Page 14-Friday, September 29,11978-The Michigan Daily TALKS COULD STAR T BYWEDS.: Israelis plans next peace moves Conferees agree. on tuition tax credit (Continued from Page 1) TEL AVIV, Israel (AP)-The Israeli government, armed with over- whelming parilamentary backing for the Camp David accords, began detailed work yesterday on the next s;eps toward peace with Egypt. In Cairo, senior Egyptian Foreign Ministry officials said preliminary- mnieetings could begin as early as next 1Wednesday, Oct. 4, in the Suez Canal city of Ismailia. Israeli army specialists were preparing to leave for Cairo today to reopen the direct com- munication links that will facilitate negotiations: MEANWHILE, U.S. Mideast envoy Alfred Atherton arrived from Jordan to ';rief Israeli officials on his swing through Arab capitals. The developments underscored the two directions in which Israeli policy- makers must face in the coming weeks: along the relatively well-mapped path to an 'agreement with Egypt, and toward an uncertain cast of characters and vague principles laid out by the Camp David accords for eventual agreement on the West Bank of the Jor- dan River and the Gaza Strip. The Israeli Parliament, the Knesset, approved the Camp David plan by a vote of 84-19 after an exhausting 17 hours of debate that ended at 3:30 a.m. yesterday. The accords call for the withdrawal of Israeli troops and civilian settlements from the Sinai Peninsula and return of the desert region to Egypt. Thsey call on the two countries to sign a treaty by mid- December. IN WASHINGTON, President Carter, who had hailed the Knesset action as "a great step forward," told a news con- ference yesterday afternoon Begin and President Anwar Sadat of Egypt told him after the vote there are now "no remaining obstacles" to an Egyptian- Israeli peace treaty. Asked if he would go to the Middle East for the treaty signing, Carter said: "Nothing would please me more than to participate in the signing of a peace treay at an early date.' Yigal Hurvitz, minister of commerce and a member of Begin's own Likud bloc, quit the Cabinet yesterday to protest the accords, saying he didn't want to "take part in this whole process." ALTHOUGH preparatory talks may begin next week, Israeli officials said Defense Minister Ezer Weizman, a key negotiator, would not go to Egypt before the end of the Jewish high holy days-New Year next Monday and Tuesday and Yom Kippur on Oct. 11. The details that negotiators must work out include the timetable for the Israeli withdrawl from the Sinai, whose first phase must be carried out within three to nine months of the treaty- signing; the future of Israeli invest- ments in the peninsula, such as tourist facilities and oil fields; traffice arraygements between Israel and Egypt,'and the future of the U.S.- operated early-warning stations in the Gidi and Mitla passes. The evacuation of civilian and military posts in the Sinai must be completed in two to three years. The 18 civilian settlements now house 4,000 people. Egy t's acting foreing minister, Butro Ghali, said the Knesset vote should encourage other Arab nations "to think seriously about negotiating with Israel so that we can achieve a comprehensive peace in the region." Ghali told the Associated Press in an interview that Israel may voluntarily end its military government in the West Bank in the next three months. "There is a general understanding that there will be paralellism and syn- chronization," Ghali said. "At the time this Egyptian-Israeli treaty is con- cluded, you can have the end of military administration in the West Bank and the Gaza." the conference committee acted: "We may not have gotten all we wanted, but we are well on our way to having a law." THE HOUSE BILL had included a credit for parents of pupils in private elementary and secondary schools, most of which are church-oriented. That approach was rejected by the Senate on grounds such aid would run afoul of the Constitution's requirement for separation of church and state. Sen. Russell Long (D-La.), cheif of the Senate conferees, along with Senate backers of the elementary-secondary have said there was no way the Senate, in the closing days of the 1978 session, would accept a compromise that carried such aid. Rep. James Burke (D-Mass.) said the House would agree to dropping elemen- tary aid and retain it for high school and college but could go no furthr. AFTER THE ENTIRE bill appeared all but lost for the year, House mem- bers caucused. behind closed doors, emerged and voted 4-3 to drop their in- sistence on elementary and secondary aid. Earlier, Long told the conference that some items will be trimmed from a big tax-cut bill if necessary to allow the college tuition credit. Backers reason that Carter would not risk vetoing the big tax cut a few days before the November election just to TAKE THE SHOT. " " MAKE THE REBOUND WITH BASKETBALL SHOES FROM AND " BRUIN-Leather & Suede " AMERICANA-Low & Hi 9 BLAZER-Leather & Suede " PROMODEL * SUPERSTAR * ABDUL JABBAR-Leather & Suede - 30 S.STATEST _ 995-1717 309 S. STATE ST. ; :. ...:... ,99S-171 7 defeat tuition credits. But already the Carter ad- ministration is emphasizing that it is not happy with the Finance Commit- tee's tax cut bill, mainly because of it cost and the deep reduction in taxes on capital gains. "IT'S TOO LARGE, particularly il the out-years (1980 and beyond) and it's going to have to come down," Emil Sunley, deputy assistant secretary of the treasury, told reporters yesterday. Administration officials, while ex- pressing displeasure, have avoided an outright veto threat at this point. They know the Finance Committee bill may be changed by the Senate and will be compromised with a less expensive, $16.3-billion version approved by the House. One obvious candidate for trimmin is the Senate's capital gains tax cut o $2.5 billion. The House voted a cut of less than $1.9 billion in the tax on suc1 income. A compromise halfway betwer those figures could make room in th budget for the tuition tax credits. PBB fo-und, in 9 of 10 Michigan residents (Continued from Page 1) as memory loss. In the study, 896 Grand Rapids ani Kalamazoo residents were given botl blood and fat tests, and of the 101 analyzed, about 91 per cent had PBB i4 their blood, and 98 per cent had the chemical in their fat, Fry said. Tracet of PBB are reputed to be more easily detected in fat than blood, he added. 722 persons from the Detroit area, a well as the two cities of the previou test, had only blood samples taken Like the first subjects, approximatel 91 per cent of these were shown to con tain PBB in their blood. The highest level of PBB found in a human was discovered in a Gr.an Rapids resident: 37.2 parts per billion. One part per billion is the level at whic the chemical is considered potentiall dangerous, and 20 parts per billion i the maximum level allowed by the stat in animals slaughtered for human con sumption. ICHIGI ALL-N1 Saturday;Sept. 30 I IG E - 8PM-8AM _ * FEATURING: "American Graffiti"-continuous showings all night. A11.. L_ .a- if AInE"w 1 All nighT aisco-courtesy of WRCN. Dance contest-sponsored by CBS Records. Live jazz-in the University club. Half-price on bowling, billiards, and pinball. Ken Felt-performing in an evening of mime, puppetry, mask play, music, etc. (8:30-1 1:00pm). Student Activities Fair-representatives from all organizations. Prize Raffle-with prizes donated by: CBS Records, Checkmate, Don Cisco's, The Michigan Daily, the Athlete's Shop, K Marty's. I 1