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Woodward Royal Oak, Michigan 48072 (313) 549-TRIP Supreme Court Upholds Deportation Of Awad Jerusalem (JTA) — Against the backdrop of continuing unrest, including the death of a yeshivah student, Israel's Supreme Court last Sunday upheld the deportation order against Mubarak Awad, a Palestinian activist and American citizen. The court stayed execution of the order for one week, however, to allow Awad to testify in his libel suit against Ma'ariv. The newspaper al- leged he was a drug trafficker in the United States and that he channeled his income to the Palestine Liberation Organization. The U.S. State Department issued a state- ment urging Israel not to deport Awad. Militant Jewish settlers and other right-wing Israelis demanded Awad's immediate expulsion lest Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, the acting interior minister, come under American pressure, during his visit to the United States, to rescind the deportation order. Israelis who support Awad's right to remain in the country rallied for him out- side the Supreme Court building. Awad, who was born in east Jerusalem, is an advocate of non-violent Palestinian resistance to Israeli control of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. His method has been to encourage civil disobedience. But ultranationalists claim he also fomented violence in the administered territories. Although Shamir claimed Awad was subverting state security and public order, the official grounds for his depor- tation were that he is in the country illegally. Awad's residence visa expired last November. The high court rejected Awad's argument that as a native of east Jerusalem, he does not come under the Is- raeli residency law. According to that law, an Israeli resident loses his status if he either re- mains outside of the country for seven years or becomes a citizen of another country. Awad left Jerusalem after the 1967 Six-Day War and lived in the United States, where he acquired citizen- ship. He returned to Jerusa- lem about three years ago and founded an institute for the study of non-violence. In other developments, two Palestinians were killed, one apparently by militant Jew- ish settlers, as Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip staged a general strike Mubarak Award: Suing Ma'ariv to protest the arrival of U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz. Meanwhile, thousands of pro-Palestinian Israeli demonstrators clashed with police and hostile bystanders during a march along Dizen- goff Street in Tel Aviv pro- testing the continued occupa- tion of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Eight people were arrested, including a woman who wrapped herself in a Pales- tinian flag. Two foreign press photographers were injured in scuffles with police. The event was organized by an ad hoc coalition of a score of far left-wing organizations. Peace Now, the largest and best-known group opposed to government policies in the territories, did not partici- pate. Apparently Peace Now, which has many supporters in the United States, did not want to associate itself with the blatantly pro-Palestinian extreme left. French, Saudis Sign Arms Deal Paris (JTA) — France and Saudi Arabia signed a $550 million arms sale contract in Jidda that will provide the Saudis with sophisticated weapons systems they have been unable to purchase in the United States. The deal, announced in Paris last Sunday by the gov- ernment-controlled company responsible for arms ex- ports, is the first of several being negotiated by the two countries. Future contracts will run into several billion dollars worth of combat aircraft, air- to-air and air-to-ground missiles and Exocet missiles.