The Michigan Daily-kednesday, May 13, 1981--Page 7 Syria fires missiles From AP and UPI JERUSALEM-Syria fired surface- to-air missiles at Israeli jets over eastern Lebanon yesterday and repor- tedly patrolled the skies over northern Lebanon in MiGs in a major escalation of the Middle East crisis. Syria claimed it shot down one plane but Israel said all its jets returned safely to base. THE REAGAN administration was trying desperately to keep the crisis from erupting into war. Prime Minister Menachem Begin told Parliament after meeting with President Reagan's envoy, Philip Habib, that Israel would exhaust every diplomatic means, but if none suc- ceeded, "military means will be used." Parliament backed Begin by a vote of 51-39 but failed to give him bipartisan support. The missile firing was announced by the Israeli military command, which said: "A number of Syrian surface-to- air missiles were fired at noon today, Tuesday, at Israel air force planes on a routine reconnaissance flight in the Bekaa Valley region in Lebanon. The missiles apparently were fired from a Syrian missile base located inside Syria close to the Lebanese border near the Bekaa Valley. 'The air force planes were not hit and returned safely to their base." IN DAMASCUS, a Syrian military spokesman claimed one Israeli recon- naissance jet was brought down by Syrian' "air defenses in the Bekaa" yesterday morning. The Syrian an- nouncement did not specify that missiles were used and witnesses in the Bekaa Valley denied that any planes were downed. The missile firing was first reported by Lebanese citizens and a Lebanese army officer who said two SAM-6s were fired at the jets from halftrack vehicles two miles south of the Lebanese airfield at Rayak. They said missiles were fired shortly before 5 a.m. There was no explanation either for the discrepancy between the time they reported and the time announced by the Israeli command, or the site of the launch. The Syrian claim was that a reconnaissance jet was downed shortly before 5 a.m. THE CHRISTIAN Voice of Lebanon radio, which also carried the report of the missile firing, said the Syrians also have based MiG jet fighters at the military base at Kleiat, 75 miles north of Beirut, and that the MiGs already were flying patrols over northern Lebanon. The broadcast said two SAM- 6 missile batteries also were set up at Kleiat. There was no comment on the report from Syria, which moved SAM-6 bat- teries into Lebanon April 29, a day after - Israeli jets shot down two Syrian helicopter gunships attacking Zahle, a stronghold of Israel's Christian allies east of Beirut. The Christian radio said three SAM- 6s were fired at four Israeli jets during patrol flights over the Bekaa Valley at daybreak yesterday, scoring no hits. The incident underscored Syria's refusal to bow to Israeli pressure to remove the missiles from the Lebanese arena. HABIB ARRIVED from Damascus Monday, met with Begin and conferred with him again yesterday and then, ac- cording to sources close to the Israeli premier, decided to return to Damascus Wednesday in hopes of defusing the crisis. Israel Radio said Begin told Habib he was setting no deadlines, but warned that time was growing short. Winding up the parliamentary debate yesterday, Begin failed to win the bipartisan support he had hoped would be forthcoming on his Lebanese policy. FULL-SCALE SYRIAN WAR UNLIKELY: Profs discuss Mideast By ANN MARIE FAZIO Althouglh Israel leaders warn that war with Syria is "inevitable" if Syrian missile batteries remain in Lebanon, several University professors agree that a full-scale war is unlikely. Israeli and Syrian forces will continue to clash on a small scale, the professors said, but the current crisis will probably not grow in- to a declared war. YET, THE CONFLICT IS EXTREMELY serious, according to Political Science Prof. Jerrold Green. "The situation is heating up instead of cooling down," Green said. "It's only a matter of time before Syria downs a plane" or Israel retaliates, he said. Prof. William Zimmerman, also of the Political Science"Depar- tment, agreed "there may be some shooting and killing" but an all- out war is not likely to result. ZIMMERMAN SAID HE also doubted that outside forces - the United States or the Soviet Union - would be brought in. "This is a local thing. The U.S. and Soviets are willing to let their proxies play games." According to Green, however, Syria may be playing with fire. "Syria is taking a big chance" in firing at Israeli planes, he said, because they can't predict the magnitude of Israel's military retaliation. Syria may want to heat the situation, however, to discredit Egyptian President Anwar Sadat for par- ticipating in the 1977 Camp David peace accord, or try to win Saudi support, Green said. THE UNITED STATES thus far has boen unsuc- cessful in its attempts to cool the situation dewn, ac- cording to Green. U.S: special envoy Philip Habib has failed in his mission to "induce both sides to com- promise," Green said. Zimmerman said he too felt Habib's mission had not succeeded but added that it is not Habib's fault. "There are too many reasons why they (Israel and Syria) want to fight" preventing Habib from negotiating a truce, he said. "They are spoiling for a fight." Accused opera killer jailed by judge new classes beginning May 18 NEW YORK (UPI) - Craig Crim- mins, former stagehand accused of hurling a woman violinist to her death in a sex attack at the Metropolitan Opera House, was jailed yesterday by a judge who ruled there was an "ap- preciable risk" Crimmins would flee as his case neared the jury. Crimmins, 22, who had been free on $50,000 bail, faces a sentence of a minimum of 15 years and a maximum of life if convicted of the second-degree murder and attempted rape charges against him. THE ORDER REVOKING Crimmins' bail was issued by acting state Supreme Court Justice Richard Denzer after the prosecution completed its case. Assistant District Attorney Roger Hayes requested the lock up, saying his case was strong and Crimmins might flee. The judge said, "The odds are in his favor that he would appear in court ... but there is a risk and I believe it is an appreciable one. "At this point, I just don't think I can take the responsibility. While I dislike doing it, I am going to revoke the defendant's bail and remand him to the custody of the New York City Correc- tions Department." DEFENSE ATTORNEY Lawrence Hochheister, in an unsuccessful arguement to keep his client free, said, "If there is one thing certain in this case ... it will be that the defendant will be here when required." He also said that the prosecution's case was not as strong as Hayes believed and that revocation of bail would signal the jury that the justice "thinks the case against Crimmins is going badly" for the defense. Denzer, in pre-trial hearings on what evidence might be admitted in court, had rejected an earlier request by Hayes to jail Crimmins. The justice had said then that he was impressed that Crimmins had appeared every day in court during the lengthy pre-trial motions. ' A jury of seven women and five men heard testimonies from 32 prosecution witnesses over a 12-day period. They we. a also shown two videotaped statements Crimmins gave authorities, one of which police have termed a con- fession. In the other videotape, Crimmins ad- mitted having told police he kicked violinist Helen Hagnes Mintiks to her death at the Met last July 23 after a rapes empt ballet modern jdzz mime information: 995-4242 1 5 weekdays Doance Theo trc Studio 711 N. University Ann Arbor separate ciasses for: cild rebalet c'ea b be movement - duas bai Imadr.jazz