Take Ten The University's Inter-House Assembly recommended the Board of Governors of the Residence Halls drop the dorm requirement for sophomore women on September 24, 1968. But it was ten years ago, af- ter all, and the Assembly members still reacted favorably to the Board's decision to retain a mandatory live-in rule for first year students. Also ten years ago members of the all-black fraternity Kap- pa Alpha Psi were raising questions about the fairness of the criteria for selection of the 1968 homecoming queen. Happenings.'.. Sunday . . . after sleeping in this morning stretch your legs by participating in the Greenpeace Ann Arbor Save-the-Whales Walkathon. Bring your walking shoes to Pioneer High at noon ... if you've ever been to Israel, you're invited to reminisce about your ex- periences over a noon brunch at Hillel ... at 2 the People's Action Coaliton is sponsoring a lecture entitled "National Overview of Cam- pus Radicalism: 1960's-Present," delivered by Dan Perlstein in room 126 at the Residential College ... also at 2 the Outing/Hiking Group will meet at the Huron Street entrance of Rackham ... then at 5:30 the Wesley Foundation hosts an informal worship at 602 E. Huron ... the Levin for Senate committee is holding a "brainstorming session" at 7:30 at 711 N. University ... Monday ... although it's probably more risky to sleep in on Mondays, you can snore through your morning classes and still catch the day's first happening: a noon lecture by K. Allin Luther on "Contemporary Iran and Recent Development" in the Commons Room of Lane Hall.. . to register to attend a November con- ference on Ethics, Humanism and Medicine, call the Inteflex Program at 764-6263 or 764-1647. . . if interested in being on the selection com- mittee to choose the new University president, MSA will be taking ap- plications all week at 3909 Michigan Union, from 1-5. . . at 4:10 the Jerome Lecture series will present "The Earliest Roman Historical Releas4" delivered by Mario Torelli in Auditorium A, Angell Hall ... if you need a break from Monday night studies, head over to the Union at 7:00, and learn to square dance with the A-squares. . . the Nuclear Concerns Film Series will present "Hiroshima-A Document of the Atomic Bombing" in the Kuenzel Room at 7:30.. . also at 7:30 the Ann Arbor Chapter of the Indoor Light Gardening Society of America will meet at the Matthaei Botanical Gardens ... tying up the evening, Jewish graduate students have planned an informal discussion on marriage between Jews and non-Jews at Hillel at 8. Rah, rah Beethoven's Missa Solemnis may be Heaven to some ears, but it won't sell many records. It seems the Mormon Tabernacle MORMO Choir has finally opened its eyes: to this fact. Among the sundry obscure discs we receive was this collection of school fight songs, entitled Hail to the Victors and adorned by one of Michigan's own Maize 'n' Blue pom-pom girls. Even the illustrious Mor- mon Tabernacle has caught on to the fact that what's on the record# need be of little relevance to what lies within. As for her, well, she's not the conductor - not yet, at0 least. We're rooting for her. On the Outside.. .. Look for a continuation of the lovely fall weather through the end of the weekend and into next week. Today will be mostly clear with a high in the upper half of the 70's. Little chance of precipitation to dam- pen frisbee for the next several days. Low near 50. Byrd clears wayfor FR A vX n sinn hill The Michigan Daily-Sunday, September 24, 1978-Page 3 ARAB ANTI-ACCORD PLAN FINISHED Egypt cheers returning Sadat CAIRO, Egypt (AP)-More than 100,000 cheering Egyptians jubilant over the new prospects for peace with Israel welcomed President Anwar Sadat home yesterday. But in Damascus other Arab leaders put the final touches on a "rejectionist" plan to undermine the Camp David accords. In Jordan, King Hussein reiterated his country's objections to the U.S.- engineered peace proposals and chastised Sadat for suggesting that Egypt might go it alone and negotiate an agreement over the West Bank without Jordanian participation in peace talks. SECRETARY OF STATE Cyrus' Vance, meanwhile, played tourist for a day in Saudi Arabia after being forced to put' off for 24 hours a meeting in Damascus with Syrian President Hafez Assad. Vance, who is trying to sell the Camp David accords to the Arabs, toured Saudi oilfields yesterday. Assad asked him to postpone his Damascus visit un- til today because the Arab hard-line summit ran overtime. Sadat was swamped by thousands of well-wishers at an airport reception at- tended by the entire Egyptian Cabinet and all 360 members of Parliament. Security police were forced to push the crowds aside so Sadat could reach his Cadillac convertible for the triumphant ride into Cairo, where he was cheered by tens of thousands lining the streets. THEY CROWDED under arches holding Sadat's picture and in front of stores festooned with colorful banners proclaiming the Eyptian leader a "Hero of Peace." Sadat had flown in from Morocco, where he spent three days talking with King Hassan II without winning that moderate Arab leader's public support. In the Syrian captial, the leaders of the Palestine Liberation Organization and four hard-line Arab states opposed to the Camp David accords met for a fourth day to complete a "final political statement" from their summit, the group's spokesman said. THE GROUP included Liban leader Moammar Khadafy, PLO head Yasser Arafat and Presidents Hafez Assad of Syria, Houari Boumedienne of Algeris and Ali Nasser Mohammed of South Yemen. In Saudi Arabia, U.S. sources said that after Assad's postponement request Vance wanted to cancel the Syrian visit, but then decided to wait in order not to offerd the Saudis, who had arranged the meeting. Syria is the final stop on the secretary's Mideast mission. -He has already conferred with the Saudis and Jordan's Hussein, making a bid for support for the accords but receiving no commitments. AT A NEWS conference in Amman yesterday, Hussein repeated his coun- try's objections to the new Egyptian- Israeli agreements-that they do not provide for total Israeli withdrawal from Arab lands or for the right of Palestinians to establish their own state in those lands. He said he would join the peace process only if the accords were modified. Hussein also said that Sadat "has no right to feel more concerned about the West Bank than we do." The king clearly was implying that Sadat must not negotiate alone with Israel for regaining ,the West Bank if Jordan chooses not to join the neogtiations, something Sadat has in- dicated he might do. The accords call for the end to Israeli military government on the West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gaza Strip followed by a self-governing Palestinian entity there. But they do not spell out precisely the kind of entity that will be established, nor do- they specifically commit Israel to a timetable for withdrawal of all troops. Jordan is asked under the plan to take part in the peace negotiations and to contribute to a police force on the West Bank. JOAN MICKLIN SILVER'S' 1975 H.ESTER STREET CAROL KANE in a well done allegory of the necessary American assimilation a Russian Jewish family faces in an upward mobile society. As the traditional orthodox wife of an increasingly suc- cessful businessman, Kane is incredibly convincing. TUES: Mizoguchi's THE BALIFF free at 8:00 * CINEMA GUILD IS SEEKING NEW MEMBERS Inquire at ticket desk about meeting Sept. 25 * TONITE AT CINEMA GU ILD 7..a&..05 OLD ARCH AUD $1.50 (The original of "Heaven Can Wait")- Alesander Hall's 1941 Sadat HERE COMES MR. JORDAN The original film about an athlete who, by celestial mistake, is given a ticket to Heaven fifty years before his time. If you've seen the remake, HEAVEN CAN WAIT, you must see HERE COMES MR. JORDAN. ". . . gay, witty, tender and not a little wise, It is one of the choicest comic fantasies." -N.Y. Times. Starring ROBERT MONTGOMERY and CLAUDE RAINS. SCHEDULE CHANGE! HERZOG DOCUMENTARIES on Tues., Sept. 26 (Not 27th)! DETROIT PISTONS CLEVELAND CAVALIERS CRISLER- ARENA Tonight! ' 8 P. M. TICKETS: UAC TICKET CENTRAL. MICHIGAN UNION LO BY S4&$5 CINEMA II TONIGHT AT 784' Angell Hall Aud. A $1.50 L*1 0 U; ยข,4 WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate ajority Leader Robert Byrd, standing irtually alone during a rare Saturday ,ession, pulled off a parliamentary huffle that cleared the way for action n extension of the deadline for atificdtion of the Equal Rights Amen- ment. Before the West Virginia Democrat cted, it had been unclear whether the enate would take up the extension uestion since there are so few remaining days in the 1978 session of Congress. Byrd's procedural step, accom- plished early in the morning with only two other senators on the floor, will make it harder for ERA opponents to lock the legislation from coming to a ote. EARLIER THIS year, the House ap- roved extending the ratification eadline from March 22, 1979, to June 0, 1982. Byrd's maneuver will also enable him to call up the ERA bill as early as tomorrow, although the senator said he hasn't decided yet on a firm date. However, Byrd told reporters the way is now clear for Senate con- sideration of the bill before Congress' scheduled Oct. 14 year-end adjour- nment. And he said he intends to take it up-thus addressing concerns ex- pressed by some ERA proponents that the Senate might not even consider the .u. .u. ~.7 -~ ~ ~u. ~. .WF -~ ~ measure. Shortly after the Senate convened at 7:45 a.m., Byrd announced his intention to call up the ERA extension bill, then objected to further Senate action for the day and moved to adjourn. No ene protested. After a two-second adjournment, he reconvened the Senate for a new "legislative day." Senate Republican leader H~oward Baker of Tennessee andSen. Edmund Muskie (D-Maine) were the only other senators on the floor at the time. UNDER THE SENATE'S intricate set of rules, Byrd's rapid-fire sequence of maneuvers automatically forced the ERA bill onto the Senate's calendar of pending business and ruled out any fur- ther\ debate on the question of scheduling the measure. - Thus, while foes of the ERA- extension bill can still filibuster the bill itself, they can no longer use direct delaying tactics to keep it off the floor. At the same time, Byrd warned in a floor speech that a filibuster against the extension might backfire on the op- ponents. He said it could kill their op- portunity to amend the House-passed extension to allow states to rescind their ratification of the ERA. If a filibuster-breaking question is passed by the Senate, Byrd said, at- tempts to amend the ERA bill to allow stats to rescind their approval would likely be ruled out of order. The Ann Arbor Film Coopertive presents at and A JOSEPH LEWIS FESTIVAL Monday, September 25 ADMISSION FREE THE UNDERCOVER MAN (Joseph H. Lewis, 1949) 7 only-AUD A -'A film noir with heart, GLENN FORD plays an agent wha must reconcile his vocation with his marriage and discharge both his responsibilities to his family and to society through his job. "Lewis' aggressive camera prodcues striking, forceful action sequences with ample imaginative wrinkles."-Myron Meisel. TERROR IN A TEXAS TOWN (Joseph H. Lewis, 1958) 8:30 only-AUD A Lewis' lost film, a bizarre western shot in 10 days on an $80,000 budget. "The arousal of gentle Sterling Hayden to fight a gunfighter with a harpoon is a fitting climax for a career built on the intersection of insane plots with a reasonable man."-Myron Meisel. TUESDAY: Kubrick's BARRY LYNDON * * * Ann Arbor Film Co-op needs new members *** Ask for details at our showings of Manchester Presents A Secia l Concert by DAVEVAN with Peter Madcatl Ruth Sept. 25 & 26 -8 P.M. TICKETS are $5.00 and availble at the door or by calling 428-9287. The BLACK SHEEP THEATRE is just 30 minutes away in MANCHESTER, MICHIGAN. 1 737 N. Huron with this Coupon (at Lowell, just E. of EMU Campus) 10*OFF COVER-. Tuesday, Sept. 26th Les McCann CJ and IR CONDO ti x APPEARING nm](Alo Mjlxb(Am:"fl SEPTEMBER 26 -