I P LIE 43Un 1t aug Vol. LXXXVIII, N . No. 64 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, November 20, 1977 Ten Cents 10 Pages Plus Supplement ABC puts Sadat before The Game By LOIS JOSIMOVICH As suspense mounted before the kickoff yesterday, thousands of blue and yellow-clad Michigan fans sat hunched before TV sets, awaiting the appearance of the Wolverines in the comfort of their living room or neigh- borhood bar. But when 12:50 rolled around, tube viewers were hissing at a receiving line that was a far cry from Woody's Buckeyes. THE ONLY network to air the Michigan-Ohio State game, ABC, had pre-empted the first dramatic min- utes of the annual struggle in favor of a weightier matter - the welcoming of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat on Israeli soil by Prime Minister Menahem Begin and a line of digni- taries. Large numbers of Ann Arbor fans had hit the bars at opening time in order to get good places in front of a large color screen; and some, ac- cording to local bartenders, were vo- ciferous in their protests. "It was a real mess; it was very frustrating," said Marie Hinile, an employe of the Blue Frogge on Church St. HIMLE ESTIMATED that there were some 170 football fans in the discotheque half an hour after it opened at noon. "There were no fights or any- thing," but there were a lot of com- plaints, she added. At Dooley's on Maynard St., there was a line at the door from 10:30 on to get inside the bar, where around 300 fans echoed the sentiments of the "Go Blue" sign on the wall. LARRY "ARAB" Williams, an Ypsilanti native, couldn't remember at kick-off time exactly when he had arrived to get his seat a short distance from the screen. But the delayed TV coverage didn't seem to bother him and his friends as they chugged away on golden brew. "I don't care as long as the pitchers keep coming!" said Williams. Joni Jacobson, a Michigan sopho- more, was "not really" upset by the ABC maneuver either. See ABC, Page 2 Defenders are., key to triumph By KATHY HENNEGHAN Delicious victory was delivered up by the Wolverine defend- ers yesterday as Michigan defeated its bitterest rival. The 14-6 win over Ohio State University was played before a national television audience and 106,024 spectators, the largest crowd ever to attend a regular.season collegiate football game. The triumph earned the Wolverines a New Year's trip to Pasadena for the Rose Bowl, where they will face the Pac-Eight champion - Washington, UCLA, or Stanford -- on January 2. Michigan finished the regular season with a 10-1 record, its only loss a stunning 16-0 upset at Minnesota. The Buckeyes end- ed up at 9-2, having also lost a non-conference game to Oklahoma. Ohio State dominated nearly every category of the statistics, except points scored. For the second time in as many years, the Buckeyes failed to cross the Michigan goal line, this time settling for two field goals. The Michigan defense tightened up where it counted the most - deep in its own territory. "Our defense was terrific," said Bo Schembechler. "They came up with the big plays when we had to have them. That is a great Ohio State offense and we have now held them without a touchdown three of the last four years. See DYNAMITE, Page 9 Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Tom Cousineau (36) has an eye for Wolverine quarterback Rick Leach (7) and all his muscles have been activated, but the Michigan lefty has turned his thoughts and body to the goal-line--the stripe he crossed at the conclusion of this play. ANGR Y REACTION ROCKS ARAB NATIONS: Drama marks Sadat arrival JERUSALEM (AP) - Anwar Sadat came to Israel last night on a "sacred" historic mission, risking both his political future and Arab unity in a bid for lasting peace in the Middle East. The Egyptian president, first Arab leader to visit the Jewish state in its 29-year existence, landed at Ben-Gurion airport, was welcomed in an emotional gathering of Israeli leaders and then rode in the evening darkness, to Jerusalem, the ancient .Holy City and symbol of centuries of strife between Arab and Jew. WITHIN THREE hours he held his first private discussion with Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin. Toward the end of the half-hour meeting, Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan and Deputy Prime Minister Yigael Yadin joined the two na- tional leaders. "I can say that we like each other," Begin told Israeli radio. A Begin spokesman called it a "courtesy call" and said: "There was a very cordial atmosphere. It was a friendly talk." "Shalom"-peace-shouted some of the thou- sands of jubilant, applauding Israelis at the en- trance to Jerusalem as Sadat, accompanied by Israeli President Ephraim Katzir, passed by in a U.S.-supplied bulletproof black limousine. Parents held their children aloft to see the Egyptian leader. OUTSIDE ISRAEL, the fury of Arab reaction to Sadat's solitary diplomacy reached a crescendo. Libya broke diplomatic relations with neighboring Egypt. Bitter Palestinian militants demonstrated, sometimes violently, in world capitals. Syria called it "the blackest day in Arab history." But Jordan, like Egypt a moderate in ranks, appealed for an end to "negative" tions and for cooperation in preserving unity. Arab reac- Arab STEPPING DOWN from the Boeing 707 at 8:05 p.m.-1:05 p.m. EST-to a bugle fanfare, he was greeted and shook hands with Katzir and Begin, then stood at attention alongside them for the playing of the Fgyptian and Israeli national an- thems. tunes that so often inspired them in bitter enmity. A 21-gun salute was fired. Moving down a reception line of Israeli and foreign dignitaries, the 58-year-old Sadat reserved his warmest greeting for former Prime Minister Golda Meir. They smiled, shook hands firmly, then he kissed her on the cheek. "I have waited a long time for this," said the Egyptian. "But you didn't come," replied the 79-year-old woman who led Israel in the 1967 and 1973 Middle East wars. "Now the time has come," said Sadat. Among those meeting the Egyptian leader were some of his country's most implacable enemies from the past-Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan, Israeli military hero of the 1967 Mideast war; former Prime Minster Yitzhak Rabin, his counter- part in the 1973 war, and Agriculture Minister Ariel Sharon, the general who turned the tide of the 1973 conflict against Egypt. Security for the visit was the tightest in Israeli histor. Jordan was assassinated there by a Palestinian extremist because, like Sadat, he dared to accept Israel's existence. Sadat will be staying in a sixth-floor suite at Jerusalem's King David Hotel-ironically the scene of a Begin-led dynamite attack during Be- gin's days as a leader of the Irgun guerrillas seeking independence from the British mandate. Today, Sadat's day begins in Jerusalem with prayers at the Al-Aqsa mosque. After praying in the mosque, Sadat crosses the Temple Mount for a visit to the Dome of the Rock, also known as the Mosque of Omar, a few yards from Al-Aqsa. Inside the octagonal building is the sacred rock on which it is said that Abraham was to have sacrificed his son Isaac. Coincident- ally, today is the Moslem feast of Al Adha, which commemorates this. See inside: One Israeli's hopes for peace, Page 7 The world reaction to Sadat's trip, Page 7 A look at Sadat's record on Israel, Page 4 The arrival scene at the airport, 30 miles west of Jerusalem, was historic and poignant. It took Sadat only 33 minutes to fly aboard his jetliner "Egyptian One" from a military airport near Lamailia, Egypt, to Ben-Gurion a Jordan urgesJwomen to unify HOUSTON (AP) - Rep. Barbara Jordan told the National Women's Conference yesterday that the battle for women's rights needs President Lyndon B. Johnson, joined Mrs. Carter and Mrs. Ford in calling for equal rights for women. Jordan addressed some 13,000 women in the Albert Thomas Con- From the rock, Sadat goes to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, said by Christians to have been built over the spot where Christ was buried. The next stop on Sadat's schedule, at 11 a.m. -4 a.m. EST-is Yad Vashem, Israel's monument I