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Rd. 0 n Farmington Hills, MI 48018 TRES SWEET Candy & Nut Rays A Gift of Caring. FREE LOCAL DELIVERY (313) 626 - 3435 = SUZI & RANDY 148 FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1989 Poll Favors Military Suppressing Uprising Tel Aviv (JTA)) — A recent poll shows that more than half of Israelis support the use of greater military force in the administered ter- ritories, and they believe that the 16-month-old Palestinian uprising can be suppressed by force. This was revealed by a Pori poll conducted last week among 1,200 Jewish men and women over 18. The results were published in Ha'aretz on Friday. In response to the question, "Are you for or against the use of greater military force to suppress the uprising in the territories," 54.6 percent replied in the affirmative, 36.6 recent were opposed and 8.8 percent had no opinion. Asked, "Do you think it possible or impossible to sup- press the uprising in the ter- ritories by military force," 53 percent thought it was possi- ble, 38.1 percent said impossi- ble and 8.9 percent had no opinion. A majority of Israelis back territorial compromise to resolve the problem of the ter- ' ritories, according to a Dahaf poll reported in Yediot Achronot. Taken on the eve of Passover among 656 adults, the poll revealed that ter- ritorial compromise was favored by 33 percent, 27 per- cent favored autonomy and 22 percent opted for annexation. The status quo was prefer- red by 9 percent, and 5 per- cent supported a Palestinian state. The same poll showed that 17 percent support negotia- tions now with the Palestine Liberation Organization, 41 percent would support negotiations under certain conditions and 39 percent op- pose talks with the PLO under any circumstances. A Modi'in Ezrachi . poll published in Hadashot on Fri- day contained bad news for the Labor Party. If elections were held now, Labor would win just 29 Knesset seats, down from the 39 it won in the November 1988 elections, the poll showed. Likud would hold firm at 40 seats, while the religious par- ties would do about the same in new elections as they did in the last one. But parties on the left and right of the political spectrum would enlarge their Knesset representation, with signifi- cant gains for the left. The Citizens Rights Move- ment would increase from five to nine Knesset seats, Mapam would go from three to five and the Center-Shinui party from two to three seats. On the right, Moledet and Tsomet would each increase its Knesset delegation from two to three seats, while Tehiya would go from three to four seats. • Far from the political realm was a study conducted by the Education Ministry s psychological counseling ser- vices, reported by Hadashot. It found that 25 percent of high-school students had full sexual relations and another 25 percent partial sexual rela- tions. Forty percent of the students having sex used birth control. Hadashot observed that this accounts for the fact that only 13 unwanted pregnan- cies were discovered during the study among 2,400 students from 12 high schools. ' Canadian Chain's Bid For Post Is Tops Tel Aviv (JTA) — A Canadian-based newspaper chain has won the top bid for a controlling interest in the Jerusalem Post, Israel's only English-language daily paper. An agreement in principle was reached last week bet- ween Hollinger Inc. and Koor Industries, the Histadrut labor federation con- glomerate that is liquidating the 55 percent block of shares it now holds. Shimon Ravid, Koor's finan- cial director, declined to name the sum to be paid, but con- firmed that the Canadian bid was "by far the highest of the eight submitted last week." The sums mentioned vary between $17.5 million and $20.6 million. Ari Rath, co- editor and managing director of the Post, said the amount was "probably closer to the $17.5 million figure" — more than twice the $8 million of- fered by the next highest bid- der, U.S. businessman Arye Genger, a former Israeli. A joint bid by Robert Max- well and Charles Bronfman was the third largest and con- siderably lower.