I UP FRONT YOU'RE COVERED With Our New T-Shirt! Japan Continued from Page 5 year of Japanese. That ex- perience, his previous YFU participation and academic excellence qualified him for the exchange study program. However, he did have to make formal application and sub- mit to an interview. One of six children of David and Micki Berg of Hun- tington Woods, Berg said the cost of his stay abroad totals more than $4,000. He is being supplemented with scholar- ships, and his cousins, Lisa and Hannan Lis, have spearheaded a fund-raising drive on his behalf. The Lises began the drive "because we feel it's an important cause," Mrs. Lis said, adding "and it's family." More than 160 letters have been sent to private in- dividuals and many more to civic groups and corporations seeking help for Berg. Mrs. Lis said she hopes the letter-writing campaign will bring enough results to meet Berg's expenses by the time he leaves, but if the goal isn't met, the campaign will continue until it is. She didn't want him to be prevented from going on the trip due to lack of funds. "He's a very bright individual. I'd like to see him go to Japan." Retreats Continued from Page 5 Planning for the joint FAS- CLAL seminars are only in the discussion stages, accor- ding to Tamra Morris of CLAL. The first meeting bet- ween the two organizations took place in December, she said. According to FAS Executive Director Sam Fisher, the seminars, combining academics and nature, would be conducted year-round. They would be geared toward educators, school principals, rabbis, community center workers and other communal leaders. The program Subscribe Today To The Jewish News And Receive Our New T-Shirt With Our Compliments! Ifs durable, comfortable, easy to care for and attractive. And it comes in an array of adult and children's sizes. But most important, your new subscription will mean 52 information- packed weeks of The Jewish News, plus our -special supplements, delivered every Friday to your mailbox. A great newspaper and a complimentary T-shirt await you for our low subscription rates. Just fill out the coupon below and return it to us. We'll fit you to a T! Jewish News T-Shirt Offer Please clip coupon and mail to: JEWISH NEWS T-SHIRT 20300 Civic Center Dr. Southfield, Mich. 48076-4138 NAME This offer is for new subscriptions only. Cur- rent subscribers may order the T-shirt for $4.75. Allow four weeks delivery. ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP (circle „ One) i year: '24 2 years: S45 Out of State: '26 Enclosed $ (Circle One) ADULT EX. W. ADULT LARGE ADULT MED. CHILD LARGE CHILD MED. CHILD SMALL 14 FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1988 Fisher said the program would commence in the spring. The Fresh Air Socie- ty's goal in both projects is to reach out to as wide a span of Jews as possible, both geographically and religious- ly. FAS has hired a full-time mashgiach (kashrut inspec- tor) to ensure that camp kit- chens are kosher, he said. Breach In Israeli Border Security Raises Question From the West Bank to West Bloomfield — and all points in between — The Jewish News covers your world. And now with our new T-shirt, we cover our new subscribers, too. Yes! Start me on a subscription to The Jewish News for the period and amount circled below. Please send me the T-shirt. dovetails with the activities of CLAL — headed by Rabbi Ir- ving "Yitz" Greenberg — which conducts programs to educate Jewish leaders in Judaism. Tel Aviv (JTA) — The in- filtration of three Palestinian terrorists into Israel from Jor- dan last week has raised questions about security along the normally quiescent Israeli-Jordanian border. Israeli authorities still believe King Hussein is doing his best to prevent terrorist activity from Jordanian soil, according to a report in Hadashot. Terrorist leaders are exerting pressure on him, but the king is standing fast. He has informed the United States that while Palestine Liberation Organization of- fices are open in Amman, their activity is restricted, Hadashot reported. Nevertheless, the infiltra- tion, though short-lived, was unnerving. The three ter- rorists were captured alive after a brief shoot-out with security forces, shortly after they crossed the Jordan River near Maoz Chaim and Bet Shean, south of the Sea of Galilee. One of the three was wounded. It was the first infiltration since Nov. 25, when a lone Palestinian riding a motor- ized hang glider, crossed the Lebanese border into upper Galilee and killed six Israel Defense Force soldiers at a military base and wounded seven, before he was shot to death. Maariv reported that the three terrorists belong to the Palestine Liberation Front, a group headed by Mohammed (Abul) Abbas, who master- minded the October 1985 hi- jacking of the Italian cruise ship Achille Laura The infiltrators reportedly traveled from Iraq to Amman, where they were given Kalachnikov assault rifles and other equipment and briefed on their mission. The head of the PLO military staff, Khalil Al-Wazir, also known as Abu Jihad, was in Jordan at the time. Gen. Amram Mitzna, IDF commander of the central sec- tor, told reporters after the in- filtration that the Jordanians are working to prevent ter- rorist activity aimed at Israel.