16 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, March 29, 1985 AL'S SAVES YOU MONEY! _HELP CUT YOUR HEATING BILLS! Al's Stocks It All STORM DOORS PATIO DOOR WALL STORMS • Many styles and colors , • Self storing • Security From 89 , 95 • EXPERT INSTALLATION AVAILABLE • Mill, white or bronze colors • Insulated or single glazed glass • Most sizes From $149 88 most sizes I • STORMS REPAIRED I MI IN GLASS & AUTO TRIM CUSTOM WALL MIRRORS TIRES & ACCESSORIES 15'AF SOUTHFIELD: 24117 Toolograph 383-2500 Other legations: Warne and Uncipla Park STORM WINDOWS • Outside or inside • Picture window storms • Custom Storms made • PATIO DOOR WALL GLASS REPLACED • INSULATED GLASS REPLACEMENT SPECIALISTS • PRIME DOORWALLS NEWS Christians, Moslems Will Cooperate In Lebanon Tel Aviv (JTA) — Christian and Moslem residents of south Leba- non near the Israeli border have promised to cooperate with Israel to maintain peace and order in the security belt just north of the bor- der after the Israel Defense Force (IDF) completes its withdrawal. But they may well have to deal with Palestinian terrorists who confirmed Tuesday that they are returning to the areas of south Lebanon from which they were ousted by the IDF in 1982, to con- tinue the war against Israel. About 100 Christian, Shiite and Sunni Moslem dignitaries from border villages met Monday with Brig. Gene. Shlomo Ilya, the IDF's chief liaison officer with the popu- lation in the south of Lebanon. Gen. Ilya promised that the "good fence" — the arrangement by which Lebanese could freely enter and leave Israel for commercial or personal purposes before June 1982 — would be re-instated after the IDF leaves Lebanese soil. The village leaders promised in turn that they would support local civil militias to maintain order in the region and would encourage young men to enlist in them. Gen. Ilya, who met with them in the Shiite village of J'bail, a few kilometers inside Lebanon, said the civil militias, along with the Israel-backed South Lebanon Army (SLA) would have a central role in maintaining peace. In Amman, meanwhile, Khalil Wazir, senior deputy and top mili- tary aide to Palestine Liberation Organization Chief Yasir Arafat, said PLO members loyal to Arafat were returning to south Lebanon. He confirmed that they have par- ticipated in attacks on the with- drawing IDF, carried out mainly by Shiite terrorists. The IDF in south Lebanon was the target of 11 attacks in one 24-hour period last week, none of which caused casualties. But an. Israeli soldier was slightly wounded in a clash with terrorists during a search of Shiite' villages last Thursday. Another soldier has died of wounds sustained ear- lier this month in an attack on the IDF. A military spokesman iden- tified him as Sgt. Yariv Lahav, 21, of Moshav Tamerin. Four attacks on IDF patrols and convoys last week involved road- side explosives near the villages of Maaroub, Arab Selim and El Basouryie, all east of Tyre. An SLA patrol was attacked with automatic weapons and rocket- propelled grenades near Jarjoura in the Nabatiya area, without casualties. The IDF said it killed 20 ter- rorists in the course of searches of two villages in the Nabatiya area and seized large quantities of weapons and sabotage material in their possession. Israeli officials are also keeping a sharp watch on events in Sidon, where rival religious factions have been fighting for the past three days. The IDF evacuated Sidon, the largest seaport in south Lebanon, a month ago and violence erupted there almost immediately. The latest and most serious battles are between rebel Chris- tian Phalangist forces led by Samir Jeajea and forces loyal to President Amin Gemayel, head of the Phalangist party whom the rebels accuse of being under the thumb of Syria. Eight persons were killed in Sidon last week and about 60 wounded. Moslem militiamen who have joined the battle blame Israel for the unrest. The Syrians, like the Israelis, are keeping a close watch on the situation but have not intervened directly so far. Premier Shimon Peres, speak- ing to high school students in Nazareth this week, promised that the IDF would be out of Lebanon "far quicker than many The Syrians, like the Israelis, are keeping a close watch on the situation. - people think" because "we are dealing with matters of life and death, both as regaids our own soldiers and as regards the resi- dents of Galilee." And Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin told the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Security committee that Lebanon today is a more seri- ous focal point of terrorism than it was before the Lebanon war. He warned there was no certainty that the PLO would not return there to join Shiite Moslem ter- rorists against Israel. At the same time, former De- fense Minister Ariel Sharon con- tinued his campaign of blaming opponents of the war in Lebanon for the present situation there. Sharon, who is now Minister of Commerce and Industry, charged at a press conference in Haifa that the total destruction of the ter- rorist infrastructure in Lebanon could have been achieved but for political opposition at home. "They prevented me from carry- ing out our aims in Lebanon. They didn't let me finish the job there," Sharon declared. Judea, Samaria Role Illuminated Washington — Describing Judea and Samaria as "forming a significant portion of the Jewish homeland to which all Jews cherish special emotional and his- torical ties," the Herut Zionists of America presented testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Europe and the Middle East earlier this month. As part of his prepared tes- timony, Seth D: Eisenberg, Herut's national executive direc- tor, said that "Judea and Samaria are indivisible parts of the Jewish homeland and Jews have an in- alienable right to settle there." Eisenberg also said that if Israel was to lose control over Judea and Samaria, "it would become vul- nerable to deadly attacks either in the form of terrorist infiltration or a more ominous general offensive against the heart of the land." g‘o