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"...•..•.•.••....•..• 20% OFF WIRE SPACE SAVERS (313) 855-9678 • Peres is faced with mounting demands for an official investiga- tion by many Labor Party minis- ters and their political allies in the unity coalition government, and a majority of Labor's Knesset faction. This is fiercely opposed by the Likud ministers who have ac- cused Labor of trying to precipi- tate a coalition crisis to bring down the government before Likud leader Yitzhak Shamir as- sumes office as Prime Minister next October, under terms of the coalition's rotation of power agreement. There are five no - confidence motions pending against the gov- ernment over the affair from op- position factions. They are ex- pected to be easily defeated. But the issue of an investigation may hinge on i a decision of the Sup- reme Court. A panel of three justices is pre- sently hearing a series of appeals to overturn the pardon granted by President Chaim Herzog last Wednesday to Shalom and three of his top aides in Shin Bet for any offenses they may have commit- ted in connection with the deaths of the prisoners in custody. Peres, Shalom, Justice Minister Yitzhak Modai, Police Minister Haim Barley and Attorney Gen- eral Yosef Harish are all named as respondents. Harish is arguing their case. The three justices — Supreme Court President Meir Shamgar, Miriam Ben-Porat and Aharon Barak — ruled Monday that President Herzog's name be re- moved from the list of respondents on grounds that he acted within his constitutional authority when he granted the pardons. But this does not mean the pardons cannot be challenged. The appeals were filed by the Citizens Rights Movement (CRM), a political party in the Knesset, and by several groups of private attorneys. The Court was told that when Shin Bet chief Shalom applied for a Presidential pardon last week, he stated all his actions in the cast at hand had been undertaken "with authority and permission." One of the main objectives of those seeking an investigation is to establish political responsibil- ity for the illegal killing of pris- oners. The head of Shin Bet is re- sponsible solely to the Prime Minister and Shamir was Prime Minister at the time of the inci- dent. Peres took office several months later. Both men are al- leged to have known of the pur- ported coverup by Shalom. Peres told the Knesset, "I do not accuse any person in the political echelon," an apparent reference to Shamir. "But (the affair) must be investigated so as to leave no doubt," he added. "I don't want to go around trailing a tail of ques- tionmarks. I have always been consistent to principles. I have never sought an inquiry of the op- erational level, but have defended that level and I have not opposed an inquiry of the political eche- lon," Peres said. He said he could not report to the house any definitive position of the government because the Cabinet has not yet taken a posi- tion. He said the demand for a commission of inquiry was sub- mitted by "a group of ministers" and there would be debate and a decision on it. The Likud Knesset faction held caucus before the plenary debate began. Speaker after speaker flayed Peres and the Labor Party for "whipping up" the Shin Bet affair as a way to thwart the rota- tion of power. Shamir himself levelled the same charge. He told reporters Monday that it was "clear as daylight" that the at- tacks by Labor on the Presidential pardon were aimed at bringing down the government. Political observers said Monday night, that despite the bristling hostility between the two major coalition partners, behind7 the- scenes efforts were being made to find an acceptable way out of the controversy over a probe of the Shin Bet affair. ADL Board Re-elects Lockman President Stuart M. Lockman, a Detroit attorney, was unanimously reelected President of the Michi- gan Regional Advisory Board of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, at that group's an- nual meeting last week in South- field. Lockman, a member of the ADL's national board, serves on the national ADL Law Commit- tee, and its Community Service Committee, as well as being active locally. Elected or reelected as vice presidents of the Michigan group were: Robert J. Gordon, Linda Soberman, Deena Lockman, David Wallace, Judy Nolish, Laurence A. Miller, and George Nyman. Gordon also was recently elected as a member of ADL's na- tional board. Betty Goodman of Lansing was re-elected vice president for outstate activities. Norman Beitner was elected sec- retary of the group, and Kenneth E. Konop was re-elected trea- surer. A special award was presented to Flint Journal reporter Dan Shriner, in appreciation of his "outstanding activities on behalf of America's Democratic Tradi- tions." In 1979, Shriner pene- trated and exposed hate group op- erations in Michigan, resulting in the arrest and conviction of sev- eral members, for illegal traffick- ing in weapons. Since then, he has exposed various other similar ac- tivities, including several of the recent national hate-group as- semblies at the farm of Robert Miles, former Grand Dragon of the Michigan Ku Klux Klan, lo- cated outside of Howell, Mich. Lockman, in accepting reelec- tion, reviewed the group's past