[via9 ecorner 615. FOREST 0H57~ Paae 6-Fridav. September 10, 1982-The Michigan Daily Israel rejects, Arab peac I y14, lZA< E 4 . KFGro. CIAL.S c 2.55: cK 5.IOt . x 8.19 rw A 1 I 14 1 FEZ, Morocco (AP)- Israel rejected an all-Arab plan for a Middle East set- tlement that implies recognition of the state of Israel for the first time, and meanwhile sent warplanes against Syrian anti-aircraft missiles in Lebanon for the second straight day. Lebanese radio said Israeli jets also struck Syrian armor positions in Lebanon, heightening the threat of a showdown between the tens of thousan- ds of Israeli and Syrian troops remaining in that war-battered land. SOURCES AT the Arab summit con- ference in Fez, Morocco, said the Arab leaders approved Syrian President Hafez Assad's request to cancel the .6- year-old Arab League mandate for his Syrian "peacekeeping force" in Lebanon, enabling him to withdraw the troops. But Israel questioned Assad's sincerity. "I think this (Syrian readiness to leave Lebanon) is lip service and there is no reality in it," Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Raphael Eytan told Israeli army radio. "It is a political tactic. In my opinion, the Syrians have made every effort to stay in Lebanon for a long time." THE FEZ summit, concluding late yesterday, produced the first collective Arab proposals for peace with Israel since the creation of the Jewish state in 1948. The proposals were not immediately made public, but as high-level- delegation sources outlined the plan, it contained elements long rejected-by the Israelis: the creation of an indepen- dent, PLO-governed Palestinian state in the Israeli-occupied West Bank of the Jordan River and Gaza Strip, and in- Delivered to your dorm room Cut to length, stained and drilled, Ready to assemble in your room Complete hardware package with Tools included for assembly Angle or square designs Lofts feature built-in upper table See your campus representative, Call toll free 1-800-821-6324 e plan corporating the Arab-populated sector of Jerusalem in that state. The reported proposals do not e- plicitly offer recognition of Israel. > IN ISRAEL, Prime Minister Menachem Begin's spokesman, Uri Porat, dismissed the summit, saying it was no different from previous such meetings "and there is no reason to pay attention to it. "They don't recognize Israel and they speak of the PLO as the sole represen- tative of the Palestinian people," he said. The Begin government has offered limited autonomy to the 1.3 million Palestinian Arabs of the West Bank and Gaza, insists on ultimate Israeli sovereignty over the territories, refuses to deal with the PLO, and sas all of Jerusalem will forever be Israeli. All the 22 Arab countries except Libya and Egypt took part in the sum- mit, 15 of them at chief-of-state level. Libya boycotted the meeting and Egypt was barred because of its separate peace treaty with Israel. The Israeli air attacks on Syrian missile positions Wednesday and yesterday marked an escalation in the Lebanon confrontation one week after the completion of the PLO guerrilla pullout from Beirut. The Israeli military command repor- ted yesterday its warplanes returned to the same area and knocked out four of the mobile SAM-9 batteries. No Israeli planes were lost, it said. A Syrian military spokesman in* Damascus said the jets hit "three air defense vehicles." He gave no other details. w hurdle, doesn't come to us, we have to work to get it." Cohen said nearly one-third of all research grant money goes to the University for research administrative costs. "Over the past three or four years, for every dollar of general fund support for research, the Institute has been able to get five dollars in outside support" he said. "Cutting that money wouldnt save anything. J "But," he added, "Vice President Frye understands our problem and 'I think the cuts that are made will be fair to us." Frye would not speculate on the even- tual decision of the executive officers, but he expressed dismay about negative attitudes in the University community about the review process. "I've had some concern about at- titudes that a reviewmnecessarily means closure," he said. "There are many outcomes other than closure." h Subscribe to The Michigan Daily AP Photo ISRAELI PRIME Minister Menachem Begin waves a copy of the Camp David accords Wednesday as he debates President Reagan's peace proposals. Israel rejected both the Reagan and Arab summit plans. ILIR clears first revie (Continued from Page 1) ting funds to high priority areas. BY CUTTING ILIR's budget, the sub- committee expects the University would save nearly $150,000 per year. The subcommittee's report involves three major recommendations: ILIR, primarily a research institute, should stop offering courses taught by non- faculty staff members; the University should offer no additional support for research; and funds to the Labor Studies Center should be continued, while the center looks for other sources of money. ILIR's total budget is $1,460,000. The institute receives $360,000 from the University's General Fund. The institute's achievements have been carefully publicized by ILIR, which gave out its own press releases this summer, gathered supportive let- ters, and held a 25th anniversary celebration in June. ILIR HAS trained more than 10,000 state workers in the past 10 years, Cohen said in defense of the institute. "Innovative research and action programs to aid the men and women of this country, that's the theme of our in- stitute," he said. The institute is now under contract with the U.S. Department of Labor to study immigrants and their em- ployment patterns, to research where jobs are being created, and to develop training programs for unemployed workers. Although Cohen said he is happy with the way the review was conducted, he said the administration's proposed General Fund cuts to the institute would be "devastating."' "WE NEED General Fund support to fund staffers to get reporters for out- side funding," he said. 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