. LTER LIFE LIKE PLANTS FOR HOME & OFFICE ULTRA SILKS I LIFE IN ISRAEL ---..: .:. sewel-oric x .0.4 :.• v c,%.0) SI? ftel' 6 FT. FICUS Of Harvard Row 4. -N- 7 NATURAL BARK CALL BARBARA 851-7822 FOR STUDIO APPOINTMENT Designers of Fine Furs Complete Fur Service ::: :..1 11 MILE & LAHSER ::•i ..: Phone: 358-0850 You Are Invited To A champagne reception on Saturday, November 21, from 11:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. and Sunday, November 22, from 12: 00 Noon to 5:00 P.M. to see the finest display of jewelry and watches by famous designers such as Kurt Wayne, from Italy, Holland, Brazil, etc. A 30% Discount Is Offered Enigma Continued from preceding page found a large "bamah" or altar installation. In the cour- tyard onto which the two rooms open, a round hearth or fire pit was found, which already has yielded remains of utensils and bones of animals. Similar palaces with hearths of this type have been found in mediterranean coun- tries occupied by Aegean peoples, indicating the con- nection between them and the Philistines, said Prof. Dothan. Ekron was the farthest in- land Philistine city in Israel, located on the border with Judah. Therefore, distinguishing between the Philistine and Judean struc- tures, artifacts, town plann- ing and even diet (the Philistines raised and ate pork, for example, unlike their Israelite neighbors) of- fers the most striking of con- trasts in the region. "They were an entirely distinct ethnic group from the neighboring Canaanites and Israelites," notes Prof. Dothan. One of the intriguing ques- tions facing the ar- chaeologists in what has been discovered so far at Ekron is why olive oil production was such an important part of the economy, particularly in the latter period (the 7th century B.C.E.). Prof. Gitin offers a possible explanation: The period was marked by an Assyrian en- forced peace in the region, enabling the Philistines to concentrate on "home in- dustrial development" rather than on warring with hostile neighbors. Furthermore, Ekron was centrally located in terms of north-south (Assyria-Egypt) and east-west (coastal-hill region) trade routes. - But what, then, of the many four-horned altars? What of the finely sculpted animal figures?) Who were the god or gods that the Philistines wor- shipped? And what happened to the Philistines after the Babylonian conquest? Were they carried off into slavery, or were they assimilated into the local culture? Jordan Strengthened By Arab Conference JEWELERS ■ PII INC. 32940 Middlebelt Rd. at 14 Mile • In The Broadway Plaza 855-1730 Mon., Wed. & Fri. 10-6, Sat. till 5:30, Thurs. 10-8 " _ ruin At/ 111/11 / ft6 4rtrr, Tel Aviv (JTA) — The Foreign Ministry believes the Arab summit conference in Amman last week strength- ened the position of Jordan's King Hussein and deepened the decline of Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasir Arafat, according to the newspaper, Al Hamishmar. The ministry's appraisal is based on analysis of the resolutions passed at the summit, the newspaper notes. Although many of the fam- iliar extremist Arab declara- tions concerning the Israeli- Arab conflict were contained in the resolutions of the sum- mit, they did not include the usual demand for an indepen- dent Palestinian state. The resolution that the PLO must participate in a Mideast peace conference "on the basis of equality" was seen by the ministry as mean- ing that the PLO would not attend as a separate delega- tion, but as part of a joint delegation with Jordan. Apparently, this could also allow the formation of a Jordanian-Palestinian delegation, without explicit mention of the PLO. It was also noted that the summit did not adopt the anti-Israel formulations that the PLO had demanded. In addition, it is said that the willingness to accept Egypt back into the Arab fold constitutes a de facto recogni- tion of both the Camp David accords and the State of Israel. Haaretz quoted the Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Rai Al-Am as saying that Syria will receive $2.5 billion — presumably from wealthier Arab coun- tries including Saudi Arabia — in exchange for its recon- ciliation with Iraq. The paper reported that this was decid- ed in meetings held between Presidents Saddam Hussein of Iraq and Hafez Assad of Syria at King Hussein's residence. Reparations Sought New York — Reparations for the thousands of Jews ousted from Libya will be sought by a new organization, the Inter- national Commission on the Claims of Jews from Libya. The Commission was formal- ly incorporated Oct. 29 dur- ing a ceremony held at the national headquarters of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith. In 1970, Libya nationalized private and communal pro- perties of the Jews of Libya.