l A Page 10-Wednesday, February 27, 1980-The Michigan Daily Egypt and Israel make history, establish full diplomatic ielations From The Associated Press Egypt and Israel established full diplomatic relations for the first time yesterday, a day hailed in Cairo and Jerusalem as a major chapter in the history of peace but denounced in much of the Arab world as a day of betrayal. As ambassadors from the former enemies presented their credentials in the two capitals, Palestinian Arabs protested by closing down businesses and schools in the Israeli-occupied territories, Moslems staged similar strikes in parts of Lebanon, and all traffic in Syria came to a stan- dstill for five minutes at midday. Protesters clashed with riot police in Sudan. At Cairo's A Palace, an honor guard snapped to at- tention and a military band played the Israeli national an- them as, Sadat accepted the credentials of Israeli Am- bassador Eliahu Ben-Elissar. "LET US VOW on this historic occasion, to complete our sacred mission and make the peace process irreversible," the Egyptian leader declared. "I am absolutely sure that peace is unavoidable," said Ben-Elissar, who praised Sadat as a man who would "live throughout history" for his 1977 journey to Jerusalem, which launched the process that last March led to the signing of the Israeli-Egyptian treaty and the end of 30 years of war bet- ween the two nations. Three hundred miles away in Jerusalem, an air force honor guard and police bandplaying the Egyptian anthem welcomed the new Egyptian ambassador, Saad Murtada, as he arrived at the presidential compound to present his credentials to Israeli President Yitzhak Navon. "We can provide a good example of coexistence in peace between the Israeli people and the Arab people in the area," Murtada said, "something that will reduce for the Arabs the threat to their security and will ensure a just and lasting peace." EGYPT'S MIDDLE East News Agency said Begin telephoned Sadat to congratulate him on the exchange of ambassadors. 6 6 ABOUT FIFTY STUDENTS, carrying banners and chanting slogans, gathered outside the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi Tuesday to protest the exchange of ambassadors between Israel and Egypt. 't. THURSDAY February 28, 1980 DR. EMILIO BIZZI MIT "Central and Peripheral Mechanisms in Motor Control" Student GOP candidate Burton challenges incumbent Dem Greene in 2nd Ward race (Continued from Page 1) Greene "obviously recognizes the need and is working on the problem" of bet- ter security downtown, she said that his solution, assigning police officers to walk beats part-time downtown, was ineffective. "I would like to put full-time added (police) personnel in the Second Ward," she said. Although she admitted the city's budget this year was tight, Burton said the extra police protection could come through a reorganization of the police department. SHE ALSO contended that Greene had "mentioned" the problem of the lack of child care facilities in the ward, but he had not resolved the issue. Burton said the solution to the lack of child care was to "work with the University to have them provide a child care facility on North Campus." She said she supported ideas gleaned from her talks with other city Republicans on how to reduce property taxes - a millage rollback by the city's government coupled with tax cuts by the gchool board, which receives about 60 per cent of the taxes collected in Ann Arbor. ] GREENE YESTERDAY charac- terized proposals to limit property taxes in Ann Arbor as "irresponsible." The limits "will lock us in, year after year, with inflation, so that ultimately services would have to be cut," Greene maintained. "City services are now at a bare bones level." Taxes are a major problem in the city, according to Greene, but less of an issue in the Second Ward. "There is less concern for the level of taxation in the student segment," Greene said, "But it is reflected in their rent structure." Greene placed much of the blame for the Second Ward's housing problems on the University's failure to build more student housing. "The council has to take a tough position with the Regen- ts," Greene said. "The University has social responsibilities and I don't feel they've met them." Greene wants the council to pressure the Regents into building more Univer- sity housing or "cooperate with the city in a housing authority." Greene has espoused a Downtown Development Authority to create more available housing, and hopes to im- plement this before the election. Thee .mayor supports him in this, Greene said, "and I believe he will live up to his word. On housing, Burton endorsed the idea of a Downtown Development Authority, but she said she opposed rent control, which Greene has supported in the past. Burton said her only answer to the housing crunch was to "educate the renters and the landlords on their rights." Court rules that minors can obtain contraceptives freely CINCINNATI (UPI)-Family plan- ning clinics may distribute contraceptives to minors without notifying parents, a federal appeals court ruled yesterday in a Michigan case. "Minors possess a constitutionally protected right of privacy," said the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. "As with . s ° adults, the minor's right of privacy includes the right to obtain contraceptives." THE 3-0 DECISION reversed a federal district court finding that such a practice violated parents' constitutional rights.' "The desire of parents to know of such activities by their children is understandable," said the appellate court. "However, the only issue before the court is whether there is a constitutional obligation on the family planning center to notify them. "THE RECORD before us does not establish that the center infringes a constitutional right or parents by its practice of distributing contraceptive devices and medication to unemancipated minors without notice to their parents." The ruling stemmed from a controversy at the Tri-County Family Planning Center in Lansing, Mich., operated by the Ingham County Health Department. Although the center requires youths to attend an educational "sex rap session" and to undergo' a physical exam before receiving contraceptives, it does not require parental knowledge or consent before giving the youths the free contraceptives. MOST OF THE contraceptives distributed are birth control pills for women. A survey at the center showed that in one year it distributed contraceptives to 623 females who were 17 years old, 466 who were 16, 210 who were 15 and 74 who were 14. According to a study, 89 per cent had had intecourse at least one time before visiting the center. Unhappy parents filed a lawsuit agaisnt the center, presenting an expert witness who testified that the center's policy was "viewed by teenagers as a green light for the use of contraceptives" and "usurped parents' rightful position of authority over their children." Loyalists arrest insurgent Moslems' in Kabul (Continued from Page 1) q With Michigan Bell's newest discount rates you can save 50% on direct-dialed Long Dis- tonce calls within Michigan. Just call any night between 11 p.m. and 8a.m. and weekends from 11 p. m. Friday till 5 p.m. Sunday. You'll receive a 50% discount from the day rate on the cost of those great late-night and weekend calls. Think about it! The best times to call your friends and family in Michigan are the times that'll save you 50% on every Long Distance call you make. When you want to keep in touch, don't hold back. Reach out the LongI and save. Distance way - Calling Long Distance can cost you 5 I PUBLIC NOTICE LIQUIDATION AUCTION OF ORIENTAL RUGS at HOLIDAY INN-EAST 3750 Washtenow at 1-23-Ann Arbor, MI FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 29th VIEW TIME-7:00 PM AUCTION-8:00 PM Immediate and Urgent Removal of an Air Cargo Shipment, Air Way Bill No. 085-3212-2171, consisting of fine Oriental Rugs in all sizes is now being demanded for immediate dis- posal at this auction to the highest bidder in single pieces. Sponsored by ORIENTAL RUG PALACE OF MASSACHUSEiJTS TERMS: Cash or check initiative, the gravely ill Tito last week sent letters, to Carter and Brezhne4 urging them to pursue detente. The Soviet military commander. in Afghanistan earlier appeared to have taken charge of the Afghanistan gover- nment in face of the paralyzing strikes by the shopkeepers and civil servants against President Babrak Karmal's eight-week-old government. FOREIGN BROADCASTS by Kabul radio monitored here have made y4 mention of Karmal in the last twoas and the Afghan president has not been seen in public during the past three weeks. A reliable report said 85 per cent to 90 per cent of Kabul stores were closed Monday because of the protest over the Soviet occupation. There was no clear indication how long the shop closings would last, but one underground leaflet claimed the protest had been set for six days. That would mean yesterday was the last day. The report from Kabul, quoting con- sistently reliable Afghan sources said many, but a still undetermined num- ber, of Shiite Hazara tribesmen were taken into custody yesterday. The sour- ces declined to be identified by name nationality or occupation because the feared reprisals against them. Hazaras, Mongolian-appearing Afghans from the central Afghan province of Bamian, traditionally have faced social and religious discrimination at the hands of Afghanistan's dominant Sunni Moslem Pushtun or Pathan tribes, Shiites, in- cluding Hazaras, comprise one to two per cent of the Central Asian nation's estimated 16 million people. Clip Save! MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT SUN 8am-8 am FULL RATE .5pm 5pm3 p EVENING DISCOUNT PERIODS EVENING n *30% DISCOUNT *DISCOUNT *11 pm 11 pm; I NIGHT AND WEEKEND DISCOUNT PERIODS **50% DISCOUNTsa 8am8am * CEDAR POINT AMUSEMENT PARK, Sandusky,