THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 6 Friday, February 8, 1980 MAGICIAN Available For All Occasions 25 years e=pe.,ence MAGICAL MEL 547-2464 COMPLETE ALTERATIONS Reasonable Prices HERBERT Cleaners & Tailors Expert Cleaning Lowest Prices Also Suede, Leather 8 Drapes 24109 Coolidge at 10 Mile Across from Dexter Davison 399-0336 Hebron Jewish Presence Sought After Student's Death (Continued from Page 1) Likud and National Reli- gious Party MKs ridiculed the opposition arguments, stressing the right of Jews to live in Hebron and claim- ing that only a massive Jewish presence would con- vince the Arabs that "Israel is here to stay." A curfew was clamped down on Heb- ron Jan. 31 following the fatal shooting of 23- year-old yeshiva student Yehoshua Sloma from nearby Kiryat Arba. The victim died while under- going surgery at Hadas- Remember! The Next time you have a watch problem See THE Specialist! • Watchbands — the largest selection to fit any watch or arm in the city. • Watch Repairing • Jewelry Repairing • Engraving • All Work Done on'Premises Has Moved to fx 29205 Southfield Road :).• One Block North of 12 Mile Road in the Farrells R; Shopping Plaza. Located Next to the Secretary of State Office 552-0080 in s a h Hospital Jerusalem for a gunshot wound in the head. Israeli troops ranged through the Arab town on the West Bank searching for the perpetrators. They also cordoned off Kiryat Arba, a Gush Emunim stronghcld, to prevent possible revenge attacks on the Arab population of Heb- ron. The incident was the first in which firearms were used against anyone from Kiryat Arba although there have been frequent clashes be- tween the Jewish militants and local Arabs. , The victim was de- scribed as a student at Yeshivat Hesed, a school whose student body engages in _ ilitary ac- tivities such as patrols and guard duty. Israeli authorities said he ap- peared to have been un- armed when attacked, al- though he might have been carrying a weapon which was stolen by his assailants. Gen. Moshe Levi, com- mander of the central region, and Gen. Benjamin Ben-Eliezar, commander of the West Bank, met at Mili- tary Government head- quarters in Hebron to dis- cuss future action. Mean- while, soldiers combed the streets. Checkpoints were set up at the entrances to the town and all men and vehicles were searched. The Kiryat Arba resi- dents were furious and SHOULD YOU SELL OLD UNWANTED GOLD & JEWELRY? Come Into Tapper's To See What It's Worth We Pay Highest Prices IMMEDIATE CASH!! Tapper's, the source. 26400 West Twelve Mile Road in Southfield's Racquetime Mall Northeast corner 12 Mile & Northwestern Hwy. 357-5578 Mon.. Tues'. Wed.. Fri.. Sat.. 10-6. Thurs., ID 9 I,44111 blamed the Military Gov- ernment for not reacting forcefully enough to earlier incidents that involved stone-throwing by Hebron Arabs. The shooting occurred in mid-afternoon when the Hebron market place was crowded with shoppers, in- cluding a number of Jewish women from Kiryat Arba. As soon as the shots rang out, Arab shop- keepers shut down and the market was deserted within minutes, except for the Jewish women shoppers. They found the student covered with blood in an alley but were unable to get assistance from local policemen. A passing Israeli military vehicle picked up the youth and took him to a local hos- pital from where he was flown by helicopter to Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem. Sloma's funeral in Jerusalem on Sunday, attended by more than 2,000 mourners, was the oc- casion for political demands by Kiryat Arba residents and religious leaders, in- cluding Ashkenazic Chief Rabbi Shlomo Goren. Kiryat Arba leader Rabbi Mosher Levinger demanded in his eulogy of Sloma that the government take over "all our stolen places and all the places where Jews were killed." He also demanded that "the brazen and evil Arab mayors be put in their place." Goren, in a tearful eulogy of the slain student, declared that he had not died in vain. "There is no force on earth that can pre- vent us from settling throughout our land," he said. Eliezer Rabbi Waldman, head of the Kiryat Arba yeshiva, called on the government to "replace the nests of murderers" in Hebron with "Jewish life." Another local leader, at- torney Elyakim Haetzni, repeated the long standing demand by Kiryat Arba residents that their town be expanded by seizing 5,000 dunams of Arab-owned land that surrounds it. A total curfew on Hebron remained in effect for more than five days. It was briefly lifted to allow residents to shop for food. . Sloma, originally from Denmark, died of two gun- shot wounds in the head. His identity had been with- held pending notification of his parents who live in England. They were per- suaded by the military authorities not to inter him in the ancient Jewish cemetery in Hebron for fear of further aggravating the tension there. Mayor Fahed Kawas- seme of Hebron, a promi- nent West Bank leader, expressed "sadness" over the killing. He suggested that personal motives may have been involved. Police inves- tigating the murder re- port no progress in the case. Scattered incidents of vio- lence erupted over the weekend between local Arabs and residents of Kiryat Arba. Most of the clashes in and around Heb- ron involved stone- throwing, which Arabs and Jews accused each other of starting. Rubber tires were burned in the streets and the Abraham Avinu Synagogue in Hebron was stoned. Three buses and a taxi carrying local workers back from their jobs in Israel Fri- day night were hijacked by armed men who robbed the passengers. One of the buses was rolled into a ditch. The hijackers fled be- fore security forces arrived. In another development, a Jerusalem district court acquitted Ilan Tor, a Kiryat Arba resident of charges of murder and attempted murder in the fatal shooting of a 17-year-old Arab schoolgirl during a riot on the Hebron-Jerusalem road last March. Tor, 30, and the father of five children. was accused of firing the fatal shot. But the court found that there was no conclusive proof that the girl waskilled by bullets fired from his re- volver. Other guns were fired during the melee. Bond Leaders End Israel Visit JERUSALEM (JTA) — peace." Israel Bond leaders from 59 The Israel Bond organiza- U.S. and Canadian corn- tion launched a new $1 bil- munities promised Premier lion Economic Development Menahem Begin Sunday for Peace loan issue late in night they would meet the 1979, earmarked primarily 1980 record goal of $525 for infrastructure develop- million "to help meet the ment in the Negev. economic challenges of peace." Projected building "We will help you build costs in such areas as the Negev," pledged Sam energy, water pipelines Rothberg of Peoria, Ill., and roads were outlined Bonds general chairman. to the Bonds leaders dur- Begin attended the con- ing their five-day mis- cluding session of the 1980 sion. They were told that Israel Bond Premier's Con- in the Negev 240 miles of ference at the Knesset. new highways and sec- "In the 30 years of the ondary roads are needed. Israel Bond organiza- In his speech to the Bond tion," said Rothberg, "we leaders, Begin criticized have met every crisis and "voices in Europe, and challenge. We are now sometimes in America," prepared to meet the ur- urging Israel to make con- gent task of peace, and cessions in view of recent intend to surpass the re- developments in Iran and cord of $515 million in Afghanistan. sales achieved during the To the contrary," Begin Yom Kippur War." said, "because of the Islamic The 300 Israel Bond lead- revolution, and because of ers adopted a"declaration of the growing force of the faith and support," which USSR, Israel must be was read by Mrs. Jane Stern stronger and more careful of New York City, chairman than ever." of the Bonds Women's Di- . Begin said that Israel vision. would stick to the im- "The time has come, once plementation of the au- and for all, we hope and tonomy, provided it follows pray, to put the period of the agreement reached in conflict behind us and turn Camp David. "We say yes to to building an Israel at . the Camp David agree- ment," Begin said. Prior to arriving in Is- rael, the Bond leaders met in Paris for two days with European Bond leaders and members of the French Jewish com- munity. They participated in serv- ices at the Rothschild Synagogue and conducted ceremonies at the Memorial of the Martyrs, honoring the memory of the Holocaust victims. The contributions of Theodor Herzl to the Zionist dream and the im- pact of the Dreyfus trial were recalled at the Ecole Militaire, where delegates conducted a brief ceremony. Connally Writer Asked to Resign WASHINGTON — The new director of John Con- nally's Presidential cam- paign, Charles Keating, has fired the author of Connal- ly's October speech which linked U.S. foreign policy with appeasing the Arabs and pressuring on Israel. Keating told the principal author of the speech, Samuel Hoskinson, that his views are now out of favor, according to Newsweek magazine. JEWISH NATIONAL FUND 27308 SOUTHFIELD SOUTHFIELD, MI 48076 Phone: 557-6644 Monday thru Thursday 9 AM to 5 PM — Friday 9 AM to 4 PM — Sunday 10 AM to 1 PM .3