PRESIDENT SMITH See editorial page Ltt METAMORPHOSIS jtfl 'IHigh-60 Se Low-45 See Today for details Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIX, No. 135 ' Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, March 21, 1979 Ten Cents Ten Pages A ' Israel, Egypt clash 0I Egypt a yesterday o and the Pale clash sin breakthroug The clash Prime Mini in Parlia Jerusalem state in the IN CAIR Khalil saidl mosphere" doubts it w signed. Begin, in treaty due b Washington return to pr Khalil, in said: "Eas of the Jorda and Israel1 the 1967 bor ALSO, IM Arab Leagu. cy meeting 1 proposed I From AP and Reuter discuss sanctions against Egypt for nd Israel locked horns signing a treaty "with the enemy ver the future of Jerusalem Israel." There were signs two estinians in their first public moderates, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, ce President Carter's would join in the sanctions. gh visit to the Middle East. Approval of the treaty by a large h was triggered by Israeli majority of the Israeli Parliament was ster Menachem Begin's vow expected to come today or early Thur- ment never to divide sday, clearing the way for Begin, or permit a Palestinian President Anwar Sadat and Carter to West Bank or Gaza Strip. sign the treaty at the White House. 0, Prime Minister Mustafa House Speaker Thomas O'Neill quoted Begin's vow "spoils the at- Carter as saying the signing is set for 2 of the treaty but said he p.m. EST next Monday. &ill prevent it from being Opening the debate, Begin pledged never to re-divide Jerusalem or the Knesset debate on the surrender its status as Israel's capital, o be signed next Monday in never to withdraw to Israel's pre-1967 i, said: "Israel will never borders and never to let an independent e-1967 lines." Palestinian state arise in the West Bank n a speech last Saturday, and Gaza Strip. Some nations, in- t (Arab) Jerusalem is part cluding the United States, do not in West Bank borders of 1967 recognize Jerusalem as the capital. has agreed to withdraw to ADDRESSING himself directly to ders." Khalil, Begin declared: "My =dear, AQ announced it had called honorable Dr. Khalil, write this down: ie members to an emergen- Jerusalem, the one Jerusalem, is in Baghdad March 27-29 to Israel's eternal capital. It will never be border divided again." As for a Palestinian state, he said: "We won't agree to it, we won't allow it, we won't make it possible." Begin said he was replying to Khalil's statement last week that Israel would have to withdraw to the 1967 borders, accept Palestinian statehood and surrender Arab Jerusalem. The issues are not directly dealt with in published versions of the treaty draft. KHALIL, ON hearing of Begin's vow, said: "As for the Palestinian question, the Camp David accord clearly stipulates the necessity of solving the question from all its aspects, thus taking into consideration the legal rights of the Palestinians. It is along this principle that they will decide their "future. Khalil, asked if the dispute could block a treaty signing, said, "No. I don't think so." A Western diplomat in Cairo, who asked not to be named, also said the signing would not be affected, but ad- ded, "I wish both sides would shut up." Daily Photo by DAN OBERDORFER A CAP AND GOWN bedecked Heidi Gottifried and demonstrator Geoff Cox protest the University's tenure process. Part of the protest, held at noon yesterday on the Diag, involved a skit in which Gottfried portrayed a professor in the Policical Science Department reviewing assistant professor Joel Samoff's tenure appeal. RALLY DRAWS 50 PARTICIPANTS: Carter may remove oil price 'U' tenure poltCY hit controls, price increai i By JOHN GOYER and ALISON HIRSCHEL More than 200 University students and members of the Samoff Student Support Committee held a day-long protest yesterday, including a rally on the Diag, to show their dissatisfaction with the University's tenure process. About 50 students and Committee members met in the Union at 10 a.m. to criticize the University's tenure policy. The group of protesters were later joined by about 150 spectators and supporters in a rally on the Diag at noon. The students held another two-hour meeting in the Union after the rally. DURING THE meetings, the protesters complained that students have no input in the University's process which grants tenure to in- structors. The protest was centered around Political Science Prof. Joel Samoff who has been denied tenure several times. At the rally, the protesters shouted pro-Samoff slogans, held a short skit, and tried to solicit student sup- port. LSA Dean Billy Frye later said in response to the protest that he is against student input in tenure decisions. "I would be opposed to students participating in tenure decisions. Only the most carefully selected committees should make these decisions and they should not be diluted by inexperience," he said. REPRESENTATIVES from eight campus political organizations, in- cluding the Literary College student government (LSA-SG), and the People's Action Coalition, criticized the tenure process citing several problems in the University's policy: " There is a strong bias toward granting tenure to professors who are good researchers, but not in- structors; " Students have no input in the process of choosing who is granted tenure; " Those professors who are gran ted tenure often lapse into what one protester termed "on-the-job retirement;" " Professors who co innovative research are often (rejected for tenure; " Female instructors and minority members are often discriminated against when being considered for tenure. " Professors are not notified in writing as to why they have been denied tenure. The protesters also charged that tenure decisions are often influenced by racism, sexism, and often involve political repression. FRYE, WHO has the power to in- tervene in tenure decisions, called the protesters' charges "nonsense." See STUDENT, Page 7 WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter plans to announce late this mon- th a new energy plan that may remove controls from crude oil prices and tax excess oil industry orofits. it was disclosed yesterday. Members of Congress who par- ticipated in a leadership breakfast with Carter at the White House quoted the president as saying he still hasn't made up his mind on many details of the plan. HOUSE SPEAKER Thomas O'Neill (D-Mass.) said Carter intends to con- suit further with key lawmakers before delivering his energy speech to the nation March 29. Meanwhile, a congressional staff study suggested a presidential decision to lift price controls from crude oil could cost consumers from $5 billion to $14 billion a year in higher fuel costs. At the conclusion of the White House session, House Democratic Leader Jim Wright of Texas told reporters that while Carter-didn't dwell on specifics, "he mentioned the possibility of a tax, Kahn criticizes huge corporate profit jump 'U' Co-op tenants all By AMY SALTZMAN Tenants at the University Townhouse Co-op are charging their manager with racial discrimination, harassment, and maintenance neglect, and are exploring the possibility of initiating legal action. Alonso Restreppo, the manager of the Co-op on 3200 Braeburn Circle, has denied all of the charges. ALTHOUGH TENANTS have taken no direct legal action against Restrep- po, court proceedings are currently pending in one case. The plaintiff in that case is charging that Restreppo failed to comply with a verbal agreement he made with her concer- ning her late rental. payments. The woman then issued a court summons despite Restreppo's word that no such order would be forthcoming. The case is expected to go to trial sometime in April and is being handled by the University's Clinical Law Program. Restreppo said there is "no validity to the charge. I do not make verbal agreements." BUT SEVERAL other tenants at the Co-op have accused Resptreppo of making similar transactions with them. Lorna Whitfield, who has lived in the complex since 1973, said when she was behind on her rent four years ago, Restreppo made a similar verbal agreement with her that she could pay $50.00 a week until the rent was paid. Despite Whitfield's contention that she complied with the alleged agreement, she said she received a bill for $588.00 two months later, and a let- ter threatening to evict her if she failed to pay the bill. , "He (Restreppo) said that the money I had been paying was for little main- tenance things, but I never got any notice that I owed money for anything like that," said Whitfield. Whifield was unable to come up with BULLETIN Representatives for the Univer- sity and the Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid (WC- CAA) will meet in Washtenaw Coun- ty Circuit Court in the County Building at 11:15 today for a hearing,, to determine the constitutionality of a restraining order issued last Friday by visiting Judge Harold Van Domelen banning the WCCAA from attending a semi-private Regents' meeting. Several members of the group say some of the 200 protesters who halted the Board's meetings last week will show up at the County Building in support of the WCCAA. ge neglect the $588.00 and lost the case when it was brought to court. Whitfield was con- sequently forced to pay all of the $588.00, plus court fees. TENANTS HAVE said this non- compliance with verbal agreements is one of a number of discriminatory ac- tions consistently utilized by Restreppo against black tenants and residents receiving Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) funds. See TOWNHOUSE, Page 10 WASHINGTON (AP) - Corporate profits increased 26.4 per cent last year, the biggest annual jump in nearly three decades, and the Carter administration said the leap puts the nation's businesses "on trial in the eyes of the American people." "The very large increases in profits of American corporations will strengthen the widespread belief that many American businesses aren't assuming their full responsibility to fight inflation," said Alfred Kahn, the administration's chief inflation-fighter. BUT THE CHIEF economist of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Jack Carlson, accused the administration of trying to use the profits report as "a scapegoat for bad government policies that are causing inflation." The Commerce Department said yesterday that before-tax profits during the fourth quarter of 1978 were at an annual rate of $225.3 billion, a gain of $19.9 billion over the third quarter and $47 billion over the final three months of 1977. After-tax profits rose $26.3 billion over the year, an increase of 25.2 per cent. The increase in both before-tax and after-tax profits was the largest since 1950. t KAHN, WHO earlier had said the profits report was a "catastrophe" for the anti-inflation program, said in a new statement that "the large in- crease. . . puts business on trial in the eyes of the American people." Carlson, however, said profits ac- See KAHN, Page 10 ses likely accompanied by decontrol of oil, over a period of time." WRIGHT, A LONGTIME proponent of oil price deregulation, said such an excess profits tax would likely contain a "plowback" provision exempting profits that oil companies funnel back into the exploration for new U.S. sup- plies of energy. Existing law gives the president the option of lifting price controls on oil on June 1 or extending them until Septem- ber 1981, when they come off automatically. THE OIL PRICE study, by a.staff of the House energy and power subcom- mittee, indicated full immediate oil control on June 1 would cost consumers $14 billion the first year, 'increase gasoline prices 4.7 cents a gallon, in- crease inflation by half a percentage point and the unemployment rate by two-tenths of one per cent. The study was released at a' Capitol Hill news conference by Rep. Bob Eckhardt (D-Texas), a foe of deregulation. Eckhardt said phased decontrol would have a less serious im- pact on the economy, but could still raise prices to consumes by at least $5 billion. CARTER'S MARCH 29 energy speech is generally expected to deal with both long-range energy steps, like oil decontrol, and more immediate ways of offsetting the loss of Iranian oil. MSA urges Regents to lift order By JULIE ENGEBRECHT The Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) last night unanimously ap- proved a resolution urging the Regents to lift an injunction against the Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid (WCCAA),the principle demonstrators at the Regents' meetings last week,'which authorizes the Regents to hold meetings against the Open Meetings Act. In response to a regental resolution passed Friday MSA last night appoin- ted Anne Fullerton and Yvonne Mc- Clenney to the Senate Advisory Com- mittee for Financial Affairs (SACFA). The committee will prepare a report bn .University investments in South Africa to be discussed by the Regents. THE STUDENTS were appointed to the committee to discuss University in- vestment policies, because of demon- strations last Thursday and Friday at the Regents meeting advocating divestment from banks and cor- porations involved in activities in South Africa. The appointments to the com- mittee are for one year. According to MSA President Eric Ar- nson, the Assembly has been trying to A .::....::,.::r.-..-..-. . :::::..... .:....::::::....... . .:.. .......... ..... ..*.*** ................... Shapiro cites danger in schools' stands By TIM YAGLE University Vice President for Academic Affairs Harold Shapiro told an audience of over 20 at the Inter- national Center yesterday that univer- sities should be wary of taking a political stand on controversial political issues, such as South African divestiture. "It's dangerous for universities, in- cluding this one, to take stands on political and moral issues. They run a danger of becoming orthodox," Shapiro said. SHAPIRO STRESSED that univer- sities should be a place where scholars as well as students can learn. He said universities should not become "guar- dians of moral orthodox," but rather institutions "where free inquiry and high-level criticisms can take place." Universities can lose their existing roles in society if people stop respecting See SHAPIRO, Page 7 Shapiro keep politics out of 'U' Kenworthy raps mayor on housing project By ELISA ISAACSON Democratic mayoral candidate James Kenworthy yesterday charged Mayor Louis Belcher with "secretly" rejecting a federally funded housing project, and thereby potentially endangering $1.6 million of Community Development Block Grant The housing project, proposed by the Glick build- ing company, would have been constructed near Eisenhowe rParkway and State Road, and would have provided dwellings for 110 medium income-no more than $16,000 per year-families. The project would have been financed by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) through the Mioin 4imio nd D-vinmetAnthnirit the South Area-which includes Eisenhower and State-for subsidized housing development. The mayor pointed out that the areas designated by the HAP "are big areas." KENWORTHY EXPRESSED concern that the of- fer and rejection of the project was not made known to the public. "I personally have no idea whether this -j m