▪ THE OMIT JEWISH NEWS 40 Friday, June 18, 1982 Brzezinsky Advises Reagan: 'G e t In v olved' in Autonom y NEW YORK (JTA) — Zbigniew Briezinski, na- tional security adviser in the Carter Administration, said Tuesday night that in the wake of Israel's actions in Lebanon, President Pr - agan should get personally involved in the negotiations for autonomy for the Pales- tinian Arabs on the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Brzezinski said in an ap- pearance on ABC-TV's "Nightline" that a high- level negotiator should also be appointed "so that the United States is actively engaged in pushing the negotiations forward." He said that if "tangible pro- gress" can be demonstrated in the negotiations, then the U.S. will be in a "better position" to get Jordan and "moderate Palestinians" involved in the talks. While the former Carter . Administration official said that the Israel defeat of the Soviet-backed Palestine Liberation Organization and Syria in Lebanon was beneficial to the U.S. in the short run, it would eventu- ally result in radicalization of the Arab states and more opportunities for the • • Soviets to penetrate the Mideast unless the U.S. pushed the peace process forward. Brzezinski stressed that while Israel has de- feated the PLO in Leba- non, the Palestinian problem still has to be solved by political means. Asked about reports that the Soviet Union has moved an airborne division near its border with Syria, Brzezinski said the President should send the Soviets a "quiet message" not to inject themselves in the situation. Brzezinski said the Soviet troop movement and the sailing of some ships into the Mediterranean was a "belated expression" of Soviet support for the Arabs but he believed it highly un- likely they would move into Syria. Everlasting peace is a dream, and not even a pleasant one; and war is a necessary part of God's ar- rangement of the world .. . Without war, the world would slide dissolutely into materialism. 4110 MEYERSON'S ••••••••• • Buddy's Bar - B - Que • % am* "RIB TICKLING GOOD" 0.06. WE DELIVER 1 I 851-4250 r ........., SINCE 1932 6676 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD JUST SOUTH OF MAPLE IN THE WEST BLOOMFIELD PLAZA DELIVER si OFF I I E . SMALL OR LARGE • . 1 • SQUARE PIZZA Limit 1 • Pic* Only • 1 copse per visit 1 ei I I . $2 OFF ! SLAB DINNER I 1 I a. ..Expi16 6-25-82 Limit 2 Coupon per visit -- - I 1 I an I . Habib Tries to Extend the Ceasefire JERUSALEM (JTA) — U.S. special envoy Philip Habib was this week trying to cement a lasting ceasefire in Lebanon to forestall a feared Israeli assault on Palestine Liberation Organization headquarters in the heart of Beirut. Fighting flared anew Tuesday evening after Is- rael reported its troops were being fired on by PLO and Syrian forces from Beirut. Israel said it returned the fire. The report was the first of hostilities between Israeli and Syrian forces since the Syrians agreed to a cease- fire last Friday. A report from Damascus said Syria rejected an Israeli demand to pull its troops out of Be- irut. An Israeli army spokes- man said the shooting began shortly after 6 p.m. local time. He said Syrian and PLO forces opened tank fire from inside Beirut on Israeli forces camped east of the international airport which lies just south of the Lebanese capital. According to reports from Beirut, most of the Israeli forces were stationed in Ba'abda vil- lage, a Beirut suburb near the Presidential Palace but left those posi- tions for a point further east along the Beirut- Damascus highway where Syrian forces were said to have fortified new positions. The spokesman said Is- raeli troops had completed mopping-up operations in the Khilwei refugee camp near Sidon which the PLO turned into a stronghold. The Israeli army shut down the Palestinian hospital in Sidon and ousted a number of foreign doctors who al- legedly sheltered terrorists in the guise of patients. While Habib's efforts Plan Your Next Affair At inotep • Bar Mitzvas • Bat Mitzvas • Sweet-16's • Banquets • Showers • Parties For All Occasions Excellent Facilities Available For Wedding Ceremony and Receptions Plus A '160--Room Hotel For Your Guests Call 644-1400 LUNCHEONS MON. THRU SAT. FROM 11 a.m. DINNER MON. THRU SAT. FROM 5 p.m. SUN. 1 to 10 p.m. LATE NIGHT ALA CARTE MENU MON.-SAT., 11 p.m. to 1 a.m. SUNDAY IS BRUNCH DAY- Served From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. One of Michigan's Most Elegant Arrays of All-You-Can-Eat Delights, Including 14 Hot Entrees WOODWARD S. OF LONG LAKE RD. Bloomfield Hills $ 6 95 per person Reservations Accepted . 642-0100 were underway, Lebanese leaders were attempting to create some sort of national body as a precursor to a new, independent government in Beirut. So far, President Elias Sarkis has been un- able to establish a represen- tative National Salvation Council. Three of the more important candidates for membership in that body failed to show up for a meet- ing Tuesday. The main problem is the refusal of Walid Junblatt, leader of the leftist National Lebanese Movement, to participate in the council. Junblatt, who heads Leba- non's large Druze commu- nity, is regarded as a sup- porter of the PLO and Syria. Without him, there can be no representation in any national body of the Druze or pro-Syrian Lebanese. Junblatt's position was seen as _ an indication of the difficulty of reaching any long term solution in Lebanon opposed by the Syrians. Nevertheless, the initiative by Sarkis in face of apparent Syrian opposition was viewed as a major political change in the country. Observers noted- that prior to the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, Sarkis would not have dared take such ac- tion without first consulting Damascus. The continued fighting around Beirut was the sub- ject of two appeals by the PLO to the Egyptians to intercede on their behalf. Egyptian Ambassador Saad Mortada delivered two mes- sages to the Israel Foreign Ministry. Israel replied that it would reinstate the cease- fire when its forces "ceased being shot at." Israeli observers pointed to the irony of the situation in which the PLO, sworn foes of the Israel-Egypt peace treaty should appeal to Egypt to bring its influ- ence to bear on Israel on be- half of the beleaguered PLO forces. In Cairo, a group of Egyptian lawyers staged a protest meeting against Israel's invasion of Lebanon. The lawyers demonstra- tion was the first open out- break of anti-Israeli feeling in Cario since the start of Israel's military operations in Lebanon. Earlier, the Is- raeli embassy in Cario was cordoned off after anonym- ous callers said two bombs had been placed on the premises during the night. The building was thoroughly searched but no explosives were found. Meanwhile, the State De- partment said Monday that those Palestinians who wish to remain in Lebanon following an Israeli with- drawal, must respect the authority of the govern- ment. Spokesman Dean Fischer said that the U.S., since the conflict in Lebanon began, has not had direct contacts with the Palestine Libera- tion Organization. But he said that the U.S. had "had a number of contacts with parties with input on the non is settled, "it would be PLO and we would antici- difficult to go on with the pate that those contacts peace process and the au- would continue." tonomy talks in particular. Meanwhile, Secretary It would be our hope that of State Alexander Haig the ultimate solution to the conferred for three hours. Lebanese crisis will be a Monday afternoon with catalyst for facilitating pro- Egypt's Foreign Minister gress in the peace process." Kamal Hassan Ali. On Sunday, a somber Ali told reporters that and austere mood pre- "the Lebanon question was vaned as some 1,000 per- at the top of our discussion sons gathered for the an- . . . much depends on the nual Ambassador's Ball willingness of the people to sponsored by the Wash- get stability in the area." ington Committee State The Egyptian Foreign of Israel Bonds. The usual orchestr - Minister reiterated his country's commitment to entertainers and glitteri the peace process, saying it decorations were canceled remains "valid." after an emergency meeting But on the issue of the last Thursday of the Israel long stalled negotiations on Bond Organization and offi- Palestinian autonomy, Ali cials of the Israel Embassy. said, "I think some time has The dinner at the Wash- to pass before overcoming ington Hotel, however, was the difficulties which arose held as a gesture of solidar- in the past month." ity with Israel and mourn- Haig shared a similar ing for the Israelis and in- view on the autonomy nocent victims who lost negotiations. He said that their lives in the conflict in until the situation in Leba- Lebanon. " Doubling of Aliya Is Sought GROSSINGER, N.Y. (JTA) — Describing the in- termarriage rate in America as a "silent Holocaust," Moshe Shech- ter, director of the Israel Aliya Center of North America, challenged the 225 delegates at the Na- tional Convention of the North American Aliya Movement (NAAM) to this year double the number of immigrants to Israel from the organization and the number of chugim (groups of potential olim) in North America. "From the time a Jew knocks on our door, it takes from six months to two years to bring him from America to Israel," Shech- ter said. "This doesn't leave us time for promotion, and every NAAM member should be promoting aliya." Shechter added that the Aliya Center's other plans for promotion include bring- ing short-term- shlikhim (emissaries) to America, and placing aliya on the agendas of Jewish federa- tions throughout the coun- try. Shechter has requested that Israel government officials who visit the U.S. include aliya promotion in their speeches to Jewish audiences. Israel Ambassador Moshe Arens is planning to de- vote 25 percent of his time Galilee Visit TEL AVIV (JTA) — President Yitzhak Navon and several groups of Knes- set members visited Galilee on a morale-boosting tour and to observe conditions a week after many towns and settlements in the area were heavily hit by Palesti- nian rocket and artillery barrages. No man is happy without a delusion of some kind. De- lusions are as necessary to our happiness as realities. —Bovee to promoting aliya, ac- cording to Shechter. Another new project of the Aliya Center is the crea- tion of a special shaliakh position in New York to deal with the problem of yordim, former Israelis now living in America. - Shechter said, "This is the first time since 1948 that Is- rael has officially recog- nized this problem." In the past few months, the new program has encouraged several hundred yordim to return to Israel, he said. MOVIE GUIDE BERKLEY THEATRE 2990 W. 12 Mile Rd. 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