The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 8, 1982-Page 5 Guerrilla tunnel o.etwork in. Beirut eBEIRUT,, Lebanon (AP)- An elaborate network of tunnels under west Beirut served as a "city within a city" for Palestinian guerrillas- ,gmplete with an amusement center pnd torture chamber, security sources said yesterday. They also said that the international, terrorist Carlos used the tunnels to meet with Palestine Liberation Organization guerrillas. The sources said the four-mile net- work ran from the Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps to $ourjhel-Barajneh * ext to the airport and was packed with arms, forged passports, and stolen ,cars. Other sources said helicopters and small submarines were hauled from the tunnels, but that was not con- firmed. The tunnels were discovered late last month, the sources said. In other Lebanese developments: " U.S. envoy Philip Habib met in Washington with top Reagan ad- SJministration officials to refine a plan for the phased withdrawal of Israeli, Syrian, and Palestinian forces, from Lebanon, followed by the recall of the 12 U.S. Marines in the peacekeeping farce: Stock trading breaks Habib ... refining withdrawal plan " Israeli officials in Jerusalem, in an apparent softening of earlier positions, said the PLO could pull out in stages with the Syrian army, but that all PLO fighters must be out before the last phase of the Syrian and Israeli pullout. " Lebanese army troops arrested 175 more people in west Beirut, bringing to more than 1,000 the number seized sin- ce last week in what the military calls a campaign to pacify the Moslem sector of the capital. The Palestinians fear the drive is to terrorize them and force them to leave the country. One security officer described the west Beirut tunnel network as a "city within a city," six feet beneath the ear- th. He said it was equipped with air raid shelters, food storage rooms, an un- derground prison, a torture chamber, an amusement center, a hospital, prin- ting press, and radio relay station. NEW YORK (AP) - Stock-trading records toppled and interest rates fell sharply yesterday as the financial markets of Wall Street continued their "what recession?" rally. Volume on the New York Stock Ex- change reached 147.7 million shares, eclipsing the previous record of 137.33 million set Aug. 26. THE DOW JONES average of 30 in- dustrials, which leaped 37 points Wed- nesday for its second largest gain ever, jumped an additional 21.71 to a 15, mon- th high of 965.97. Since mid-August, the average has risen 188 points. In the bond market, prices of long- term government bonds soared almost $40 for every $1,000 in face value, one of the biggest single-day gains traders in the credit markets could recall. Over the last few months, both stock and bond prices have soared more than 20 percent in one of the most spec- tacular rallies Wall Street has ever seen. MOST LARGE banks lowered their prime rates from,13.5 percent to 13 per- cent, matching a reduction last week by Bankers Trust of New York. President Reagan, in Las Vegas, Nev., to attend a Republican fund- raiser, told reporters the surge in the stock market meant "just what we always said. The people are getting more confident in the economy." The stock market's rise has baffled many economists and market analysts who point out that there has been very little evidence to date of any budding recovery from the recession. "THERE ARE still a lot of people who don't believe the market shouldbe going up," said Robert Stovall at the brokerage firm of Dean Witter Reynolds. "But if this is a bear market, it's the healthiest bear market I've ever seen." The spark for the markets' latest ex- plosion has been the belief among many traders that the Federal Reserve, worried about slumping business ac- tivity, has decided to loosen up on credit, thereby encouraging interest rates to decline further. Said Stovall, "We believe inflation and interest rates are on their way down in a big way," setting the stage for an economic recovery at some as- yet-uncharted point in the future. "Maybe we can't see it now, but the a I I I Open Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday 9:30 a.m. 'til 5:30 p.m., Thursday and Friday 9:30 a.m. 'til 9:00 p.m. I eords market sees it," he said. Some doubters persist in their belief that the euphoria has no rational basis, and could soon give way to a painful collapse. Joseph Granville, the flam- boyant market-letter publisher who has been urging "sell" since early last year, told his subscribers this week tlhat stock prices were due for a "free fall." MeDonald's hamburgers linked A o d' hamburgers linked .to 37 illnesses in 2 states ATLANTA (AP) - A new disease has been linked to hamburger meat, and 58 cases have been reported with two main outbreaks, the Center for Disease Control reports. Trading in McDonald's Corp. was halted yesterday on the New York Stock Exchange after it was disclosed that 37 cases were traced, to Mc- Donald's outlets in Oregon and Michigan. The other cases have been linked tomeat cooked at home and to other hamburger chains, said CDC epidemiologist Mitchell Cohen. COHEN, WHO presented his data on the disease at a medical conference in Miami on Wednesday, said the illness appears to be transmitted through hamburger meat. The disease has been named hemorrhagic colitis. Its symptoms are severe -stomach pain and bloody diarrhea, but the disease is not fatal, Cohen said. Twenty-six cases were reported in February and March in Medford, Ore., with 17 people hospitalized for short periods, Cohen said. The illness was dubbed "bloody diarrhea syndrome" by Oregone officials confounded at the *. IN MAY AND June, 21 cases were confirmed in Traverse City, Mich. McDonald's said it expected trading to resume today. In a statement, the U" company said that the trading halt had "absolutely no basis for concern about the company's future business." The statement called the outbreaks "rare and isolated occurrences" that may be "part of a cattle herd food chain or cattle process system. "SUBSEQUENT symptoms have been associated with food prepared in the home as well as the restaurants. We have served more than two billion hamburgers since the first report of the symptoms," the statement said. Cohen says the disease "appears to be a small problem and poses little risk to the public. It doesn't appear to require special treatment and resolves on its own in two to seven days." He said careful food handling and adequate cooking minimizes chances of getting the disease.. Cohen said only one in 1,000 people who ate hamburgers at McDonald's during the outbreaks in the two states became ill. Cohen declined to name the other fast food chains linked to the disease among the 21 sporadic cases documented since July because the actual organism causing the disease was not found in their meat. The Wolverine Submarine Contributors are Gratefully Acknowledged: Coca-Cola Michigan Repacking and Produce Co. Miesel/Sysco Food Service Co. Hygrade Meats Labatt's Beer Pellerito Foods Chadalle Farms Henri's Food Products Co. Galup-Silkworth Michaels and Associates The Affections Alpha Phi Omega Residence Hall Association Gandy Dancer Kraft Taylor Rentals Rich's Products Corp. 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