THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Lebanon Countdown Reduced to Matter of Hours (Continued from Page 1) its stand on this point and agree to a partial with- drftwal earlier than it otherwise intended. The White House said Wednesday • that President Reagan would comply with the War Powers Resolution if U.S. -oops are sent to Leba- )n. The resolution passed by Congress in 1973 over President Ni- xon's veto requires the President to consult with Congress. Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev on Wednesday protested the possible use of U.S. troops. Reagan said in Los SAY IT WITH TREES JEWISH NATIONAL FUND 27308 SOUTHFIELD SFLD, MI. 48076 557-6644 Monday thru Thursday, 9 AM to 5 PM Friday 9 AM to 4 PM KEREN KAVEMETH LEISRAI Angeles on Tuesday that he had "agreed in principle to contribute a small contin- gent" of U.S. troops as part of a multinational force for "temporary peacekeeping" in Beirut provided agree- ment was reached by all parties concerned in the crisis there. Reagan said he was responding to a request relayed to him by his special envoy for the Lebanese crisis, Philip Habib. Habib has been in Beirut for nearly a month attempt- irut. It had been thought that Algeria would take them in but Morocco has objected strongly to that, apparently out of fear that the terrorists would join the Polesario guer- rilla movement. Muamar Qaddafi of Libya has recommended to the PLO in Beirut that it fight to the death, and plainly does not see itself as their safe haven. Egypt too — to the open JERUSALEM (JTA) — Relative quiet was reported on the West Bank early this week following several vio- lent incidents over the weekend in demonstrations against the war in Lebanon. But one incident occurred Monday in Dahariya, near Hebron where several per- sons were injured, some ap- parantly by gunshots. Offi- cial sources attributed this to feuding between local clans rather than to politi- cal violence. The toll from Sunday's disturbances were two dead and at least 14 injured. It was not clear how the two fatalities — young men from Nablus — met their deaths. Al-though there were violent demonstra- tions in the town and local people claimed the two were shot by Israeli forces, army sources said soldiers had not fired into crowds but only into the air. The two bodies were delivered anonymously to a local hospital and police were investigating the circumstances of their death. Commercial strikes called by local politicians and radical groups to pro- test the war in Lebanon were partially observed in East Jerusalem and in sev- eral West Bank towns as well as in Gaza. A violent incident near Ramallah involved the stoning of members of a Bright, Low Voltage Lighting • Installed with NO damage to lawn. • Automatic on-at-dusk off- at-dawn photo-control. • Less$7 a year than to run. • Bright, year-round beauty for home and yard. • Greater SAFETY AND SECURITY for home and family. NEW INSTALLATIONS ALSO AVAILABLE COLONIAL LAMPLIGHTERS 875-2845/967-3845 local Village League who opened fire with Israel- supplied guns on their as- sailants, six of whom were injured. There, too, there were apparently local un- dertones to an ostensibly political incident. Israel, meanwhile, claimed another success in its ongoing efforts to pro- mote Village Leagues throughout the West Bank. A league has been set up in the notoriously radical area of Nablus. The new league is based on the village of Az- zirat Al Shmaliya and the Israeli authorities have al- ready announced a grant to it of 1.5 million Shekels ($75,000) for a water de- velopment project. In another West Bank de- velopment, police believe they have uncovered a ter- rorist gang of Bedouins re- sponsible for the murder Friday of David Rosenfeld, 27, of Tekoah, a recent im- migrant from the U.S. who was the father of two chil- dren. OFFICIAL relief of Israeli officials has backed off from an ear- lier idea that it might re- ceive the PLO. Now, accord- ing to reports from Cairo, the Egyptians are prepared to take only the PLO lead- ers, not the thousands of rank-and-file fighters. an attack on PLO forces holding out in west Be- irut which, they said, would be an act far re- moved from Israel's de- fense and security needs. Despite the size of the rally, it was dismissed by the government. Cabinet Secretary Dan Meridor told reporters after the weekly Sunday session, "The Prime Minister said the govern- ment would not be influ- enced in any way by demon- strations organized by Mapam or its surrogate, Peace Now." According to Meridor, Premier Menahem Begin observed that the govern- ment won the confidence of the people in the last elec- tions and was "determined to move ahead with its ef- forts designed to oust the PLO from Beirut and Leba- non." OMEGA , FRUIT /BASKETS 3 Times Daily $ Nation-Wide Delivery $ 1 795 RODNICK- McINERNEY'S 772-4350 • • "11111 ■ • 4 16A OUR. OMEGA COLLECTION FROM SITS George Ohrenstein Jewelers, Ltd. Creative Jewelers HARVARD ROW MALL Winer & 11 Mile Rd. _ 353-3146 A . • airr elf • .0114 ■ 411100 11\ miami blue water • pool service co. COMPLETE POOL CARE • POOL OPENINGS AND CLOSINGS • POOL REPAIRS • POOL RESURFACING • MONTHLY AND WEEKLY MAINTENANCE • SOLAR AND WINTER COVERS COMPLETE RETAIL STORE • NAME BRAND CHEMICALS, SUPPLIES & PARTS • TOYS AND GAMES — Fiberglass Spas & Solar Heat Available — 33060 NORTHWESTERN HIGHWAY - WEST BLOOMFIELD BETWEEN 14 MILE & ORCHARD LAKE ROAD PHONE: 626-5131 - HOURS: MONDAY - SATURDAY 9-5 — WE DELIVER — ** * 100,000 in Tel Aviv Protest Lebanon War An estimated 100,000 people jammed Tel Aviv's municipal square Saturday night in the biggest anti- war demonstration since Is- rael invaded Lebanon on June 6. The rally, called by the Peace Now movement, was heavily guarded by police after anonymous telephone calls to local newspapers warned that pro-government forces would open fire on the demonstration. No incidents were re- ported but a score of counter-demonstrators sh- outing "Begin, Begin" were arrested for threatening to disturb the peace. Speakers at the Peace Now rally included reserve officers just released from active duty after fighting in Lebanon. They called for the removal of Defense Minister Ariel Sharon and an end &the war. According to the speakers, the gov- ernment has gone far be- yong the national consensus which was to drive the Palestine Liberation Organization forces 40 kilometers (25 miles) from Israel's borders in order to protect northern Israel from rocket and artillery attack. Speakers urged the government not to order AGENCY Daily—Hospital Sympathy West Bank Quiet After Violence; Peace Now Rally Draws 100,000 ELECTRIFY . YOUR GASLAMP r- 77 ing to negotiate a settle- ment that would ensure the departure of the PLO from Lebanon, the withdrawal of Israel and Syrian forces and the establishment of a strong, independent Lebanese government. One major problem that Israel can do little to help solve is that of the PLO's destination. None of the Arab countries have shown enthusiasm at the prospect of absorbing the estimated 6,000 PLO men in west Be- Friday, kly 9, 1982 5 Fir.enzas In Stock' • Largest Inventory Around! *NOTICE TO BUYER: The Factory Invoice Price is higher than the price we actually paid for the vehicles. A rebate to the dealership is included in the Factory Invoice Price. It also may include advertising assessments, future rebates, allowances, discounts and incentive awards from the manufacturer to the dealer. Dealer installed options extra. Lower Prices — Better Service 28000 TELEGRAPH AT THE TEL-12 MALL :354163300 • • Gir, Grin s GM Feei3O9 . GerkrInt• GM Par,. :3