Wednesday. May 31, 1978 mD Sixteen Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents plus Supplement PSC bulb challenge in works By BRIAN BLANCHARD The Public Service Commission (PSC) plans to challenge the federal district court order which ended Detroit Edison's light bulb exchange program last Friday, but the state attorney general's office has not yet decided how to carry out that action. Robert Nelson, PSC Policy Director, said yesterday "we wil probably go to court either today or tomorrow" to urge a temporary restraining order to force the utility to maintain the free light bulb program until a final decision can be made "in several months." BUT STANLEY STEINBORN of the state attorney general's office, which handles all PSC legal action, said, "We are almost certainly not going to court" im- mediately, adding his office "is still studying" possible Sadat: I'll give peace 60 more days CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - President Anwar Sadat declared yesterday he is giving his peace initiative with Israel another two months to prove itself a success or failure. If his overtures to Israel fail to being a settlement, Sadat said, "it's not the end of the world. Let us try another way, let us try another system." But, speaking at a news conference at his Nile-side villa, he hinted that if the peace process proves fruitless, he might not agree to renew the disengagement of forces pact with Israel in the Sinai Desert. The agreement expires in October. HE INDICATED he might reach a decision by the time Egypt celebrates the 26th anniversary of its revolution in July. "I hope on the next 23rd of July there will be a surprise," he said. In Jerusalem, meanvhile, Israeli press reports claimed hard lobbying by Israeli embassies in Washington 'and other capitals of the North Atlantic Summer is Treaty Organization (NATO) has sof- in the bac tened a draft statement by NATO on the season wit Middle East. Israeli officials said they could not SLAM confirm the reports, but acknowledged that the United States had been pushing for a strongly worded statement4 backing President Carter's Mideast policy. WASHIN ANTICIPATING A tough stand by the Carter ye NATO foreign ministers' meeting in "massive Washington, the Israeli Foreign Africa," ai Ministry published a communique Vance hel Monday saying Israel would be "very Western ai surprised" by a one-sided NATO security fo declaration. Carter e The reports said the final NATO mit sessio communique is likely to drop a call for Organizati granting "legitimate rights" to the reporters: Palestinians and for Israeli withdrawal NATO is th on all three fronts-the Egyptian, Jor- any' boun danian and Syrian. massive pl and this ce See SADAT, Page 2 be a non-al actions. Although the PSC has the power to regulate all of the state's privately owned electric and gas utilities, it is up to the attorney general to direct "an eleventh- hour attempt" to revive the program, according to Steinborn. Edison ended the light bulb swap after Southfiedl druggist Lawrence Cantor took the utility to court, claiming Edison's exchange program violated anti- trust laws and hampered his own light bulb business. The order to close the program was approved by U.S. District Judge John Feikens. An earlier dismissal of Cantor's suit by Feikens was reversed last year by the U.S. Supreme Court. Nelson yesterday said the Supreme Court decision was con- tingent on the approval of the PSC. STEINBORN SAID THE most likely course of action for the PSC would be to go back to the federal court level to ask for reveral of the approval on the basis of new evidence. The new evidence would apparently be the public support for the "Lamp Supply Program" claimed by the PSC. The PSC could also go to local circuit courts, but "ther you'd have the situation in which on the one hand the federal court would be saying 'no' and on the other the state would be saying 'yes"' to the program, accor- ding to Steinborn. ON MAY 22 THE attorney general's office recom- mended to the PSC that Edison's monthly rate for r-sidential customers be reduced by 44 cents, an See PSC Page 10 Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Ah, summer! s when watermelon and popsicles drip down your arm, blue jeans become cut-offs, and hamburgers are barbecued kyard. Memorial Day weekend kicked this summer off to a sunny start and these three sun-worshippers began the h a floating frolic on the Detroit River Monday. [S AFRICAN BUILD-UP: Carter assails Cuban troops GTON (AP) - President sterday assailed Cuba's placement of troops in nd Secretary of State Cyrus d open the possibility of d for building a Pan-African rce. merged from a secret sum- in of North Atlantic Treaty on (NATO) leaders saying to "The general feeling inside at the Cubans have exceeded ds of propriety in having acement of troops in Africa rtainly makes their claim to igned country ridiculous." WESTERN authorities estimate that Cuba has between 38,000 and 40,000 troops in various African countries. Later, Vance, answering questions at a news conference, labeled the for- mation of a Pan-African force as "anin- teresting idea that we would like to con- sider." "I certainly would not rule out the possibility of some sort of economic assistance to such a force, but it's much too early to draw any conclusions on it," Vance added. . KEY WESTERN nations will meet in Paris on Monday for preliminary talks that would serve as a prelude to a broader conference on African security to be held in Brussels on June 13 and 14, he said. Vance said the government of Zaire will attend the Brussels meeting which will focus on the central African coun- try's economic problems resulting from the recent invasion of Shaba province by rebels based in Angola. Besides the United States, the Paris and Brussels talks will be attended by France, Great Britain, West Germany and Belgium, Vance said. See CARTER, Page 11