Friday, February 15, 1985

1 1

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

`7N
IEL739AIL.Z.Zw4
SPECIAL SPRING OFFERS TO ISRAEL

March 4-18, 1985 & March 18-Apr. 1, 1985*

no Per Person
TWO WEEK TOURS $1 nA
urto

AIRPORT
SERVICE

0

CHAUFFEUR driven

Includes:

Air fare from New York, first class hotels including 7 nights
Jerusalem, daily breakfast and dinner, 8 days sightseeing,
transfers, etc. Add $140.00 from March 18-Apr. 1.

Seats are limited. For reservations and details please call

LIMOUSINE

NEWS

—

Incidents In Territories
Renew Security Demands

— No Parking Worries -
- Help with Your Luggage
- Best Rates in Town —

GOLDSTEIN TRAVEL
559.2770

UNIVERSITY LIMOUSINE

455-5858

P.S. Limousines are a
nice wedding gift.

Lathrup Landing Plaza corner of Eleven Mlle and Evergreen Road

F.4.;.;;;;;"

Religious News Service

36

••

Israeli soldiers search Arab detainees in Ramallah after a soldier was
shot and killed on Feb. 4.

Orlando
$329
Nassau/Paradise Island
f.$359
Barbados
from$529

(home of EPCOT Center/Walt Disney World)

from

Including round-trip ow fare,
hotel and bonus extras.

Orlando
Extras include Alamo Chevy Chevette, or
similar car, for 3 or 7 days. Free mileaget.
Also free day at Sea World. rmi.s-c-rw603

Quality Inn Plaza

Holiday Inn East of Disney •
or Sheraton Lakeside
Wyndham Hotel at
Sea World
Buena Vista Palace
(Walt Disney World Village)

4 days, 3 nights from $329
8 days, 7 nights from $399
4 days, 3 nights from $359
8 days, 7 nights from $469
4 days, 3 nights from $429
8 days, 7 nights from $629
4 days, 3 nights from $489
8 days, 7 nights from $759

Similar hotels may be substituted.Tues. or Wed. departure; return any day
except Sun. Other days slightly higher. Tour features available through
April 14, 1985.

Barbados

Sichris Resort Hotel

Cunard Paradise Beach Hotel

Coral Reef Club

4 days, 3 nights from $529
8 days, 7 nights from $599
4 days, 3 nights from $579
8 days, 7 nights from $699
4 days, 3 nights from $719
8 days, 7 nights from $1019

Similar hotels may be substituted. Midweek travel only; weekends slightly
higher.Tour features available through Dec. 15,1985.

ITDL5-CTBG103

Nassau/Paradise Island

Cable Beach Inn
or Pilot House
Sheraton British
Colonial Hotel
Paradise Island Resort and
Casino, Paradise Towers
or Nassau Beach Hotel
Paradise Island Resort and
Casino, Britannia Towers or
Cable Beach Hotel and Casino

4
8
4
8

days, 3 nights from $359
days, 7 nights from $489
days, 3 nights from $444
days, 7 nights from $634

4 days, 3 nights from $499
8 days, 7 nights from $789

4 days, 3 nights from $509
8 days, 7 nights from $809

Similar hotels may be substituted. Midweek departures only; weekends
slightly higher.Tour features available through April 21,1985.

ITDL5-CTWN003

Check your professional Travel Agent for
full details. Or call Delta's Vacation Center
toll free at 800-523-7777. All tour rates
are from Detroit and subject to change
without notice.

Prices are per person, double occupancy. Seats and accom-
modations are subject to availability. Make reservations 7
days in advance. Add taxes and gratuities. Rates may be
higher during holiday periods. tGas, taxes, rental deposit
and optional Collision Damage Waiver are extra.

DELTA GETS YOU THERE'

Jerusalem (JTA) — West Bank
settlers who have been demand-
ing tougher security measures
were assured by Premier Shimon
Peres on Sunday that despite dif-
ferences over the future of the
West Bank, there will be no com-
promise over its security.
Peres met for the first time
since taking office with the
mayors of 15 Jewish settlements
and other local leaders. He made
no specific promises in response to
their demands for harsh treat-
ment of Arabs who agitate or per-
petrate violence. They left the
hour-long meeting at the Prime
Minister's office apparently satis-
fied but said they would "wait and
see" if Peres' assurances are
translated into greater security.
The Premier suggested that the
settlers distinguish between what
they call Eretz Israel (Land of Is-
rael) and the security of Israel.
They seemed to agree when he
asked rhetorically, "The settle-
ments were not established as a
counter-terrorist measure, were
they?" adding, "So I suggest that
you don't make terrorism a politi-
cal issue because by doing so you
serve the interests of the ter-
rorists."
He noted that previous gov-
ernments had to contend with ter-
rorism and that Israel is not the
only country to experience the
phenomenon.
With respect to the political as-
pects of the debate, he reminded
the settlers that in order to protect
Jews one must also protect the
Jewish nature of Israel.
The settlers have made a
number of demands in the past
week. They want Arab agitators
deported, the houses of Arab ter-
rorists demolished and the estab-
lishment of a civil guard in the
territory similar to the volunteer
civil guard that operates in Israel
proper. So far, none of these de-
mands has been met.
Jewish military sources insist
there is no connection between
the escalation of violence on the
West Bank and the phased with-
drawal of the Israel Defense Force
from south Lebanon.
They concede that the situation
in the West Bank has changed in
recent weeks. There has been a
steady decline, they say, in what
are described as "incidents" such
as stone-throwing by youngsters,
cutting telephone lines and other
petty sabotage. At the same time,

there has been an increase in the
number of more serious attacks
with firearms and gasoline
bombs.
In the last two weeks, an Israeli
civilian and a reserve soldier have
been killed, the former by a
Molotov cocktail in Kalkilya, the
latter shot to death by a ldne
gunman at his guardpost in the
Arab town of Ramallah. Defense
Minister Yitzhak Rabin has
warned that if terrorist attacks
continue, harsh punishment,
temporarily abandoned, will be
resumed.
Rabin was quoted in a Maariv
interview as saying, "In response
to further attacks in Judaea and
Samaria, I do not rule out any one
of the possible punishments, in-
cluding expulsions, administra-
tive detention or the destruction
of houses or sealing them off. Such
punishments will not be taboo,
and if necessary we shall make
use of them.
Military sources suggest that
the new wave of more deadly vio-
lence in the territory is traceable
to "directives" from Amman, Jor-
dan. They do not accuse the Jor-
danian government but rather
the Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization which was allowed to open
an office in Amman following the
recent rapprochement between
King Hussein and PLO chief Yas-
sir Arafat. They say Jordan is still
trying to prevent terrorists from
crossing the Jordan River.

Austrians Pay
Reder Pension

Vienna (JTA) — The political
furor over Austrian Defense
Minister Friedhelm Fris-
chenschlager's reception of Nazi
war criminal Walter Reder, when
he returned to his native Austria
on Jan. 24 after nearly 40 years in
an Italian prison was renewed
when the Ministry of Social Wel-
fare disclosed that the convicted
mass-murderer of civilians has
been receiving a war pension from
the Austrian government since
1970.
The 69-year-old former SS
Major has been getting a monthly
stipend equivalent to $324 plus a
$29 old age supplement. The pen-
sion was granted in 1970, retroac-
tive to 1964.

K

