he ichigan Dail Vol. XCII, No. 27-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, June 11, 1982 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages Israelis push to Beirut FromAPandUPI Israel's triumphant invasion army, at the doorstep of Beirut, hammered Palestinian and Syrian positions relen- tlessly yesterday from the air, sea and land, and threatened to storm the panic-torn Lebanese capital. The Palestinian guerrillas promised a fight to the death. "We shall fight from house to house, from room to room" the Palestine Liberation Organization radio vowed as Israeli jets struck at PLO targets. THE GUERRILLAS reportedly held off Israeli armored forces four miles south of the city limits. To the southeast, across Lebanon's central Senate restricts release of agents' identities By CHARLES THOMSON with wire reports The Senate yesterday over- whelmingly passed and sent to President Reagan a bill making it a crime punishable by imprisonment to disclose the names of covert U.S. in- telligence agents-even if that infor- mation is derived from public records. Michigan Senators Don Riegle and Carl Levin, both Democrats, joined 79 other senators in passing the In- telligence Identity Protection Act, a bill which some critics have said could seriously erode Americans' First Amendment freedoms. THE ACT cleared tbe House last week by a vote of 315-32. Four senators voted against the final version of the bill yesterday. The bill provides prison terms'of up to 10 years and fines of $50,000 for gover- nment employees who expose U.S. spies living undercover in foreign nations. People outside the government, in- cluding journalists or scholars who identify agents as part of a "pattern of activities" which would "impair or im- pede" U.S. intelligence operations, could be imprisoned for up to four years and fined $15,000. BURT HOFFMAN, a spokesman for Levin, said the senator voted for the bill because he was concerned that the disclosure of agents' names could en- danger their lives. Supporters of the bill have said that publication of many agents' names has led to their assassinations in recent years. Hoffman said the effect of the bill on See CIA, Page 5 Palestinians vow to fight from house to house' mountain spine, Israeli tank troops cease-fire and Israeli troop with- moving north into the Bekaa Valley drawals from Lebanon, White House of- were reported locked in heavy combat ficials said yesterday. Syrian forces. And in new air battles, Besides appealing to Begin, officials the Israelis said their pilots shot down said Reagan urged all "interested" 23 Syrian MiG jet fighters. parties - including Soviet President From Bonn, West Germany, Leonaid Brezhnev - to use their influen- President Reagan sent Israeli Prime ce "to hlep bring the bloodshed to an Minister Menachem Begin a "per- end." sonally crafted, persuasive and frien- An Israeli Cabinet minister, Yitshak dly - but firm" letter demanding a Modai, said the invasion force had achieved its objectives and it was time to start working out a political set- tlement. Modai said "no exact date has been set" for a cease-fire, Israel radio said one was expected within a day. What the Israelis did not say was whether they would first push into Beirut. The PLO, in a claim that could not be verified, said more than 10,000 civilians had been killed or, wounded in the in- vasion, which began after the shooting of an Israeli ambassador in London. The Israelis said their attack was mounted a week ago to push the Palestinians back 25 miles from the See ISRAELI. Page 11 Palestinian protest The invasion of Lebanon by Israeli forces prompted these Palestinian sympathizers to gather on the Diag this week to express their disapproval. WSU talks By LOU FINTOR Contract negotiators at Detroit's Wayne State University were still split last night over faculty wage con- cessions as they met one nore time to try to avert the declaration of a financial emergency by the school's board of governors today. WSU administrators said that if an agreement between the university and the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) cannot be reached, they will ask the board to issue a statement of "financial exigency" at this morning's 9 a.m. meeting. SUCH A statement will mean notification of layoffs for many WSU employees, including tenured faculty attempt to avert crisis members, within a few weeks, officials faculty members to make said. benefit concessions totaling "If we don't reach agreement with million which they say are ne the faculty by 8a.m., we will be making meet the University's 1982-83 the financial exigency statement that fiscal budget of $147 million. will be necessary for the layoffs to be "We're not playing a gam the Board," said WSU Chief Financial said, "and that budget will t Officer Charles Sturtz. exactly what we said-thrc The WSU faculty contract provides cessions or layoffs." The on for layoffs only if a state of financial for making a statement of exigency exists. Although the exact exigency would be to enabl definition of the term is still being layoff tenured faculty, he said debated, the AAUP defines financial According to Sturtz, if an a exigency as an "imminent financial is not reached, officials will1 crisis that threatens the survival of the ving layoff notices to som institution as a whole, and cannot be members beginning July 1 alleviated by less drastic means." with contracts expiring in les ADMINISTRATORS are asking year will receive six month wage and over $3 cessary to proposed e," Sturtz be met by ough con- ly reason financial e WSU to d. greement begin ser- .e faculty . Faculty s than one 's notice.