Gaza Mayor Escapes Death at Hands of Assassins

TEL AVIV (JTA)—Mayor
Rashid Shawa of Gaza nar-
rowly escaped death Monday
when three would-be assas-
sins peppered his car with
bullets and threw a hand
grenade that failed to ex-
plode.
Shawa, a controversial fig-
ure in Gaza because of his
leanings toward King Hus-
sein of Jordan, was attacked
outside the walls of his house
while driving home early in
the afternoon with other local
Arab notables in his car.
Pistol bullets penetrated
the windshield, but no one
was hurt. Shawa has been a
frequent visitor to Amman
and is believed to favor the
incorporation of the Gaza
Strip into a Palestinian en-
tity under Jordanian influ-

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Orchestra and Entertainment

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ence or as part of the West
Bank that he hopes will
eventually be returned to
Jordan.
He is known to have made
many enemies especially
a mong pro-Egyptian ele-
ments in the Gaza Strip.
For the first time in the re-
lationship between the Gaza
Strip civilian administration
and the Israeli military gov-
ernment , a local authority
officially condemned terror-
ist acts. At a municipal meet-
ing in Khan Tunis to which
sheiks and other Strip not-
ables were invited, a unani-
mous resolution condemned
a hand-grenade incident that
injured three local workers.
Another hand grenade —
the fourth in a week — was
thrown Monday in the Gaza
Strip. It was aimed at a
passing car near Dier el Na-
lab. The hand grenade
missed. There were no casu-
alties. Police and security
forces launched a search for
the perpetrators.
Israeli authorities attribut-
ed the resurgence of grenade
attacks in the Strip to local
terrorists or "summer visit-
ors" from Arab countries
who "leave a souvenir."
A Syrian soldier w h o
crossed the Israeli lines sev-
eral days ago has been cap-
tured and placed in a prison-
er-of-war camp. The soldier
was identified as a sergeant
in the Syrian Army.
Israeli circles are taking a
grave view of the resurgence
of terrorist activity along the
Syrian line in the upper Go-
lan Heights. They say this
could not happen without the
direct knowledge and assis-
tance of the Syrian army.
Military sources disclosed
that an Israeli tank was
damaged when it struck a
land mine planted by infiltra-
tors from the Syrian lines in
the Buqaata region of the
n orthern Golan Heights.
There were no casualties.

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A search of the area dis-
closed large quantities of
mines and explosives planted
by what must have been a
fairly large party of terror-
ists who managed to cross
the cease-fire line in a sec-
tion known to be closely con-
trolled by the Syrian army.
Earlier, mortar fire was
aimed at an Israeli patrol in

the same region.
According to observers
here, the renewed terrorist
activity in that sector may
be an indication of internal
strife inside Syria or within
the terrorist organizations
which forted the Damascus
regime to give its blessing to
new incursions against Is-
rael.

The Human Scene

By MURRAY ZUCKOFF
TTA News Editor
(Copyright, 1972...FTA Inc.)
Students at Bar-Ilan Uni-
versity in Tel Aviv have just
about eliminated the road-
side prostitution which has
plagued the main road near
the campus during the past
year. The weapons used by
the students in their war
against the prostitutes and
motorists who try to pick
them up are cameras and
flash bulbs. Several weeks
ago the students warned they
would photograph drivers
who stop to pick up prosti-
tutes and send the pictures
to their homes. One night
last week students posted
photographers at the road-
side site and focused in at
the thriving activity. The
next right trade was consid-
erably slower, the students
reported. They said they
have not yet mailed any of
the photos but would if the
prostitutes returned.
• • •
Rackets have been uncov-
ered in the Sinai — tennis
rackets, that is. Things are
so calm that tennis courts
for soldiers posted in the
Sinai were inaugurated on
July 31 at Refidim, accord-
ing to an Israel Defense
Force spokesman. At the in-
augural ceremony demon-
stration games were played
by Israeli champions follow-
ed by mixed doubles. It was
a labor of •v
loe.
•
•

Posted on a bulletin board
in the Beth Agron, the cor-
respondents' press club in
Jerusalem, was the following
handwritten notice on offi-
cial Ministry for Foreign Af-
fairs stationery: "The Min-
istry for Foreign Affairs an-
nounces the arrival of a son
to Mr. and Mrs. Avi Pazner.
According to a briefing given
to the father, his son weighs
four kilos (about 8' pounds)
and is described as being 'a
giant.' Mrs. Pazner and son
are at Misgav La Dach ac-
cording to observers." Sev-
eral journalists reading this
notice sighed anti said they
wished For eign Ministiy
briefings were always this
straightforward and clean.
• • •
VITAL STATISTICS: Dep-
uty Transport Minister Gad
Yaacobi reported that 685
people were killed in road
accidents last year and 21,-
000 injured. He said the cost
to the economy was IL 600,-
000,000 ($144.000.0001. The
government, he said, is in-
vesting IL 180,000.000 ($42.-
000,000) to reduce the toll,
including work on road im-
provements.
• • •
Strikers at the Ce De
sweets factory in Upper
Nazareth decided to utilize
their time off by studying
Hebrew. Most of the plant's
500 workers are immigrants
who arrived in the last few
years and still do not know
Hebrew. So, while 30 work-
ers maintain a picket line at

the plant the rest are either
i n Hebrew classes organized
by the local Labor Council
4r resting at home.
• • •
A peddler from Ilebron
asked Natanya police to help
him locate a woman to whom
he owes IL 85 ($2O). Alzit-
iat Mohammed Talleb, 28,
told police that he sold the
woman a blouse for IL 13
($3.50) and she gave him a
IL 100 note ($241. Before
he could give her change she
walked away. When he start-
ed to look for her, municipal
inspectors came along and
ordered him to leave. Talleb
said he decided to bring the
change to the police head-
quarters in the hope that
they could locate his cus-
tomer.
• • •
East Jerusalem cab driv-
ers held a work stoppage
several days ago to attend
the funeral of one of their
co-workers who had been
killed the day before in the
Jerusalem Forest. The death
of Wadie Atallah, 37, the
father of five children, was
the latest in what the cabbies
said are repeated acts of
violence against East Jeru-
salem businessmen. Taxi of-
ficials are considering can-
celing all night-time service
in the wake of violence
against cab drivers. A num-
ber of those attending the
funeral were themselves vic-
tims of brutal robberies in
the past. Police said they
could not establish any mo-
tive in the killing of Mr.
Atallah
• • •

TIE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Israeli Presses Expand to U.S.

NEW YORK — Isratypeset,
Ltd. and Alpha Press, Ltd.,
Jerusalem-based typesetting
plants, have opened offices
here. Their trade in the
United States will be handled
by M. Dworkin and Co.,
which also represents the
leading Israeli newspapers,
Yediot Ahronot, Davar and
Omer.
A six-month market survey
has shown that Isratype,set
and Alpha Press can offer
cold and hot type respective-
ly at 3040 per cent below
prevailing market rates. A
courier system has been de-
veloped to make delivery
schedules comparable to
those for domestic typeset-
ting. Both companies employ
a large percentage of Ameri-
can-born and American-
trained personnel who are
familiar with American
standards.
Isratypeset, a subsidiary of
Central Press, Israel's oldest
and one of her largest print-
ers, specializes in cold type

for technical and multi-
lingual books and periodicals.
Alpha Press, an independ-
ent hot metal press, is a
leader in the Israeli publish-
ing industry in composition
and typesetting for mathe-
matics and the exact sci-
ences.
Moshe Dworkin, former
Detroiter who is president of
M.
Dworkin and Co., an:
nounced that in cases where
speed is a vital factor, his
company has arranged for
alterations to be done in
New York. Offices will be
located at $01 Fifth Av e
New York, N.Y. 10017 (212-
972-1746).

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A segment of a ceramic I
statue of a lion in Philist ne =
style, an ivory figure of a
deer, scales and sever al _
bronze and stone weights in-
cludi ig one in the form of a
fish, were discovered in an =-
archeological dig just com
p'eted in Ashdod. Some 30
volunteers. mostly from the
Hyatt Institute at Brandeis
University. participated in =
the dig. The purpose of this
year's excavations were to
uncover the southern tower
of the gate to the town. The
gate itself, the first of its
kind to be found in Philis
tia, resembles those at Gez-
Megiddo and Hatzor
Solomon's era .

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Ten new absorption cen-
ters, with a total capacity
of 400 immigrant families,
will be established next year ,
in kibutzim. The Absorption
-
Ministry spokesman w h o
made the announcement said
the plan was being coordin-
ated by his Ministry. the
Housing Ministry and the
kibutz movement. There are
currently two such centers
operating at Givat Brenner
and Mishmar Haemek. A
third center is due to open
next December at Kibutz
Tzora. So far more than half I
of the immigrants staying at —
these centers have selected
to settle on a kibutz. the Min
istry spokesman said.

• • *

Friday, Sapt. II, 1972-35

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