THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS NEWS CALL Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Arens has appointed a commission to investigate the circumstances sur- rounding the deaths of four rrorists the circumstances arrounding the deaths of four terrorists when Israeli troops stormed a hijacked bus April 13. Meanwhile, the authorities ordered the newspaper Hadoshot sus- pended for four days for breach of censorship. The tabloid reported the estab- lishment of the inquiry commission before it was of- , Second Israeli child undergoes liver transplant New York (JTA) — A sec- ond Israeli child has been flown to the United States for a liver transplant during the past two months, but unlike 19-month-old Chaya Cohen of Natanya, Limor Eisner, a 12-year-old daughter of Holocaust sur- vivors, had a successful transplant in Pittsburgh on April 7 and "is really mak- ing a remarkable recovery." That report on Eisner of Givatayim was made by Jane Berkley, director of planning of the Jewish Fed- eration of Greater Pittsburgh, which has mobilized the resources of the Pittsburgh Jewish community to help the child's parents, Joel and Pnina Eisner, particularly the huge costs the trans- plant operation and post- operative care entail: The father has been an Egged bus driver in Tel Aviv for 26 years, after entering Palestine illegally in 1947, with his wife. They had three children, a boy and two girls. Yoram, the son, died five years ago of the same liver disease when he was 17. Doctors say it is rare for two children in one family to have the disease. The mother is recovering in a Tel Aviv hospital from gall bladder surgery and, ac- cording to the federation, hopes to rejoin her husband -ind the two children in ttsburgh. The Egged bus company, Eisner's employer, raised funds for the flight of Eisner and his two daughters to Pittsburgh, where Limor was promptly admitted to Children's Hospital for tests and surgery, with hospital officials indicating confi- dence the bill would be paid. Chaya Cohen has been approved for the transplant by the bledical staff of the University of Minnesota Hospital and is awaiting a suitable liver dpnation. ficially announced. The Is- rael Supreme Court rejected an appeal by the paper against the suspension. Arens announced that the commission would be headed by Maj. Gen. (Res.) Meir Zorea, a former De- fense Ministry comptroller, and that its report would be published. According to the Defense Ministry, Arens in- structed Zorea to complete his investigation as quickly as possible. The investigation was prompted by widespread media reports that at least one of the terrorists was taken into custody un- harmed, implying that he was subsequently mur- dered. All four, residents of the Gaza Strip, were buried on April 15 under army supervision. David Shipler, the New York Times correspondent in Jerusalem, was sum- moned to the government press office last week and was reprimanded by its head, Morton Dolinsky, for dispatching his report of the incident to New York with- out submitting it to the cen- sor. He was admonished for a "serious breach" of censor- ship regulations. Reporters present when troops surrounded and then assaulted the Tel Aviv-to- Ashkelon Egged- bus were- quoted by Israel Radio as saying that two of the ter- rorists were killed on the spot. Arens was later quoted as saying that he had no reason to disbelieve the army account that the other two died or their wounds shortly afterwards, one of them on the way to a hospi- tal. , Cop foils terror blast Jerusalem (JTA) — An alert policeman was cre- dited last week with pre- venting another terrorist attack in Jerusalem that could have resulted • in heavy civilian casualties. The officer noticed a suspicious-looking bag in the Givat Shaul quarter on the western outskirts of the city. He summoned police sappers who found that the bag contained a powerful explosive device which they dismantled safely. The last assault in Jerusalem occurred April 2 when three . terrorists opened fire and hurled gre- nades on King George Ave. near Jaffa Rd., the city's busiest intersection, wounding 48 persons. Armed civilians at the scene killed one terrorist and cap- tured another. The third was captured by police. INSTANT LOWEST FARES EVERYWHERE But a photograph, taken by a Hadoshot reporter, showed one man, appar- ently unharmed, being led away from the scene hand- cuffed by two plainsclothes Israeli security men. Friends and relatives later identified the man as 18- year-old Majdi Abu Jama, of Beni Shuheila village in the Gaza Strip, one of the bus hijackers. Arens originally said the incident was being "routinely" investigated by the army. He announced the special inquiry after de- mands by opposition politi- cians and local editors for a thorough investigation. The authorities cracked down on Hadoshot, a new tabloid owned by the Schoc- CALL US! FOR THE LOWEST RATES ON ALL YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS In a letter to the Secre- tary General, Blum, reply- ing to an earlier letter on• the issue by .de Cuellar, re- called that Israel voted against such a conference in the last General Assembly. The Israeli ambassador de- clared "that the sole path to a peaceful settlement in the Middle East is that of direct negotiations, based on Se- curity Council Resolution 242 — which has already proven effective in bringing about the Camp David ac- cords and, through them, the Israeli-Egypt treaty of peace of March 26, 1979." Israel marks May Day Histadrut and Labor party leaders headed a May Day parade in Haifa. The slogan was "Stop the Col- lapse," a reference to Is- rael's economic woes. 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Some seats still available for June 16, departure. Tel Aviv (JTA) — May Day, the traditional work- ers' holiday, was observed in Israel Tuesday. Many schools were closed as were post offices and the Histadrut-owned Bank Hapoalim. Other banks re- mained open. 40 1352-70301 LEO KNIGHT RYKE TRAVEL 356-8400 United Nations (JTA) — Yehuda Blum, Israel's am- bassador to the United Na- tions, told Secretary Gen- eral Javier Perez de Cuellar that Israel will not partici- pate in an "international peace conference on the Middle East." & VISA PHOTOS PROFESSIONAL PORTRAIT LIGHTING ken family which publishes the independent daily Haaretz. While the Sup- reme Court upheld the four-day suspension order, Hadoshot won a 30-day in- junction against an order by the Defense Minister bar- ring sale of the newspaper in army camps. The Press Council and the Editors Committee have re- fused to back Hadoshot be- cause it "broke the censor- ship law." 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