The ichianDaily Vol. XCI, No. 26-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday. June 11, 1981 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages US. suspends shimen o ~ jtstoIsae From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - The Reagan ad- ministration suspended yesterday the pending shipment of four sophisticated F-16 jet fighters to Israel after deter- mining that the Isiaeli attack on an Iraqi nuclear power plant may have violated a U.S.-Israeli agreement. Reagan believes the use of American- made planes in the attack Sunday may have constituted a "substantial violation" of the agreement limiting their use to self-defense, Secretary of State Alexander Haig said in a letter to Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Charles Percy, (R-Ill.). DEPUTY WHITE Houe press secretary Larry Speakes said President Reagan, whom he earlier described as "shocked" at Israel's destruction of the reactor on Sunday, "personally approved the text of the letter." Israeli Ambassador Ephraim Evron issued a statement expressing "deep regret and disappointment at the ad- ministration's decision." He said it was "unjust because Israel acted in self defense against an implacable enemy whose president declared time and again that his objective is to destroy Israel." Evron met with Haig at the State Department about an hour before the decision was announced. HAIG SAID the administration would consider Israel's contention in its review, but "in responding to this in- cident we will make clear the seriousness with which we view the obligations of foreign countries to ob- serve scrupulously the terms and con- ditions under which the United States furnishes defense articles and defense services. Israel was scheduled to take possession of four more F-16s Friday at the General Dynamics plant in Texas. Of the 75 it had on order, 53 already have been delivered and the remaining 22 were to he readyby November. A spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin said after hearing of Washington's decision, "We have at this time only one comment and that is no comment. We can't say anything until we have all the details." ,THE SPOKESMAN, Uri Porath, ad- ded that Israel had not yet received of- ficial notification of the U.S. decision. With elections for Parliament 20 days away, Prime Minister Menachem Begin and his main challenger, Shimon Peres, clashed sharply yesterday over Israel's attack on Iraq's nuclear reac- tor. Canine crasher When Lady crashed Gari Lee and Emmy Lou Cook's going-away party at Stone Dr. play area, she got more attention than she planned on from their friends. DIT closing causes legal battle By SUSAN McCREIGHT Daily staff writer When administrators of the Detroit Institute of Technology, citing declining enrollment and a shrinking budget, an- nounced they would close the 104-year- old Institute, several students launched a legal battle against DIT, charging its administrators with ineffective management and racism. The first day of the legal battle ended in a Detroit court yesterday, with the matter still unresolved and the promise of more legal dogfights next week. IN THEIR suit against DIT, the five students claim the Institute is closing its doors-not because of dire financial straits-but rather because the school's administrators are no longer interested in operating the Institute in an inner- city area-with an increasingly black student population. "I think it's (the suit is) an emotional Students launch fight against administrators reaction," said DIT President Robert Ellis. "People want to find a way to keep the school open, and this will make people look twice." However, Mary Rivers, director of DIT Student Activities thinks the students have a legitimate grievance. "DIT's never done a feasibility study to say that the school does not have the resources to continue," she said. ACCORDING TO Rivers, a 'financial statement was released in the president's report to the DIT Board of Trustees, but it was done without the. benefit of financial statements from DIT'sown accounting firm. Ellis explained that the Institute has been audited but that such a procedure takes time. Though a financial report was issued after the Board made its decision, all the necessary information was available before, the president noted, adding that, "Nothing in the report refers to financial statements." THE REPORT outlines the numerous problems DIT has had to face. By the mid-1970s, student population was 40 percent foreign, and financial support from the business and industry sector was dwindling. Enrollment continued to drop in the 1980-81 academic year from about MO0 to 650 students due primarily to the loss of foreign studen- ts, especially from Iran. Eighty percent of DIT's foreign students are Iranian. The increasing reliance on foreign students - especially Iranian - and the resulting dramatic decline in enrollment when Iranian students began to drop out and leave for home after the strain in U.S.-Iranian relations was also cited as a reason for the Institute's-closure. THE PRIMARY reason for the decline in the enrollment of Iranian students is that they can no longer get funds. Before the 1979 Iranian Revolution, the Iranian Consulate in Chicago and the Embassy in Washington provided considerable financial support, which the student's families could augment. Now there is See STUDENTS, Page 11