I NEWS I YOU'RE COVERED With Our New T-Shirt! 2 Soldiers Charged With Burying Youths Tel Aviv (JTA) — The Israel Defense Force arrested two soldiers who are charged with burying alive four Palestinian youths near Nablus. Addi- tional arrests are expected, the IDF announced last Sunday. The youths were rescued by Palestinian villagers. None of the soldiers has been identified, but a Jewish settler from the Gush Emunim settlement of Eilon Moreh near Nablus was named as an accomplice. The settler, Nissim Haba, has denied the allegation. According to unofficial accounts, the incident oc- curred when several soldiers remained in Salem village after IDF troops quelled Palestinian rioting there. Villagers claim the troops called in a bulldozer to erect an earth rampart around the village, which had been placed under curfew. Soldiers, accompanied by Haba, reportedly entered homes in the village and ordered youths to clear away burning tires and rock bar- ricades. The youths reported- ly threw rocks at the bulldozer and its driver. After being beaten, the youths were ordered to lie on the ground, and the bulldozer dumped earth on top of them. Israel Orders End To Hospital Strike Subscribe Today To The Jewish News And Receive Our New T-Shirt With Our Compliments! 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. It's 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: Yes! Start me on a subscription to The Jewish News for the period and amount circled below. Please send me the T-shirt. JEWISH NEWS T-SHIRT 20300 Civic Center Dr. Southfield, Mich. 480764138 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 (Circle One) I STATE ZIP year: '24 2 years: 845 Out of State '26 Enclosed $ (Circle one) ADULT EX. W. ADULT LARGE ADULT MED. CHILD LARGE CHILD MED. CHIT D SMALL 12 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1988 Tel Aviv (JTA) — Under emergency regulations Israel has retained from the British Mandate more than 40 years ago, Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir signed a back-to-work order that ended the 11-day strike of government hos- pitals. Shamir acted last week after the Cabinet voted 11 to ten to support the move. The ministers preferred to invoke the emergency regulations in- stead of seeking an injunction from a labor court. An injunc- tion could be appealed by the strikers to the Supreme Court, prolonging the walkout. Many hospital maintenance workers, service and ad- personnel ministrative reported back to work. Some 2,700 physicians who had been curtailing their services at a different hospital each day, on a rotating basis, returned to normal work schedules. They ended their job action when the Finance Ministry promised to discuss their demands for second shifts with overtime pay. The non-medical personnel also may get a hearing, now that they are back on the job. The hospital workers are seeking the same salary in- creases and fringe benefits -won by their counterparts employed by Kupat Holim, the Histadrut health care agency. Human Rights Report Easy On Israel Washington (JTA) — The State Department releasted its report on human rights practices in more than 160 countries for 1987, which is submitted annually to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the House Foreign Affairs Committee. In response to a question at the briefing about the report, Richard Schifter, assistant secretary of state for human rights and humanitarian af- fairs, ruled out any possibili- ty that the United States would cut aid to Israel because of Washington's criticism of the way Israel is handling the unrest on the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The section on Israel in the 1,358-page report states, "As in the past, the most signifi- cant human rights problems for Israel in 1987 derived from the strained relations between the Israeli authori- ties and some Israelis on the one hand and the Arab inhab- itants of the occupied ter- ritories on the other hand:' Schifter said that since the report only covers the period through the end of December, the situation in the ter- ritories since then will he dealt with next year. Scattered through the report are descriptions of the situation of Jews in various countries.