THE JEWISH N THIS ISSUE 60¢ SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY MAY 6, 1988 / 19 IYAR 5748 Syria Places Troops On Alert Israeli forces meet with resistance near the Bekaa Valley as IDF soldiers seek to weed out terrorists Thousands celebrate Israel's birthday . . . Page 50. ENDLESS FLIGHT OF JERZY KOSINSKI Jerusalem — The Syrian govern- ment ordered its military forces on alert this week as Israel, following its push into Lebanon, neared the Bekaa Valley just on the edge of the Syrian border. Some 10,000 Syrian soldiers reportedly were stationed in the Bekaa Valley, but were told not to fire unless attacked by Israeli forces. Reacting to the Syrian alert, Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir said the IDF operation does not signal an anti-Syria initiative. "We are not there to go to war with Syria;' he said, "but simply to insure the safety and security of our northern border settlements?' Shamir termed the operation a "usual" one and suggested it would be completed within several days. IDF troops were said to be evacuating by Wednesday. An unconfirmed report suggested that neither Shamir nor Foreign Minister Shimon Peres had any knowledge the troops would operate so close to Syria. The move apparent- ly was sanctioned by Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin. IDF soldiers crossed into southern Lebanon on Monday in a move aim- ed at cutting down the number of ter- rorist attacks from Israel's northern border. Some 500 soldiers of the South Lebanon Army are working with the IDF soldiers. The troops were said to be passing out flyers which read "If you obey IDF orders, no harm will come to you," and searching homes. No casualties were reported and no prisoners have been taken captive, but the IDF did meet with resistance when it overtook the Lebanese village of Maidun, just south of the Bekaa Valley. An NBC report early this week pegged the number of Israeli troops in Lebanon at more than 2,000. Israel officials have repeatedly denied that figure and set the number of soldiers at about several hundred. The IDF move into Lebanon ap- parently sparked further demonstra- tions in the West Bank and Gaza as Palestinian protestors battled with Continued on Page 20 Women Cantors Rejected New York (JTA) — The Conser- vative movement's Cantors Assembly voted Tuesday to reject a move to ad- mit qualified women members. The vote was 97-95 against admit- ting women awarded the degree of chazzan (cantor) by the Jewish Theological Seminary's Cantors In- stitute into the ranks of the world's largest professional body of cantors. A two-thirds vote was needed for the measure to have passed. The vote took place at the assembly's 41st annual convention at Continued on Page 20 With Bev Kagan and a few other activists at the helm, the future of Grand Rapids' fragmented Jewish community looks promising