The Michigan Daily-Saturday, November 4, 1978-P 1I ATM: a ~ SEEMEV4S A1PEN CALLZ t~lJY Study halls galore :' Bureaucratic hassles within the University have delayed the ivailability of evening study halls in Angell hall, but officials say the rooms will be ready for use on Monday. The four classrooms-4004, 4007, 4068, and 4205 Angell Hall-will be open for study from 5:00 p.m. until midnight, and hopefully will alleviate overcrowding problems in UJniversity libraries. And there's more good news. Bland Leverette, '"#he administrave manager for space and equipment in the literary college, said food and drink will be allowed in the study halls. 1S Canham 'hoops'it up The Michigan-Notre Dame. basketball game at the Pontiac Silverdome isn't until March, but University ticket master Don Can- I,ham can hardly wait for the whistle to blow. Checking out the 82,000 seat arena Thursday, Canham was caught drooling over anticipated icket sales by Detroit News sports columnist Joe Falls. "All I know is when we leave here we're going to leave with a lot of money," Canham gleefully calculated as he rubbed his hands together. By the way, University students will have to pay the same price for tickets as any other Joe attending the game. But Don need not worry; he's been known to have a few extras at times. Quick Don, no one's lookin'! Buckeye body language Although the Big Ten Conference is no longer the "Big Two and Little Eight" the hatred between Michigan and Ohio State is as healthy as ever. A Columbus prints company is offering Buckeye fans "the t-shirt that says it all." It's a red t-shirt with gray print proclaiming "Beat, curse, stomp, kill, maim, destory, massacre, eliminate, atrash, thrash, annihilate, wipe out, pulp, pound, squash, whip, whup, exterminate, liquidate, cream, crinkle, cripple, murder, mash, smash, total, quarter, crunch, flay, flog, fight, throttle, insult, hurt, harass, harm, bludgeon, violate, vex, curse, ax, besmirch, brutalize, snap, twist, dislocate . . . & finish Michigan." For more profane fans, an adults-only shirt is available with a different, yet unspecified, final action verb. Take Ten An estimated 1,500 to 2,000 students massed in front of President Fleming's house on Nov. 4, 1968 and demanded that he end war research at the University. The protesters also demanded that the University sever all ties with corporations that produce war products, abolish all entrance requirements, and give students a fairer voice in school affairs. Fleming met with the group and said, "All war researh has both military and civilian applications." Happenings FILMS Cinema Guild-The Seduction of Mimi, 7,9:05 p.m., Old A&D. Cinema II-The 7 Year Itch, 7, 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Mediatrics-They Shoot Horses, Don't They? 7, 9:15 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Couzens Film Co-op-Silent Movie, 8, 10 p.m., Couzens cafeteria. Ann Arbor Film Co-op-13th Annual Tournee of Animation, 7, 8:40, 10:20 p.m., Aud. 3, MLB. PERFORMANCES PTP--"California Suite," 8 p.m., Power Center. R.C. Players-"Endgame," along with three short works by Beckett, 8 p.m., R.C. Aud., East Quad. Celebrants-"Godspell," 8 p.m., Holy Trinity Chapel, 511 W. Forest, Ypsilanti. $hgwcase Theatre-"Blood Wedding," 8 p.m., Trueblood, Frieze. MUSKET-"'M.an of .La Mancha," 8 p.m., Mendelssohn Theatre. Wind ensemble-"Masterworks for Wind," 8 p.m., Rackham. Paul Siebel, singer, songwriter, 9 p.m., Ark. VANCE MEDIATOR FOR RENEWED TALKS Pact to center on wes WASHINGTON (AP)-The Israeli- Egyptian peace pact will confront directly the issue of future decisions on the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance said yesterday. Vance said Egypt and Israel would exchange documents establishing the "timing and modalities" for beginning negotiations on setting up an autonomous Palestinian entity in the territory. THE QUESTION OF whether to link the peace treaty with the more complex and sensitive West Bank and Gaza issues has been the most difficult hur- dle in the talks thus far. Vance's statement at a news conference yester- day was the first public commitment that the pact will establish a link bet- ween the issues. Egypt has insisted on such linkage, while Israel has maintained that the West Bank and Gaza talks are a separate matter.. Vance indicated the link may be con- tained in an exchange of letters dealing "with the question of the timing and modalities of addressing the issue of carrying out the provisions of the general framework." BY "GENERAL FRAMEWORK," Vance referred to that part of the Camp David agreement that deals with set- ting up a Palestinian government in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, areas which Israel occupied in 1967. It is a problem that has bedeviled Middle East peacemakers for more than 10 years. Thus far, only Egypt has indicated it will participate in the negotiations. Other Arab states have said the framework does not provide the specific guarantees they want of com- plete Israeli withirawal from the cap- tured territory and the return of Arab Jerusalem. The United States has sought unsuccessfully to persuade Jor- dan to join the talks. VANCE SAID IT was his belief that the negotiations on the West Bank and Gaza could go forward with only the Israelis, the Egyptians and those Palestinians who could *be persuaded to join the Egyptian delegation. "We would hope that as the discussions got under way, we would begin to find people beginning to par- ticipate through consultation with those Palestinians and Egyptians involved in the negotiations. There is, in my judgment, increasing interest in how this process is going to work," Vance said. Vance said the United States has made no commitment yet to finance Israel's withdrawal from the Sinai, which is supposed to take place in stages after the Egypt-Israeli treaty is signed. HE CONFIRMED THAT Prime Minister Menachem Begin is asking for a 25-year loan, which informed sources say would amount to about $3.3 billion, *to pay for the removal of settlers and the cost of new bases for Israeli troops. "We said we shnuld take the matter under consideration. It will require we careful study," Vance said. Vance said that he and Begin did not resolve the dispute over the plan to ex- pand its West Bank settlements, which : Bank the United States considers illegal. "It remains a question for discussion bet-' ween us," he said. Vance said there were still unresolved issues in the Egypt-Israeli negotiations, but he added that steady progress was being made. The negotiations continued Friday. Other sources indicated the treaty was almost complete. Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman has flown to Jerusalem to brief the Israeli Cabinet on the pact. Daily Official Bulletin SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4.1978 SUMMER PLACEMENT :32001 SAB 76:3-4117 The Bristol Regional Environmental Center. Conn.: Openings for interns in the field of environmental education. Must have background1r natural sciences. Deadline Dec. 1. Further details, available. Forestry Service/Fish & Wildlife Service: Filirig' date Dec. 1 through Jan. 15. Further information and. applications available. League manager frets over stolen flag By JOE VARGO The significance of a stolen flag might not appear to be great in this world of tax revolts, inflation and energy shortages. But that isn't the case at The Michigan League. It's been two weeks since the maize and blue flag-believed to be the only University flag flying on campus--was stolen from the flagpole at the League. And League manager Patricia Lawson is still very upset. "I NEARLY CRIED when I found out it was stolen," she said. Lawson has good reason to be upset. When she came here in 1977, she thought it would be a good idea to have the flag flying on campus. Flagpoles are expensive, however, and the budget wouldn'T ALLOW FOR SUCH A LUXURY. A flagpole finally became available when The University pur- chased St. Joseph's Hospital. "After we got the pole, I contacted the alumne group and Alva Gordon Sink to see if they would make us a flag," said Lawson. "Rather than sell us the m flag, however, they donated it to us as a present for The League's 50th anniver- sary." THE FLAG APPEARED on October 18. "I was so proud to see it go up after all that time and effort," said Lawson. "I had decided to put floodlights around it and leave it flying around the clock. It would never come down." But it did come down. Sometime bet- ween Saturday, October 21 and Mon- day, October 23 someone either shin- nied the pole or used a ladder to reach the flag. Although campus security and local police were called, no trace has been found of the flag. And Patricia Lawson remains upset. "I really feel bad about it," said Lawson. "It's not that we can't buy another one, because we can. But this one was a gift to us, and, as such, it held sympblic value. It took over a year to raise that flag, and I believe it was the first.flag flying on campus. Now, when the League celebrates its 50th anniver- sary in May, it won't be around." Daily phoneNumbers: Billing-764-0550 Circulation-764-0558 Classifieds-764-0557 Display-764-0554 News and Happenings-764-0552 Sports-764-0562 I This space contributed by the publisher as a public service. UAC Medlatrics PRESENTS: THEY SHOOT HORSES, ON'T ThEY (Sidney Pollack, 1969) Director Pollack, using Horace McCoy's novel, puts Jane Fonda and Michael Sarrazin on the dance floor to the goading of Gig Young, the cynical promotor, and comes up with some of the most memorable screen performances ever. "I was moved, then shaken by the beauty and genius of Horace McCoy's metaphor. Two people circling endlessly around a dance floor, the girl, tough and scared and vulnerable, spitting out 'Christ' as an epitaph at every new evidence that God did not exist. In the stages of the marathon with death hovering everywhere, the survivors make us rejoice for all those '30's families that hung out together through the incredible squalor of the period."-Andrew Sorris, Village Voice. Sat., Nov. 4 7:00& 9:15 Nat. Sci. Aud. Admission $1.50 R.C. Players preseits ENDGAME and other short works by SAMUEL BECKETT L~eukema 4I's no. lonrger a death sentence.' NOV. 2, 3,4 & 9,10,11 SPEAKERS International Trade Symposium-"Anti-dumping Law Policy and Implementation," 10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m., Hutchins Hall, Law Quad. Stearns Lecture/Concert-Chung-shu Chang, "Peking Opera: Song, Dance and Gesture,'8 p.m., Stearns Bldg., North Campus. Birth Control Education Seminar-"Sexuality with Responsibility:. Developing a School Program," noon, Washtenaw Intermediate School District Bldg. MEETINGS Folklore Society-Square, Contra Dance, 8 p.m., 1429 Hill, free admission. Eclipse Jazz-"Ann Arbor Jazz Workship: Beginners Session," 3:30-5:30 p.m., Anderson Room, D, Union. MISCELLANEOUS Football-broadcast, UM vs. Iowa: 91.7 FM, 1:45 p.m. Friends of Matthaei Botanical Gardens-Annual Fall Sale: Plants, Herbal Products, Botanical Gifts, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., lobby, Gardens. Pendleton Center-"Rhyme Space Poetry Readings," 2 p.m., 2nd floor, Union. UAC/Union Programming Committee-Mini-course on Ballroom Dancing, beginning November 8,7-9:30 p.m., sign up at Ticket Central in the Union before Nov. 8. Ethics, Humanism, and Medicine-Last chance to register for the conference, Nov. 11, 8-4:30 p.m., Public Health Building, call 764-6263 for registration information. 8pm $1.50 East-Quad i TMANN THEARES F4X GET WiN MAPLE VILLAG SHOPPIN CENER SNEAK PREVIEW Saturday night Only of "MAGIC" at 8:00 SHOWTIMES IE'S FRIDAY :XPRESS"0:30 When you were young, no form of cancer terrified your parents more than leukemia did. Just fifteen years ago, a child with leukemia could expect to live only months. But, thanks to research, things have changed. Children who once lived months are now living years. Many of them are grow- ing up. Some are already adults, living normal lives. Did you ever wonder what the American Cancer Society did with the money you gave us? Well, some of it went to leukemia research. And, if we had more we could do more. Give to the American AQATHAcn sries L EATt1mENILE SATURDAY. 1:30 4:00 6:30 9:05 Tickets on sale 15 minutes prior to showtime