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MIRRORED WALL SPECIAL — 12'x8' High Call today for free estimates: 552 0088 $425.00 - Atlas Glass St Mirror PERFECTION IS OUR REFLECTION Where quality work, discount prices and you the customer make us #1 552-0088 Lebanon 'chaos' seen 15" Tel Aviv (JTA) — Brigadier- General Amos Gilboa, head of the Israeli delegation to the Israel- Lebanon military talks at Nak- ura, foresees chaos in Lebanon if Israel is forced to decide on a un- ilateral withdrawal from Leba- non without satisfactory ar- rangements being made in ad- vance to ensure security. Gen. Gilboa told Israel radio last week that if such a unilateral withdrawal is made, the Druze will take action to seize control of the Christian areas, especially those along the coast below their Kharoub mountain region. They would also probably try to seize Sidon port. The Shiite Amal military organization would move to take control of southern Lebanon, and there would likely be fighting be- tween the various Shiite Moslem factions, the general said. He also thinks the PLO would try to re- turn to the southern area abut- ting Israel. Gen. Gilboa was pessimistic about Syria's chances of using the Christmas and New Year's recess to bring about some form of stabil- ity in Lebanon. United Nations Secretary Gen- eral Javier Perez de Cuellar is re- ported to have told Israel's Am- bassador to the UN, Binyamin Netanyahu, that he would try and use the end-of-year recess to per- suade the Lebanese government to get the Nakura talks restarted. Natanyahu reportedly told Perez de Cuellar that if the talks fail, the Israel Defense Force (IDF) would have to effect a redisposi- tion in Lebanon. In an Israel radio interview last week marking the 100th day of the national unity government, Deputy Premier and Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir, whose Likud Party is opposed to Shimon Peres' ideas on unilateral with- drawal, said that Israel would have to thin out its forces in Leba- non if the Nakura talks fail. Meanwhile, a massive car bomb exploded in the courtyard of a school in the Lebanese Druze vil- lage of Ras Al-Mattan in the hills east of Beirut last Friday. More than 25 people, including a number of children, were killed or wounded. Druze radio reported that the booby-trapped car had been packed with over 200 killograms (about 450 pounds) of explosives. Extensive damage to buildings was reported over a wide area. Immediately after the blast, Druze gunners lobbed at least two artillery shells in the Christian suburbs of the east Beirut, caus- ing several casualties. There were no casualties in two guerrilla attacks against IDF and South Lebanon Army (SLA) troops in south Lebanon last week. A Katyusha rocket was fired at an IDF position near the Zaharani River, last Friday, but burst in an empty field. Also on Friday, light- arms fire was directed at a SLA post south of the Zaharani. The IDF arrested 21 Shiite Mos- lems from Sarafand and Ein Hilwe villages last Thursday for questioning in connection with recent attacks on IDF and South Lebanon Army (SLA) units. The detainees include several mem- bers of Amal, the Shiite militia. The IDF reported resistance from villagers, including women - and children, during its round-up operation. In a related development, two French soldiers of the United Na- tions Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) were wounded last week when a UN convoy from Be- irut to Nakura came under small arms fire. The convoy returned to Beirut where the soldiers were hospitalized. Beirut radio reported Dec. 19 that an IDF column of 15 tanks and a bulldozer patrolled north of the Awali River into territory evacuated months ago by the IDF. The column was reported to be headed toward the Kharoub area where heavy artillery exchanges were reported between Druze and Christian militias. Schools get Ford grants J.- No matter how you turn the globe The Jewish News keeps you posted on Jewish happenings everywhere! Call 424-8833 TODAY and order your subscription. • f• New York (JTA) — The Van Leer Institute in Jerusalem and Neve Shalom will receive grants totaling $225,000 from the Ford Foundation, aimed at fostering improved Israeli-Arab relations, the foundation announced this week. The foundation will provide Neve Shalom, a village near Jeruasalem, with $75,000 for its School for Peace, an educational center in intergroup relations. Neve Shalom, or Oasis for Peace, is where Arabs, Christians and Jews have, according to their statement of purpose, "joined to- gether to provide a living example of co-existence in a pluralistic society." In an effort to develop new edu- cational programs in Israel to-re- duce ethnic divisions in Israeli society, the foundation has an- nounced a grant of $150,000 to the Van Leer Institute, a private group that prepares curriculum materials and trains teachers in their use. A Ford Foundation grant last year to the Van Leer Institute was used to evaluate and supplement texts currently used by Jews and Arabs in primary and secondary schools and to develop materials on language, culture, literature and intergroup relations. In making the announcement, the foundation noted that at pre- sent, "Arab school children are required to study such subjects as Jewish immigration to Israel, Hebrew and Jewish scripture. Jewish children, on the other hand, do not study Arabic, Arab culture or the basic tenets of Is- lam." Furthermore, the foundation cited an Israeli Education Minis- try paper that said state interven- tion to further understanding is a "vital need," adding that "in the absence of appropriate education, directed on a national scale, it is