MISPLACED PRIORITIES See Editouial Page £ LitPi4a 1 ai g OBSIDIOUS High-TI Low-2 See Today for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 105 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, February 5, 1978 Ten Cents 10 Pages Pus Supplement Carter meets with Sadat; sale of F-5E fighter By AP and UPI CAMP DAVID, Md. - Talks are continuing between President Carter and Egyptian President Anwar Sa- dat, following extended discussions . yesterday in which Carter rejected Sadat's position of "self-determina- tion" for the Palestinians, refused to impose a peace.settlement on Israel, and agreed "in principle" to sell fighter planes to Egypt. Administration officials said yes- terday the United States has decided to sell F-5E fighter planes to Egypt and is trying to work out a plan to win Congress' approval. THE OFFICIALS said no final decision on the number of planes to be sold, or the tack to be taken with the lawmakers, will be made until President Anwar Sadat leaves Wash- ington Wednesday. But they said President Carter has decided he will try to meet at least part of Sadat's request for 120 F-5Es - a major shift in U.S. arms sales planes OK'd policy and the first attempt to sell Egypt weapons it could use in combat against Israel. Officially; the White House de clined confirmation of Carter's inten- tions. Spokesman Jerrold Schecter, said, "No decision has been reached by the President." OTHER administration officials said Carter had made the decision in principle, but reporters were told one problem is the Egyptians have to be persuaded to accept the F-5Es, in place of the more advanced F-15 or F-16 that Sadat said he wanted. Administration officials said the matter will be discussed at the Camp David summit this weekend, and the Egyptian views will be taken into view when the final administration strategy for congressional approval is worked out. Previously, the United States has provided Egypt with only so-called "non-lethal" military equipment, in- cluding C-130 transport planes. Even that sale provoked stiff congressional opposition. SADAT'S REQUEST for a major See related story, Page 2 infusion of U.S. arms was just one of the topics he and Carter were discussing at their private Camp David summit this weekend. At the start of the talks Friday, Carter emphasized that "obviously the first responsibility is for direct negotiations between the leaders involved in the Middle East." He pledged a continuing, active, U.S. role, but offered no specific pro- posals to meet Egyptian demands for self-determination" for the Palestin- ians, dismantling of Israeli settle- ments and total Israeli withdrawal from all occupied Arab territory. With the negotiations in suspen- sion, Sadat is asking the United States to use its leverage against' Israel. In his own arrival statement, Sadat envisioned a new Middle East in which "nations, including the Palestinians, live together in har- mony and fraternity." JmDaily Photo by WAYNE CABLE The large as-life mural on Liberty St. depicting a south seas haven offers a stark contrast to this winter-weary traveller as h(e trudges through the slush and snow instead of the white sandy beach he appears to be traversing. Purdue blitzes Wolverines, 75-66 By RICK MADDOCK Special to The Daily WEST LAFAYETTE-After leading by as many as 26 points, the Purdue cagers had to stave off an impressive Michigan surge before holding on, for a 75-66 win yesterday af- ternoon before 14,123 fans. The Wolverines closed the gap to within five points three times in the second half only to have the taller and stronger Boilermakers stall the come- back attempt. Purdue assured itself of at least a share of the Big Ten lead, raising its record to 8-2. Michigan fell to 6-4. "NATURALLY you have a tendency to let down (with a big lead), but with our experience we knew Michigan was going to come back," said Purdue senior forward Walter Jordan. "They (the Wolverines) were hollering at us at halftime, "We are not out of it." Michigan had just tallied eight straight points in the last 90 seconds of the first stanza, but trailed 44-28. "I think that's where the momentum started to change, when we lost the ball a -couple of times there," said Purdue Coach Fred Schaus. THEN THE WOLVERINES fired out of the locker room, and fired in a bar- rage of buckets, as they outscored Pur- due 11-4 in the first three-and-a-half minutes of the second half. "We were very hesitant about mak- ing our entry passes. We were too cau- tious," Schaus said. - Michigan's fast break was in high gear in the second half. The Wolverines netted six fast break layups resulting from steals and quick outlet passes from rebounds. "THEY GOT SO MANY transition baskets they damn near killed us. In Ann Arbor they only got one transition See FOULS, Page 9 ACLU CHARGES CENSORSHIP: A12 porn bill dra Hash charge costs VISA V.P. dorm jobWARE By SUE WA RNER Michigan Student Assembly tMSA ) Vice President Eric Arnson has been fired as a resident advisor (RA) in Bur- sley Hall over charges he arranged for a hashish sale between two residents. According to several Bursley staff members, Irving Freeman, who is MSA vice president for personnel, bought one gram of hashish for $4 from another Bursley student last November after Arnson brought them together, staff members said. Arnson AFTER BUILDING Director Ted Hanson learned of the sale, he notified Arnson he would either have to resign or be fired, Bursley sources report. Ar-. nson moved out of the dorm January 25, according to students on his floor. N ir eArnson told The DaYily the firing was fe the culmination of a series of harsh con- flicts between himself and Hanson over imon called it "imaginatively dorm policy and student input in moncaledit imaintivly decision-making. , ed censorship " Students on Arnson's floor and otherr- isa still bl censorship," Bursley resident staff members said d is still blatant cnosi, there was a long history of friction bet- imon. "It sounds like censor- ween Hanson and Arnson. Hanson took ith a velvet glove. Even if it is over as dorm director a year ago. Ar- ship nson has been an RA since September, ship."1977. FREEMAN TOLD a number of FIRST part of the Belcher bill residents on his floor of his purchase, prohibit the establishment of according to several dorm staffers. ntertainment businesses with-Vener,whowasthen S feet of any school, church, Freeman'sresidedit advisor,but who See A2, Page 2 See HASH, Page 2 By KEITH RICHBURG A battle is brewing between the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Ann Arbor City Council over a proposed pornography ordinance that the ACLU calls "bla- tant censorship" and "a violation of the First Amendment." The first part of the ordinance, sponsored by Mayor Pro Tem Louis Belcher (R-Fifth Ward), seeks to limit the growth of "adult enter- tainment businesses" through a rigid rezoning process. The second part would limit the display of "sexually explicit material" to at least four feet above the floor,with only the top three inches of the cover showing. THE FIRST part of the ordinance is up for public debate at Council's Monday night meeting. The second part, dealing with display, will be introduced at that time. The ACLU says both parts of the proposed bill violate First Amend- ment rights protecting freedom of ex- pression. State ACLU Director How- ard Si design "Bla metho said S ship w done it censor THIE would adult e in 1504 AP Photo Tom Staton fouls Purdue's Wayne Wals as Wals attempts a pass during yester- day's contest at West Lafayette. Fouls plagued the Wolverines en route to their 75-66 drubbing at the hands of the Boilermakers. Be. hopeful slams Milliken's leadershiy By MITCH CANTOR and KEITH RICHBURG On State Senator Patrick McCol- lough's report card of leadership per- formance, Governor William Milli- ken is flunking out. According to McCollough's evaluation, eight years as governor has worn the Republican incumbent out, and the Dearborn Democrat thinks he can do a better job. McCollough was in Ann Arbor, yesterday to hold the "typical Milli- ken" up for public inspection and to hang blame for what he called an inefficiently-run bureaucracy around the governor's neck. ADD TO THAT the PBB disaster, the Seafarer controversy and Milli- ken's pet small business -tax, and McCollough sees the incumbent as weak on all fronts. He hopes to cash in on a storehouse of statewide ills. "I think Governor Milliken is tired of being governor," he said. "I think he's lost his zest for it. I think he would admit that himself. In fact, I think his public comments indicate that," McCollough remarked. "He's sick of it and if he had his own mind to make up he wouldn't The Fool' takes hi~s clowning seriously By ELISA ISAACSON He's definitely not your run-of-the- mill mop-headed, polka-dot-suited, balloon - bearing, crackerjack - crunching, cheek-pinching, ho-ho- hoing Barnum and Bailey clown. A tall figure in jeans and classic Brando white t-shirt, Ken Feit comes as close to Bozo the Clown in enter- tainment as John Birch does to Huey Newton in politics. Ken the Fool, as he calls himself,