16 Friday, February 25, 1983
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
The Jewish National Fund, Congregation Beth Achim,
and United Hebrew Schools
invite you to attend. a
Lecture and Slide Presentation
by
LT. COL.
ITZHAK ITZHAKI
Noted Israeli Archeologist,
Educator,
Biblical Scholar
and Lecturer
Topic: THE BIBLE and ARCHEOLOGY:
EVERYDAY LIFE IN BIBLICAL TIMES
DEALING WITH THE ECONOMY, RITUAL,
COMMUNAL AND FAMILY LIFE
Monday 9 March 7 9 1983 - 8 p.m.
CONGREGATION BETH ACHIM
21100 West 12 Mile Road, Southfield
Free Admission — Coffee hour to follow
For information call the JNF at 557-6644
DISCOVER THE
CANADIAN ALTERNATIVE
IN SUMMER CAMPING
Questions •
• Are you thinking about summer camp for 1983?
• Are your children tired of the same camp year after year?
• Would you be interested in your children meeting new friends from
Canada, U.S.A., and Mexico?
• Would your children benefit from a summer at one of Canada's
outstanding private camps?
• Would a change of camps be beneficial for the all around development
of your child?
Answers •
If you answered YES to any of the above questions why not take some
time and explore the benefits and advantages of CAMP WALDEN/CANADA.
Camp Walden/Canada - A co-ed summer camp for young people 7 - 16
is a traditional, group oriented camp which offers all age groups a wide
variety of activities including all water and landsports, visual and perform-
ing arts and a variety of special programs.
The camp is located in a beautiful, private woodland setting in Ontario,
Canada, northeast of Toronto and northwest of Montreal. The site has
1,000 acres and two private lakes. The food is kosher style.
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT:
TED COLE - DIRECTOR
3995 Bathu.st Street, #206
Downsview, Ontario
Canada M3H 5V3
OR
Michigan Representative
626-2260
(416) 635-0049
CAMP WALDEN CANADA IS IN NO WAY AFFILIATED WITH ANY
OTHER ORGANIZATION BY THE NAME OF CAMP WALDEN
Blizzard in Lebanon Kills 100,
Israelis Aid in Rescue Efforts
TEL AVIV (JTA) — A se-
vere winter storm with bliz-
zard conditions has taken
over 100 lives in Lebanon
where Israeli troops are
helping in rescue opera-
tions.
In addition to clearing
roads, including the section
of the Beirut-Damascus
highway which they con-
trol, the Israeli soldiers
were extricating people
from villages buried in snow
drifts yards deep and from
stranded vehicles.
There have been , no
casualties among the Is-
raelis who are equipped
with winter clothing and
sheltered in heated huts
and glass-walled observa-
tion posts. But soldiers are
finding routine patrols dif-
ficult and uncomfortable.
Chief of Staff Gen.
Rafael Eitan said that
"certain elements" may
be deliberately keeping
the roads blocked with
snow and doing nothing
to rescue stranded
motorists in danger of
freezing.
The storm conditions did
not prevent an ambush at-
tack on an Israeli Merkava
tank west of Aley village,
last Friday. A rocket propel-
led grenade tore a hole in
the tank's armor but caused
no casualties.
Meanwhile, two Israeli
soldiers were killed and two
were slightly wounded in an
ambush attack in the cen-
tral sector of Lebanon last
week.
An army spokesman said
Thursday's incident oc-
curred in the area of Al-
Zahlata, one of the
northern-most points
patrolled by Israeli soldiers,
when a jeep and a command
car passed a civilian vehicle
parked at the side of the
road. The vehicle appeared
to have broken down.
As the Israelis passed,
two passengers standing
near the open hood of the
car pulled out guns and
opened fire, hitting the
command car. By the
time the soldiers in the
jeep were in position to
return fire, the attackers
had fled.
Earlier this week, three
terrorists trying to attack
an Israeli roadblock were
killed by the soldiers man-
ning it. An army spokesman
denied reports from Beirut
that the Israelis had opened
fire on an "innocent
Lebanese civilian vehicle."
He said the attackers had
fired Kalachnikov rifles at
the roadblock.
Meanwhile, Labor MK
Gad Yacobi has called on
the government to order an
immediate pullback in
Lebanon to the proposed
40-kilotheter security line.
He said there was no reason
to continue to pay the high
price in soldiers' lives by the
Israeli presence north of the
security line.
In a related development,
the Yesh Gvul ( There's a
Limit) movement told a
press conference that 21 Is-
raeli soldiers had been sen-
tenced to prison by military
courts since the Lebanon
war started, for refusing to
serve in Lebanon.
The movement, which
opposed the war, says it
has some 1,500 members,
all of them reserve
soldiers. Some have also
refused to serve on the
West Bank.
It also was learned that a
senior Israeli official said
that Israel welcomes the
deployment of the Lebanese
army in the greater Beirut
area where an Israeli patrol
rammed through a
roadblock manned by
Lebanese regulars last
week.
David Kimche, director
general of the Foreign
Ministry, played down that
incident in remarks during
a half-hour session of the
Israel-Lebanon-U.S.
negotiations held
in
Natanya.
Kimche, who heads the
Israeli negotiating team,
said Israel army patrols in
the area were not aimed
against the Lebanese army
but were necessary to com-
bat Palestine Liberation
Organization elements
which have reinfiltrated the
region.
MAX BURNS
Humidor One
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LAWRENCE M. ALLAN
President
1 GEMOLOGIST 6.1 DIAMONTOLOGIST
Hours daily til 5:30. Sat by appt.
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