GEO WOES See Editorial Page rlJIii i Iai1 FADING High56a Low-low 44s See Today for details VoL. LXXXIX, No 57 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, November 11, 1978 Ten Cents Twelve Pages LSA lans review o honors program By HOWARD WITT Prompted by Honors Council Director Otto Graf's retirement at the end of the current academic year, the Literary -College (LSA) has appointed an ad hoc committee to review the college's honors program. Chaired by Political Science Professor Harold Jacobson, the committee has been given the task of :evaluating the honors program and making' recommendations about its future. THE- LSA honors program gives high-ranking students opportunities to take honors courses. or honors sections of courses, and receiving individual academic counseling. Honors students must meet certain requirements for admission to the program, maintain specified academic standards, and take several honors courses each term. Thursday and yesterday, the committee distributed a program evalution survey to honors students. Hours after students found "LSA Honors Evaluation Surveys" in their mailboxes, rumors predicting the cancellation of the honors program began circulating, but honors committee members insisted cancellation was unlikely. "I really doubt that the program will be abandoned," said Carolyn Rosenberg, one of the two student representatives on the committee. CONCERN HAS also been expressed over honors students' increased access to faculty members, and the ' segregation which some believe exists between honors and non-honors students. "Honors is a misleading word," Hornback said. "It should be called 'A Program for Students Who Want to Work Hard,' but that's too long. It would be nice if the whole college could provide programs and counseling services similar to those of the honors program, but finances won't allow it," he added. Rosenberg believes the committee will address each of these problems as well as examining the validity of the honors thesis. The relative merits of honors housing and possible programs to increase interaction between all students might also be discussed, Rosenberg said. "THE REVIEW is a normal sort of thing," Jacobson said. "We will see whether any innovations would make sense. The cancellation is an option, but I'm personally skeptical that it will occur. The committee is currently accepting faculty and student comments about the honors program. Several letters have already been received from faculty members challenging the fairness of the program and its admission guidelines. "No one has yet tackled the problem of which students are most capable," Rosenberg said. ONE QUESTION on the survey asked whether honors students have an advantage over non-honors students See LSA, Page 2 "tie will see whet~her (LflYinno1- rations trouldfma4ke' sCIs' Thee' canicellatlion (O f ithe pro- grarn) is an ioption, but 6n, jpersoiiaIliY skeptical 1that1trill' occur. - Projfessor 11Haroldl J(1c'oIsotl, re rit comm'011ittjee elairin an 0 I Mideast talks stall on Palestinian issue WASHINGTON (AP) - A new, har- dened Egyptian position on the Palestinian question prompted Israel's top negotiators to leave the Mideast peace talks yesterday to confer with Prime Minister Menachem Begin in Canada. In response, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat said he would "not be astonished" if negotiations broke down. Hours later, it was announced that Secretary of State Cyrus Vance will meet with Begin in New York tomorrow. While Vance's plans were being an- nounced by the State Department, a White House official portrayed President Carter as becoming in- creasingly worried about the talks. THE NEW Egyptian proposals that led to the recall of the Israeli negotiators called for a specific Israeli timetable for setting up a Palestinian civil authority on the West Bank of the Jordan River and in the Gaza district. The White House official, insisting that he not be named, said, "1 think for the first time there has begun to become a sort of gnawing concern about this thing." He stressed that Carter remains generally optimistic about the talks and believes Israel and Egypt eventually will sign a treaty. BUT IT WAS understood that failure of the talks is no longer considered by Carter to be out of the question. "For the first time, that little dark cloud on the horizon, it's there," the of- ficial said. The impact on the negotiations of Egypt's position on the Palestinian question was not immediately clear as. Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan. and Defense Minister Ezer Weizman flew to Toronto to seek instructions from Begin, who is on an official visit. The visit ends tomorrow and Begin will return to Israel through New York. Vance will meet briefly with the prime minister tomorrow evening while "he changes planes," the State Department said. DAYAN TOLD reporters here that Egypt had tabled "a new list of requests and demands'" to link the peace treaty with Egypt to future negotiations over the Palestinians. "Our position is that there shouldn't be a linkage or even a mixture of the discussions," Dayan said, "that we should do one thing at a time." Asked about reports that President Anwar Sadat considers the negotiations as verging on a breakdown, Dayan replied: "If he tries hard, he can achieve that." THE PEACE talks were already snagged over Israel's efforts to eliminate a provision in the preamble that linked the treaty to a second round of negotiations aimed ata comprehen- sive Middle East settlement. The new Egyptian proposals would require Israel to make a number of commitments in the treaty package to implement its offer of full autonomy for the 1.1 million Palestinians living on the West Bank of the Jordan River and in Gaza. Israel considers the two sets of negotiations to be essentially separate. As a result, while standing on a com- mitment to negotiate'with Egypt, Jor- dan and Palestinian Arabs on the future of the Israeli-occupied territories, Israeli negotiators are trying to weaken the link. PRESIDENT Carter, at a news con- ference Thursday in Kansas City, urged the two sides to accept existing pream- ble language. He said it was "adequate" in reflecting their mutual commitment to deal with the Palestinian question. After Carter spoke, Boutros Ghali, the acting Egyptian foreign minister, presented to the Israelis on Thursday night his negotiators' new instructions from President Anwar Sadat. Ghali made the presentation in a more than See MIDEAST, Page 5 Angolans fear S. Africa attack Skirting the taboos Marin College behavioral sciences major Bill Cushing, 34, says he is battling the American male taboo by always wearing a skirt. He resents being labeled a transvestite, however. "I'm a macho dude. You can ask my girlfriend," he says. UNITED NATIONS (UPI)- Angola yesterday claimed that South Africa is massing 22,000 troops along the Namibian border and warned it will call in Cuban forces if Pretoria attacks. Angola's U.N. Ambassador Elisio de Figuieredo told newsmen at the United Nations that intelligence reports in- dicated South Africa will strike at villages and towns three to four miles inside Angola north of the Namibian frontier. DE FIGUEIREDO said the intelli- gence information had been given to black African states who are pressing the U.N. Security Council for economic sanctions against South Africa. The 15-member Council scheduled a meeting on Namibia yesterday after- noon. Angolan intelligence has "detected a massing of South African troops along the border between Namibia and Angola," de Figueiredo said. "We have a figure of 22,000 massing along the border." ANGOLA HAS declared a state of emergency, and "our troops are cer- tainly prepared in case of attack from South Africa," the ambassador said. A dusk-to-dawn curfew was imposed in four Angolan provinces on Thursday. "If we cannot defend against a massive attack, we will be calling on our friends certainly for help - in- cluding the Cubans," de Figueiredo said. The Marxist Angola regime won the civil war in the former Portuguese colony against two pro-Western guerrilla organizations with the help of HOUSING OFFICE SEEKS STUDENT SUPPORT: 'U' plans energy program Cuban troops. There are still an estimated 15,000 Cuban troops in Angola. De Figueiredo also said South African reconnaissance planes have swept "a hundred or so miles inside our country," and "the violation of our air- space continues." South Africa has complained that Angola provides bases for guerrilla groups operating in Namibia, par- ticularly the South West Africa Peoples Organization, which the United Nations recognizes as the representative of the Namibian people. LSA-SG candidates, prepare, campaigns.,, BY LEONARD BERNSTEIN and BETSY MANN More than 40 candidates will begin cranking up their publicity campaigns for positions on Literature, Science and Arts Student Government (LSA-SG) today, as the filing deadline for that election passed last night. As of last night's election meeting, 15 independent and 25 party-affiliated candidates entered the race for the 15 available executive council seats on LSA-SG. The following parties, in order of their appearance on the ballot, have entered candidates: People's Action Coalition (PAC), Young Socialist Alliance (YSA), Student Organizing Committee (SOC), United Students, and the Bullshit Party. ONLY CURRENT council and PAC by MARK PARRENT If University housing residents received some kind of automatic reward every time they turned off an unnecessary light, George Sanfacon's job might be a little easier. Unfortunately for the Housing Division Energy Manager, such a positive reinforcement system is not possible, and Sanfacon must resort to alternate means for controlling the division's energy costs. "THE BIGGEST challenge that Housing faces in its eniergy conser- vation program is establishing residen- ce hall programs where students and staff consistently contribute to energy conservation," said Sanfacon. While the University may have trouble convincing students to conserve energy, several capital projects designed to save energy have already been completed and show signs of positive results, according to Sanfacon. Such improvements include the in- stallation of extra roof insulation, automatic steam control devices, and double-pane glass in many windows. According to a report recently released by the Housing Office, capital improvement projects completed in the fiscal year 1976-77 saved enough energy to account for 17 per cent of their costs. The report said that if the price of raw energy increases 20 per cent per year, The consolidation plan, if approved by the Regents at their meeting this month, would call for the construction of a large dining facility behind Mosher-Jordan hall. The facility would serve the students of Mosher-Jordan, Stockwell, Alice Lloyd, and Couzens residence halls. The cafeterias in those dorms would be converted to extra living space. Housing officials claim such a move would save money over the long run, but students have raised some op- position to the plan. Students complain that the consolidation plan would lessen the quality of dorm living and cause residents inconveniences. HOUSING Division Administrative Associate James Anderson said if the Regents do not approve the food service consolidation plan, the portion of the loan for the plan may be able to be aerospace engineering from the University. SANFACON said a more appropriate title for his position would. be energy engineer, since his work involves com- piling and analyzing statistics and designing conservation programs rather than supervising personnel. Sanfacon said he has received a. warmer reception at times from mem- bers of the University work force when he introduces himself as an engineer rather than as a manager. AnothernHousingDivision energy saving project currently underway is a lighting survey being conducted by student employees to determine where SEE 'U', Page5 Saturday * A roaming band of man-eating * Thu' ipi rn i rcad he