Subscribe to the Daily! Call 764-0558 'U' BRAINWASHED? :M WINTERLICH See editorial page See Today for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 81 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 8, 1978 Ten Cents 10 Pages Carter maintains foreign trip enhancedU.S.image abroad; shrugs o WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter says he believes his just-con- cluded foreign tour enhanced his goal of projecting a United States 'that stands for what is right and decent and good.. ..' Carter told reporters aboard the Air Force One flight headed home Friday night that his journey im- proved America's standing despite two untoward incidents in Poland and India. THE PRESIDENT said he wanted. to "strengthen the concept of democ- racy, both in the developing nations and the developed nations." And Carter said he tried to make progress on resolving the Middle Eastern. dis- pute. It was agreed by the White House and the reporters interviewing Car- ter that the President's remarks would not be released until last night. Although Carter wasn't claiming any big victories, he obviously was in a buoyant mood after completing his longest overseas tour since becoming President nearly a year ago. THE PRESIDENT relaxed with his shirt open and shoes removed as he chatted about the 18,730 mile air- borne journey that ventured into India, Western and Eastern Europe ..- and the Middle East. The trip symbolized "the power and influepce and goodwill of the United St es," said Carter, who answered reporters' questions some 33,000 feet over the North Atlantic while White House aides, Secret Service agents and others slept or talked quietly among themselves. White House officials had- said earlier that while Carter managed several lengthy and frank meetings, the trip was long on symbolism. Thus, they said, specific accomplish- ments can be difficult to measure. CARTER SAID he was convinced the United States improved relations with each of the countries visited - Poland, Iran, India, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, France and Belgium. The President acknowledged, how- ever, that all didn't go smoothly. In New Delhi, a microphone picked up the raw suggestion that Indian Prime Minister Morarji Desai be sent a "cold and very blunt" letter on nuclear safeguards. The incident followed a less-than-perfect transla- tion of Carter's arrival statement in Warsaw that caused a stir among the Poles. IN NEITHER case, said Carter, was any lasting damage done. ffgaffes Polish leader Edward Gierek joked to Carter that "in Poland we don't criticize women or translators," recalled the President, seated on the edge of an arm chair, his left hand draped over his drowsy wife's right shoulder as first lady Rosalynn Carter sat on the floor. Officials traveling home with Car- ter conceded that at first they were quite concerned about the comments in New Delhi. But, said Carter, "he (the prime minister) and I made a joke of it several times after that in a perfectly easy way." "I REGRET that the open mike thing occurred. It was a mistake on my part," Carter said. "I should have said 'a very frank and factual letter' and not 'a blunt and cold letter' Perhaps the highlight of the jour- ney was Carter's surprise visit to Egypt on Wednesday. The mission had been left unannounced until New Year's Eve, four days earlier. Carter also held talks in Tehran with Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi and King Hussein of Jordan, and in Riyadh with Saudi leaders. The President concluded he had 'made "some progress in the Middle East." Like most of his public appear- ances during the nine days, the speeches Carter gave in India and France dealt with lofty principles on the role of democracies in the modern world, rather than specific policies. Ford library $500,000 clos er to constrction --e-eDaily Photo by PETER SERLING Master Mime Internationally acclaimed pantomime artist Marcel Marceau mesmerizes a crowd at the Power Center-last evening. He will repeat his performance this afternoon and again tonight. Words cannot express... By DENISE FOX The University is half a million dollars closer to beginning construc- tion of the President Gerald R. Ford library, thanks to a grant from the Charles S. Mott foundation. The library, to be located south of the Bentley Historical Library on North Campus, will probably start going up during the next calendar year, according to Harold Shapiro, Vice President for Academic Affairs. HOWEVER, work cannot begin on the library until the national fund- raising campaign for a presidential museum (to be located in Grand Rapids) and the library reaches its $6 million goal. Approximately $4 million has been collected so far, Shapiro said. The Mott contribution goes into the national campaign fund which is expected to donate $3,500,000 to build the library and $2,500,000 to build the museum. THE LIBRARY will house all of Ford's official papers, Shapiro said. This will include the entire White House Central File from Ford's term as President as well as the office files from his principal assistants. Ford visited the site of the library when he was in Ann Arbor on November 2-4 as a University ad- junct professor of political science. Shapiro said the library will be built by the University, but run by the National Archives, a division of the federal government. ALTHOUGH the library will be located in Ann Arbor, University scholars will not be the only ones working on Ford's papers. "Clearly there will be scholars from all over the country working on the papers," Shapiro said. The library will also be open to the general public, according to Shapiro. Ford's papers and memorabilia are currently housed in the Univer- sity's former plant department near Michigan Stadium, where Ford played football from 1931' through 1935. University President R o b b e n Fleming could not be reached for comment on the Mott grant. "IT IS HARD to say whether the speeches made any impact or not," the President conceded. Was the President surprised by anything that didn't work as well as he expected? "I can't think of anything," he said. IN INDIA, Carter said, he found "a genuine feeling of compatibility and friendship based on deep religious convictions, a commitment to de- mocracy, the principle of human rights; that was very encouraging to me." When Carter returned home Fri- day night, ending the 16,000-mile, nine-day journey to both sides of the Iron Curtain, he said he was more certain than ever that Communist nations "want to avoid war and have peace as much as we do." Standing bareheaded in a drizzle, the President told members of his staff, and their families who wel- comed him outside the White House that when he embraced President Anwar Sadat in Egypt he realized this was "one of the bravest men on earth." ASKS FOR TREA TY CHANGES: Baker optimistic Canal pact can pass Senate PANAMA CITY (AP) - Senate Minority Leader Howard Baker said yesterday he thinks U.S. and Pana- manian .leaders can agree on changes in the Panama Canal treaty that could help it win Senate ratifica- tion. Closing out a five-day visit to Panama, Baker told an airport news conference he was "optimistic that it is possible to find a combination of changes that would be acceptable to Panama and the United States." THE TENNESSEE Republi- can had warned Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos that unless some key adjustments were made, the treaty stood no chance of passing the Senate. Although their talks failed to establish any specific understand- ings, Baker said he found Torrijos "open-minded" on the problem. He said he had not expected concessions,. however. "We came here to find out if there is some flexibility and we found that there is," he said. Baker and his two GOP colleagues, Sens. John Chafee of Rhode Island and Jake Garn of Utah, made a hasty last minute trip to Torrijos' oceanside home for their final meeting after the general was unable to see them off. PANAMANIAN officials said Tor-, rijos' helicopter broke down, pre- venting him from traveling from his seaside villa at Farallon to the Panama City Airport, about 70 miles away. In private conversations, however, the Panamanians made no secret of their displeasure at being subjected to what some described as pressure tactics. But U.S. Einbassy spokes- men told reporters there was no rift between Baker's group and Torrijos on the matter of changing the treaty. Foreign Minister Nicolas Gonzalez Revilla said Torrijos was willing to listen because "he believes in a peaceful solution." But Gonzalez said revising the pact "is a river that people of the two countries must cross . . ." This was an apparent reference to the fact that Panaman- ian voters have already endorsed the treaty in a referendum and U.S. public opinion is against it. GONZALEZ told a news confer- ence the "issue is now on the U.S side." Later he told a reporter that Panama would take no initiative to change the treaty but would wait for U.S. action. Baker said he felt there was a good chance the Panamanians would agree to one key U.S. demand - that a memo of understanding on future U.S. canal defense rights be incor- See BAKER, Page 8 Energy policy limits blacks, sa From Wire Service Reports The chairperson of the NAACP1 says President Carter's energy con-1 servation program could jeopardize many of the hard-won gains made by1 blacks and other minorities during the past decade.1 Dr. Margaret Wilson, in an inter-1 view published in today's Detroit News, said the chief problem with the administration's energy plan is that it wa drawn up "by a virtually lily- NAACP thought that President Carter would have been as good as he said he was - but nobody thought he would be as bad as he has turned out to be." However, Hooks said, Carter's performance is not "disasterous" because he has done more for blacks than former President Gerald R. Ford. 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