Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, July 21, 1983 Reagan officials head for Bohemian club WASHINGTON (AP) - Several Reagan administration officials, in- cluding two senior cabinet officers, are packing for the annual gathering of the all-male Bohemian club in Northern California - and a quick inspection of a nearby naval station means taxpayers will pay the airfare for at least some of them. Defense Secretary Caspar Wein- berger and two other top Pentagon of- ficials, Navy Secretary John Lehman and research chief Richard DeLauer, will spend three hours tomorrow at the D avy Supply Center in Oakland and then go to Bohemian Grove for the remainder of the weekend, said Pen- tagon spokesman Henry Catto. CATTO SAID the trip to the supply center was arranged "several weeks ago." He said it would include a tour of the facility and a briefing by the com- mander on the center's problems and successes. "What they are doing on their own time is up to them," Catto said. The group will return to Washington Sunday night. Attorney General William French Smith and national security adviser William Clark, also club members, planned to attend the gathering, their spokesmen said. CLARK SPOKESMAN Robert Sims said Clark is going on the government plane "at the invitation of the Secretary of Defense. As a government official, he can ride on government aircraft." Clark was not scheduled to visit the naval supply center, said a Pentagon source who spoke on the condition he not be identified. Smith spokesman Thomas DeCair sent a message through a secretary that Smith was attending the Bohemian gathering, but DeCair could not be reached to tell who would pay Smith's expenses. - THE BOHEMIAN club is a secret society made up of some of the coun- try's most powerful corporate and business leaders. It is located on a 2,700- acre redwood grove on the russian River, 75 miles north of san Francisco. Among the club members are President Reagan, former presidents Ford and Nixon, Vice President George Bush and Secretary of State George Shultz. Reagan, Bush and Shultz did not plan to attend this year's gathering, their spokesmen said. SHULTZ MADE headlines last sum- mer when he used the club facilities to host West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt. At the club's opening events each year, Bohemians wearing red hoods cast aside worries by burning an icon in a "Cremation of Care" ceremony. The idea is to relax completely. FALL/WINTER HOUSING IN RESIDENCE HALLS SPACE CURRENTLY REMAINS AVAILABLE IN BAITS AND OXFORD HALLS COME IN TO APPLY AND BE PLACED TODAY OR CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION HOUSINNTU G INFORMATO 1011 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING HOURS: 7:30 a.m. - 12:00 Noon 12:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. TELEPHONE: (313) 763-3164 IN BRIEF Complied from Associated Press and United Press International reports Israelis to shift Lebanon troops JERUSALEM - Israel, its soldiers and policy under attack, approved plans yesterday to redeploy its troops to southern Lebanon in a strategy Lebanese officials condemned as a prelude to the partitioning of their oc- cupied land. The Cabinet action came hours after forces in Lebanon's Syrian-controlled Upper Metn mountains shelled Christian east Beirut, killing at least three people and wounding 24 others. Military sources said the redeployment would take eight to 10 weeks, and would begin after the government consults with the United States and Lebanon on what forces would replace the Israeli troops. The sources said the withdrawal could begin in only a few days. Both Beirut and Washington object to the unilateral Israeli move, fearing that it could permanently partition Lebanon into Israeli and Syrian spheres. Israel says it wants to leave the exposed positions in the north, where it is taking casualties from guerrilla attacks and in cross fires from sectarian fighting, and move behind a more defensible line. Government sources said Israel was prepared to build a system of defen- ses on the new line that would match its nearly airtight security on its bor- ders, including an electric fence and an interlocked series of fortified out- posts. Crane and Studds censured for sex with pages; will run again WASHINGTON - The House voted yesterday to censure Rep. Daniel Crane (R-Ill.), for having sex with a teenage female page, and Rep. Gerry Studds ( D-Mass), for his relations with a male page. The House supported the censure against Crane 421-3, and against Studds 421-3, with Crane and Studds present but not voting. With tears streaming down his face, Crane apologized to his colleagues before the vote making him the 25th member to be reprimanded or censured in the history of the House. They responded with a standing ovation. "This is one of the most difficult moments of my life," Crane said, his voice choked with emotion. A yearlong investigation of rumors of sexual misconduct on Capitol Hill revealed that Crane, 47, had sex four or five times with a 17-year-old page three years ago. Both Crane and Studds have said they will not resign and plan to run for re- election. House for MX deployment WASHINGTON - The Democrat-controlled House voted 220-207 yesterday to build and deploy intercontinental MX missiles in underground silos in Wyoming and Nebraska. The vote was a major defeat for opponents of the multi-warhead missile who say it will be vulnerable to Soviet attack and sure to accelerate the nuclear arms race. Conversely it was a major victory for President Reagan, who lobbied members by telephone during the day and into the evening. "It is extremely expensive, very vulnerable and the money is needed for conventional weapons," said MX critic Rep. Charles Bennett (D-Fla.) a senior Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee and author of an amendment to cut out $2.6 billion in production funds for the MX. On May 23, the House voted 245-176 to release funds for MX flight tests. It was clear yesterday's vote would be much closer, and Speaker Thomas O'Neill Jr. (D-Mass.), said during the afternoon MX opponents had to gain eight more votes to win. The Senate is also'considering the MX as part of the debate on a $200 billion defense authorization bill. The legislative package covers the full range of U.S. military activities, including the new B-1 bomber, the size of the military services and U.S. military support for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Polish govt. obtains new powers WARSAW, Poland - Parliament granted broad new powers to Poland's Communist government yesterday and acted to extend many martial law curbs for 18 months. The actions were aimed at insuring the regime's grip after the expected lifting of military rule Friday, Poland's national day. The new powers proposed by the Communist leadership include a con- stitutional amendment which would permit the government to impose a state of emergency, swiftly re-imprison dissidents or keep them and leaders of the outlawed independent union Solidarity interned. The 450-member Parliament is expected to approve a conditional amnesty and a call for formally lifting the December 1981 military crackdown today when party chief Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski addresses Parliament. The amnesty bill would free or pardon hundreds of violators of martial law and make sure they avoid political protests or strikes in the future by providing for re-imprisonment. The measure provides amnesty for all women, all people under 21, and anyone sentenced to three years or less. Those with longer sentences would have their terms cut at least in half and possibly eliminated.