Page 2-Sunday, October 8, 1978-The Michigan Daily DEPT. OF PHILOSOPHY is sponsoring a public lecture by DR. ARYEH NEIER Visiting Prof. of New York University Law School Former Executive Director of American Civil Liberties Union 1970-78 "Defending Freedom for the Enemies of Freedom: American Nazis and Free Speech" Rackhamn Amphitheatre Monday, Oct. 9 4 p.m. Receive The Daily daily! Subscribe Call 764-0558 RHODESIAN LEADERS IN WASHINGTON: Smith lobbies for U.S. BOSTON, Va. (AP)-Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith virtually challenged U.S. officials yesterday to support his plan for a black majority government in Salisbury. In his first interview after arriving on a quasi-official visit to the United States, Smith replied. affirmatively when asked whether American supprt was crucial to the success of his proposed solution to Rhodesia's racial crisis. "THE UNITED States is the leader of Michigan Student Assembly Is Now Accepting Applications for the Presidential Search Committee APPLY 3909 MICH. UNION, 1-5 P.M. DAILY DEADLINE 5:00 P.M., 10-12-78 Go Ape with Your Camera In t 3an ItI. Photo Contest! } o .* 1st Prize: $25 gift certificate from Big George's Photo Dept. 2fm 2nd Prize: $15 gift certificate from Purchase Camera. 3rd PdiZE: $10 gift certificate from Purchase Camera. RULES 1. Photographs must be black and white only, no smaller than 5"x7" and no larger than 1 l"x14". Mats and mounts are acceptable. Entries will be judged on con- tent and overall technical quality. 2. Individuals can submit as many photographys as they wish. Photographs will be judged on an individual basis. Name, address and phone number must accom- pany each photo. 3. Entries must be received by The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, no later than 5 p.m., Tuesday, October 17. 4. First, second and third place photos will appear in The Michigan Daily's Sights & Sounds tabloid, to be published Tuesday, October 24. 5. Contest will be judged by The Michigan Daily Photography Staff. 6. Photos accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope will be returned after October 24. All other photos may be picked up between October 25 and November 1, 1978. the free world. It goes without saying," he said in the interview aboard a jetliner carrying his from New York to Washington. Rev. Ndabaningi Sithole, one of three black Rhodesians who share power with Smith in his "transition gover- nment," added that "all exchange of in- formation is good. We feel the United States must lead in southern Africa as it does elsewhere." Smith, in a news conference before leaving Salisbury recalled that former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger had proposed in 1976 the arrangment he is now trying to effect=a turnover of power by year's end to Rhodesia's 6.7 million blacks, with guarantees for the 260,000 whites who have controlled the country. "THE AMERICANS sold us this in the first place," Smith said. "Now that we have implemented it, we are going to go back and-try to sell it to them. It should be easy,'shouldn't it?" Yet no one was more aware than the prime minister of the Carter admin- sitration's official distaste for the solution offered by Smith, whose government it has never recognized since the break from British rule 13 years ago. The United States now supports, with Britain, an "all parties conference" that would include the leftist rebel fac- tions of the Patrioctic Front that are waging guerrilla warfare against Smith's biracial government. THE INVITATION extended Smith by 27 senators led by Sen. S. I. Hayakawa (R-Calif.), precipitated a struggle within the Carter ad- ministration over whether visas should be approved for the representatives of a governmetn the United Nations con- siders "illegal." Those favoring the visit finally prevailed, however, and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance went a step further by consenting to meet with Smith. , In a sign of official displeasure, however, the Armyand the State Department denied him permission to lay a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery. They said such an action would imply a partisan effort to in- fluence U.S. policy. WHILE HAYAKAW and his Senate. colleagues actually extended the in- -M Iupport vitation to Smith and Sithole, the idea originated with two conservatively: oriented organizations, the American Conservative Union and the American Security Council, both of which support the Rhodesian initiative. The latter was playing host to Smith, Sithole and their entourage at a private estate near this hamlet in the northern Virginia foothills. Smith's visit was expected to last a week to 10 days. While all stops have riot been determined, California was scheduled tentatively after Smith arrived. Because of Smith's identification with the Rhodesian issue, organizers of the trip privately admitted concern that he would dominate the spotlight during: this effort to gain American support for: his cause, to the detriment of Sithole as representative of the blacks. For that reason, they sought to en-. sure that Sithole-once held in deten- tion in Rhodesia for plotting Smith's assassination-would participate equally in all events including an ap- pearance on a network television inter- view program today. h * 1 -~ aceceru wins boosrtcarter image WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter's string of recent wins is giving him added leverage with Congress, but some White House staff members are afraid the upswing may be too good to last. His Camp David peace initiative is progressing on schedule, his standing is rising in the polls and he has won from Congress a string of victories topped last Thursday with a vote in the House sustaining his veto of a $10.2 billion public works bill. WHITE HOUSE aides at various Coupon (Continued from Page 1) of Miller and Tilly. Miller said she had been reassured by Tilly recently the coupons are okay, but acknowledged she has actually "never seen the con- tract, but that now it might be in- teresting to go down (to LeMar's office) and take a look at the contract." Tilly, although told by LeMar that Jaeger had signed the contract has not seen the actual contract either. Tilly has asked LeMar to mail him the con- tract within seven days (the middle of this week) "if he (LeMar) wished to avoid legal action." Daily Official Bulletin Sunday, October 8, 1978 D~aily Calendar Music School: William P. Maim, "Japanese Bugaku as a Reflection of Ancient East Asian Culture," Rackham Aud.. 8 p.m. General Notice PRESIDENT'S STATE OF THE UNIVERSITY ADDRESS. President Fleming will give his annual address to the faculty and staff in Lydia Mendelsson Theatre at 8:00 p.m., Monday, October 9, 1978. Dis- tinguished faculty awards will be presented during the program. The Faculty Women's Club and ASCUA will host a reception in the Michigan League following the ceremony. All members of the University community are invited. Monday, October 9, 1978 Daily Calendar Recreational sports: Advisory Committee meeting, Bell Pool Conf. Rm., 4 p.m. Physics Physics/Astonony: B. Kayser, National Science Foundation, "Probing the Weak Interactions of the Charmed Quark by J/4 Decays: Neutral Currents: Where do we Stand?" 2038 Randall Lab., 4 p.n. Women's Studies: Battered Women: Violence Behind Closed Doors, Aud. 3, MLB, 7 p.m. THE MICHIGAN DAILY volume LIX, No.28 Sunday,.October 8, 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. Subscriptionrates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail. outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail outside Ann Arbor. levels, all of whom spoke on condition they not be named publicly, were unanimous in saying the wins give the president new political strength and in- crease the likelihood of further vic- tories. But some fear, as a top-level adviser put it, that "The state of euphoria around here could disappear as quickly as it appeared." Another said it is possible that if Car- ter misses a step or two, "he'll deflate like a balloon." A THIRD, MORE optimistic aide said Carter could now afford to lose a fight or two, and might even gain strength in the polls if he is seen as fighting a good-although losing-fight. "You don't get much credit for losing if you never succeed," he said. "But af- ter you win a few, you can get credit for just trying to do what's right. The public knows you can't win them all." This aide said the White House staff was humming efficiently last week in an all-out lobbying drive to sustain Carter's vote of the $10.2 billion public works bill. Indeed, House Speaker Thomas O'Neill Jr. described the successful lobbying effort as an "avalanche." AND ANOTHER staff member said members of Congress are now paying increasing attention to the president's veto threats and are checking their spending proposals with presidential aides. But there remains below the surface a suspicion that the old Georgia crew around the president still isn't as ef- ficient or capable as a president's staff ought to be, and that this could trip him up in the future. One lower-level aide related this: story: After Carter's Mideast triumph, pollster Patrick Caddell told Hamilton Jordon, the president's top political hand, "The Camp David summit was a personal triumph for the president, and it will increase his standing with the public and with Congress. But you've still got the same boobs on the staff as before." HOWEVER FRAGILE Carter's newfound strength, his aides say he is: steadfast in his vow to impose his own brand of fiscal restraint on Congress. He'll certainly veto a bill to grant in- come tax credits for college tuition, they say, and may well disapprove an election-year cut in income takes,; especially if it is anywhere near the $29.7 billion cut being considered by the Senate. They say Carter can expect further; boosts from good news that is expected soon, including the scheduled signing this week of the civil service revision bill and an Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty promised before Christmas. And, by the end of the year, Carter expects to conclude a SALT II agreement with the Soviet Union: limiting strategic nuclear weapons. Syria orders end to shooting in Lebanon (Continued from Page 1) on Israel to end its support for the Lebanese Christians. Many diplomats fear that continued fighting here and a deeper involvement by Israel might threaten the likelihood of peace under the Camp David accords between Israel and Egypt. INTENSE MORTAR and artillery fire rained down earlier yesterday at a rate of one shell a minute as Syrian ar- tillery units in west Beirut pounded the eastern sector, once the home of 600,000 Christians. Two-thirds of the residents have fled the area. The Christian rightist Voice of Lebanon radio said new battles had begun in the city's northeastern quar- ter, which is cut off from the rest of the capital by roadblocks and snipers. The broadcast said the Christians were assaulting the Qarantina and Beirut River bridges and were drawing heavy retaliatory barrages from Syrian field artillery and rocket positions around -the city. "The random shelling has set off at least three new huge fires in the Dora area near the Qarantina," the broad- cast said. Dora is the site of the main fuel-storage compound that feeds, Beirut's Christian enclave. The huge tanks have been ablaze for nearly a week and black smoke covers much of the Christian sector and the neigh-A boring Beirut port. POLICE SOURCES said at least 85 Lebanese had been killed and 200 wounded since Friday, bringing the: casualty toll for the past week to 500: dead and 700 wounded. Christians claimed Friday that more than 800 had been killed and 3,000 wounded. Lebanese Moslems, who teamed up with Palestinian guerrillas against the Christians in the 1975-76 civil war, have stayed out of the Christian-Syrian con- frontation in Beirut. -The Syrians make up the largest pait of the Arab League peacekeeping army that intervened on the side of th$ Christians to halt the civil war. Besidet wanting to disarm the militias and establish control over the Christian sectors, the Syrians are also unhappy with the alliance the Christians have formed with ,Israel in southern Lebanon. There has been no official ex- planation for the latest Syrian offensive against the Christians, which erupted in earnest last Monday. The Syrians con- fined their operations to a steadily in; creasing barrage from artillery, rockets and tank cannons, but speculation was that the bombardment might be a prelude to a large-scale ground assault. Union Programming's "Soundstage" presents: COFFEE HOUSES Beginning Tues., Oct. 10 at 8 p.m. in the University Club of the Student Union