SUNDAY MAGAZINE See Inside Y , 'i t i :43 ii (RYOGENIC High-20 Low-7 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State 1- Vol. LXXXVI; No. 93 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 18, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages ROAD BLOCKADES LIFTED if TA SEE t&.HAPPN CALLwDNLIy Cease-fire called 10 Lebanon Happenings.-- . . . begin at 5 p.m. today with the third pro- gram of the Eva Jessye Music Series in the Cady Music Rm., Stearns Bldg. The free program cele- brates Dr. Eva Jessye's birthday and is entitled "An Ethnic Festival" . . . at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. tonight and tomorrow everyone's favorite come- dians Procter and Bergman -will appear at the Matrix . . . at 8 p.m. there will be films on Cuba and Chilean peasants in the East Quad Aud . . . at noon Monday Dorothy Thompson speaks on "Women and Chartism" in 1402 Mahon Hall . . . novelist John Hawkes reads from his works at the Hopwood Underclass Writing Awards ceremony at 4 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall . . . at 7:30 p.m. there will be a Revolutionary Student Bri- gade-sponsored memorial for Chou En-Lai at the International Center, next to the Union . . . and the A-Squares Dance club will teach beginners from 8-9:30 p.m. Halts heaviest strife in 9.m0o tli civil war By AP and Reuter BEIRUT-After 11 days of bloody fighting that cost hundreds of lives, the guns of Lebanon's nine-month-old civil war fell silent as a ceasefire took hold at ,7 p.m. (EST) yesterday. Premier Rashid Karami said on Beirut radio that the truce calls for blockades. to be lifted around two Pales- tinian refugee camps and four predominantly Christian towns. THERE ARE at least 25,000 Christians besieged in the seaside towns in southern Lebanon, including Interior Minister Camille Chamoun. Witnesses said "corpses are strewn all over the place." Karami, a Moslem, said the government will guarantee that all roads will remain open, and that all sides had agreed to lift their blockades. These include the Palestinian camps of Tel Zaater and Jier Basha in Beirut's suburbs that have been encircled by Christians Who's kinky? Judith Campbell Exner, the dark-haired woman with the list of famous boyfriends, which includes former Mafia kings and former president John Kennedy, will apparently get down to intimate ba- sics in her proposed book. In an outline of the work, which focuses on her relationship with Kennedy, she claims that singer Frank Sinatra's sexual tastes "ran into areas which might be termed kinky." Sinatra had only a brief reply: "Hell bath no fury like a hustler with a literary agent." 0 T V diplomas Remember when you -were in high school and "heavy" books like the "Scarlet Letter," "Moby Dick," and "The Great Gatsby' were required reading? Well, it ain't as tough as it used to be. The Los Angeles Board of Education has ruled that beginning with the class of 1979, no high school diplomas for those who can't read at least well enough to understand TV Guide, labels, signs, and government forms like social security and welfare applications. That level of literacy is what the~ board described as "survival reading ability." The board felt it was unfair to the current crop of senior high school students to impose this shock- ing new graduation requirement on them, so the rule will not apply for three years. The test will be changed each year to prevent students who cannot read from passing by memorization after taking is so many times. Can you picture the LA seniors studying three years from now? Thev'll sit down in front of the tube with a stack of TV guides, and a sixpack with plenty of labels and cram. That's survival? Those were the days The times they are a changing. And it's sad to watch them change, sometimes. Take,. for exam- ple, Friday's watered-down protest against the government. Across the parking lot from the Pen- tagon's river entrance, a few youths dug a mock grave while a few others sang "Tell Don Rums- feld . . . we shall not be moved." Seventeen mem- bers of the group were arrested. They had to come to ask White House Chief of Staff Rumsfeld to open a debate on national nuclear policy. In 1967 there were over 50,000 protesters demanding an end to the Vietnam war. Over 150 were ar- rested; officials had to call up 11,000 troops-al- though only about 2,500 were used - at a cost of over $1 million. On Friday it took only a few cons. One young woman began crying as she lav face down on the pavement waiting to be handcuffed for violating GSA Regulation 101.19.3-blocking the entrance to a public building. "That'd make a terrible picture," said Sam Carmel, the mili- tary security chief, turning to a policeman. "Get 'em the hell arrested 'and onta here." " Special to the White House If you can't get Jerry Ford. to the phone to com- plain, you might just have to vault the high White House fence to get to the busy president. Secret Service men arrested an unidentified intruder+ doing just that yesterday afternoon. It seems to be the thing to do this year as several unauthorized persons have been caught sneaking onto the White House grounds. One young man was arrested re- cently for attempting to see Ford about clemency for his father regarding a narcotics charge. Who knows, maybe it was New York City mayor Abe Beame trying to get funds through the back door. On the inside ... Rich Lerner explores the glittering world of Las Vegas and Bill Turque writes about the more sober side of gambling in an interview with a member of Gamblers Anonymous for the Sunday mnnin nR t t-i n C ,.r r'c, (IP. nfn t.rAQn nfl Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Pi askin puppet The puppet's companion, who works at the University Cellar, is collaborating on a Ses me St.-inspired sequence for a cable TV children's workshop. HISTORY, ATTITUDES EXAMINED: Gaystudies course offered for two weeks, and the Moslem Jiysh, Naameh, Saadiyat and Damour. THE PALESTINIAN camp of Dfmieh that was captured by Christians three days ago will be returned to the guerrillas and Moslem militiamen and Palestinians will withdraw from Christian territory that they seized, according to the agree- ment, Karami said. Many Lebanese were doubtful that the cease-fire would hold. Dozens of truces have been call- ed, bit only 16 were successful for brief neriods. If it holds, the ceasefire will check what seemed to be the inevitable slide of Lebanon into a conflagration fueled by reli- g~w s nassions which would have torn the country apart. 'WSERVERS said that both sides may have reckoned the cost of a fight to the finish too great to contemplate. Certainly the Arab world was deenly concerned a b o u t the rind deterioration of the situa- tion in the last few days and the i'tervention of the Arab am- bassadors here may have been a decisive factor in persuading the rival factions to put up their guins. The partial occupation by g"errillas of Damour on Friday sent air force jet fighters on their first antiguerrilla bombing and strafing missions in the con- flict. CHAMOUN, 76-year-old for- mer president and Lebanon's Christian leader, was trapned with his family in their mansion in Saadiyat, 13 miles south of Beirut. There were conflicting reports on efforts to evacuate him. Palestinian spokesmen said guerrilla leader Yasir Arafat sent some of his soldiers to Chamoun's home to protect him. They added that Chamoun re- fused on offer to evacuate him. AN OFFICIAL of Chamoun's National Liberal party denied the guerrilla reports. He said- C ham o un and thousands of Christian refugees in the area "are determined to fight to the end for their honor." sieges of the Christian towns of Iowa hosts eectio caucuses DES MOINES, Iowa (A)-Iowa Democrats and Republicans be- gin on Monday night the task of helping the nation choose a president. Both parties will hold pre- cinct caucuses - neighborhood meetings in each of Iowa's 2,617 votingprecincts-to make known their presidential preferences. THE CAUCUSES .are billed as the first test in the nation of the relative strength of the can- didates. But odds are that no clear-cut choice will emerge. Six of the Democrats' 11 pres- idential hopefuls have campaign- ed extensively in Iowa for pre- cinct level support.' And on the Republican side, supporters of President Ford and former California Gov. Ron- ald Reagan are urging party members to choose between them. CANVASSERS in all candidate camps, however, report about half the voters they have con- tacted in the last week remain undecided on a presidential choice. They say there will be more undecided votes than com- mitted ones in the caucuses. Most of the' candidates say the contest for precinct support is a game nobody has .to win anid they'll be satisfied merely to make a good showing. By PAULINE LUBENS TSANG ALS .as a forum for Gay activism has secured a new foothold in openly discuss the University's academic door with a Course ward homosex Mart offering on Gay and Lesbian Liberation. ays The course, officially enti ed "The Politics of One gay stu Gay and Lesbian Liberatiod," is the brainchild is taking the c of Teaching Assistant Dan Tsang and will outline finding out wh the history of gay oppression and homosexual f struggle for acceptance and equality. tI have Lea than going into "WE WILL NOT just be looking at the victims A person whoc of oppression but at the creators as well," said in today's socie Tsang, an active member of the Graduate Em- step," he adde ploye Organization's (GEO) Gay Caucus. "We will examine the manifestation of homo- THOUGH TS phobia (fear of homosexuality), racism and sex- gay studentsv ism," he added. member of the In addition to tracing the history of gay acti- majority of the vism since its inception in Germany at the turn "People arer of the century, Tsang says he plans to explore their transcrip the "problems, contradictions, racism, and sex- they're gay-an ism in the Gay Liberation movement, and its these days," thl relationship with other leftist and third world Jean Crawfox movements."S protects itself fro-m own reports WASHINGTON (P)-The Central Intelligence Agency maintains a secret coordinating panel to make certain the United States is not misled by its own propaganda, according to former intelligence officials. The purpose of the panel, which includes representatives from the CIA, the State Department and the United States Information Agency, is to prevent key policymakers from drawing erroneous conclusions from false news stories or forged documents planted by the CIA in foreign countries, the former officials said in inter- views yesterday. THE COMMITTEE also seeks to prevent the Voice of America from giving worldwide circulation to stories planted by the CIA. "You don't want to let them get taken in," one former official said, adding that this procedure began in the early 1960s when it was realized "there was a problem with contamination" caused by CIA propaganda overseas. "It's inevitable that it might bounce back," the second former official said. HE CITED as an ex-ample CIA radio broadcasts aimed at Cuba during the time of the Bay of Pigs invasion. These fake broadcasts were heard by Cuban exiles in Miami, printed in their newspapers and in turn picked up by other U.S. media outlets. A third former official cited CIA-sponsored radio stations broadcastirg from Taiwan in the 1950s. The stations would purport O anticipates the course serving both gay and non-gay students to their feelings and attitudes to- uality and society's treatment of dent enrolled in the class said he ourse "because I am interested in ere my true sexuality lies.", xned that homosexuality is more o a john and picking up a guy. can accept the fact that he is gay ety is strong. Coming out is a big d. SANG had hoped that many non- would enroll in his course, one class said that an overwhelming 33 students are gay. afraid to have it (the course) on t because p e o p 1 e will assume nd that's not a good thing to be e student said. rd, who attended the first meeting See COURSE, Page 2 l Tsang q', t" 'r;. t, ,.. w. r4 +4 ri.: ^h,;..}?h; ,:,..}}, .nY.. dom. L Y. t,;'y ", !".f ti Zt I M. :,al', .,Y k i.c: :' v. !i. .. f .. ;r"BlYn <',"r I " .. +; N ; ? ? .£, v 4 0 a.: ' a