Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. IC, No.50 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, November 16, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Dily U.S. rejects PLO recognition of Israel ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) - PLO chief Yasser Arafat said Tuesday it was up to the United States to make the next move toward Middle East peace now that the Palestinians have formed an independent state that implicitly recognizes Israel. But the Reagan administration rejected the PLO proclamation, asserting that the Arab-Israeli conflict must be settled by negotiations and not by unilateral acts. Washington said that the Middle East conflict had to be resolved by negotiations, not a unilateral act on either side. The United States has demanded the PLO recognize Israel and renounce terrorism before there could be any dealings. "The ball is now in the American court," Arafat said a few hours after the Palestine National Council, the PLO's parliament-in-exile, solemnly proclaimed Pales- tinian independence in a ceremony early Tuesday. The declaration accepted U.N. Security Council Resolution 242, which implicitly recognizes Israel when it refers to the right of all countries in the region to live within secure and recognized borders. The proclamation topped the list of issues taken up during the council's four-day special session in Algeria, which ended Tuesday. The 450-member council also voted to form a provisional government at a future date and pledged to restrict guerrilla operations to military targets in Israeli-occupied territories. The council's move, largely symbolic and clearly aimed at capitalizing on the 11-month-old Palestinian uprising in Israeli-occupied lands, sought to remove obstacles to U.S. and Israeli dealings with the Palestine Liberation Organization. Referring to the intefadeh, or uprising, Arafat told a news conference: "It is true that this is the intefadeh session of the (council), but it also could be the session of peace with the U.S. administration and Israel." The PLO chief said the council had given him a mandate to pursue a political settlement. "But if we are met with a rebuff," he said, "only God knows the out- come." Israel immediately rejected Arafat's declaration, calling it "double talk" and denying that it recognized Israel or truly renounced terrorism. "They mentioned rejection of terrorism outside Israel, but they did not denounce terrorism inside Israel," said Foreign Ministry spokesperson Alon Liel. "So we still see the PLO as a terror organization, and the government decision not to negotiate with the PLO stands." The declaration, which Arafat read out at a seaside conference center west of the Algerian capital, did not specifically describe the new state's borders. But officials said it was clear the "Palestinian territory" referred to was the West Bank and Gaza, captured by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war. "We are obviously talking about land occupied in 1967," said Nabil Shaath, head of the political commit- tee that drafted the document. Resolution 242 also calls on Israel to withdraw form territories it captured form Jordan and Egypt in the 1967 Middle East war. In the past, the PLO has refused to accept the resolution because it deals with the future of Palestinians as merely a refugee problem. Rally cheers, PLO decision" BY JONATHAN SCOTT Nearly 60 people joined in a cele- bration yesterday commemorating the Palestine Liberation Organization's historic proclamation on Monday that declared Israel's occupied territories an independent Palestinian state. While renouncing all forms of ter- rorism and implicitly recognizing the state of Israel, the proclamation, de- clared the occupied territories of West Bank and Gaza the first-ever indepen- dent Palestinian state. The event's participants gathered in front of the Union and marched through campus chanting "Long live Palestine, free, free Palestine." They carried signs that celebrated the PLO's landmark decisions and condemned Israeli state policy as "oppressive" - the equivalent to South African apartheid. The ralliers then assembled in the Union's Anderson room, where speakers from the Latin America Sol- idarity Committee, the Free South Africa Coordinating Committee, and the Palestine Solidarity Committee all offered their solidarity to the Palestinians "struggling against Is- raeli dominance and oppression" in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. RIN"L"^NAK/" oy Ralliers march through the diag yesterday in support of Monday's landmark Declaration for Independence of Palestine. "We can get a lot of inspiration from the children who are resisting oppression every day in the streets," FSACC member Brett Stockdill said. PSC member Hilary Shadroui said: "It is critical that we condemn the racist policies in Israel and bring the realities of the occupation out to the American public. It is the United State's responsibility, in large part, for this system." The Palestine National Council - the Palestinian people's parliament in exile - voted to accept United Na- tions Security Council Resolution 242 Monday, establishing the princi- ple that Israel has a right to safe and secure borders in the region. Union of Students for Israel mem- ber and medical student Steven Stryk said, "If the PLO officially accepted UN resolution 242, it is a first step toward negotiating with Israel. The only step blocking direct negotiations with Israel is the renunciation, by the PLO, of all forms of terrorism." The General Union of Palestinian Students, who organized the celebra- tion, announced in a statement: "After so many failed attempts, maybe our enemies will now realize that peace in the Middle East can not be achieved without recognizing our inalienable rights to self-determination and Na- tional Independence." Search panel lacks student BY STEVE KNOPPER The search for University Presi- dent James Duderstadt's second-in- command has had no formal student input since Michigan Student As- sembly President Michael Phillips resigned from the search advisory committee earlier this term. But Phillips, an LSA senior, said student representation on the provost search committee doesn't matter be- cause Duderstadt will make the final selection himself. "The decision is going to be Dud- erstadt's anyway," stated Phillips, who said he resigned for academic reasons. "I don't think I had any real impact. I don't think anyone else (on the committee) has any real impact." Phillips announced his decision at the Oct. 18 MSA meeting. His letter of resignation was dated Oct. 25, but Assistant to the President Robin Ja- J coby said she did not receive it until Nov. 5. Phillips said he submitted a list of students as replacements on the committee, but Jacoby said it is too late to involve those students on the committee. The search committee and the fac- ulty's Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs have already finished interviewing candidates. "There's nothing to do now," Jacoby said. "It's in the President's hands." The Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs oversees all 17 University schools and colleges and educational programs. Currently, Robert Holbrook is serving as in- terim provost; he took over when former Provost Duderstadt became President this fall. Jacoby said Duderstadt may reveal his permanent replacement within the next few weeks. The Daily reported last month that Duderstadt is considering Engineering Dean Charles Vest, LSA Physics Department chair Homer Neal, Busi- ness School Dean Gilbert Whitaker, Associate Vice President for Aca- demic Affairs Mary Ann Swain, and Rackham Dean John D'Arms as the top five hopefuls for the position. Both Neal - saying he does not want to leave teaching - and Whitaker emphatically denied their candidacy Monday. Vest has denied his candidacy, D'Arms would not comment on the search, and Swain was unavailable See Search, Page 2 Soviets successfully MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviets broke the U.S. monopoly on re-usable spacecraft yesterday by launch-ing their own space shuttle on a 31/2-hour unmanned orbital flight that President Mikhail Gorbachev hailed as a major coup for his country. "The space plane has ushered in a new era in the history of Soviet space exploration," state-run Radio Moscow declared after the 100- ton Buran made two orbits streaked earthward in a fireball and landed at a specifically built runway in Soviet Central Asia on its maiden mission. The pilotless flight of the Buran - "snowstorm" in Russian - was a major success for the Soviet space program after a series of problems that included the near loss of cosmonauts on a joint Soviet-Afghan mis- sion in September and loss of contact with a probe sent to Mars. The early morning launch of the Buran fastened to the back of the 198-foot-tall Energia booster rocket also ended a seven-year U.S. monopoly on reusable spacecraft in- launch space augurated by the launch of the shuttle its U.S. cou Columbia in April 1981. payload cap In Washington, NASA congratulated the automatically Soviets on the mission. The officia The Buran, as well as other shuttles still shuttle's dim being developed, will have a central role in the same size as Soviet space program, the state-run media long, 18 1/2 plane nterpart because of a bigger 'acity and its ability to fly . l news agency also disclosed the nensions: Buran, "roughly the a passenger airliner," is 119 feet feet in diameter and has a 79 feet. the Soviets criticized the U.S. iasteful and unreliable. But ce specialists say the Soviets g their own space plane in 1982. said. Radio Moscow said the Buran's railway car-sized cargo bay can house an entire Salvut space station. Tass said the Soviet shuttle was superior to wingspan of 71 For years, shuttle as w. Western spac began plannin RC director search promotes openness, student input BY TARA GRUZEN When James Duderstadt was named University President last summer, the search process that chose him was criticized - and even brought to court - for being too secretive. The search for a new Residential College director, however, has been designed to promote an openness that other University searches lack, with students and faculty intricately in- volved in the selection process. Unlike the presidential search, for example, the final candidates for RC director are public knowledge. And all RC students will be able to interview the six finalists in open meetings throughout the month. "The dispute over the way Duder- stadt was chosen shows that we need a voice," said Michael Kelly, an RC social science major and search com- mittee member. "This is another ex- 'This is another example ofI the RC reaching out to the students. We really are part of the committee, we are not just token students.' ' - RC social science major' Michael Kelly, a search committee member through the hundreds of applications received in the first nation-wide search for an RC director, the search com- mittee announced the six final candi- dates. When Libby Douvan resigned as RC director last spring, elections were held to choose RC students for the the c~arrh , rmittnci A 1.hn-..1h *1. search committee their opinions after the meetings. History Prof. William Rosenburg, chair of the search committee, said the student and faculty input will ensure that "the director has the support of all the RC community." However, Rosenberg said, "this is not an election," and the search com- mittee will not base their endorsement solely on the assessments of RC members. The first candidate to visit the RC was Richard Taub, professor of social sciences and public policy studies at the University of Chicago. The meet- ing, held Monday night, received a "huge turnout," said RC faculty member Warren Hecht. Interim RC Director Herb Eagle is also among the six finalists. Eagle, a University graduate, was associate di- rector of the RC during the 1987-88 nr'aA3,mi, r tI N h~nmtin 1~tri m di- JK4AW, %/ IE' IFIMMEM.:Mk: IRUM At m