Page Ter THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, August 15, 1975 Sinai agreement believed to be near By The Associated PresS Israel and Egypt have agreed on all but some minor points of an interim Sinai settlement and Secretary of State Henry Kis- singer is "almost certain" to arrive in Israel by the- middle of n e x t w e e k, diplomatic sources in Jerusalem said yes- terday. Israeli Prime Minister Yitz- hak Rabin is expected to inform Austrian Chancellor Bruno Krei- sky that he will not be able to visit Vienna next week as pre- viously scheduled, the Israeli state radio said. SOURCES in Jerusalem said the issue that will probably keep Kissinger busiest during his shuttle would be who will run the radar stations in the stra- tegic Mitla and Gidi passes. They said while Egypt had not accepted all of Israel's de- mands to station Israeli soldiers and American technicians at the e a r l y warning stations, the problem was not considered in- surmountable. Other well p l a c e d Israeli sources in Tel Aviv said that a Kissinger shuttle probably would not last more than 10 days. If he did come next week, that would m e a n an agreement would be signed by Sept. 1, if one were signed at all. THE SOURCES said that most of the major points of the agreement such as the Israeli withdrawal to the eastern end of the passes, plus control of a strategic road to southern Sinai east of the proposed Egyptian land corridor leading to the Abu Rudeis oilfield, had been settled. The Israelis received the lat- est Egyptian views Wednesday, and one source said "our cau- tious optimism is maintained after an analysis of the last 24 hours." Rep. Morris Udall (D-Ariz.) told a news conference in Tel Aviv that in his opinion "we have about reached that 90 per cent point" for the chances of success in the negotiations. KISSINGER has said he would return to the Middle East when he was 90 per cent sure of con- cluding the accord. Meanwhile, in a speech to a Southern farm group in Birm- ingham, Ala. yesterday, Kis- singer inlicated that any Soviet interference in the domestic af- fairs of Portugal runs against the principles of European se- curity and the over-all policy of detente. Kissinger also nade a strong plea for popular support of his foreign policy. "Without unity and common purpose,' he said, "we harm not only the country's fortunes today but the hopes of future generations." IN SEEKING to ease fears that recent moves toward bet- ter relations with Moscow will w e a k e n America, Kissinger said, "The United States has never accepted that the Soviet Union is free to relax tensions NEW RESTAURANT NOW HIRING COMPLETE CREW " WAITRESSES * WAITERS . COOKS :"DISH MEN " HOSTESSES Apply in Personi 2 to 6 Daily COTTAGE INN 512 E. WILLIAMS Troubled cities quiet last By The Associated Press Specially trained police teams searched for snipers yesterday in a Mexican - American area of Riverside, Calif., after six persons were wounded and a police helicopter was forced f:,' ,, r, Y s:, : ' ; ap: 1 ; f MEDICAL DENTAL-NURSING and other Health Science Students Overbeck Bookstore offers you the same old thing v°" 5% discount on Required or Recom- mended coursebooks. i Best and most informed service in town. Microscope rentals & supplies. tooAs many good used books as we can get. too The largest selection of Health Sci- ence Reference Books in Michigan. PLUS ONE NEW THING: MEDICAL INSTRUMENTS io check us out Professional books are our business- not our sideline 1216 S. University Phone 663-9333 33 down by gunfire the night be- fore. Meanwhile in Boston,. five persons were injured yesterday and police sealed off streets near a housing project in the predominantly black Roxbury neighborhood. Authorities said the violence was scattered and less than in four previous nights. CALM prevailed in Elyria, Ohio, after several nights of rock and bottlethrowing, and in Hartford, Conn., where a crowd in an Hispanic area threw debris and rocks at po- lice Wednesday. There were ns new outbreaks of violence yesterday in the Casa Blanca area of Riverside, 70 miles east of Los Angeles. On Wednesday night, two offic- ers were among six persons wounded by gunfire, and auto- matic weapons fire disabled a police copter and a light plane, police said. Special weapons and tactics SWAT teams from San Bernar- dino and San Diego joined local officers in an unsuccessful hunt for four snipers who drove po- lice from the Mexican - Ameri- can neighborhood before dawn yesterday. OFFICERS searched a corn- field and the yards of six near- selectively or as a cover for the pursuit of unilateral advant- age." Pointing the near-civil war in Portugal between Social Demo- crats and Communists, he said: "The Soviet Union should not assume that it has the option, either directly or indirectly, to influence events contrary to the right of the Portuguese people to determine their own future, Without making any direct threat, Kissinger nevertheless said pointedly that "the involve- ment of external powers for this purpose . . . is inconsistent with any principle of European se- curity." This was a reference to an agreement signed by the Soviet Union, the United States and 33 other governments earlier this month in Finland establishing principles of European security and cooperation. night by houses, where police at first believed up to 50 persons were hiding. In Boston, two white fire- fighters were stoned yesterday when they answered a false alarm in the mostly black Rox- bury area and one black was assaulted by a gang of whites in South Boston, an Irish neigh- borhood. Two other whites were also stoned. All were treated and re- leased. Boston police closed three streets around a housing project in Roxbury because of isolated incidents of stoning ON WEDNESDAY night, 29 tpersos, including eight potice men, were injured. A total of 36 persons ho\ been injured and 83 arrested for assault and disorderlint-, since Monday, police said. Most stoning in Boston on Wednesday was near housing projects in Roxbury, but a black and a white were hit by rocks in South Boston. IN ELYRIA, black leaders and city officials met to seek an end to the violence and van- dalism that flared in the city of 53,000 Tuesday and Wednes- day nights, injuring 24 persons. T h i r t e e n fires were set Wednesday and 40 persons were arrested, NOTICE OF REFUND HEARINGS If you were a University of Michi- gan student during any term from May 1, 1972 through June 30, 1973 and paid non-resident tuition but believed yourself a resident of Michigan at the time, you may be entitled to a tuition refund under Hays v Regents, 393 Mich 756 (1974). The deadline to apply for a refund hearing is Sept. 1, 1975. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION WRITE: Woshtenaw County Clerk County Building Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108