Israeli letter on Jerusalem displeases Egypt CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) - Egypt received a crucial letter from Israel on the Jerusalem crisis yesterday but a high-ranking official indicated that he was not happy with its contents and that the Palestinian autonomy talks would not immediately resume. - The 15-page letter from Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin to Egyptian President Anwar Sadat was delivered to Vice President Hosni Mobarak by Israeli Ambassador Eliahu Ben-Elis- sar. SADAT, WHO suspended the Palestinian autonomy negotiations last weekend for the third time in three months, had said no decision to resume the talks would be taken until he received Begin's reply to a letter he sent the Israeli leader. The exchange of letters centered over the latest crisis to Middle East peace efforts caused by Israel's formal declaration that Jerusalem is and forever will remain the undivided capital of the Jewish state. Mobarak received and examined Begin's letter during a 45-minute meeting with Ben-Elissar. He would not comment on its contents directly but he indicated he was not happy with Begin's reply. "We shall not resume the negotiations so long as there are Israeli preconditions," Mobarak told repor- ters. "We shall never accept precon- ditions." He did not elaborate. But Egypt . repeatedly has said it regards as a precondition the new Israeli law an- nexing Arab East Jerusalem and making it part of an "indivisible and eternal" national capital. Egypt argues this move prejudges the issue and removes it from the Palestine autonomy negotiations where Sadat believes it belongs. Israeli officials and news reports ha- ve quoted Begin's message as saying Egypt was free to raise the Jerusalem issue in negotiations but Israel will not budge from its position. Cairo newspapers quoted Foreign Ministr Kamal Hassan Alias saying the 14-month-old autonomy talks, in which the United States is a partner, will remain suspended until Israel changes its position on Jerusalem. Mobarak said he did not read the whole letter during the meeting with Ben-Elissar but did discuss its main pointa. PERPETUATED PERFORMANCE BERLIN (AP)-If Ameircan soprano Anna Moffo confuses her identify with that of Violeta, heroine of Giuseppe Verdi's opera, "La Traviata," it might be understandable. The Philadelphia-born singer recently gave her 700th performance in the role at the new International Congress Center here. Singing with the famed company of the Arena di Verona, Moffo, after suf- fering for over a month with flu and bronchitis, received a standing ovation from the capacity crowd of 7,500. Mle Iangutniho A Tanguinho, a baby orangutan, gets a bit of exercise swinging on a branch recently at the zoo in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Tanguinho is being raised by biologists at the zoo because his mother abandoned him shortly after he was born earlier this year. 'U'faces probe on sex bias (Continued fromPage 1) "The policy now is that in order to reached at his Washington D.C. office, vestigations. "The specific allegation look at any of this, we have to look at said, "the NCAA does not have any role (of discrimination) really doesn't mat- the whole thing." she added, in Title IX (sex discrimination) enfor- ter, because we'll be looking at the total Department of Education midwest cement, but the Association has been program." acting director Bob Hewlett said his providing information ... advice and MARY O'SHEA, spokeswoman for department is not involved in the actual assistance to help the schools deal with the midwest Office of Civil Rights, investigations. "After findings are these investigations." which will conduct the investigation at made, we can help the university come Kramer said he doubted any NCAA the University, said, 'Even if a com- into compliance . . . but as long as rules would be violated by the univer- plaint came in alleging discrimination there's an investigation going on, it's sities if they followed procedures called in one small part of the athletic depar- strictly hands off for us," he said. for by the education department. tment, we would have to investigate the NATIONAL COLLEGIATE Athletic The attorney added he was not par- entire department. Association Attorney Bill Kramer, ticularly surprised about the in- __ - l3-E vestigations. "They're clearly going af- ter some major institutions.. .it's been coming for a long time." ASSISTANT ATHLETIC Director and Sports Information Director Will Perry said he "kind of felt ... that they would be going to schools all over," and was not taken by surprise by reports of investigations. Perry did confide, however, "I just don't know what the intensity of this will be." One of Billy's travel pictures? Ahmed Khomeini, (left with turban), son of Iran s Ayatollah Khomeini, and Billy Carter, brother of President Jimmy Carter, sat in the same audience during a military parade in Benghazi, Libya in September, 1979. It is not known whether Billy Carter met with Khomeini during his visit, Which was made about two months prior to the hostage in- cident in Tehran.