Vol. LXXXIX, No. 9-S trday' May 12, 1979 9 Sixteen Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents Pre-written term papers readily available By SARA ANSPACH p pany offers "custom research," a service that will Money can't buy everything, but enough of it will Firm s profit from write a paper tailored to a student's particular bring a pre-written, pre-typed term paper on any . needs. For example, if you need an eight-page subject delivered to your door and ready to hand in student cheating paper on themes of love and war in Walt Whitman's at your next class. work, paying close attention to the Leaves of Grass, Several commercial firms advertise a variety of Pacific Research offers thousands of papers, with with 10 footnotes and 13 bibliography sources, it's no "research" and "writing" services on campus. tilsappcfc s" itr f antiHomsexa sweat for Pacific Research. Just send in the "resarc and' witin" srvics o camus. titles as specific as "A History of Anti-Homosexual specifics and it should arrive in 10 days, or a little Signs are posted in the Modern Language Building Legislation from Ancient Times to the Present" and faster for an extra one dollar per page. (MLB) and Angell Hall, and want ads appear every "Aspects of Guerrilla Warfare During the Civil ar o t o ype r age. day in the Daily. a"ada ra s"rbesF civilth RELYING ON THESE types of services can soon SWar" and as broad as "Problems Facing the deplete a student's budget. Pacific Research POSTERS STRATEGICALLY placed in the College Student." charges $3.00 per page for its pre-written papers, UGLI mvite students to send onedollar for a cats- But if one of the thousands of pre-written papers and $6.50 per page for undergraduate level "custom logui from Pacific Rese arh, a stt-barse fr me doesn't fit your needs, don't despair, as the research" and $8.00 per page for graduate research. libraries in the country. catalogue hastens to reassure its readers. The com- See PRE-WRITTEN, Page8 Carter blasts gas ration vote Daily Photo by JIM KRUZ MAYOR BELCHER welcomes Mayor Naochika Ii of Hikone City last night at Webers Inn. The Japanese visitors are making'a rare visit to their sister city. Japanese officials visit A 2,their 'sister city' By ADRIENNE LYONS Calling the visit a "goodwill and AMY DIAMOND mission," Mayor Naochika Ii In a unique exchange of said "the two sister cities are so culture, approximately 80 people far apart physically, we don't get gathered at Weber's Inn last exchanges very often." night for a reception welcoming The mayor, who visited Ann 32 visitors from Ann Arbor's Arbor in 1964 for one day, said he sister city of Hikone City, Shiga, only remembered Ann Arbor's Japan. See JAPANESE, Page 2 From UPI and AP WASHINGTON-An angry President Carter yesterday accused House mem- bers of burying "their heads in the sand" in rejecting his emergency gasoline rationing plan and challenged them to draft an acceptable alternative within 90 days. "I was shocked and I was em- barrassed for our nation's government ... that the House refused to take the responsibility for giving me this authority," Carter told reporters he summoned to the Oval Office to hear his first public statement on the issue. IN AN UNEXPECTED move, the House late Thursday voted 246-159 against giving Carter the power to im- pose a coupon-type rationing plan in the event the nation faces emergency gasoline shortages. The Senate had passed his proposal 58-39. Carter's stern wor'ds marked a sharp departure from past White House policy of refraining from attacks on either house of Congress. "I am not willing to accept the judgment of a majority of the House of Representatives, whose members have apparently put their heads in the sand and refused to take action," the president said, standing behind his desk as he addressed reporters. "I CHALLENGE the Congress within this next 90 days to develop their own rationing plan-fair, equitable and balanced." He said he would not resubmit his own plan, but would offer Congress "any possible assistance." He declined to say what steps woul be taken if Congress failed to meet the 90-day deadline. "THIS QUESTION indicates, and I hate to say this, that a majority of the House of Representatives have been willing to put local or parochial in- terests ahead and let political timidity prevent their taking action in the in- terest of our nation," Carter said. - He warned that "anyone in a position of authority, who is not wiling to See CARTER, Page 12 Liability for sludge in dispute, By JOHN GOYER The company which hauls sludge from Ann Arbor's waste treatment plant has been spreading the material as fertilizer on fields in Washtenaw County for the past three weeks, but of- ficials disagree on who should take responsibility for any damage it might cause to the environment. City officials claim the company, NyTREX, is responsible while the owner of the firm maintains the city is liable for possible environmental con- tamination. Sludge is a muddy by-product of the city's waste treatment plant. City Utilities Director Wayne Abbott said the sludge contains only low levels of heavy metals or contaminsnts such as -the chemical PCB. LAST MAY, the Michigan Depar- tment of Natural Resources (DNR) threatened to impose a ban on new con- nections to the city's sewage system if the city's waste treatment plant con- tinued to discharge sludge into the Huron River. In response to DNR's demands, the city hired NyTREX to haul the sludge by tanker truck to Ohio. State officials in Ohio issued permits allowing NyTREX to give the sludge to farmers, See NyTREX, Page S Sentences surprise 'Soweto 11' KEMPTON PARK, South Africa dead and causing $70 million in April 30. (AP)--The sedition trial of 11 black damage. The toughest sentence-eight Soweto students ended yesterday with "WE DON'T THINK they should have years-was handed Sechaba Dan Mon- lighter than expected prison terms for been convicted to begin with, but we're - tsitsi, 23, the former chairman of the four and suspended sentences for very pleased with the sentences," said now banned Soweto Student Represen- seven, surprising black leaders and a defense source, who asked not to be tative Council. Four years of the term defense sources. named. were suspended. All could have been sentenced to life The charge of sedition has not been JUSTICE HENDRIK Van Dyk of the for their convictions, stemming from used in South Africa for 30 years and provincial supreme court said that rioting that started at the black town- the penalty was discretionary with the more than any of the accused "he could ship of Soweto and swept the country court, where the 10 men and one during the summer of 1976, leaving 700 woman, aged 18 to 23, were convicted See 'SOWETO I', Page 2