DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Asylum-Seeking Terrorists Condemn El Fatah (Continued from Page 1) Hussein, though he vowed in Zerqa, Jordan, to support Arab commando activities against Is- rael, has mounted a new drive aimed at ousting the fedayeen from north Jordan. Israeli observers on the West Bank reported seeing Arab Legion- aires in jeeps and armored cars criss-crossing the Jordan Valley in search of guerrilla bands. Jor- danian infantry was routing ter- ritorists out of hiding places in fields and orange groves, accord- ing to Israeli sources. The mass surrenders were on the agenda of Sunday's cabinet meeting, an extra-long session that heard reports from Defense Min- ister Moshe Dayan and Army Chief Of Staff Haim Bar Lev. Details of the reports have been classified and publication of information is forbidden under penalty of law. It is clear to observers here that this latest development along the Jordanian frontier has `created a headache and poten- tial embarrassment for Israeli authorities. The surrendering terrorists pose problems. They must be quartered, fed and heavily guarded since most are highly trained in terrorist and sabotage techniques. Yet, deny- ing them entry to Israel would mean delivering them to almost certain death at the hands of Hussein's troops. Reports from Amman told of mass executions of guerrillas, many of whom were reportedly flushed out of hiding places with gas bombs. The Israel government wants to avoid any act that might be inter- preted as interfering in Jordan's internecine fighting. On the other hand, it does not want to inhibit Hussein's drive against the ter- rorists. This has been going on since the Jordanian civil war last September, and it has taken con- siderable pressure off Israel's long frontier with Jordan. Once-daily rocket, artillery and mortar bom- bardments of Israeli settlements in the Beisan and Jordan valleys have become a rare occurrence. An Israeli patrol Sunday en- circled a band of 16 terrorists crossing the Jordan River and or- dered them to surrender. The ter- rorists laid down their arm, which included automatic rifles, hand grenades and a machine gun, and became willing captives. The fact that they carried no food or explo- sives satisfied the Israeli com- mander that they were not on a sabotage mission but were fleeing Hussein's troops. Seventeen armed Arab terror- ists fleeing Jordan surrendered to Israeli forces Monday bringing to 80 the number that have laid down their arms and begged asylum in Israel since Saturday. The terrorists have been surren- dering in small groups or individ- ually, carrying white flags. Most were carrying fire-arms and gren- ades although some dumped their weapons to make flight easier. Reports from Amman said King Hussein's forces were "mopping up" in northern Jordan. Guerrilla bands have been encircled near Kureima and Karameh, the latter once the terrorist stronghold in Jordan. Baghdad radio announced that in support of the Palestinian com- mandos, Iraq was severing diplo- matic relations with Jordan and closing its border with that coun- try. The J o r d a n i a n government charged that some of the guerril- las surrendering to Israeli forces were "Israeli agents." In Beirut, a guerrilla spokesman said that "criminal and treach- erous acts" by the Jordanian army had "forced a number of commandos to cross Into occupied territory to face the Zionist enemy rather than such treacherous ac- tions." Israeli sources said that most Govt. Seeks to Curb Illegal Strikes as Israel Reels From Work Stoppages JERUSALEM (JTA) — With al- most 21,000 Israeli workers en- gaged in various forms of strikes, stopages and slowdowns, Labor Minister Joseph Almogi proposed 4, .,;'- 41 two bills Monday night designed to curb what he called "illegal" ‘)S.,- strikes. The proposals were made at a meeting of the Labor alignment - which, with the exception of the Mapam faction, supported the , :ineasures. One of Almogi's bills would per- :emit no strikes during a period:of "Collective agreement: Any -. dis- pute- would have to be;• settled through mediation or binding arbi- tration. The other bill deals with strikes after collective agreements have expired. Mapam has indicated its opposi- Con to both measures. Yitzhak Ben Aharon, secretary general of His- tadrut, Israel's labor federation, is yet to make his stand clear. The labor picture in Israel was far from bright. Some 15,000 employes of the sick fund ad- ministrative and medical auxil- ry staff have adopted The prac- of working their required hours without breaks, which means that clinics and: pharma- cies close by mid-afternoon, pre- venting many patients from re- ceiving treatment or prescrip- tions. About 3,500 employes of govern- ment hospitals whose strike last month was ended by a back-to- work- order from the Knesset, re- newed it Monday when the order was canceled. The hospitals were expected to feel the effects in a 'day or two. At the same time, 1,000 physi- cians employed by government hospitals are refusing to work in outpatient clinics which have been shut down as a consequence. A partial—afternoon—strike by 120 International Telex and Cable Exchange workers disrupted over- seas communications for 7 1/2 hours. of the surrendered terrorists were members of El Fatah, the largest of the Palestinian guerrilla groups and that some belonged to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a more extreme group headed by Dr. George Habash.. Defense Minister Moshe Dayan asked several of the captives why they fled to Israel and not to Syria. The reply was that the Syrian bor- der was blocked and, anyway it was "safer in Israel." The commandos reportedly pleaded with Dayan to let them stay, promising to "do every- thing we are told, even join the Israel army." Sources here said that "competent authorities" would decide the fate of the sur- rendered terrorists whom Is- rael regards as civilians, not prisoners of war. An Arab terrorist was wounded and captured Monday in an en- counter with an Israeli army patrol in the Jebaliya refugee camp in the Gaza Strip. He was shot after ignoring warnings to identify him- self and attempting to escape. Saboteurs demolished a high-ten- sion pylon in the Arava region of the Negev north of Groffit settle- ment Sunday night. No casualties were reported. The saboteurs were believed to be infiltrators from Jordan. Eight terrorists crossed in- to Israeli territory from Jordan Tuesday and gave themselves up. Three of them, including one in- jured man, surrendered at El Ham- ma after crossing the Yarmouk River from north Jordan into the Golan Heights. The others sur- rendered in the Jordan Valley. Official sources said the govern- ment was still considering what to do with the terrorists who be- came voluntary captives. Retraining Suggested for Social Science Graduates JERUSALEM (JTA) — Labor Minister Yosef Almogi said that Israel has a plethora of graduates in the humanities and social sciences entering the country as immigrants and suggested that retraining programs were the only viable solution to the problem. Almogi spoke at commencement exercises at the Hebrew Univer- sity's Paul Baerwald School of Social Work at which 23 new immi- grants were awarded degrees. All had completed a 13-month intensive course at the school. Almogi said that 40 per cent of recent immigrants were profes- sionals, with a substantial number holding degrees in the social sciences and humanities. This adds up, he said, to an oversupply of Science and Ignorance The greatest and saddest defect is not credulity, but our habitual forgetfulness that our science is ignorance. —Henry David Thoreau. You won't skid if you stay in a rut. —Kin Hubbard. 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