4 Rage 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 27, 1963 Wazzan resigns 10 aid BEIRUT, Lebanon - Prime Minister Chefic Wazzan and his cabinet submit- ted their resignations to President Amin Gemayel yesterday only hours after a cease-fire stopped fighting in Lebanon. Wazzan, a Sunni Moslem, and his 10- mpan Cabinet bowed to the demands of the Syrians and Druse leader Walid Jumblatt and resigned to pave the way for a national unity government. Gemayel, a Christian, said he asked the 58-year-old prime minister to stay on "until the features of the new era crystallize, and arrangements to usher it in are completed." Wazzan, had become a target of Syrian and rebel criticism of the Christian-dominated government of Gemayel. "I made this decision before the start of national negotiations that will result in establishing a national Cabinet in- volving all parties concerned," Wazzan said on radio. "I submitted by resignation to the president in order to, facilitate the future changes." The cease-fire, mediated by Saudi Arabia and the United States appeared to be holding despite isolated sniper fire and a few mortar shells. The 6 a.m. truce ended a month of fighting that left some 700 people dead. However, army sources said three militiamen tried to infiltrate Souk el- Gharb about two and a half hours after the cease-fire, Druse snipers killed two, soldiers at Kaifoun, less than a mile away, and the troops in Kaufoun fired automatic rifles and .30-caliber machine guns for at least 30 minutes at the snipers 30 yards away. The government's Radio Beirut reported after nightfall that army positions in the mountain village of Kabr Chmoun were under fire from rocket-propelled grenades and automatic rifles, but the government truce troops were not shooting back. But the radio said army troops fired at snipers shooting at them from Shiite Moslem neighborhoods in the Beirut suburbs and that about 20 military vehicles were spotted at sunset headed toward the Druse mountain garrison of Baissour. In another sign of strain, the right- wing Christian "Lebanese Forces" militia predicted Syria would attempt to use the cease-fire to "stir up internal trouble" and extend its influence in Lebanon. WASHINGTON (AP) - is expected to smooth the The cease-fire in Lebanon way for congressional ap- Congress asked to compromise War Powers to lengthen stay in Beirut proval of a compromise with the White House that would allow U.S. Marines to stay in Beirut for 18mon- ths. The compromise resolution, prompted by the first of four Marine deaths in Beirut under shelling by Moslem militias Aug. 29, would recognize the authority of Congress to limit the troops' stay there under the War Powers Act of 1973, but would approve keeping them in the Lebanese capital for 18 months, if needed. UNDER THE War Powers Act, a vote on the resolution must take place by tomorrow. Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker says he hopes to complete the Senate debate today. The House is ex- pected to begin debate tomorrow or Thursday. Secretary of State George Shultz said the cease-fire would bring no immediate change in the mission of the 1,600 Marines who have been in Beirut for more than a year. However, he said, "I think they will be a little more comfortable in carrying that mission out." Shultz said the cease-fire announced in Lebanon on Sunday has taken effect and "things are settling down. THE WAR POWERS Act requires the president to notify Congress within 48 hours whenever he sends combat troops abroad. If they are in a zone of hostilities, he is required to bring them home in 60 to 90 days unless Congress declares war or authorizes them to stay. President Reagan has said he will sign the measure if it reaches his desk in the form negotiated by his aides and congressional leaders, even though he takes exception to parts of the resolution concerning his prerogatives as commander in chief. Charles Mathias (R-Md.) supported the com- promise Friday in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, voting first to trim the Marines' stay to six months, and then reversing himself after Majority Leader Howard Baker (R-Tenn.) told him the delicately arranged deal was 'turning to ashes." SPECIAL For the students, faculty and staff of the University of Michigan and other 4-year universities. Offer extends thru September 30th. Complete System Solution IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports U.S. to give China military technology as relations improve PEKING - Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger told Chinese officials yesterday that most of the military technology they have requested from the United States can be furnished now that China has been reclassified as a friendly, non-allied, Weinberger's official spokesman reported. The spokesman, who briefed reporters.on the condition that he not be iden- tified, said Weinberger at a three-house meeting told Defense Minister Zhang Aiping the U.S. Commerce Department can automatically approve 32 more items of civilian high technology with possible military use. He said 11 more could be approved after further study and assurances about the intended use. Weinberger's offer to provide the Chinese with sophisticated technology is considered a strong signal from the Reagan administration that it wants bet- ter ties with Peking, including a strategic military dialogue. China and the United States both oppose what they call Soviet military ex- pansion. Though China-Soviet relations have improved recently, Peking still says it considers the Soviet Union a threat to world peace. 21 IRA guerrillas still at large after Britains biggest jailbreak BELFAST, Northern Ireland - Police captured two more IRA guerrillas who shot their way out of Belfast's Maze prison but the government said yesterday it will be difficult to catch the 21 still at large. Supporters of the Irish Republican Army set bonfires in Belfast to celebrate what they called.,"the great escape" of 38 convicts from the maximum security prison on Sunday. It was Britain's biggest jailbreak, and three of those still on the run are among the Irish Republican Army's top gunmen. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, in Canada on an official visit, called the jailbreak "a very serious incident . . . the gravest in our prison history." Police have recaptured 17 geurrillas, including two who were grabbed yesterday as they walked on a narrow country road 10 miles south of the prison and a few miles north of the border with the Irish Republic. Continental flights to resume HOUSTON - Continental Airlines announced it will resume service to 25 U.S. cities today under protection of a federal bankruptcy court, cutting top employees' salaries in half and offering $49 one-way domestic fares this week. "We are very optimistic and very enthusiastic about our future," Con- tinental President Frank Lorenzo said at a news conference yesterday. "Now that costs are firmly under control, we can compete and build a Con- tinental Airlines that our founders and everyone associated with us can be proud of." On Saturday Lorenza announced the nation's eighth-largest airline had filed for reorganization and temporarily suspended flights to all 78 U.S. cities it served after posting losses of $471.9 million since January 1979. When Continental returns to service. it will have just 27 Dercent of the flights it had prior to filing its reorganization petition, Lorenzo said. Domestic service is being slashed by two-thirds- and only about 35 percent of the airline's 12,000 employees will be on the job. More will be added as the com- pany grows, he said. International flights were not affected by the filing. IMF sets new borrowing limits WASHINGTON - Top officials of the International Monetary Fund said yes- terday that their agreement setting limits on loans to needy nations allows the agency to keep up its battle against the international financial crisis. "We are now stronger. . . we will retain our role as catalyst in the fight," said Willy de Clercq, chairman of the agency's policy-making Interim Committee. Financial ministers representing the Fund's 146 member states reached agreement early yesterday to limit access to its lending pool. The agreement cleared the air for the formal opening today of the IMF's 38th annual meeting in conjunction with its sister organization, the World Bank. Together, they are the world's largest lending agencies. The IMF makes loans to nations with severe debt loads and balance-of-payments problems while the World Bank finances development projects, usually to the neediest countries. Ruth Carter Stapleton dies FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. - Ruth Carter Stapleton, sister of former President Jimmy Carter, died yesterday morning at home after a lengthy battle with cancer of the pancreas, her husband said. She was 54. Stapleton, an evangelist from Fayetteville, was diagnosed as having can- cer in April. She had said she would forgo medical treatment and would rely on her faith in God to help her. She said she would use prayer, meditation, exercise and a special diet in her fight against the disease. Her father died of pancreatic cancer almost 30 years ago. Her mother, Lillian Carter, has experienced total remission from breast and bone can- cer. Her husband, Dr. Robert Stapleton, reached today at his Fayetteville home, confirmed the death but declined to comment further. Vol. XCIV - No. 17 Tuesday, September 27, 1983 (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $15.50 September through April (2 semesters); $19.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $8 in Ann Arbor; $10 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY; Sports desk, 763-0376; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0557; Display Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. 4 Here's everything you need to get into personal com- puting. Ontel Corporation, one of the largest suppliers of computer terminals to the University of Michigan, brings you The Amigo Personal Computer.... And for the month of September we're offering a complete turnkey Amigo system, including printer and software, for the unbeatable price of $2395.00. 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