The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, March 26, 1980-Page 5 Palestinian Arabsg strike in protest of Israeli settlements Vo EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT ANWAR Sadat confers with the former Shah of Iran yesterday morning during thei meeting at the Maadi military hospital in Cairo. l rrnans mob Embassy to rotest sh s move From AP and UPI TEHRAN, Iran - Tens of thousands of chanting, fist- waving Iranians mobbed the occupied U.S. Embassy yesterday, protesting the deposed shah's move to Egypt and demanding the 50 American hostages be put on trial: The angry crowd estimated at between 50,000 and 60,000 denounced Egyptian President Anwar Sadat'and "American imperialism." Inside the barricaded diplomatic compound, the American hostages spent their 143rd day in captivity.. THERE WERE no reports of violence but the emonstrations, encouraged by Tehran Radio, were reported have spread throughout the nation. The focus of the crowd's anger, Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, was in a Cairo military hospital spending his first' full day in Egypt after leaving Panama. Sadat visited with the shah briefly and reported the ailing monarch was running a high fever but was expected to soon undergo surgery for the removal of his enlarged spleen. The Egyptian president dismissed the attacks by Iranian officials for granting the shah asylum and said, "They may shout until the end of the world. I shall never heed this." There were conflicting signals from the government and She powerful Islamic clergy over what effect the shah's move -Would have on the protracted U.S. crisis. FOREIGN MINISTER Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, who was the prime force behind the unsuccessful attempt to extradite the shah from Panama, asserted the shah's flight to Egypt was "a moral victory for Iran. "Seeing that our casewas strong enough to put him in jail -and to pave the way for his extradition, he fled," Ghotbzadeh said. The foreign minister denied the release Americans was linked with the extradition of the s "Let us make it two separate cases," he extradition of the shah is one case and the host other." BUT TEHRAN'S clergy, in a 10-point resolu the mass demonstration outside the embassy, Egypt's acceptance of the shah as a "disgrac treason against Islam" committed at the behest o and Zionist ihterests. The resolution, broadcast on Tehran rat solution to the prolonged hostage crisis depen extradition of the shah and a return of his wealth." In Washington, the State Department ac yesterday there is no end in sight to the crisisat considering "available options" to obtain the release. It did not describe the options. The Soviet news agency Tass, meanwhile, iss warning against what it called "the real danger military invasion of Iran, a danger it said "is gr each passing day." In another development, a Cairo newspaper, said the shah had left Panama because he recei information that the CIA was plotting to p thereby making moot the embassy militants' den extradition and obtaining release of the hostal spokeswoman in Washington, Kathy Pherson,, report, calling it "absolutely absurd.' HEBRON, Occupied West Bank (AP) - Palestinian Arabs staged a general strike yesterday throughout the oc- cupied West Bank of the Jordan River to protest Israel's plan to- settle Jews here, and there were signs the already- strained Israeli-Egyptian Palestinian autonomy negotiations faced new trouble. Special U.S. Ambassador Sol Linowitz called the Israeli decision to establish two live-in schools in Hebron "distrubing" and added, "I found it, as a negotiator in the autonomy talks, a cause of some concern. I conveyed this to the prime minister (Menachem Begin). We are regietful the decision was made." AP Photo; THE DECISION prompted an almost total shutdown of businesses and r second schools in the Israeli-occupied Arab cities of Hebron, Nablus, Ramallah, Bethlehem, Jericho, and Halhoul on the West Bank. Partial.strikes were repor- ted in Jenin and smaller West Bank towns. Israeli spokesmen said the only violent outbreak was in the town of Bir Zeit, 15 miles north of Jerusalem, where youngsters threw stones at Israeli vehicles. The Army Radio station reported that troops fired into the air to disperse the group. On Monday, Hebron Mayor Fahah Qawasmeh had urged Arabs to resist the Israeli move into Hebron "by all of the 50 means at our disposal." shah. DURING A meeting in Jerusalem, said. "The their third in three days, Linowitz failed tsais the to win a pledge from Begin to stop set- ages sh tlement activity in occupied Arab territories during the weeks leading up condemned to the May 26 deadline for an Israeli- emnedact o Egyptian agreement on the Palestinian ef Aecan fissue. A American 11 discussed... the possibility of a freeze and received no favorable ido said a response," he said, adding, "on the ded on the other hand no rejection, so perhaps this "plundered is still being considered." knowledged Later, after flying to Cairo, Linowitz nd said it is met with Egyptian President Anwar e hostages' Sadat but apparently failed to reassure him thatEgypt's conditions for pursuing sued a stern Palestinian autonomy talks could be " of a U.S. met. rowing with After the meeting, Sadat said, "I have agreed with Sol that we shall meet Al Akhbar, after the Alexandria session to reassess ved "secret the whole situation." oison him, HE ADDED, more hopefully, "As nand for his usual, we have agreed that we shall gn r CIAs continue to give momentum to the denied the peace process Linowitz flewto Egypt for the next round of Palestinian' autonomy negotiations in Alexandria tomorrow and Friday. Egyptian officials have said it would be fruitless to extend the May 26 deadline unless Israel came up with concessions in Alexandria. e can't offer The Palestinian autonomy drews said, negotiations have made virtually no ng is an progress since they began 10 months Oxford's ago. es could not Israel wants to give the 1.2 million Palestinians living in the West Bank and Gaza Strip limited powers. Egypt sees the five-year autonomy phase as leading to self-determination and perhaps an independent Palestinian state. Sadat said he would be going to Washington on April 8 for three days of talks with President Carter and would return immediately to Cairo. Begin is to go to Washington later in the month. i Y Thk Ann Aor From Coeev Presents at MLB $1.50 Wednesday, March 26 HOUR OF THE WOLF (Ingmar Bergman, 1968) 9:30-MLB 3 Swedish with English subtitles. MAX VON SYDOW, LIV ULLMAN. Bergman's most personal film is considered to be his greatest by some, by others it is thought to be a worthless enigma. An artist falls under the control of inner demons and disappears, or do those demons really physically exist? Friday: The grand-daddy of rock concert films, the T.A.M.I. SHOW. Starring the (original) Rolling Stones, Chuck Berry, James Brown, Marvin Gaye, Jan and Dean, Smokey Robinson, and many more. Also showing, JAM SESSION OF JAZZ SHOARTS featuring Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington. At MLB. i 1 35MM NEW PRINT SCARFACE 1932 Directed by Howard Hawks with PAUL MUNI, GEORGE RAFT, B( (as a human being). An'exquisite blend of incest and sadism. I h see this film for years and I can't wait to compare it to the Films this weekend. 35MM NEW * PRINT ORIS KARLOFF ave wanted to e GODFATHER 0& 9:05 The friars in concert with Harmony Renaissance March 29, 1980-8:00 p.m. Rackham Auditorium Tickets $2.50, $3 at the door Contact ticket central for more information CINEMA GUILD TONI Located at Old Arch. Aud. GHT AT 7:00 $1.50 47 ..a Aids for handicapped planned them. (continued from Page 1 ) Andrews said he hopes the new facilities will attract more handicapped students to the University. "I think a lot of them haven't come to Michigan because we haven't had adequate access to buildings," he said. "This year we had only 24 people registered. as handicapped." - With the new facilities, the dorms will e able to accommodate not only the mobility-impaired, but also visual- and hearing-impaired student. Braille ,markings have already been installed -in several units, and an alarm system to warn the deaf is being considered. ALSO, CLOSET and towel racks will be lowered and lever doorknobs" installed to replace the present round knobs. Some rooms may be, provided with air conditioners for students with allergies. One of the most obvious and costly renovations planned is the installation ,of chairlifts in Markley and East Quad. Project coordinator Paul Boyer explained that Markley would need three chair lifts - two leading up and down from the front entrance, and one ,leading to the cafeteria. "The real problem in the dorms is to keep it (the chair lift) from being vandalized," said Andrews. He Axplained that it would be vital that the Wlifts, as well as all elevators, remain in working order. One solution would be to issue a key for the lift to handicapped residents, he said. "WE HOPE to start a good awareness campaign in each hall," Andrews said, adding that people will not vandalize the facilities as readily if they know certain people rely on them for access. Boyer explained that any dormitory which houses students in a particular academic program must be converted so that handicapped students may participate. Mosher Jordan and Couzens halls are not being converted because handicapped students can get the same kind of housing in the other dorms. "We want to have all programs open to the handicapped," Andrews said. That includes the Pilot Program '(in Alice Lloyd) the Residential College (in East Quad), ,female housing in Stockwell, and co-ed corridors and honors housing in Markley. "THE ONLY program w is language housing," An( because Oxford housi "architectural nightmare language cooperative hous accommodate handicapped facilities because the buildings conform to the landscape of the area, as do Baits housing units on North Campus. Some renovation was done to comply with federal government requirements during the past three years, but the majority of the work will be done this -summer. The government's deadline for the project was originally set for June, 1980, but Andrews said September is a more realistic date. "There's no great need to have it done until then," he said. WORKWEAR FOR FUN E3. rsm-o.verlstr~ug 'A. rtt-'rnrrhamU ttt .. ; . e a