, and a spokesman said the scanning beams have produced readings that may or may not. be. those of the legendary monster. "This signal may act as a sexual stimulant," said test director Bryan King. "We beamed Beet- hoven's Fifth into a river and it brought some small fish to the surface," he explained. But whe- ther the monster gets off on string quartets or rock 'n' roll will not he known for some time, since the sound used at first would be very high fre- quencv, like a dog whistle. Sir Peter Scott, director of the Loch Ness investigation bureau, doesn't like any of it. "Or ingen'itv should be good enough to find ot i" it is there without interfering with the monster," he said. 011 e If$1(i(.. De of Crow NO W By ANNEMARIE SCHIAVI Karen De Crow, president of the National Organization for Women, defended her organization's deepening involvement in the national and local political arenas. "They call it radical, but political action is one of the best ways of working within the system," De Crow told a crowd of over 500 at Hill Aud. yesterday. HER SPEECH was the first in the series of Future Worlds lectures this term. De Crow, a lawyer and author of two books on feminism, assumed the NOW presidency in 1974. Under her leadership, the once-moderate feminist organiza- tion has taken an active role in lobbying for such issues as gay rights, guaranteed employment, abortion and the equal rights amendment. "TARGETING your political foes is about the scariest thing you can do to them," asserted De Crow. She noted NOW's grow- ing "clout" among political candidates as a result of its new thrust. "Almost all of the presidential hopefuls have approached me -they want NOW to endorse them, they want to put our names efends role 12 politics on their letterheads," she said. "Only four years ago at the Miami convention they ((the can- diates) didn't even know who we were," she added. Although some contend that NOW's outspoken political posi- tions have divided and depleted the membership, De Crow dis- agrees. "MY FEELING is that there is no split in NOW, we have more members than ever. But if you have 70,000 members who are by definition feisty, then they aren't all going to agree," she said. NOW is attempting to broaden its base of support beyond middle class, often politically conservative, white women, assert- ed De Crow. "There is no conflict of interest between people who are dis- criminated against racially and those who experience sex dis- crimination," she claimed. "Feminists and minorities must band together against the white male establishment which is throwing only a few crumbs (jobs) in our direction." BUT DE CROW welcomed the non-traditional males "who want to become feminists" into NOW. "Male and female separatism is not desirable, I consider such things as all women banks or law firms part of a transi- See DE CROW, Page 2 Doily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER De Crow House votes aidi to cut off to Angola factions WASHINGTON tAf) - The House voted overwhelming- ly yesterday to halt further U.S. aid to two Western- backed factions fighting in Angola, and a White House spokesman said the action "can only result in serious harm to the interests of the United States." Prior to the 323-99 vote, President Ford had sent a letter to House Speaker Carl Albert asking that the aid not be cut off. Albert spoke forcefully on the floor in favor of the cut off. AFTER THE v o t e, White House Press Secretary Ron Nes- sen said in a statement which he reported had been approved by the President: "The Congress has stated to the world that it will ignore a clear cut Soviet - Cuban ex- pansion by brute military force into areas thousands of miles from either country." Nessen said Ford regrets the vote which he said prohibits the use of funds in the defense ap- propriations bill to assist the people of Angola in resisting Soviet - Cuban intervention in their country. THE SENATE earlier ap- proved the prohibition that came in the form of an amend- ment to a $112.3 billion defense appropriation bill. Nessen said the President is considering two options to try to revive aid for the Angolan factions. These are to veto the bill in an effort to force Con- gress to reconsider its decision, or to send up separate legisla- tion cutting the Angola issue away from the defense appro- priations bill, which "may be with different language that will give the Congress more flexi- bility." In a letter to House Speaker Carl Albert, delivered moments before the House vote on a bill to end future aid, the President said that "failure of the United States to take a stand will in- evitably lead our friends and supporters to our resolve" conflicts. conclusions about over international ALBERT, however, said the Uiited States was not prepared to match the huge Soviet and Cuban support for its Angolan faction and Congress should thereforeacut-off U.S. involve- ment. "This is a typical Ford opera- tion: Wave your hand, make a gesture and that's the end of it," Albert told reporters. "One thing about foreign aid, military aid or war itself: you either dotenough or you're bet- ter off not doing anything," Al- bert said. THE ANGOLA aid cut-off was attached to a $112.3 billion 5- m o n t h defense appropriation bill. The White House has given no indication whether F o r d might veto the bill to try to force Congress to reconsider. The Senate earlier voted 54 to 22 to prohibit further aid. The cut-off applies only to some $28 million earmarked in the bill for Angola but congressional staff experts said the effect would be to cut-off all U.S. aid. Meanwhile, western-supported troops w e r e reported under heavy attack by Soviet-backed forces in their central Angolan stronghold yesterday. They were also reported to be clashing among themselves. See HOUSE, Page 2 Senate confirms Republican Bush as new CIA head AP Photo Which way's home? A boy and his dog explore a tangle of discarde l signs near the city maintenance yard in King- man, Arizona. The signs were tossed in a heap near the yard in 1972 when the city purchased new signs. IIEW FUNDING BILL: House o-ver-ridsveto WASHINGTON U/P) - The House voted 310 to 113 yester- day to override president Ford's veto of a $45 billion bill to fund labor, health, and welfare pro- grams, giving Democrats an early victory in their election- year drive against Ford's econ- omy proposals. The override issue now shifts to the Senate, which tentatively plans to vote today. Democrats in that chamber were optimis- tic. FORD vetoed the bill Dec. 19 because it was nearly $1 billion above his budget recommenda- tions. He called it "a classic example of . . . unchecked spending."~ The Grote came only six days after the President submitted his budget of the next fiscal year, urging Congress to hold to a tight $394.2 billion spending ceiling. Republicans nleaded for the veto to he sustained as an indi- c-tion of Congress' intention to show restraint on the new bud- Democratic leaders only hours before the vote were tell- ing reporters they had only a fighting chance to override. But when the showdown came, 49 Republicans joined 261 Demo- crats to provide a margin 28 above the two-thirds needed to override. Voting to sustain the veto were 92 Republicans and 21 Democrats. BOTH sides agreed that this veto would be one of the most difficult for Republicans to sus- tain. The bill funds a variety of politically appealing programs, including maternal and child health care, research on sever- al major diseases, nutrition pro- grams for the aged, vocational rehabilitation and the commun- ity services undertakings that are the remnants of President Lyndon Johnson's War on Pov- erty. In a last minute effort to hold Republican and conservative DMemocratic votes, Michel offer- ed a compromise that would See HOUSE, Page 8 WASHINGTON (P)-The Sen- ate, ignoring the arguments of liberal Democrats, confirmed former Republican party Chair- man George Bush as the fourth man in three years to head the CIA. Bush, selected by President Ford to succeed career intelli- gence officer William Colby, was confirmed yesterday by a 64-27 vote. Only one Republican, Sen. Jesse Helms of North Caro- lina, voted against him. THE SIX Democratic mem- bers of the Senate intelligence committee, which has spent al- most a year investigating the CIA,all opposed Bush. Sen. Lo- well Weicker (R-Conn.) said he could not vote to confirm a man of Bush's political past to head such a sensitive agency, and voted present. Senate intelligence chairman Frank Church (D-Idaho), Bush's most vocal opponent, argued that "the strongly partisan, po- litical background of George See SENATE, Page 8 BUSH: The Senate confirmed him as the new head of the CIA despite objections from liberals that his "strongly partisan" background makes him unqualified for the post. The Editorial Page feattires a Pacific Service interview with Eldridfe Cleaver . the Sports Page, columnnist Jeff Schiller the supremacy of Big Ten basketball. News . on extols Private eye LOS ANGELES 0P -- The businessman on the phone has a multimillion dollar problem. Foreign terrorists have kidnaped one of his top executives and are demanding a huge sum for his release. It may sound like a scene from a movie, but it's tracks kidnaped execs man who founded the company 22 years ago, claims a 100 per cent batting average in kidnaping cases. "The most important element is the safe return of the victim," said Lynch. "That's what they're paying me for." of the FBI. In the case of a foreign kidnaping, Lynch's first move is to send a man to the scene. "HE'S THE one who evaluates the field situation and then gets back to us on what he needs in the 0 i I I