The Michigan Daily-Friday, July 28, 1978-Page 5 Israeli officials leave Egypt TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Israel's only direct negotiating link with Egypt was severed yesterday while America's Mideast mediator moved to get the two countries talking face to face again about a Mideast peace set- tlement. An Israeli military delegation, in Egypt since January, was thrown out f the country on the order of President Anwar Sadat and flown back to Tel Aviv in an Egyptian jet liner. "THIS IS NOT the end, only the beginning of the process," delegation commander Col. Yaacov Heychal told reporters after arriving at Ben Gurion airport and receiving an enthusiastic hug from one of his daughters. The group, which stayed in Egypt after peace talks broke down in January, was said to be used occasionally to transmit peace feelers. In Washington, a spokesman for the State Department said "we would have preferred that this step not be taken because of the interpretation that may be placed on it." But the spokesman, Thomas Reston, declined to interpret the Egyptian ac- tion in any way. "I don't believe it is going to be useful for me to charac- terize such development," he said. He House cover-up This peaceful painter seems nearly enveloped by clouds overhead. To have Albert Einstein's brain ... NEW YORK (UPI) - In an office in Wichita, Kan., in a cardboard box stashed unobtrusively in a corner, in a mason jar nestled among rumpled newspapers - floats the brain of Albert Einstein. Like a Grade B Hollywood thriller come true, the bizarre fate of the brain was disclosed this week, from its removal after Einstein's death in 1955 to its 23 years of dissection and scrutiny by scientists seeking the biological basis of genius. "YES, IT'S TRUE we're studying it," Dr. Thomas Harvey, who has custody of the precious gray matter, said. "We're comparing it to normal, looking for any differences we can find." The brain - or what's left of it - of the man who changed our concept of the universe was tracked to Wichita by Steven Levy, reporter for the New Jer- sey Monthly, who chronicled his hunt in the magazine's August issue. But followup efforts ran into a scien- tific stonewall. APPLE APPEAL NEW YORK (AP) - For centuries apples have been associated with Halloween celebrations. "Maybe it's because apples ripen at Halloween time, and were sacred to the early Druids," says Hallmark researcher Sally Hopkins. "They also figured in the Roman equivalent of Halloween, a festival honoring Pomona, the goddess of fruits." The Halloween game of bobbing for apples or biting at apples suspended by a string originated generations ago in Ireland, Scotland and parts of England, according to Miss Hopkins. Sometimes a riskier variation was played by fixing an apple and a lighted candle at opposite ends of a suspended stick. The stick was rotated and the object was to bite the apple without getting burned by the candle. "THE ONLY THING I can say is that it's a study that the Einstein estate wants done, and that it also wants kept in scientific literature rather than in the lay press," Harvey said. Harvey said the research team was "close" to winding up the study, con- ducted intermittently over the years, but he would not specify when or where it would be published. He told Levy it might be some time next year, the cen- tennial of Einstein's birth. Einstein, known mostly for his theory of relativity, died in Princeton, N.J. Hospital of an aneurysm on April 17, 1955. He was 76. His-brain was removed and study began under the auspices of Harvey, the hospital's pathologist who presided over the autopsy. WHAT HAPPENED to the 2.64-pound brain remained a mystery for 23 years. But Levy said Harvey told him how he packed the brain in a jar filled with formaldehyde and drove it - "very, very carefully" - to Philadelphia where it was sectioned at the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania. It took six months and the specimens were sent to various researchers across the country. Harvey moved in 1975 to Wichita where Levy found him working as a medical supervisor in a bio-testing lab. LEVY DESCRIBED how Harvey reluctantly decided to let him take a look at the unsectioned "gross material" of Einstein's brain, kept in a mason jar placed in a carton with the logo Costa Cider on the side. "Floating inside the jar, in a clear liquid solution ... several pieces of matter. A conch shell-shaped mass of wrinkly material the color of clay after kiln firing. A fist-sized chunk of grayish, lined substance, the apparent consistency of sponge. And in a separate pouch, a mass of pinkish- white string resembling bloated dental floss. All the material was recognizably brain matter." It was a sight enough to send any per- son into raptures about the mysteries of the universe and the miracle of human achievement, Levy said. But scientist Harvey is less poetic. Asked if years of studying Einstein's brain has turned up any differences from the ordinary run of mankind, Levy quotes Harvey as saying: "So far it's fallen within the normal limits for a man his age." added that he still expects new Israeli- Egyptian negotiations to be held next month. IN CAIRO, Sadat called the Arab territories occupied by Israel since the 1967 war "stolen land." "Today I call it stolen land, not just usurped land," Sadat said in a speech that was broad- cast nationally. U.S. Ambassador Alfred Atherton Jr., the roving Mideast mediator, pressed ahead with his Mideast shuttle, meeting with Israeli, Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan. After the meeting, Atherton said there still is a chance to make progress in Mideast negotiations but declined to comment on Sadat's decision to kick the Israelis out of Egypt. "THERE WOULD be great utility in having further tplks and the oppor- tunity to make progress in these talks is still here," Atherton said. The U.S. envoy, on the third stop of his cujrrent Mideast shuttle, said he brought no messages to Begin from Saudi Arabia or Jordan, where he held talks earlier this week. He is to go to Egypt Friday. Washington hopes the mission will lead to a resumption of direct Israel- Egypt talks in about two weeks, when U.S. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance is to travel to the Middle East. THE AMERICAN aim is to get the foreign and defense ministers of both Israel and Egypt together with Vance as chairman, probably at a U.S. sur- veillance station in the Sinai Peninsula. The American aim is to get the foreign and defense ministers of both Israel and Egypt together, with Vance as chairman, probably at the U.S. sur- veillance station in the Sinai Peninsula. Begin dismissed the expulsion of the delegation asa minor matter. "THEY DON'T have a central role," Begin said on television Wednesday night after the Egyptian decision was announced. But observers here and in Egypt saw the expulsion as a signal of Egyptian impatience for a change in Israel's negotiating position. In Amman, King Hussein of Jordan and Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Ibrahim Kamel met to review the latest developments in the Arab-Israeli conflict. 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