AID TO VIETNAM See Editorial Page jol: *fr A AdW :43 latt HEAT WAVE High-27 Low-20 See Today for Details Vol. LXXXVI, No. 106 Latest Deadline in the State Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, February 3, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages plus Supplement SUCCESSOR IN DOUBT iXUSEE WIS HPPDE s jVyy Under new management The old gives way to the new starting with today's issue of The Daily. Our editorial staff has elected Rob Meachum and Bill Turque Co-Editors- in-Chief for the coming year. Rounding out the senior staff will be Managing Editor Jeff Ris- tine, Executive Editor Tim Schick, and Editorial Director Stephen Hersh. The old guard won't be fading away entirely, however, as outgoing Man- aging Editor Jeff Sorensen and Co-Editor-in-Chief Cheryl Pilate move over to helm the Arts and Entertainment Page and the Sunday Magazine respectively. We wish them all the best of luck. They'll need it. 0 Bomb scare Residents of Markley were jolted from the calm of a lazy Sunday afternoon when city police re- ceived a call announcing the existence of a bomb somewhere in the dorm. Although it was a false alarm, evacuating residents were seen fleeing with their most prized possessions. One student left his $3000 stereo system in his room but took along his honors thesis. Must be a matter of priorities, we guess. " Art fair It may seem a bit premature, but if you are in- terested in applying for space at next summer's art fair, send your name and address to: Ann Ar- bor Street Art Fair, Inc. P. 0. Box 1352, Ann Ar- bor, MI. 48106. Each applicant must return three to five slides of the art medium to be displayed with their application. e Happeinigs.. . .. .begin today at high noon with a brown bag lunch at the Michigan Undergraduate Economics Assoc. in Rm. 102 of the Econ. Bldg.. . . Psycholo- gy and Social Work Prof. Jesse Gordon will speak at the Ann Arbor Public Library at 12:00 on "The Impact of Local Government Employment Pro- grams . . ." Dr. Marsha Clinkscales will discuss her study on differences in non-verbal behavior between Blacks and Whites at the Center for Con- tinuing Education of Women, 328 Thompson St. at 12:00 . . . Muhammad's Temple of Islam presents Sister's Co-op, from 2 until 5 p.m. at 331 Thomp- son St. . . . A meeting to discuss issues surround- ing the housing lottery, off-campus housing, and tenants rights will be held in Markley's main lob- by, at 7:30 . . . Future Worlds will present clinical psychologist Rollo May at 3 p.m. in Hill Aud.. . Duane Niatum will read his poetry at 4:10 in the Pendleton Arts Center on the second floor of the Union . . . the Undergraduate Political Science Association will hold a mass meeting tonight at 7:30 in 6602 Haven Hall . . . Residential College Lecture series presents Sabra Slaughter, com- munity psychologist, sneaking on "Recantiring Afro-American History in the US: An Oral History Approach, at 7 n.m. in East Quad's Greene Loine m.t.The Coalitiontto stonSenate Bill One will meet at7:30 p.m. at 332 S. Stte. The Shadow knows It was a miracle Punxsutawney Phil didn't freeze to death yesterday. Phil, the groundhog who made the small Pennsylvania town whose name he bears famous, emerged from his electrically heated burrow and saw his shadow-assuring us of winter for six more weeks. As if we needed him to tell us. 0 Revolutionary relief Amid 'all the Bicentennial hoopla, there is one vital question that has yet to be answered: Will there be enough toilets in Philadelphia this sum- mer? "We'll have enough to meet the crowds," says William Rafsky, head of Philadelphia '76, the organization planning the city's celebration. A check revealed that the city had only 380 public toilets in its historic area, not enough to handle the expected 10 to 20 million visitors. So, last week, Philadelphia '76 announced it would be taking bids for 3 trailer facilities containing 20 toilets each. Consideringrthe popnlarity of the song "Phil- adelnhia Freedom," maybe they could call the toilets Elton Johns. On the inside ... The editorial rage feavures gay activist Dan Tsang writing about the murder of gays in Ger- many during World War Two . . . and on the sports page, Kathy TIennighan recaps last night's basketball action against Wisconsin. 0 On the outside... Looks like winter will continue full force for at least the rest of the week. A storm moving south- Moynihan resigns U.N. post By AP and Reuter UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-Daniel Moyni- han, America's outspoken Ambassador to the United Nations yesterday submitted his resignation to President Ford so that he can return to Harvard University. He submitted his resignation only 6% months after he presented his credentials. In that short time, he got more attention and created more controversy than had many of his predecessors in two or three years. HE TALKED back to critics of the United States with scorn or wit that often outraged Third World diplomats, dismayed some Western Euro- peans and delighted a large section of the American public. Nudged by the feeling that he was not getting enough support from Washington, he twice took v Y initiatives that won him endorsements from Pres- ident Ford and Secretary of State Henry Kis- singer. In November, he withdrew a threat to resign and last week he sent a controversial cablegram to Kissinger and all U.S. embassies claiming that conservative diplomats in the State Depart- ment opposed his campaign to crack the anti- American bloc at the United Nations. THE AMBASSADOR, who was on leave from Harvard, said in his letter of resignation to President Ford that "it is time to return to teaching." In a letter of reply, Ford accepted Moynihan's resignation "with the deepest regret and re- luctance," declaring that the ambassador had "asserted our position forcefully, cogently and honestly" at the United Nations. Moynihan, 49, and standing 6 feet 5 inches, is a broad-shouldered diplomat with a ruddy, baby face and a floppy shock of white hair. HE WAS BORN in Tulsa, Okla., but moved to se New York City with his parents when he was 6 years old. When his father walked out on the I family in 1938, young Moynihan peddled news- papers, shined shoes and later tended bar in his mother's saloon on 42nd Street at Times Square. A liberal intellectual who earned his Ph.D. at Tufts University, Moynihan has been involved in AP Photo his share of controversies through the years, which have seen him serve in various posts under Presidents Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon. Ringling HE SERVED President Nixon as a presidential Jackson- counselor and then, in 1972, as Ambassador to India. While working as a presidential counselor he wrote a memo that the race problem in the United States could benefit from a period of "benign neglect." In 1965, he was embroiled in controversy when, working in the Labor Department in the Johnson administration, he was the chief architect of a report entitled "The Negro Family, the Case for National Action." a go-ahead, See MOYNIHAN, Page 8 Moynihan PLO will be 4" recognized b U.S.-Sadat CAIRO (Reuter)-President Anwar Sadat said in an interview yesterday that he had tacit agree- ment from the United States to recognize the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). In an interview with the Lebanese weekly magazine Al-Hawadess, published by the Cairo daily newspaper Al-Ahram, President Sadat said he had "more than a pledge from the United States to recognize the Palestine Liberation Organization, but I am not in a position to reveal it." THE EGYPTIAN President said the Syrians fomented the recent civil war in Lebanon by supplying arms to the combatants, though the Lebanese were primarily to blame because their leaders were too busy looking after their personal interests. He supported Syrian mediation to end the wAr but the Syrians subjugated the Palestinians. He said a Palestine delegation had told him recently Palestinians "are geographically committed to the Syrians while politically committed to the Egyptians." See SADAT, Page 8 Catnapped Two rare Siberian tiger cubs were stolen last Saturday night from their cage at the Brothers circus. They came home to mother yesterday after being recovered from a ville, Florida home. Two missing circus employes are suspected of robbing the cradle DELA Y URGED: DNA study qui By JEFF RISTINE experimentsi said the likel Important questions concerning the hazards of altered bacte genetic transplants and who should have a voice in judging the acceptability of the risks must DNA is the be answered before the controversial genetic the basic unit experiments continue, two University professors ant experime urged yesterday. from their bat Humanities Prof. Susan Wright and Prof. Don- that genes fr ald Michael from the Institute for Social Re- be attached. search raised the questions at the first of three The new DN scheduled campus programs at Rackham on other bacteriu DNA recombinant research. tics of that b "WVHILE many of the claimed benefits are dubious," Wright charged, "the biological haz- MUCH CON ards associated with recombinant techniques are stems from t relatively clear." ant DNA ex( One of the hazards, she said, is a possibility terium which that harmful mutant bacteria could escape from cess of tryin the laboratory and contaminate humans on the She urged outside. The steps planned to avoid such an ac- proach" to D cident are incomplete and may not be stringent decision - mak eniough, she added. charged toc But Microbiology Professor David Jackson, scientific fie who plans to continue with the DNA recombinant Students march on Diagtin CIA protest es ion if the University gives lihood of infection from genetically ria "is exceedingly low." double-coiled molecules which form ts of life-genes. In DNA recombin- nts, tiny DNA rings are separated acteria and split open chemically so om a totally different species can NA ring can then be placed into an- um, and the hereditary characteris- acterium will change and replicate. ,NCERN, from Wright and others, he fact that the host of recombin- periments is usually E coli, a bac- thrives in human intestines. g to improve it." "a slower and more cautious ap- NA recombinant experiments, with king about the acceptability of risks committees of persons from non- Ids. See 'U', Page 8 Lebanese Christian militia stocks new arms for war By The Associated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon-The lead- er of Lebanon'stmain Christian militia said yesterday he is im- porting new arms because an- other round of civil war is in- evitable unless radical Pales- tinians and Lebanese are "'beat- en down." "Now and tomorrow and the day after tomorrow, as long as we are obliged to defend our- selves, we will buy arms for ourselves," P h a 1 a n g e party chieftain Pierre Gemayel said in an interview with the Asso- ciated Press. "WE WOULD be imbeciles if we did the opposite." Gemayel's party fields the largest Christian militia fight- ing leftist forces backed by Palestinian guerrillas. The most influential Lebanese M o s 1 e m leftist leader, Kamal Junblatt, said in an interview with the AP on Sunday that he, too, is importing fresh arms, and he predicted new fighting by spring. Their statements fit in with actions during previous cease- By PHIL FOLEY About 75 p e o p l e marched from the Diag to the Student Acti-ities Building (SAB) yes- terday to protest CIA and Na- tional Security Agency (NSA) recruiting on campus. Career Planning and Place- ment Assistant Director Harold Fowler met the protestors in the thin floor SAB offices. When the group asked him if there were CIA renresentatives on he replied, "They don't work through this office. They ha-e their own system of re- ruitig." HE DDED that the NSA has thority to ban CIA recruiters from campus. He suggested the group should see them. A WOMAN demonstrator ask- ed, "Maybe the President should come to us. Why do we always have to go to him?" Fowler agreed to try to persuade John- son to come to the SAB. When he returned, he said Johnson was in conference. When a protestor called John- son's office, he was told John- son was not in conference, not in his office and it was none of the protestor's business where Johnson could be found. The group decided to demon- Rabin wb~> 4' ..foiled by r blizzard By LOIS JOSIMOVICH Special To The Daily DETROIT - Elderly women in outrageous fur coats and sun- glasses, occasionally calling out "Shalom!" waddled majestically down the corridors in the wake of flocks of schoolboys wearing skullcaps and awed expressions. Over 30 police officers sat hunched around a table behind a half-closed door. Outside the room, waitresses in blue uni- forms and white aprons saun- fires when both sides rearmed. GEMAYEL praised Syrian at- tempts to mediate in the con- flict, but he said they were "use- less" unless the government re- gains enough power to crush the far left by force. The 70 - year - old Phalangist leader, his graying hair slicked back 1920's style, spoke in his office in "Phalange House" just off Beirut's battle-scarred Mar- tyrs Square. Bullet holes were visible in the windows and fresh concert covered a foot-wide gap left by an artillery shell that pierced the wall. "It is necessary - first, first, first-that the state regain con- trol of security and take back its sovereignty," he said. "As long as there is no authority, I don't know how this country is going to make it. "JUNBLATT and those who are behind Junblatt destroyed this country morally, and they destroyed it physically by break- ing its spine," Gemayel said. "Well, now the terrain is open to them. "We are perhaps at the sixth round now. They have seen we aren't knocked out yet. They think there hasn't been enough misfortune, that there hasn't been enough destruction. They find the country still on its feet, they are still trying to break it." Gemayel emphasized that 95 Hall, and the individual in ques- per cent of Lebanon's Chris- tians, Moslems and Palestinians have had enough of the combat