i PEACE AGREEyMENT See Editorial Page 4w 40 an :4D401 TROPICAL High-upper 80s Low-mid 60s gee Today for'details Ten Page Vol. UIX, No. 12 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, September 20, 1978 Ten Cents Hussein Arabia accordI WASHINGTON (AP)-The mood of to depart for J triumph that swept the capital with the Arabia in an efi successful end of the Camp David the accords. suimit was shaken yesterday by sharp President An words from Jordan's King Hussein and planned to fly lingering differences over inter- today to mee pretation of the accords. before returning While President Carter and the THE JORDA leaders of Egypt and Israel tried to Hussein disc maintain the momentum toward peace, agreements in their hopes were jolted by an official sation with Crow announcement in Amman that "Jordan Arabia and the is dot obligated morally or materially emergency ses y the agreements signed at the Camp cabinet. David summit." White House THE ANNOUNCEMENT by a Powell said hed spokesman for the Jordanian statement "as a government came as Israeli Prime view expressed Minister Menachem Begin prepared to that they are aw fly to New York before returning home. Powell said no Minutes after Begin's plane took off Jordan was oblig from Andrews Air Force Base, ts. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance planned DESPITE H' Saudi dampen euphoria ordan, Syria and Saudi there was no indication the Are fort to enlist support for leader, whose support is consider critical to the success of the summi nwar Sadat of Egypt had changed his mind about meetir y to Rabat, Morocco with Vance. t with King Hassan Observers in Washington regarded g to Cairo. as a hopeful sign when Hussein, Kir NIAN spokesman said Khaled of Saudi Arabia and, late ussed the summit President Hafez Assad of Syria agre a telephone conver- to meet with Vance. wn Prince Fahd of Saudi Saudi Arabia also expressed rese en during a four-hour vations yesterday about the outcome sion of the Jordanian the summit, saying the agreements d not constitute an acceptable "fin, press secretary Jody peace framework." id not see the Jordanian BUT AN OFFICIAL Saudi con ny contravention of the munique issued after an emergen I to 'President Carter, Cabinet meeting refrained fro aiting a full briefing." outright rejection and did not critic oone had suggested that Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. gated by the agreemen- The communique, broadcast b Riyadh radio, urged the Arabs to er at ng it ng r, ed of id a] cy Ze by rd USSEIN'S reaction, A 2 hosts jazz fest By DAN OBERDORFER Ann Arbor this week is a jazz fan's aphrodisiac. The Ann Arbor Jazz Festival, heralded by local connoisseurs of jazz as the best festival this side of Newport, Rhode Island, opens tomorrow and runs through Sunday. Among the more than 75 jazz notables appearing will be Dexter Gordon, saxophone; Freddie Hubbard,, trumpet; Archie Shepp, saxophone; Kenny Burrell, guitar, and Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers. ALSO APPEARING will be the local II-V-I Orchestra conducted by David Swain. The four-day sound extrava- ganza marks the first time Ann Arbor has hosted a major music festival since 1973. The following year, City Council banished the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival to Canada, because of problems with litter and alleged drug trafficking. THIS YEAR'S festival, to be held in Hill Auditorium, is dedicated to the music of Duke Ellington, who for fifty years composed and directed some of the greatest jazz music ever She JORDAN, Page 7 Student sues EMU over profs strike By JULIE ROVNER As the walkout by professors at Eastern Michigan University (EMU) enters its second week, talks between striking faculty and university officials will move from the school's Ypsilanti campus to Washtenaw County circuit court today as both sides prepare to an- swer to a lawsuit filed by an EMU student last week. Aerial tragedy Two AT6 aircrafts collided last weekend during the National Air Races in Reno, Nevada. Both pilots were killed. A spectator snapped this photo moments after the collision occurred. SENATE KEEPS DEREGULATION ALIVE See JAZZ, Page 5 Gas proposal overcomes hurdle WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate yesterday beat back, 59-39, an attempt to sidetrack the bill deregulating natural gas which the Carter administration has made a top domestic priority. The vote rejected a bid by opponents to return the compromise - removing federal price lids from the newfound gas by 1985 - to a House-Senate conference committee for redrafting. Senate leaders said that would have killed the bill. THE TEST vote keeping alive the plan was a clear victory for the President, who has been waging a Wednesday * The Michigan Student Assem- bly will push the Regents for more student input in the selec- tion of a new University president. See Story, Page 7. * Nicaraguan troops continue to stamp out the final rebel strongholds in a faltering rebellion against President Somoza. See Story, Page 10. . For happenings, weather and local briefs, see TODAY, page 3. heavy lobbying campaign for the compromise on this key portion of his energy program. Opponents, who had conceded in advance that the White House would win the first vote, said they planned to offer other motions to block the bill during the next few days. Carter has said enactment of the bill is vital to U.S. prestige abroad, to finding new domestic gas supplies and ,to curbing oil imports. SEN. HENRY Jackson, (D-Wash.), told colleagues enactment of the compromise is crucial to U.S. energy policy.' But Sen. James Abourezk, (D-S.D.), a leading opponent, called it "monstrosity legislation" which he said would force unwarranted price increases on consumers. And Sen. Robert Dole, (R-Kans.), .labeled the bill, "a desperate attempt to give the administration some credibility in the energy area." The motion rejected yesterday included instructions to Senate conferees to strike the pricing provisions which are the heart of the legislation'and to return to the floor a bill merely giving the President emergency powers to deal with natural gas shortages. SENATE leaders said returning the bill to the conference committee that took 10 months to frame it would be a death blow, mainly because House conferees likely would balk at such a procedure. But underground rules previously agreed to by the Senate, any number of such motions can be offered up until 1 p.m..next Wednesday - when the bill, assuming it survives the attempts to return it to committee, will face a vote. Anti-spying conference to be held at Union this weekend By LEONARD BERNSTEIN Attorneys, academics and concerned citizens from all over the country will converge in Ann Arbor this weekend for the first National Organizing Conference to Stop Government Spying this Friday, Saturday and Sunday at the Michigan Union. Billed as a "nuts and bolts" organizing effort by Ann Arbor coordinator and graduate student Tom Shaker, the conference will be concerned primarily with devising strategies to try to counteract domestic government spying and harrassment. "THE TIME for being shocked is over. Now it's what can you do about it," Shaker said. "This is taking it a step farther than everybody just being appalled." Saturday night's plenary session will feature Morton Halperin, chairman of the Campaign to Stop Government Spying, (CSGS), which is co-sponsoring the conference, along with the University's Viewpoint Lectures organization. Halperin, who resigned as a senior staff member of the National Security Council under Henry }issinger in 1969, will speak on the presence of intelligence agencies on college and university campuses. Reports of recruiting and other activity by the Central Intelligence Agency and other intelligence groups has caused many schools - including the University - to consider drafting guidelines regulating See ANTI, Page 2 Mmmmm good A charity ice cream eating contest took place yesterday at the Farrell's in Briar- wood Mall. Eastern Michigan University's Kappa Phi Alpha fraternity won the event by consuming 51.5 lbs. of ice cream in one and a half hours. A thousand pounds of ice cream were donated by the Briarwood Movies and Farrell's. Proceeds went to the Washtenaw County United Way (other photo on page 2). ' Campus lawyers tangle with student problems By BRIAN BLANCHARD varied enough so that alleged. cheese thieves, disgruntled tenants, angry consumers, spouses 0 our staff, from income guidelines to no income guidelines," said Rose. landlords before signing a lease. "Wait until you move in," he said. "You don't want to look