TUITION HIKE See editorial page i I ll he Lttw t1 RERUN High-20's Low-Lower 30s See Today for details Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIX, NO. 129 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, March 14, 1979 Ten Cents Ten Pages Peace up to i Israel; U.S., Egypt wait CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - President Carter concluded his Mideast odyssey yesterday with Egypt embracing peace terms and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin vowing to resign unless his parliament accepts them. Both nations said a treaty could ben' signed withinthe month. Begin agreed to the U.S. compromise proposals and said he would work to persuade his cabinet and parliament to approve them. The prime minister called a special meeting of the cabinet for today amid signs that approval was likely. AFTER A FINAL shuttle from Jerusalem to Cairo, Carter flew home. The mood aboard Air Force One was upbeat. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance flashed a thumbs up sign. Kit Dobelle, chief of protocol, raised her glass of beer in a toast. And the President shucked his coat and grinned. In Jerusalem, Begin said a treaty with Egypt could be signed within the month if the cabinet and parliament approve. "IT WOULD be the duty of the gover- nment to resign," he said, if parliament, the Knesset, rejected the compromise. Begin has been able to swing his 16 fellow ministers behind him on other crucial issues during Carter's visit, and observeers believed his prestige would carry the cabinet again. Moshe Shamir, a leading hawk in Begin's own Herut Party, called the draft treaty and its appended letters "a disaster for the future and security of Israel." BUT HE SAID there was little he could do to stop the "steamroller of events" that could carry the treaty to Knesset ratification. In Cairo, Egypt's minister of state for foreign affairs. Butros Ghali, was asked if he agreed with Begin about the possibility of a signing within the mon- th. "I can answer positively," he told The Associated Press. "I hope the peace treaty will be concluded in this month." The Middle East News Agency said Prime Minister Mustafa Khalil will convene a cabinet meeting tomorrow in Cairo and Sadat will brief top officials of his National Democratic Party on Saturday. CARTER, EN route home from Israel, stopped in Cairo to meet with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. After a three-hour conference at the airport, the President announced Egypt had accepted U.S. proposals for resolving remaining obstacles to a treaty. Then Carter boarded Air Force One for the 14-hour journey to Washington, briefing Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd (D-W. Va.), on the developments by telephone. Begin said the three leaders would sign the accord in Washington. Then Begin and Sadat would sign the Hebrew version in Jerusalem and the Arabic text in Cairo. "I am convinced that now we have defined all of the main ingredients of a peace treaty between Egypt and Israel which will be the cornerstone of a com- prehensive peace settlement for the Middle East," the President declared before leaving Cairo. Presden Cater nd gypian resden Anwr Sdat(lef) rvie anAP Photo President Carter and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat (left) review an Minister Menahem Begin (right) hailed Egypt's acceptance of the American honor guard during Carter's farewell visit to Cairo. Earlier, Israeli Prime proposals, and predicted a Mideast settlement within the next two weeks. STA TE SENA TE HEARS TESTIMONY: P 0 By MARY FARANSKI Citizens, law enforcement officers, elected officials, and clergymen, representing stands both for and again- st the newest marijuana reform bill, appeared at public hearings on the proposed legislation in Lansing yester- day. Those who testified were divided about one half on each side of the issue. The clergymen and several people from Detroit most strongly op- posed the bill, while law enforcement officers and. elected officials generally took the opposite stance. THE BILL was introduced to the Senate last month by Sen. Jerome Hart (D-Saginaw). It lessens the penalties C 00 1S City voters By ELISA ISAACSON Voters in the upcoming city election will have the opportunity to determine the fate of the city dump, authorize con- struction of a new southside fire station, and demand repair of several local roads. These projects, if approved, would be financed by bond sale revenue, but un- der the Headlee tax limitation amen- dment, passed in last November's state election, a city must obtain voter ap- proval to issue general obligation bon- ds. THREE OF the eight local ballot proposals-E, F, and G-involve the city's increasingly congested landfill. The first of these, proposal E, in- volved the possible purchase of a $2,825,000 solid waste shredding facility. The shredder would prolong the life of the present landfill by com- pressing the garbage deposited there. As outlined in a bonding proposal fact sheet from the City Administrator's of- fice, a shredder would benefit the city by retaining its independence in terms W nesday r Many University students, chiming the Regents didn't live split 01 for use, possession, and delivery of less than 100 grams of pot, with its most lenient section lowering the penalty for possession of less than 100 grams from $1,000 and one year in jail to $25 and no jail sentence. This would put penalties for possession of a small amount at the level of any other civil penalty, similar to a traffic ticket. The bill also contains a section allowing pot to be used for theraputic treatments for glaucoma and asthma, and for side effects of chemotherapy treatments for cancer. Sen. Basil Brown (D-Highland Park), who presided over the hearings, opened the discussion of the highly emotional issue by stating he thought it was wrong for society to lock away a person who rileniet pot bill uses marijuana in his own home for his own pleasure. "I don't think we should continue to regard as a felon the use of marijuana. We shouldn't continue to wreck the lives of those whose use only harms themselves," he said. ONE OF THE most moving arguments in favor of the bill came from a young cancer patient, who said marijuana helps him get over the nauseous feeling and loss of appetite he has experienced, enabling him to gain some weight. "I don't feel that I should have to go outside the law to make me feel better." A Michigan State University instruc- tor, holding a doctor's degree in biology, backed up this argument, 'saying that the use of a substance ex- tracted from marijuana is more effec- tive than all other anti-nausea drugs that are commonly used. Gesesse County Sheriff John O'Brien said it is impossible to enforce the current law because of the large num- ber of marijuana offenders. Some of his deputies are hesitant to take action because the paperwork and procedures for bringing action against marijuana offense is identical to that involving robbery offenses. O'Brienadded that more deputies might begin to crack down on offenders if punishment is simply handing them a $25 fine. Making the punishment more ' realistic for the crime "will cultivate a more positive attitude toward law en- forcement," he said. A worker for the Drug Education Center of Lansing said children react to the severity of laws, and use of large amounts of alcohol are far more dangerous than small uses of marijuana. "Young people seem to think marijuana laws are just to punish them," he said. He added many persons form peer groups based solely on drug use. An aide to Sen. Steve Monsma (D- Grand Rapids) reported that Monsma had introduced a different bill yester- day morning dealing only with decriminalization for theraputic uses for glaucoma and chemotherapy, ac- See OPINIONS, Page 2 I Laos reports Chinese threat face many proposals of garbage disposal. With a trash com- are $675,000 and $725,000 respectively. pacter, Ann Arbor would be assured of Proposal D asks voters to authorize space for its garbage in the future. the sale of $700,000 worth of general Otherwise local waste might have to be obligation bonds to finance a new fire transported to private landfills, where station to service such areas as Briar- the city would be financially at the wood shopping mall and the mercy of private garbage undertakers. Georgetown subdivision. THE SHREDDER could also enhance ACCORDING TO City Administrator the possibility of city-wide recycling Sylvester Murray, "It has been shown programs, as the machine is designed that construction of this fire station is to weed out metal from the rest of the need," since the present stations, refuse. dispersed throughout the city, are not Proposals F and G request dosese roughourenit me no authorization to purchase 108 acres of emse enough to respond m i time to land as an extension of the dump, as emergency calls from the city's south- well as replace worn landfill equip- west side. ment. The price tag on these projects See VOTERS, Page 10 Iranians protest Carter's m-ieast visit By AP and Reuter BANGKOK, Thailand-While China reported a hero's welcome home for its invaders of Vietnam yesterday, Laos accused the Chinese of moving troops near its border and digging combat trenches "in preparation for war." Chinese television showed troops withdrawing through the Friendship Bass across the border with Vietnam as pretty Chinese girls garlanded tank cannons with red scarves. China's Xinhua Hsinhua news agency said, "All along the 12-kilometer eight- mile road leading to Pinxiang (P'ing- hsiang), welcomers waved flowers and colorful bunting, played traditional musical instruments and danced joyously amid the explosions of firecrackers." BUT THE Soviet Union charged "Chinese aggression continues" in nor- thern Vietnam. And Laos charged that the Chinese are moving troops, smuggling spies and commandos into its country and carrying out propogan- da to sow division among the Laotian people. The Laotian charges, carried by the offical Laotian daily Siang Prasson, did not elaborate on movement of troops. The'newspaper also said the gover- nment's March 7 decision asking China to suspend road building in Laos "will help preserve the traditional friendship between the two countries." It said, "Instead of building roads, Chinese workers dug combat trenches and made other preparations for war." See CHINA, Page 5 up to their agreement to fairly examine the Universjty's South African investments, will appeal to the board during tomorrow's meeting. See story, Page 7. * The Senate yesterday over- whelmingly approved a bill calling for a new relationship with Taiwan, saying that any at- tack by Peking on the island would cause "grave concern"'for' the U.S. See story, Page 10. " The National Football League awarded the 1982 Super owlt n the Pontiac SivwAnm. By Reuter and AP TEHRAN - Over 100,000 people demonstrated at Tehran University yesterday against President Carter's visit to the Middle East and some waved banners saying "Death to Car- ter." Addressing the rally, Shani al- Hassan, head of the recently- inaugurated Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) office in Tehran, said the U.S. aircraft carrier Con- stellation had been sent to the Persian Gulf to destroy the Iranian revolution. "CARTER HAS come to the Middle East to hatch a new conspiracy," he said. "We must not allow Carter to replace the Shah with a caliphate (ruler of Islam). We must not allow Carter to make (Egyptian President Anwar) Sadat the policeman of the Middle East. there would be no peace in the Middle East until Israel had fallen. AMIR ENTEZAM, official spokesman of the new Iranian gover- nment, yesterday denied a Time Magazine story saying he and Deputy Premier Ibrahim Yazdi were pro- American. An American expert on Iran, James Bill, was quoted in this week's Time Magazine as saying Yazdi and En- tezam were among aides of Iranian religious revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini who were pro-American or influenced by long periods of living in the United States. Bill had studied with Yazdi and described Entezam as "about as American as you can possibly get,". Time said. "WE STRONGLY denv this hnth Title IX discussedt at NO meeting By JULIE BROWN 401. Noting that "merger often means submerger," Mary Pollack, former Title IX compliance officer for Michigan State University, spoke last night on the problems of in- tegration of athletic programs. Pollack, who spoke to a group of about 30 persons at a National Organization for Women (NOW) meeting, outlined "the most viable strategy for enforcement of Title IX, which is informing students about their rights and the mechanisms to gain them." LIZ GEISE, MIchigan coordinator of the Project on Equal Educational Rights (PEER), a project of NOW's Legal Drefeme andRtnatinn Fenn