• • • • • • • • • fr• • • • have them -- REMEMBER YOUR AFFAIR' • • with • • • • COMPUTER PORTRAITS • • • 9 • Framed Pictures, • • Posters, T-Shirts, Etc. • • • BANQUETS, PARTIES • • WEDDINGS, SHOWERS • • • MITZVAHS, ETC. • .• • Call • • • PHOTOGRAPHIC •COMPUTER IMAGES, INCA (313) 851-5977 • Also located in Tally Hall, • • Farmin_gton Hills • • • • • • • • • • • 4/ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Reagan Names Replacement for Habib WASHINGTON (JTA) — President Reagan has named Robert McFarlane, a deputy assistant for na- tional security affairs, to replace Philip Habib as his personal representative in the Middle East. McFar- lane, who, as Habib did, will carry the personal rank of ambassador, is expected to leave for the Middle East within a week. The surprise announce- ment was made by Reagan last Friday as he concluded a 90-minute White House meeting with Lebanese President Amin Gemayel. AFFORDABLE ADVENTURE IN ART Fine Art Posters graphics, reproductions & custom framing Right Here at the Franklin Shoppihg Plaza 356-5454 29203 Northwestern Southfield, Mich. When you want more than just listing your property or finding a new home .. . Contact: SANDY NORMAN Century 21 642-8100 Piety Hill, Inc. 540-1601 "Clearance sales? Who needs them I've got Kent:' A John Kent Man dresses better for less. r FI EJOHNRI\IT S FORES Orchard Mall, Orchard Lake Rd. at Maple, West Bloomfierd, 855-6677 Tel-Huron Center, Telegraph at Huron, Pontiac, 334-4541. Wonderland' 4. • Center, Plymouth Rd. at Middlebelt, Livonia, 425-9500.. Friday, July 29, 1983 13 Reagan said that Habib "must return to his business and academic duties." But Administration offi- cials later conceded that one of the reasons is to bring in a "new face" in the U.S. dip- lomatic process in the hope that this will aid the U.S. effort to convince Syria to remove its forces from Lebanon. Habib has not been welcome in Damascus and it is hoped that the Sy- rians will now receive his replacement. But McFarlane said he has no advance commit- ment from the Syrians that he will be allowed to go to Damascus. "We have no reason to doubt the commitment of all countries in the area to see Lebanon able to re- store its soveriegnty," he said. "We go in good will (to the Middle East) and anticipate the same reciprocal good will from every country in the area," he said. Another Administration official said the U.S. "fully expects" that McFarlane "will be received by the Syrians." The 46-year-old McFar- lane is a former U.S. .S. Marine colonel who was military assistant to Secretary of State Henry Kissinger from 1973 to 1975, served on the National Security Council from 1975 to 1977, was a staff member on the Senate Armed Services Committee from 1979 to 1981, was State Department coun- selor in 1981, and has been on the National Security Council since January, 1982, a position he will maintain. Administration officials denied that the McFarlane appointment was an indica tion that the White House was unhappy the way the, State Department had handled the situation in Lebanon. Nicholas Veliotes; assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, said that both he and Secretary of State George Shultz wel- Prisoners Riot TEL AVIV (JTA) — Is- raeli troops fatally shot one Arab and wounded two others in a battle with riot- ing inmates, of the Ansar de- tention camp in south Lebanon last week. Two Is- raeli soldiers were slightly injured by rocks. The army said the troops opened fire when the riot seemed to be getting out of hand. It is investigating the incident. Meanwhile, two Katyusha rocket laun- chers used to fire shells into western Galilee were discovered in Lebanon 10 kilometers north of the Israeli boider. The roc- kets caused slight dam- age but no casualties. The launchers were found in the area of south Lebanon patroled by the Fijian unit of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), the army said. corned the McFarlane ap- pointment. McFarlane said he will retain Richard Fair- banks as a special Mideast envoy, but left open whether Morris Draper, a former deputy secretary for Near East- ern and South Asian af- fairs, would also con- tinue as a special Mideast envoy. But he stressed he will be meeting with Habib and Draper to get their ideas. Reagan, in his remarks after meeting with Gemayel, said he and the Lebanese President "have agreed on the next steps" in their efforts to get all foreign troops to leave Lebanon. Administration officials, briefing reporters on the meeting, had no ex- planation of what these next steps would be, except- that they would include a "new flexibility." One official said a "strong consensus" had been reached on what the next steps should be, noting that the U.S. and Lebanon had up to now had their em- phasis on different pHokities. McFarlane said that Reagan believed that it was "incumbent on the U.S. to bring peace to this trou- bled area, first in Lebanon and then through the broader peace process." Administration officials said the President felt that the situation in Lebanon must be solved first before the overall Mideast peace issue could be addressed. "It is with a deep sense of conviction, commitment and hope that I undertake this assignment," McFar- lane said. He said the main concern in the area was the "human anguish" which he noted "every day worsens." He noted that since the war in Lebanon, there have been new perspec- tives in the Middle East, which is the reason he was optimistic about his efforts. He said the Pales- tinians have called into question the viability of relying on violence to achieve their goals while others in the area have had to question their strategy of the last 35 years. In his farewell remarks to Gemayel, Reagan stressed that U.S. policy in Lebanon is based on the "full with- drawal of foreign forces from Lebanon, support for a strong central government capable of asserting its authority over all Lebanon, and security for Israel's northern border." The President pledged that "the United States re- mains firmly committed to the earliest possible resolu- tion of the conflict in Leba- non." . 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