South { y MARKPARRENT Ann Arbor police arrested a man in South. Quad yesterday for allegedly p1ling a fire alarm and attempting to assault a female dormitory staff mem- ber. ,,According to South Quad building director Mary Bewley, the man is not a South Quad resident or a University student, but had been hanging around the dormitory for several days. THE MAN, whom police declined to ientify pending arraignment this mor- ning, allegedly pulled the alarm at about 7 a.m. yesterday morning. In ac- cordance with anew South Quad policy, the building was evacuated while staff, members checked for a fire. Bewley said .after residents re- enter4 the building, a man entered a female staff member's room and at- tempted to assault her. The woman wa able to defend herself and the man escaped.' e, aboutAl30 yesterday morning, a redent in the 6100 corridor reported a suspicious rson loitering in the area. Several $tff members were alerted and found te suspect in a room on the ajl-female.. corridor. According to Resident Advisor Scott Goodman, the WORM POACHERS TORONTO (AP)Bruce Thrasher, 27, a Toronto golf course superintendent, says worms are being "poached" from his golf course. 'Thf's er gave a group of wrirmpiejres permission to use his course if they gave him acut of their profits. However, the pickers have been sneaking into the course at night and ignoring Thrasher's request. juad woman assaulted man was clad only in gym shorts and offered no resistance. We "just sort of kept an eye on him until security got there," said Goodman. HE WAS taken down to the lobby where the staff member identified him as the assailant, according to Bewley. Ann Arbor police then arrested the man, who is being held in the county jail. Bewley said that she understood that the suspect also told police that he pulled the fire alarm. According to Bewley and several staff members, the man had been "ac- ting at home" in parts of South Quad for several days. "He gained entrance (to South Quad rooms) by simply walking in and acting at home - helping himself to food, tur- ning on their stereo, etc.," said Bewley in a written statement to be distributed to residents today. "Each roommate assumed - while he was there - that he was a friend of the other room-, mate,"the statement continued. ONE STAFF member said the man had been sleeping in lounges, but Bewley said this was doubtful because security personnel are supposed to check the lounges every night. Bewley said the man usually frequen- ted women's rooms. Nothing has been reported stolen by dorm residents that could be attributed to the suspect. SOuth Quad residents have been evacuated at each fire alarm this year because last spring, many students did not evacuate the building when there was an actual fire because they believed it to be just another false alarm. In an unrelated incident, two first- year East Quad residents will have their leases terminated effective tomorrow for pulling a false alarm earlier this year, according to Ander- son-Cooley house Resident Director Bob June. 'U' POLI SCI COLLOQUIUM: Profs de-bate Camp David accord The Michigan Doily-Tuesday, September 26, 1978-Page CAREER OPPORTUNITIES MEETING Career Development Opportunities at a Unique Electronics Company We are seeking innovative and talented BS, MS, and Ph.S. graduates and undergraduate co-op stu- dents. Join our professional staff. We are doing state-of-the-art research and development in the following areas: " ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING AND COMPUTER SCIENCE Solid State Deviced, Change Coupled Devices, MOS and Bipolar Integrated Circuits and LSI Analog Hybrid Circuits, Logic Circuits, Comput- er Architecture, Software, Systems Analysis, Signal Processing Communications, Radar and IR Systems, Microwave Antennas, receivers and Transmitters, Displays. * MECHANICAL, ENGINEERING & MATERIAL SCIENCE Servo Mechanisms, Heat Transfer, Optics, Structures, Mellurgy, Stability, Analysis, Aero- dynamics and Process Control. Meet with Hughes Technical Managers and recent Graduate Engineers on Tuesday, October 3, 1978 at 8:30 AM to 12:30 PM in Room 128F, West En- gineering Building. ---- I By LEONARD BERNSTEIN Two widely divergent views of the meaning and value of the recent Camp David accords between Israel and Egypt were expressed at the Political Science department's World Political Colloquium n Angell Hall yesterday. University Political Science professors Ali Mazrui and Raymond Tanter disagreed about the current potential for peace and the future of the Middle East in general at the discussion, attended by about forty people. "I AM MYSELF pessimistic not just about the accords, but whether peace in the Middle East is possible without another military crisis," Mazrui said. According to Mazrui, the document describing a general "framework for peace" in the Middle East would have been a start towards peace in the area had it not been "nullified" by the document outlining a separate peace between Egypt and Israel. Mazrui said that the separate peace between the two nations "reduces Israel's willingness to solve the Palestinian problem" which he listed as one of three essential requirements for a lasting peace. Mazrui called Israel's withdrawal from all land cap- tured in the 1967 war and the guarantee of security and territorial integrity to all states in the Middle East as the other two requirements for peace. BUT TANTER disagreed with Mazrui's stand on the Palestinians. "Camp David excluded the P.L.O.. (Palestine Liberation Organization) from the peace process, therefore peace is possible," he said. "The P.L.O. is the major obstacle to peace." Tanter said because the agreements had divided Egypt from the rest of the Arab world, the possibility of another oil embargo or a united Arab front war with Israel is greatly reduced. The agreements also allow the Egyptians to divert military resources towards Africa or into their economy, he said. Tanter said that had there been no summit meeting between Egypt and Israel, a fifth war "either by design or by miscalculation" between the two was imminent. Tanter based his asser- tions on U.S. intelligence reports. Political Science professor Clement Henry supported Mazrui's pessimistic view of the Middle East scene, but for other reasons. Henry said that the United States had hoped that a peace between Egypt and Israel would have a "domino effect" on the other Arab nations, causing them to eventually reach or support accords themselves. But Henry forecast instead a "polarization" between moderate and radical Arab leaders. Henry said that as the situation now stands, a moderate Palestinianfaction could not emerge, nor could Syria have anything to gain by endorsing the treaties. "If the split in the Arab world means a polarization between radical and moderate, the peace-making process is not available," Henry said. Carter plans economy b oosting m (Continuedfnrom Pagel) vowed td restore good health to the U.S. econrny as part of a global effort to help' create new jobs and reduce in- flation. "Let there be no doubt in your mind about how seriously I take these pledges that have been made on my own word of honor and on behalf of the people of the United States," he said, adding, My own reputation is at stake asa4eder.' f - Carter addressed ;"about 3,500 degleates from the 135 nations that con- stitie the IMF and the World Bank. Questions: about the health of the world economy and the strength of the dollar are high on the agenda at the four-day annual meeting. CARTER'S EXPORT promotion" program, which has been on the drawing boards for months, is expected to be 'formally announced today. Its chief thrust will be to remove paper- work and' 'government regulations regarded as a hindrance to exports. The aim' of the program will be to reduce the U.S. trade deficit, which totalled a record $27 billion last year and is likely to top $30 billion this year. The deficits are regarded as a chief cause in the fall in the value of the dollar'in the past 18 months. - Carter said the new program will be the "first phase of a long-term program to expand exports," indicating other measures will be announced at a later date.; CARTER TOLD the delegates ;they should seek ways to foster growth for both developed and undeveloped nations and said the United States is pledged to ' growing international ef- fort to eliminate the worst aspects of human poverty."' aspects of human poverty." Earlier. Jacques de Larosiere, the IMF's managing director, said the rapid growth of the U.S. economy and the slower growth in Japan and Europe have led to serious imbalances in trade and inflation, which are the root cause of the steep decline of the dollar. He said coordinated economic growth by the major industrial powers is more L r easures important than the rate of growth. The United States, he said should slow its economy below the 1977 growth rate of 5 per cent, while Japan and Germany must speed their development. A scenario for more balanced growth of major economies was agreed to by Japan, Germany and the United States at the economic summit conference in Bonn. The Carter administration is aiming for an economic growth rate Qf about 3.5 per cent next year. A hungry young soph from Hesperia Lunch 11:30 to 1:15 Whose own cooking daily got drearia Dinner 5:00 to 9:15 Said, "I'm in the mood SNACK BAR For really good food".. . Lower Level So he dashed to the League Cafeteria! Open 7:15 AM to 4:00 PM SPECIAL LOW PRICES FOR STUDENTS Send your League Limerick to: The u chiganManager, Michigan League The)Vlic iga 227 South Ingalls Next to Hill Auditorium You will receive 2 free dinner Located in the heart of the campus, tickets if your limerick is used in it is the heart of the campus ... one of our ads. i i E 1 HUGHES i L------------ -J HUGHES AIRCRAFT COMPANY U.S. citizenship required " Equal opportunity M/F/HC employer 00 .. i..." .t... .. r 5..}.t" i: r lS: i id-<, fF r j 'ii y "i¢,d.. 11.1 - . s * s r ' . ' .bra= aw.*y; * .... <' :., ,. . .. ?ra