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October 01, 1982 - Image 20

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1982-10-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

20 Friday, October 1, 1982

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Grounded El Al May Close, Re-Organize

TEL AVIV (JTA) — El
Al's government appointed
board of directors voted last
week to continue the shut-
down of the national airline
for another 30 days while
plans are drawn up for the
probable closing of the air-
line.
El Al has been grounded
since early September when
management reacted to a
wildcat strike by halting all
passenger flights. The
strike was sparked by the
dismissal of stewards after
they refused to sell tax-free
goods to passengers unless
they were given higher

commissions for the sales.
The airline's difficulties
in addition to declining
revenues, were compounded
when the government
banned Sabbath and Jewish
holiday flights. The airline
board's plan now is to re-
structure the company,
reopening it on a different
basis and possibly even
under a new name. The new
airline will presumably also
not have any Sabbath or
holiday flights.

will therefore receive
wages or salaries at basic
rates, without overtime
benefits.
The board was reported to
have wanted to dismiss

Israel, Syria Withdrawal
Not Condition for Marines

WASHINGTON (JTA) —
The State Department as-
serted Wednesday that the
withdrawal of Syrian and
Israeli forces from Lebanon
Employees have been is not a condition that must
told they are now on their be met before U.S. Marines
annual vacations and will leave Lebanon.
The department's deputy
spokesman, Alan Romberg,
explained that "during the
limited period of time" the
multinational force consist-
ing of the Marines and
fir P 4'0,". 1111, 111
French and Italian troops
will be in Lebanon, "the
U.S. expects that the Is-
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withdraw from Lebanon.
The very presence of the
multinational force will
encourage early agreement
on these withdrawals," he
said.
Romberg confirmed a
charge made by Israel's
Ambassador to the U.S.
Moshe Arens, that some
PLO forces have returned to
Lebanon through the "back
door." He said the U.S. has
not been able to verify" the
exact number but "we are
convinced that some PLO
fighters and leaders
evacuated from Beirut have
reinfiltrated into Lebanon."
He said none of them were
in Beirut. Arens claimed
that thousands of PLO
fighters are still in northern
Lebanon and the Bekaa
Valley.
Romberg said that "al-
though the numbers do
not appear to be large at
this point, it is a serious
violation" of the evacua-
tion agreement and an
"affront to Lebanese sov-
ereignty."
At the same time, Rom-
berg said the U.S. has "no
independent confirmation"
of Israel's charge that some
2,000 PLO terrorists were
left behind in west Beirut
when the main body of the
PLO completed its evacua-
tion. That charge was given
by Israel as part of the rea-
son it occupied west Beirut
on Sept. 15.

NEW YORK — The
Jewish National Fund has
allocated 375 acres of land
16 miles east of Haifa in
the lower Galilee for pur-
poses of establishing the
first Conservative Jewish
settlement in Israel.

The first group of
settlers for the develop-
ment, to be called Kibutz
Hannaton, is now in for-
mation. Current plans call

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TORONTO (JTA) — A
hearing on extradition of
Albert Helmut Rauca,
sought by West Germany
for war crimes as a former
SS Nazi camp commandant,
was postponed to Oct. 12 in
federal court here.
Rauca was arrested June
17 for alleged participation
in the wartime murders of
10,500 Jews in the Kovno
ghetto in Lithuania. He was
arrested at the request of
the West German govern-
ment.
Rauca's defense attor-
neys said they would rely
in their efforts to bar his
extradition on a section
of Canada's new rights
charter which states that
every Canadian citizen
has a right to remain in
Canada. They said they
will contend at the depor-
tation hearing that this
means a Canadian citizen
cannot be extradited to
another country.
David Matas, a Winnipeg
attorney active in the
Canadian Jewish Congress,
which had joined in a futile
appeal for denial of bail to
Rauca, said his case repre-
sented the first time
Canada has acted to help
extradite an alleged war
criminal.

for a mixed agricultural
and industrial economic
base, and for the estab-
lishment of an educational
center to serve the Con-
servative movements in
both Israel and North
America. The first group
of North American settlers
is scheduled to make aliya
in the fall of 1983.

The prophet Amos lived
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unemployment rolls.

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