I The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, January 18, 1978-Page 7. New comp. program stirs reacti (Continued from Page 1) ment's undergraduate adviser. Coffin said he was not enthusiastic about writing being taught in the physics department: "This is a function that had been taken care of by one department. Our professors are not well qualified to teach English," he said. Still, to comply with the requirement, Coffin see two possibilities. A labora- tory course may be designated for writing, or a reading course that would require composition might be added. Other reaction was also mixed. Mathematics department Chairman Frederick Gehring said he supported' the philosophy of the plan, but "can't see it in this department. "Somehow we'll cope with it," he said. Planning has been under way for almost a year in the psychology depart- ment to bring about courses dealing with "writing in psychology,'"accord- -ing to Department Chairman Warren Norman. Several students expressed their overall approval of the idea, but were apprehensive about non-English profes- sors teaching writing. "I think it's a pretty good idea. People should be able to write," said LSA sophomore Dan Schwimmer. Freshperson Margy Smith said, "It's sad that people get out of school without on in LSA being.able to write." But she said she felt the new program falls short. "You should have English teachers teaching English she said." Sophomore Dave Johnson agreed. "I don't think (most professors) are quali- fied. It should be done through the Eng- lish department," he said. . Sandy Feldman, coordinator of the Students',Counseling office, said, "I'm glad they're putting an emphasis on English." LSA Student Government (LSA-SG) President Dick Brazee mirrored that view: "I applaud the positive spirit in which it was adopted." LSA-SG member Jim Sullivan said he felt the English Composition Board (ECB) "put a tremendous amount of ef- fort" into their proposal. Last year a similar proposal was made which was hotly debated by the faculty before being defeated by only a handful of votes. Psychology depart- ment chairman Norman called this year's "a much better plan." The proposal brought before the faculty last March did not include an entrance test, as does the plan passed Monday. Also, last year the ECB was suggesting very specific requirements of the various departments. The new plan leaves the required writing pro- gram open for discussion in the individ- ual departments. Stanford newspaper fights police search AP Photo' This is how it looked when the movers and shakers sat down yesterday to talk as The Egyptian delegation is in the foreground left; Israel's'Foreign Minister the Middle East peace negotiations reconvened in Jerusalem's Hilton Hotel. Moshe Dayan, with eyepatch, sits at the far side of the table. MIDEAST TALKS REOPEN: WASHINGTON (AP) -The Stan- ford Daily, an independent news- paper at the California campus, told the Supreme Court yesterday that the First Amendment barred broad searches of its news files, even under warrant, by police looking for evi- dence in criminal cases. But that contention was challenged by California law enforcement agen- cies who claimed that such a legal barrier could lead to the destruction of evidence by news organizations if, for whatever reason, they chose not to cooperate in investigations of events they have covered. THE CASE stems from a 1971 dem- onstration at the Stanford University Hospital. The incident produced some violence, including injuries to police from missiles thrown by dem- onstrators. Police in Palo Alto, Calif., obtained a search warrant and went through the newspaper's offices in an effort to identify perpetrators of the violence. The took nothing after a complete search of the offices, including desk tops. The newspaper protested that the police had no right to go through its files, and two lower courts agreed that the specific evidence should have been sought via subpoena - thus giving the paper the right to argue in court whether the material would be turned over. The U.S. dis- trict and appeals courts also award- ed ~$47,500 in attorney's fees to the paper. W. ERIC COLLINS, deputy attor- ney general of California, told the Supreme Court that the Stanford Daily had a history of being uncoop- erative with police and that, in part, was why the search warrant, rather than a subpoena, was used. Collins said the paper has a policy "to destroy all potentially incrimin- ating unpublishedphotographic ma- terial," and in such a circumstance the police are justified in expediting a search. But Jerome Falk, speaking for the paper and a-host of broadcast and .print trade organizations, said "the inference that the Stanford Daily would have destroyed evidence is an unfortunate slur that has no support whatsoever in the record." 'Equal (Continued from Page 1) and Egyptian position papers showe sharp disputes. He said these mal differences required study to defin what "is identical, and what is not t far apart, where we can relativel easily reach agreement." THE EX-GENERAL pointed toa least one narrowing of gaps, sayin house'fo there had been "change, and even a t ad major one" in Egypt's position on the I in agenda for talks. He did not elabor- ie ate but appeared to refer to the )o U.S.-engineered compromise that ly glossed over. such thorny issues ast the Palestinians in the formal agenda. P at A U.S. spokesman said the twor ng sides had shown a willingness to get r Palestinians? down to substantive issues. It is Vance's view that the negotiations will be long and difficult, possibly with occasional suspensions. Vance, who will only remain at the talks until Friday, hailed the "cour- age and wisdom" of Egyptian Presi- dent Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin "in sweep- ing aside the barriers that for so long separated Arabs from Israelis." ISRAELI OFFICIALS expressed surprise at Kamel's tough speech but said he might adopt a more concilia- tory stance behind closed doors. "Any attempt to solve our prob- lems and differences by ultimatums would miss the whole point," Dayan said in his speech. He appeared also to caution Egypt that it could no more achieve undue concessions at the peace table thanl on the battlefield. "A PEACE settlement," he said, "is the alternative to war and not a substitute for war." Kamel said Egypt was ready to accept Israel as part of the Middle East. But he said all the land - including Arab East Jerusalem - captured by Israel during the 1967 Six-Day war must be restored to the Arabs. Saudis want West Bank, Gaza (Continued from Page 1) THE PUBLICATION said the Saudis rejected Israeli IPrime Minister Mena- hem Begin's offer of limited autonomy for the 1.1 million Palestinians living on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, regions occupied by Israeli since June 1967. It also said the Saudis feel Pales- tinian nationhood should be gained in stages "but not in a generation." Thereport said Saudi Foreign Minis- ter Prince Saud al-Faisal used "harsh words" to describe Egyptian President Anwar Sadat during a meeting with John West, America's ambassador to Saudi Arabia. IT SAID SAUDI leaders resented at- tempts by Carter to get them to express for Sadat's peace initiatives. Fahd was quoted as saying he was glad Sadat "did not consult us" before his historic journey to Jerusalem last November. "If he did, we would have advised him against it and our relations with Egypt would have been disrupted," Fahd reportedly said. "Saudi op- position would have jeopardized his regime and reinforced the position of the Egyptian left." JN THEIR MEETING with Carter, the Saudis were "more openly adamant on two main conditions to help meet the free world's increasing demand for oil in the coming years," the publication, said. One of those conditions is complete Israeli withdrawal from all Arab lands occupied since 1967, the report said. The other is recognizing the right of Palestinians to be repatriated in the West Bank. Saudi leaders reportedly were unhappy about Carter's views on Sadat's peace initiatives and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). Carter has repeatedly praised the Egyptian leader and criticized the PLO for its refusal to take part in peace efforts. 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