-Friday, May 22, 1981-The MichiganDaily I Begin orders border missiles be dismantled JERUSALEM (UPI) - In a new complication in the Lebanese missile crisis, Prime Minister Menachem Begin demanded yesterday that Syria dismantle its Soviet-made anti-aircraft missiles on both sides of the Lebanese- Syrian border. THere was no immediate comment from either Syria or U.S. envoy Philip Habib, who was waiting in Israel for the go-ahead to shuttle back to Syria as part of a two-week-long effort to resolve the crisis. "THERE IS nothing more for him to do here," one Israeli source said of Habib's open-ended mission to avert a Syrian-Israeli confrontation over the installation of the SAM missiles in cen- tral Lebanon. "The missiles should be removed from Lebanon proper and the ad- ditional missiles which were placed on the Syrian-Levanese border should be removed," Begin said in an interview with NBC's Today show. Syria began installing the missiles in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley east of Beirut last month after Israeli jetfighters aiding Lebanese Christian militiamen shot down two Syrian helicopters. ISRAEL DEMANDED the missiles be removed, warning it would destroy them if they were not. But Begin added a new twist by demanding the removal of the missile batteries recently installed inside Syria near the Syrian border with eastern Lebanon. On May 11, Begin told parliament Syria had moved one additional battery each of SAM-2 and SAM-3 missiles to the border region as well as four bat- teries of SAM-6 missiles and an un- disclosed number of Libyan-operated SAM-9 missiles. IT WAS TO these missiles, as well as the several batteries of SAM-6 missiles now in Lebanon, that Begin apparently was referring. "There should be a commitment to remove the missiles because the status quo ante was that never did Syria use missiles against us," Begin said. Begin also said Syria must withdraw its troops from the Sannine mountains east of Beirut and end its siege of Christian militiamen controlling Zahle, the provincial capital of the Bekaa 30 miles east of Beirut. BEGIN'S AIDES SAID THAT IN RETURN, the Christian Phalangist militia forces in the area would also likely pull back while Israel would refrain from attacking Syrian positions in Lebanon. Meanwhile, Syria's Assad said Wed- nesday that Israel's demands are "out- side any logic or tradition." In Washington, a senior official in the Reagan administration who asked not to be identified said: "The president believes we have had some con- siderable progress." Asked to elaborate, he said the fact there has been no outbreak of hostilities was "quite a bit of progress.'' HABIB HAS com pleted three rounds of Israel-Syria-Lebanon shuttles and last weekend took a side trip to Saudi Arabia. He refused comment on his ef- forts. In Tunis, an Arab diplomat said the foreign ministers were expected to reassert solidarity with Syria. Sources also said they expected Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to announce they will resume financial support of the Syrian troops in Lebanon. Saudi Arabia suspended its subsidies at an un- specified time, Syria's foreign minister has said. I I Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM Parallel lines A student strolls amongst the pillars of the Graduate Library. Study time is over, and now it's time to enjoya carefree spring day. I Miss N. Y. denied pageant re-entry BILOXI, Miss. (AP) - Fifty beauty silicone transplants while as many as 20 queens primped and prayed on their big others used padding. final day yesterday, as New York's con- tender for the Miss USA title - booted A statement prepared by the con- out after padding her swimsuit - was testants said they were "incensed and turned down by a judge in her effort to outraged by the self-serving charges of rejoin the pageant. widespread padding and infractions by Deborah Ann Fountain, who accused Miss USA contestants . . . and we other contestants of padding both their categorically deny them." bras and their breasts, had won a show- cause order requiring pageant officials to tell a Manhattan Supreme Court judge why she shouldn't be reinstated7 in the beauty contest. BUT JUSTICE Shirley Fingerhotod declared later that she would not grant an injunction, "because I have no first- hand information in a signed affidavit and we are involved with disputed fac- ts." Fountain's contention that the -pageant forced her to wear a swimsuit that didn't fit was disputed by the lawyer for Miss Universe Inc. Gerald Posner, Fountain's lawyer, said after the hearing: "That's about all we can do." The 25-year-old Bronx brunette, who said she padded the bodice of her pageant-provided swimsuit when she couldn't get anyone to alter it, said she would fly back to Biloxi to be in the audience, if not on stage, for the nationally televised finals. The contestants, representing the states and the District of Columbia, prepared for the pageant by par- ticipating in preliminary swimsuit and evening gown competition. Each was interviewed by a panel of 11 judges. The new Miss USA, who will receive prize money and other awards, represents the United States in the Miss Universe Contest, to be held in New York on July 20. The contest differs from the Miss America Pageant in that no talent competition is featured. Before the contest began, other con- MEMBERS OF Theta Xi fraternit testants blasted Miss Fountain for her yesterday afternoon as their mascot charges thatat'leastfive of thebeauty .today and tomorrow. queens had enlarged their breasts with a 6 I a Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROA .Dog days y, the campus' co-ed Greek house, soak up the sun and 80-degree temperatures t, Gaites, patrols the fraternity grounds. Weather forecasters predict more dog days aw.