PEACE AGREEMENT IN 'THE SUPREME NATIONAL INTEREST' Begin seeks Knesset support overwhelming majority of the 120 Knesset members - most analysts said 90-100 votes - when the lawmakers decide later this week on the two "framework" agreements he negotiated at Camp David with President Carter and Egypt's Anwar Sadat. OPPOSITION leader Shimon Peres, critical of Begin's handling of the negotiations, told the Knesset his Labor Party would reluctantly support the ac- cords. But he asserted that they will cost a "double price - the unavoidable price of peace and the price for the mistakes" of the government. "We have chosen to be supporters of the only existing possibility for peace," Peres said. In related developments: " Secretary of State Cyrus Vance briefed Carter on his largely fruitless Mideast trip last week to sell the Camp David accords to Jordan and Saudi Arabia and to soften the opposition of Syria. * The State Department announced that Jordan's King Hussein has decided against a proposed mid-October trip to the United States but that he would probably go at a later date. Jordanian government sources said Hussein would visit other Arab leaders this week to explain his stand on the U.S. peace initiative. Hussein's participation is considered crucial for talks on the future of the Israeli-occupied West Bank of the Jor- dan River, but he has expressed major reservations about the accords' failure to guarantee total Israeli withdrawal. U.S. officials say Begin pledged during the Camp David talks to halt construction of new settlements until full agreement is reached on the West Bank and Gaza Strip, which could take up to five years. BUT THE Israeli leader has insisted he promised only a three-month freeze, the planned period for final negotiations with Egypt. He said yesterday a careful check of Israeli records from the summit showed his memory was correct. He said he promised Carter a freeze during talks for a peace treaty - "and today we are engaged in just one negotiation, with Egypt." He added: "As regarding adding manpower to existing settlements, no problems exist" and "we will reinfcorce them with more families." Begin said he would write Carter reaffirming his stand on the length of the freeze. The White House said last week the dispute would be resolved within a few days. There was no im- mediate Washington comment on Begin's new statements on the issue. Hard-line nationalist Geula Cohen, a Knesset deputy from Begin's Likud bloc, disrupted the prime minister's low-keyed 40-minute address, charging that he was "cheating the nation" and repeatedly calling for his resignation. A nti-spy By JEFFREY WOLFF A few minutes after 3:00 on Sunday' afternoon, an exhausted Peggy Shaker1 of the Campaign to Stop Government Spying motioned for the adjournment of the final session of this major three-day conference. Thus ended an intense national con- ference on Government Spying which Shaker pointed out had . brought together "over 240 registrants from every geographical area of the U.S., cities and rural, representatives of two state legislatures (Michigan and1 Illinois), three political parties, six dif- ferent religious groups and many others" to participate in over forty. workshops and two evening presen- tations. THE HECTIC final plenary' dramatized both the strengths and dif- ficulties of such a coalition as par- ticipant after participant advocated the1 superior merits of specific tactics or outlooks in stopping what all agreed" was the evil - government spying and harassment.' Several members who had attended an earlier workshop on political' prisoners demanded that a greater share of the campaign's resources be devoted to publicizing and alleviating the plight of political prisoners, the vic- tims of government spying. conference The primary debate was triggered by charged that those who wanted the conference to nment declare produce something concrete - in this country specifically, a statement advocating out as a wart abolishing the FBI. military progr HARVEY KAHN, researcher and as in Vietnam author of many articles on government the workshop and private spying for the Public Eye, Native Amer supported this position. He said the con- analogy but w tinuing FBI surveillance and in- was counter-ii filtration of such current movements as nam here. It w The Longest Walk Indian march this until the FBI sl summer - even during the peak of A discussi public scrutiny and suspicion of the FBI spying on the - is "proof that the FBI cannot be con- produced an it trolled but must be abolished." veillance an Esther Hearst of the National movement. TI Coalition Against Repressive veillance Ma Legislation reminded the group that the American Fri idea behind the coalition is to "organize explained, "h and educate on many different levels" national sect and this is not accomplished by "taking tivities." positions." Despite thisl Sunday morning's workshops also in- conference alo dicated the wide spectrum of interests terests, other represented at the conference more the conferenc than the issue-oriented ones of the day Harvey Ka before. There were separate workshops discussion in ti on surveillance of blacks, Native repression Mo Americans, gays, women, Latinos, and are trying t' labor, with each emphasizing their own beyond your o history as victims of intelligence agen- trying to buil cies and police abuse, political work FOR EXAMPLE, Afeni Shakur mon bond." ends "the American gover- d war on the black people " which the "FBI carried ime counter-intelligence am, along the same lines ." John Trudell, running ps on Surveillance and icans made the same with Wounded Knee: "It nsurgency, it was Viet- was not a violent situation showed up." on about government women's movement also impressive record of sur- .d infiltration of the 'he reason for that sur- rgaret Van Houten of ends Service Committee ad nothing to do with urity or criminal ac- kind of breakdown of the ng the lines of special in- workshops did articulate e's underlying purpose ihn, summing up the he workshop on The Anti- vement, concluded, "we o generate structures own little group; we are d a coalition and in our repression is the com- n Ford boosts Griffin Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan iI A I r- ------- WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----------- 1 1 ii b.------------.E .CLIP AND MAIL TODAY --===----------- . USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST Words 1I 2 3 4 5 add. 0-14 1.70 3.40 4.60 5.80 7.00 1.00 *Please indicate 15-21 2.55 5.10 6.90 8.70 10.50 1 .50 where thisad is to run:; 22-28 3.40 6.80 9.20 1 1.60 14.00 2.00 fr rent 29-35 4.25 8.50 11.50 14.50 17.50 2.50 heopaated 36-42 5.10 10.20 13.80 17.40 21.00 3.00 room"""e 43-49 6.80 11.90 16.10 20.30 24.50 3.50 ec Seven words per line. Each group of characters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over 5 characters count as two words-This includes telephone numbers. l . . m uC.U PL inenaa AND MAILa TO AYa..n.m umw (Continued from Page t) In their plugs for Griffin, both Kissinger and Ford stressed his familiarity with Washington business acquired over 22 years in. office - 10 in the House and 12 in the Senate. Each of them used the word "inexperienced" to characterize President Carter in com- parisons. Ford told reporters at the Hyatt Regency Hotel the imbalance of Democrats and Republicans deprives the country of "constructive" Republican programs such as the Kemp-Roth proposal to cut federal taxes by one-third over the next three years. IT WOULD TAKE only "a few more Republicans or discerning Democrats" to balance political rivalry in Congress and represent the taxpayers more adequately. The rejection last week by the Senate Finance Committee of the Kemp-Roth tax plan ran contrary to the sentiments of most taxpayers, Ford said. He predicted that decision, along with "a major failure" in economic policy which has produced a high rate of in- flation will result in a successful fall THE Conservatory Restaurant is now open for B REAKFAST specializing in Omelettes of our own creation 2250 possible combintions of cheeses, meats, veggies & sauces Served with Danish, Bagels, Muffins & Much More OPEN FOR BREAKFAST: MON.-FRI. 7 a.m.-lT1 arm. at campaign, election for the GOP. Ford said he looked forward to a net Republican gain in November of 20-25 House seats, one to three in the'Senate, and up to eight governorships. Curren- tly the Republicans are outnumbered approximately two-to-one in both the 435-member House and the 100-member Senate. Republicans also hold only 12 of the nation's 50 governorships. FORD HAD some words of praise for the Carter administration. "I applaud' the results of (the Mideast summit at) Camp David as we know them today," said the tired-looking ex-President. "Obviously that success at Camp David will enhance and benefit the President." Ford added, "We have a few pitfalls yet to overcome" in the negotiations. Ford had clearly come in order to say, as he did twice in so many words, that the Carter administration "blew it" while formulating economic policy in 1976 and that it will hurt the party in power come election time. "First they increased spending quite significantly over the budget I had proposed," Ford said. "And by that process they reignited inflation, which we had almost under control ... "WHAT THEY HAVE to do now is restrain the growth of federal spending and in turn, in my opinion, that will reduce the deficit. When asked about his own political future, Ford said he hasn't "really given much thought to" a 1980 presiden- tial race. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LIx, No. 17 Tuesday, September 26, 1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class. postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109.' Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12, September through April (2 semesters); $13 by maidl, outside Ann Arbor. Summer session, published through Saturday: morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; - $7.00 by mail outside Ann Arbor. 4 1 t N J /II .. 516 E. Liberty 994-5360 I PROPAGANDA IN THE FIRST WORLD WAR AND IT'S AFTERMATH ADOLF-DER OBERMENSCH J 4 R 9 Y d N e w -Awl