TURKEY AWARDS See editorial page . P LztP 1~a uil LEAVE TOWN High--41 Low--29 Vol. LXXXVJII, no. 66 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, November 23, 1977 Ten Cents 10 Pages After Sadat: Trying to believe in peace JERUSALEM (AP)-Egyptian flags began to come down over Jerusalem yesterday as Israel dismantled the largest security apparatus it ever constructed to protect a visiting dignitary. And life was returning to normal, leaving an af- terglow of hope for the future. "The whole thing was like a dream," said one housewife. "I can hardly believe he was ever here." AS THE SIGNS of Israel's welcome for Egyptian President Anwar Sadat disappeared, the country's leaders were doing some hard thinking. Prime Minister Menahem Begin planned to convene his cabinet Thursday to report on his talks with Sadat and perhaps to consider his call on Israel to take "hard and drastic decisions." Israelis were left breathless by the 44-hour visit which Sadat said he "can never forget," the incredible sight of an Egyptian president heartily shaking hands with Begin and calling him "iny friend," Sadat joking and trading tributes with "that old lady," former Prime Minister Golda Meir, and taking bows before a wildly applauding Israeli parliament. "I NEVER THOUGHT I'd live to see the day," said one oung Israeli. "I certainly never thought Golda would." Shops took "Welcome President Sadat" signs from their 'U'speech guidelines approved By MARIANNE EGRI Groans, shouts and'the hurling of a lone orange at a speaker on campus are considered all right under the University's new free speech policy, but continued harassment of the speaker may be cause for removal. Officially approved by the Regents last month, the guidelines protect "the three sides of the triangle" - speaker, listener, and protestor - according to Pathology Professor Bruce Friedman, chairman of the University Civil Liberties Board. THE UNIVERSITY was prompted to draw up a new speech policy by disruptive behavior of protestors during the 1975 visit of Israeli president Ephraim Katzir. Other dis- ruptions followed. '5, "A recent offense occurred about two months ago when African groups requested the right to review the cre- derntials of African speakers to see if they approved (of them)," said Friedman. "This is.not appropriate." to r The guidelines state that "it is inappropriate for the University to bar any invited speaker from appear- Henry Abrah ing" or to shun a controverisal speak- Gerry jacket, n er because his appearance may hash pipe. cause a violent reaction. Why? He sa: "People thro "PROTESTORS MUST not inter- the dumpster e fere unduly" in orderly communica- Hendrix poster tion between the speaker and the There's pretty audience, the guidelines stipulate. ABRAHAMI "If people groan and shout, this Jim's Restaura wouldn't be considered 'unduly' be- out for trash-ca cause they are reacting in a human you need furnit way to a controversial issue," Fried- anything." man asserts. "But when the protes- Abrahamer tor's sole purpose is to prevent the is accurate to person from speaking, it is censoring throwing out sc and is considered 'unduly'." garbage in then "You figure INTERPRETATION of terms like says. "Everyor "undue" depends on the situation, things, and ou something you The experi See 'U', Page 7 treasure searc Egyptian and Israeli flags. The King David Hotel, where Sadat spent two nights, lowered its Egyptian flag, as did the president's house. But many others still fluttered over the streets. "WE'RE IN NO hurry to take them down," a city spokesman said. The visit opened a national debate over whether Israel was obliged to respond to Sadat's peace gesture, and how. "The psychological climate between Israel and Egypt has changed from the roots," said an editorial in Haaretz, a leadingindependent Hebrew newspaper. But Haaretz disagreed with Sadat's statement that he had already done "my share in my decision to come here," and that it was now up to Israel. "This places too heavy a burden on us," it said. "ANYONE WHO believes Israel should show more flexibility should demand the same from the Egyptian president," the newspaper said in reference to Sadat's refusal to budge on the nard issues of Israeli occupied lands and a state for the Palestinians. "A measure of momentum has been generated," said the English-language Jerusalem Post. "But it may easily run out of steam unless it is refueled, and soon.. . "The big question for Israel is whether Begin is capable of taking the necessary hard decisions" and announcing a readiness to consider withdrawal on all three fronts, something he has refused to do. "THE PARTY'S over," said the conservative Maariv. "The almost inebriate sensation that followed President Sadat's stay in Jerusalem, the feeling that we were wit- nessing unreality, the almost surreal atmosphere that surrounded the high points of the visit-all of these belong to the past... "We are entering a new waiting period-waiting for Arab reactions to Sadat's step so as to find out for whom he speaks," Maariv said. In Washington yesterday, the Carter administration said that chances for a lasting peace in the Middle Eastare the best they've been in nearly 30 years as a result of Sadat's visit. IN A SPEECH billed by the administration as an impor- tant statement, Deputy Secretary of State Warren Chris- topher said the United States will do everything it can to help Middle East leaders maintain the peace momentum started by Sadat's journey. At the same time, Christopher said the Soviet Union has a joint responsibility with the United States to help move the Middle East negotiations forward. The Soviet Union, co- chairman of the Geneva peace conference, has given a generally negative reaction to Sadat's visit. "Neither the Soviet Union nor the United States wants a new war in the Middle East which would carry with it the threat of confrontation between the two nuclear super- powers," Christopher said. "Recognition in certain Arab countries that this is the Soviet attitude should help hasten peace," Christopher ad- ded. THE SECRETARY, speaking in San Francisco before the convention of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, made this assessment of Middle East peace proposals: "I want you to know that President Carter, Secretary Vance, and those of us involved in making and executing this country's foreign policy, believe that-despite all the pitfalls and difficulties-we now have the best chance since 1948 for real peace in the Middle East." n~ Cyclone claims 10,0 in India NEW DELHI; -India (AP) - In- dians burned the bodies of cyclone victims on huge funeral pyres in southeastern India yesterday as the death toll from the weekend storm and tidal waves was reported as at least 10,000. "Overnight, villages have been turned into burial grounds," said Krishna Rao, minister of education in Andhra Pradesh state, which bore the brunt of the storm. HE ESTIMATED as many as 8,000 persons may have perished in 20 vil- lages in the coastal district of Divi Taluk when it was swallowed by an 18-foot tidal wave. The minister, who traveled the area on foot, said roads were blocked by masses of uprooted trees and debris mixed with the bodies of cattle and human beings. J. Vengal Rao, chief minister of Andhra Pradesh, said after a helicop- ter tour of the stricken area-that he saw hundreds of bodies floating in the flood waters. He said the bodies that could not be identified immediately were being destroyed to prevent the spread of disease. THE 10,000 death figure from the storm which for two days battered a 250-mile stretch of coastline in An- dhra Pradesh was given to reporters at Hyderabad, the state capital, by P.N. Reddy, state revenue minister. Meanwhile, weather stations said another threatening cyclone ap- proaching the mainland from the Arabian Sea on the west coast had weakened to a rain squall. Weather officials said west coast areas in the path of the new storm, including the port of Bombay, would be spared killer winds. The cyclone, which hit the south- east coast Saturday with driving rain, 95 mph winds and tidal waves, flooded and washed away houses, fields, roads, bridges and entire villages, leaving hundreds of thou- See CYCLONE, Page 7 Arnson versus Lau*erO By MARK PARRENT Incumbent Jon Lauer and newly- elected member Eric Arnson will be the candidates for the presidency of the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA), according to several MSA represen- tatives who asked to remain anonymous. The MSA officers will probably be See LAUER, Page 10 °ecover untold treasures By TOM MIRGA Kamer didn't pay a cent for his down-filled or for his TV set, his surf board, and a nifty ys he's got the nose for "good garbage." ow out things like you would not believe," xpert says. "I have a five-foot-tall Jimi r, bamboo curtains, all sorts of stuff. much everything you could want here." ER, WHO WAITS TABLES at Bicycle nt, makes a habit of always keeping an eye an treasures. "In this town," he says, "if ture you can go out, find a couch, a chair, recalls finding a triple-beam balance that a tenth of a gram. "Some guy was just cme boxes that looked like they had good m, and there it was," he shrugged. out there's at least 50,000 people here," he ne throws out their little knickknacks and t of those millions, you're bound to find really like." enced rummager does most of his hing in the heavily populated student sec- tions of the city. "Twice a year, when semesters change, everyone throws out just everything - and I mean every- thing," he grins. "Just go look in the dumpsters. Whenever anyone leaves an apartment there's always good stuff left behind." THE UNIVERSITY is always a dependable supplier of salvagable items too, according to Abrahamer. "You can go to the Chemistry Building garbage on any day, sort through it and find enough odd pieces of glassware to make some primo pipes out of. "Once some friends and I found this five-necked bulb blash," he says, "hooked up some red hoses to it, and make a really fine hash pipe." Naturally, Abrahamer makes sure all the materials he finds are thoroughly cleaned and rinsed out of chemicals before he puts them to use. Abrahamer keeps most of his treasures in a trunk that he delivered from the hands of the garbage man. "It was sort of beat up when I found it," he says, "but I covered it with some contact paper and it looks just like real wood." Abrahamer keeps his trunk with a friend, Susanne Beardsley. The rest of his cache is scattered around town in the homes of other friends. "One person has this tree See A NOSE, Page 7 appy Thanksgiving! We're all going home for Thanksgiving dinner too, so don't expect anybody here at The Daily offices tomorrow or Friday. The business office will be open for business from 9 until 5 today. We'll publish a paper next Tuesday morning. See you then. . .r r. i Thanksgiving parade puts fantasy on wheels I By PAULINE TOOLE DETROIT - For a short while tomorrow, a fantasy of giant-size, paper mache characters and colorful pageantry will excite the little kid in all of us. For even though the floats have become ultra-modernized and the first J.L. Hudson's parade-goers have long since grown up and joined the workaday world, the parade's hypnotic spendor and dream-like aura remain. The timeless Thanksgiving tradition will be revived once again in Detroit for the 51st time at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow. "OUR PARADE is for the kids," ex- plained Charles Gettel, taking a breather from dabbing a series of wooden go-carts with blue paint. "Adults like it too, though-nobody is ever too old to be a kid." Gettel is one of 11 full-time Hudson's employes arduously preparing for the big day. They seem to enjoy their work as much as children enjoy the parade. What is it like to work with toys all day long, to create the stuff of dreams? "I couldn't ask for a better job," an- ere dGarv Panienskii as he glued felt respective storybook environments. Upstairs in the warehouse, rows and rows of colorful paper mache figures from past creations are stored-color- ful heads of birds, keystone cops, turkeys and assorted animals, full-size figures of clowns, Indians and dwarfs. Line upon line, they look ready to mar- ch away. AFTER THIS year's parade, the floats and giant figures will join these characters from years past in the attic- like storage area. Damaged figures will be repaired and saved for use later. A long standing parade tradition is the creation of a float designed by a Detroit elementary school student. Each year, art teachers submit drawings from their students. A 10- year-old's design was selected this year. The special float-a Christmas tree surrounded by dancing children-is one of many depicting the approaching holiday season. Giant snow-people, sleds, and evergreen trees populate the storage area. Enormous icicles drip from one float while another awaited ..e ~~ f~. < .. >r>: