The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 10, 1993 - 13 PLO, Israel agi'ee on recogntion mk $ Mideast. peace talks make k East Detroit classes are delayed until taxvote major breakthrough on road to stability in volitile region TNIS, Tunisia (AP) -PLO leaders and Israel swept away one of the major obstacles to Mideast peace yesterday when they agreed to recognize each other and take the risky path to peace. The mutual recognition agreement clears the way for a separate pact giving Palestinians a mea- sure of self-rule in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, occupied by Israel since the 1967 Middle East war. President Clinton called the agreement "a very brave and courageous thing," and a congressional aide said Clinton told congressional leaders that the Washington would renew dialogue with the PLO, suspended in 1990. Yitzhak Rabin's office said in Jerusalem that Israel and the PLO will sign the recognition agree- mentin simultaneous ceremonies in Jerusalem and Tnis on Friday. It said Rabin would sign in his office at 9 a.m. today (3 am. EST). Monday in Washington, the two sides will sign an accord on Palestinian self-rule in the occupied Gaza Strip and West Bank town of Jericho. Under the recognition agreement, the Palestine Liberation Organization would renounce terrorism and recognize Israel's right to exist. The agreement on self-rule could eventually lead to amore compre- hensive autonomy for Palestinians in lands cap- aredby Israel. In Washington, Hanan Ashrawi, spokeperson for the Palestinian delegation at the Mideast peace talks, said, "There are very few moments in history that are comparable to this moment." She said the agreement "recognizes Palestinian national rights and allows for genuine reconcilia- tion based on the rights of both peoples to live in the region." Texts of the unsigned recognition letters were released by Rabin's office yesterday. PLO chief Yasser Arafat, in a letter to Rabin, pledges the PLO will renounce terrorism and de- clares that sections of the PLO convenant that call for Israel's destruction are "no longer valid." School board officials postpone start of classes one week until millage vote due to budget restraints EASTPOINTE, Mich. (AP) - The start of classes has been delayed in public schools in Eastpointe until school officials see whether voters will ap- prove a proposed tax to keep the district running. The 6,800 students in the East De- troit School District in Macomb County were to begin school Tuesday. But dis- trict officials postponed classes until Sept. 15, one day after voters decide whether to approve a 2.44-mill prop- erty-tax increase for school operations. Officials said they chose to delay the start of classes rather than risk the dis- ruptions that would result from a defeat at the polls. The East Detroit Board of Educa- tion voted lastmonth to cut $1.2 million from the district's budget. That money will not be restored even if the millage increase wins voter approval. If it is defeated, district officials said they would be forced to cut another $2.6 million by laying off 109 employees, including 76 teachers; eliminating sports and elementary art, music and physical education classes; and reducing daily class time for high school, middle school and elementary students by one hour. Cutting back on class time with the school year already under way "would be a catastrophe for the kids," Superin- tendent John Gardiner said. "Parents complained about the late start, but once we explained what we were trying to do, they went along with it," he said. "The parents unhappy with the delay will still vote for the millage." School days lost to the current post- ponement will be made up after the academic year begins, allowing classes to end June 16 as scheduled, Gardiner said. Betty BreemerofEastpointeplanned to enroll in two adult education courses offered by the East Detroit district. But school officials, citing a 20-percent cut in state aid for adult education, have delayed the start of those classes as well. "Kids should be back in school now. This isn'tagood strategy, and I think the cutbackthreatsarejustaploy," Breemer said, adding that she planned to vote against the millage increase. Meanwhile in nearby Wyandotte, the Board of Education reversed a plan to hold classes only four days a week in that district to save money. The board announced Tuesday night followed word that the district would get $600,000-$800,000 more than it expected in state aid, plus $500,000 in cash reserves an audit uncovered. School board President Wayne McKinney said the extra money, plus $1.2 million in spending cuts, would enable full-time operation of schools for the 5,000-student district. Palestine refugees march in support of the PLO-Israeli recognition agreement in the streets of Gaza City. AP PHOTO Rabin, in a letter to his longtime enemy, says Israel will recognize the PLO "as the representative of the Palestinian people" and will start negotia- tions with the organization. PLO officials said the last sticking point in the agreement concerned the nearly six-year Palestin- ian uprising in the Israeli-occupied lands. 'There are very few moments in history that are comparable to this moment.' after fighting so many years for this moment, I have to go and celebrate." Norway's foreign minister, Johan Jorgen Holst, who has been helping mediate the talks, called the agreement "a historical breakthrough which was the result of the foresight, vision and courage of chair- man Arafat and the leadership of Israel." In Jerusalem, Rabin's 10-member inner Cabinet voted unanimously to approve the mutual recogni- tion agreement. Three hours after Arafat convened the PLO's ruling Executive Committee to approve the recog- nition and self-rule accords, the committee was still heatedly debating the pacts. Holst was still in Tunis, awaiting the decision. PLO officials, speaking on condition of ano- nymity, said the PLO's foreign minister, Farouk Kaddoumi, boycotted the meeting in protest. Arafat still was believed to have the necessary majority of eight or nine of the 12 committee members still in attendance. Holst was then to take the text to Israel for signature, said Yasser Abed-Rabbo, one of the Pal- estinian officials closest to Arafat. Clinton, in Cleveland, hailed the accord as a "huge development" toward Middle East peace . The president cautioned that "there are a lot of things that still have to happen." i -- Women's Varsity Softball Tryouts i1 11 I. i1 6 rA r or, rA