16 litiday, May 6, 1981_

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Labor Only `Agrees With Likud on the PLO ind Major Haddad

TEL AVIV (JTA) — The
Laboi Party said Monday
that Premier Menahem
Begin erred when he
claimed last week that the
opposition fully supported
the Likud government's

policies in Lebanon.
Labor Party Secretary
General Haim Barley ob-
served; "On 10 things we do
not agree and there is
maybe one or half a thing on
which we do agree, and

around this to built it up as
a national consensus is out
of proportion."
According to Barley, "The
only thing which is really
vital for Israel in the whole
Lebanese affair is not to let

the PLO come back into
southern Lebanon and the
area adjacent to Israel. And
in this matter, we feel that
the forces of Maj. (Saad)
Haddad are an important
element."

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TEL AVIV (JTA) — Is-
raeli army casualties and
artillery exchanges be-
tween Christian Phalan-
gists forces and Druze
militia marked the scene in
south Lebanon during the
week.
An Israeli soldier was kil-
led and three others were
wounded last Friday when
their vehicle ran over a
mine north of Sidon. Ac-
cording to a count kept by
Israel Radio, the number of
Israelis killed in Lebanon
since the start of the war
last June now stands at 478,
with 2,614 wounded.
During the month of Ap-
ril, seven Israeli soldiers
were killed and 15 wounded
in 29 terrorist attacks on
IDF personnel in Lebanon.
Another three soldiers were
wounded by Syrian gunfire
or in clashes between Chris-
tians and Druze.
Sunday morning, an Is-
raeli tank ran over a mine

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HOURS: Monday-Saturday 10 AM.-9 P.M.
Sunday 12:00-5:00 P.M.
IN THE TEL-TWELVE MALL, TELEGRAPH AT 12 MILE ROAD, SOUTHFIELD, PHONE 358-4420

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met reporters during a
ceremony of the swearing in
of new recruits to his forces.
Asked by an American
correspondent if he did
not fear that Israel might
abandon him under
American pressure,
Haddad replied: "First of
all, Haddad is not for
sale. After working to-
gether with Israel for
seven years I know that
the' Israelis are not a
people who can sell their
friends.
"It is not a question of
Major Haddad himself. It is
a question of our people." He
said the people of south
Lebanon knew him and re-
spected him.
Haddad said he had not
been officially approached
about other jobs apart from
army leadership, but had
only heard such suggestions
in radio broadcasts. "That is
all rubbish. It is not a per-
sonal question. I'm not look-
ing for my own position.
Any change in the position
of Major Haddad is a change
against the population. I
will never betray my coun-
try," . he said.
Haddad said the idea of
American Marines protect-
ing the area was "absurd.
The Marines themselves
need protection."

Lebanon Casualties Mount

DOORS fOREVER1

OUR
DOOR
OSING
CL

Begin told a closed
meeting of the Knesset's
Foreign Affairs and Se-
curity Committee that the
Labor opposition backed
the government's posi-
tion that there must be no
concessions over the role
Haddad is to play in
south Lebanon. Barley
charged that "the gov-
ernment has maneuvered
itself, and with it all of Is-
rael, into a real blunder"
in Lebanon. ,
On Tuesday, Haddad said
he would accept only the
position of commander of
Lebanese forces in south
Lebanon and would refuse
the posts of deputy or chief
intelligence officer, as re-
ported to have been pro-
posed during the ongoing
negotiations on the with-
drawal of foreign forces
from Lebanon.
Speaking to reporters in
Marjayoun, his home town
in southern Lebanon, Had-
dad said that after seven
years of close cooperation
with Israel "I know that Is-
rael does not desert its
friends."
He said that U.S. Secre-
tary of State George Shultz
should also talk to him, "as
in Beirut he only hears from
President (Amin) Gemayel
the Syrian line." Haddad

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BJE Children's
Magazine Folds

A COMPLETE PAIR
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on a road south of Beirut,
but there were no casual-
ties, an army spokesman
said. The tank was on an
early morning inspection
of the road before it was
opened for traffic.
In Beirut, two rockets
exploded not - far from the
American Ambassador's re-
sidence where Secretary of
State George Shultz was
spending the night._ The
explosion awakened Shultz,
but he did not leave his bed-
room, according to a U.S.
spokesman. There was no
damage to the building.
In a spearate incident,
U.S. Marines in Beirut
opened fire on a car which
smashed through a barbed
wire checkpoint. The car
was hit but the two men in-
side were unhurt. A Marine
spokesman said one of the
men was Lebanese and the
others was a Syrian with
false Lebanese papers: He
said both appeared drunk.
The incident occurred
outside the British Em-
bassy, where American offi-
cials have been accommo-
dated since last week's
bombing of the U.S. Em-
bassy.

S

NEW YORK — "World
Over," the children's maga-
zine published by the Board
of Jewish Education of
Greater New York (BJE),
will suspend publication at
the close of the current aca-
demic year, according to
‘BJE executive vice
president Dr. Alvin Schiff.
Jewish children throughout
the country have been re-
ceiving the magazine for
more than four decades.

