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Fosnaugh, M.D. MIMED; GET RESULT'S Dermatology Surgery Clinic Call The Jewish News 20240 W. 12 Mile Rd. • Southfield, MI 48076 • • • • • • • • • • • 353-6880 • •• • • • • • • • • 354-6060 • • • • • • • • •• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • LeVon's • SMITH • CORONA • • • KITCHEN • AID • • • • EUREKA • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • BLACK & DECKER • TOASTER OVEN • •• • • • • • • • I GENUINE DISCOUNTS SONY PRODUCTS • GENERAL ELECTRIC • PANASONIC • WESTINGHOUSE • EUREKA • KITCHENAID • BLACK & DECKER • MICROWAVE OVENS • SMITH CORONA • THERMADOR • BRAUN • TOSHIBA • HITACHI • ROEPER • JENNAIR • SUB-ZERO • SCOTSMAN • VIDEO RECORDERS • VIDEO CAMERAS • TELEPHONE ANSWERING MACHINES • 14K GOLD CHAINS • CALCULATORS • SEIKO WATCHES • CROSS PENS • TELEPHONES • BINOCULARS • STEREOS • CAR RADAR DETECTORS • CHAMBERS • RCA • SUNBEAM (We reserve the right to limit quantities, and/or, withdraw from sale.) LeVon's SUPER STORE GENERAL ELECTRIC • • • • SONY. • • • • GENERAL ELECTRIC • • • 9_ • Since 1949 30825 Greenfield • At 13 Mile • 642-4466 9:30-5:30; Sat. 9:30-5 'terrnsa," • CITIZEN/SEIKO • • • • • • • • Panasonic • • GENERAL ELECTRIC. • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israel was reported last Monday to be negotiating a prisoner ex- change to secure the release of an Israel air force navigator held captive by Amal, the mainstream Shiite militia, since his plane was shot down over Lebanon in mid-October 1986. Yediot Achronot quoted a report in the Abu Dhabi newspaper, Al Ittihad, saying that the negotiations are being conducted through Bri- tain and other Western coun- tries. The paper said that sources in Amal reported that Israel is prepared to free a significant number of prisoners, but Amal is in- sisting on the release of 810 Palestinians and Lebanese in- carcerated by Israel for security offenses. The navigator, who has never been identified by name, was one of two Israeli flyers who bailed out of their Phantom jet. The pilot of the jet evaded capture and was rescued by an Israeli air force helicopter. But on Oct. 21, 1986, Amal leader Nabih Berri confirmed in Beirut that the navigator was in the hands of his militia. Earlier, Israeli military sources had discounted claims that he was a prisoner of Amal. Israel, in fact, denied the Phantom was shot down, saying it crash-landed because of mechanical dif- ficulties. In February, 1987, Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir told reporters that Israel would do its utmost to secure the release of the flyer "alive and well," but refused to comment on reports that Berri had proposed a prisoner swap. Israel's official policy has been never to negotiate with terrorist organizations for the release of hostages. But there have been prisoner exchanges over the years. The largest by far occurred in November 1983, when Israel freed 4,600 Palestinians and Lebanese prisoners, many of them ser- ving life sentences for ter- rorist acts, in exchange for six Israel Defense Force soldiers held prisoner in Lebanon by Al Fatah, the terrorist wing of the Palestine Liberation Organization. Amal, however, is not generally considered a terrorist group. Ex-Mossad Chief Recalls Botched Munich Rescue Jerusalem (JTA) — More than 15 years after 11 members of Israel's Olympics team were massacred while held hostage by terrorists at Munich airport, a ranking Israeli military officer last week blasted the behavior of the Bavarian authorities and police whose job it had been to protect the athletes. Reserve Gen. Zvi Zamir, who was at the scene that fatal day in September 1972, offered his bitter recollections in an interview published in the current edition of Bamahane, the Israel Defense Force magazine. Zamir, now chairman of the Haifa oil refineries, was chief of Mossad, Israel's external secret service, when he flew to Munich after learning that the Israeli athletes had been kidnapped by terrorists from the Olympic Village. He said the Bavarian police and authorities did not prepare even the most basic equipment for a successful rescue attempt. Their main concern seemed to be "to remove the affair from the Olympic village and get on with the games as quickly as possible," Zamir charged. He said that until the ter- rorists forced their captives aboard helicopters to take them to the airport, the Bavarian police had no idea how many terrorists there were. "We saw the sportsmen being led to the helicopters, bound. To see them led like this, defenseless again on German soil — that was the most terrible sight." Zamir said that he and ac- companying officials of the Shin Bet, Israel's internal security service, were not en- couraged by the Bavarian police to offer their expertise in dealing with terrorists. In fact, they were clearly made unwelcome and literally had to push themselves onto a helicopter that flew the police and officials from the Olym- pic Village to the airport. There, all of the Israeli athletes died in a bloody shootout that ensued when the Bavarian police launched their botched rescue effort, Zamir recalled.