NEW TRANSIT POLICY See Editorial Page : '1 LIE wan 1 ai1 OVERCAST Iligh-low 24s Low79od See Today for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 114 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, February 16, 1978 Ten Cents 10 Pages CARL LEVIN JOINS DEM FIELD: Ruppe out after Griffin 's surprise move Coal firms OK White House talks By KEITH RICHBURG In the wake of Robert Griffin's sur- prise decision to seek a third U.S. Senate term rather than retire, major changes have occurred in each party's primary election pictures. On the Republican side, the field narrowed with the withdrawal of U.S. Rep. Philip Ruppe of Houghton. Ruppe, a personal friend of Griffin, said he was running only with the understanding that the incumbent would .step down. Ruppe said he was leaving public office after 12 years in the House. ON THE DEMOCRATIC side, an already crowded field saw the entry of still another contender, former Detroit City Council President Carl Levin. Levin, however, immediately catapulted to the fore-front of the assor- tment, of Senate hopefuls. With his name recognition and his electoral popularity in Southeastern Michigan, many observers see him as the man to beat in the August 8 primary for the Democratic nomination. Levin's brother Sander, former State Senator from Detroit, gave the Levin name statewide exposure in two close- call losing bids for Governor against William Milliken. Levin's cousin Charles has boosted the family name still further from his seat on the Michigan Supreme Court. CARL LEVIN is a political figure in his own right, however, -and says his experience in city government has given him a taste for state-wide issues. And the issue Levin sees popping up most often is that federal programs are not doing what they are supposed to. "I think I have a unique contribution because I fought the federal bureaucracy at the local level," Levin said. "Too often the programs that we struggle hard to get are messed up at the local level. I've battled the federal bureaucracy for eight years." LEVIN SAID that the current pattern in the Senate is to pass laws and then forget them, a pattern he hopes to change.. See LEVIN, Page 7 AP Pboto As the nation's 73-day-old coal strike drags on, some midwest states are trying to salvage any coal they can. Here, a Public Service Indiana employe uses a tractor to break lose frozen coal in an effort to augment Indiana's 42-day supply. B egin samU.S.-Arab arms deal By AP and UPI President Carter brought union and industry negotiators together in a rare White House meeting last night in an ef- fort to find an end .to the 72-day coal strike. White 'House press secretary Jody Powell said the president told bargainers for both sides the nation is "looking to you men" to reach agreement quickly on terms that can end the longest continuous coal strike in history. THE WHITE House won agreement for resumed negotiations in the strike earlier in the day after industry representatives consented to a White House meeting with union bargainers. Powell said that while Carter stressed the need for a swift settlement, "I think it should be obvious that the president isn't going to walk in there and set a firm deadline. That doesn't make much sense." Carter spent about five minutes with the 10 bargainers for the United Mine Workers and five representatives of the coal industry. labor Secretary Ray Marshall and other government of- ficials also sat in on the talks, held in the Roosevelt Room. POWELL SAID Carter pledged to do anything he can to facilitate agreement. But he said the President noted that he is "not a mediator" and doesn't intend to become one. Industry officials at first ignored a presidential call to resume talks. But they later reversed themselves, saying that "appropriate conditions" had been agreed to in advance of the meeting. Carter has assigned Marshall a direct role in the negotiations and federal mediators also are involved. CARTER WILL meet with Gov. William Milliken and governors from 11, other states today in Washington to discuss the impact of the coal strike on their states. The meeting, set for 3 p.m., will also include chief executives from Illinois, Virginia, West Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Missouri and Maryland. The strike is not threatening Carter's economic program yet, but it could cause short-term damage to em- ployment and production figures, ad- ministration economists said yester- day. THE ADMINISTRATION has begun a top-level analysis of what could hap- pen to the economy if the strike con- tinues much longer. "We don't foresee any major economic impact at least for the next month," said William Nordhaus, a member of the President's Council for Economic Advisers, who is heading' up the effort to assess the consequences of the record-long strike. See CARTER. Page 7 In efle x student fall1s to deathm By JULIE ROVNER A fourth year Inteflex student, 21- year-old Ronley Peisner died yesterday afternoon after falling eight stories from a window in Burton Tower. Sources said Peisner, from Hunting- ton Woods, had a history of psychiatric treatment. A SPOKESMAN for the Ann Arbor Police Department refused to call the incident a suicide, saying only that it was still under investigation. The spokesman did say, however, that no evidence of foul play was found. University Safety Director Fred Davids said an open window was found at the eiglhth level of the tower, along .._s JERUSALEM (AP) - Prime Minister Menachem Begin yesterday bitterly protested the U.S. decision to sell warplanes to Egypt and Saudi Arabia and' said he would go to Washington next month to try to smooth over the growing quarrel between Israel and its chief ally, and arms sup- plier. "With all respect I turn to the President of the United States and ask that he reconsider the decision he took last night, because it contains a grave danger to the peacemaking process and to Israel's security," Begin said in a speech to the Israeli Parliament. HE SAID the first U.S. sale of combat aircraft to Egypt would reinforce what he called ultimatums issued by President Anwar Sadat in peace talks and would encourage saber-rattling in the Egyptian press. "Threats of war and aggression will not move Israel to take any decision that would harm its status, its rights, its security or its future," Begin said. The United States "has to understand that the supply of aggressive weapons '(The United States) has to understand that the sipply of aggressire ceaponis (it this tit(e cannot be other thant . . . an obstacle to peace negotiation s. -Israeli Prime Minister Menarhem Begin sale to the Arabs. Begin's visit is unrelated to the arms deal decision and is seen as an oppor- tunity for a thorough and "quiet ex- change" 'like the one Sadat had with President Carter earlier this month, said a State Department statement. IN OTHER Mideast developments: " Ten thousand Israelis prayed at the funerals of two men killed in the bom- bing of a Jerusalem bus Tuesday. In Beirut, Yasser Arafat's Palestinian guerrilla group Fatah claimed respon- sibility for the blast, which also injured 43 other persons. " Abdul Jalloud, chief deputy to Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy, met in Moscow with President Leonid Brezhnev. The Soviet news agency said Jalloud and Brezhnev agreed that Egypt's peace overture to Israel is in- flicting serious damage to the interests of Arab peoples." " Mohamed Ibrahim Kamel, Egypt's foreign minister, said in Bonn, West Germany, that Israel is deliberately stalling the Mideast peace talks. He said Israei "is still trying to play for time, to evade tackling the real issues in the new spirit created by President Sadat." at this time cannot be other than. . . an obstacle to peace negotiations." IN WASHINGTON, Carter ad- ministration officials acknowledged differences between the two countries but said these do not undermine the basic U.S. commitment to Israel. They said they wanted to put to rest "speculation" that a crisis had developed with Israel over the aircraft See BEGIN, Page 2 See INTEFLEX, Page 7 Spill shuts down Trans-Alaska pipeline; FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) - The $7.7 billion trans-Alaska pipeline was shut down yesterday because of an oil leak near here that federal authorities said may have been caused by sabotage. "There are some indications that it is sabotage. You have to suspect foul play," said Morris "Jack" Turner of the federal Alaska Pipeline Office. "WE HAVE an indication of an explo- sion," said an FBI agent. The Alaska Pipeline Service Co. said the cause was undetermined, however, and not other details were immediately available.. sabotage s Turner said the spill was at a low point of the line and that the oil would "tend to drain out, like a garden hose." HE SAID AN engineering profile of the spill site estimated that up to 20,000 barrels could spill, and that the oil was flowing at a rate of about two to three barrels a second and was not con- trolled. Crews at the scene were trying to contain the flow but were unable to determine the cause immeditately, an Alyeska spokesman said. The leak from an above-ground sec- tion of the 800-mile pipeline was spotted by a private pilot. Alyeska sent a uspected helicopter to the scene and the helicop- ter pilot said the leaking oil covered an area about 40 feet square. THE LEAK occurred at a point a mile north of the Chena River, but the pilot said there was no open water, which would tend to spread the oil, near the leaking section of pipe. There were several leaks during star- tup of the pipeline, but this leak was the first since the first oil reached the pipeline port of Valdez. Th ursday " Leon Spinks stunned Muhammed Ali last night to capture the WOWl Box- ing Association Champion- ship by a split decision. See story, Page 8. e The University Regents meet today to discuss student space and to review the Rate Study Committee's recommendation for higher dorm rates. See story, Page 2. " A Detroit judge says prison is not the answer for yourth offen- ders. See story, Page 2. Prosecutor charges Ypsi city councilman' By JUDY RAKOWSKY Ypsilanti City Councilman Robert Cherris was charged yesterday by the comity prosecitor with falsifying a nomninating petition for disqualified April, 1975, signed and circulated nominating petitions for Page, who sought to run for the ward's other coun- cil seat. Both Cherris and Paige are students at Eastern Michigan Univer- Daily Photo by ALAN BLINKtY Rippled reflections TO AD VISE ON HIGHER ED UCA TION: Fleming will visit Saudi Arabia 'xs sonething I did. I9m in this situation and Im' going to hare to deal (icth it. I'm going to take things as theoy (me. The ,only person h() 1has suffe red or has By SUE WARNER University President Robben Fleming will travel to Saudi Arabia this weekend where he will visit several universities to offer suggestions for improving that ,antr s h ahp r~niIsvas. will be visiting universities in Dehren, Jidda and the capital city of Riyadh. Fleming said he also plans to visit Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, although he was not sure exactly what his schedule will be. ALTHOUGH HE has received infor- R' no