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Five Arab 'Collaborators'
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Barbecue 'flukey

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$1.59

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Dexter Davison Meats

13181 W. 10 Mile
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Oak Park • 548-6800

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21780 W. 11 Mile Road
Corner of 11 Mile & Lahser
Southfield • 356-5110

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1990

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THE JEWISH NEWS

knife. He was quickly sur-
rounded by hundreds of
residents and stabbed, then
lynched.
The other four incidents
took place in the West Bank.
On Saturday, the body of
Rabah Sayyas, 27, was found
in Nueima, a West Bank
village near Jericho. He had
been kidnapped Friday by
masked men.
Akram Sater, 22, was
fatally wounded by shots
fired at him Thursday night
in Beitunia, near Ramallah.
He died of wounds at
Hadassah Medical Center in
Jerusalem.
In the town of Halhoul,
near Hebron, youths broke
into the home of Ahmed Ab-
dul Hadi al-Akrab, 35, and
attacked him, inflicting
head blows that proved fatal.
Mr. Akrab later died in the
hospital.
The body of Samer
Mohammed Abdullah
Badawi, 30, was found Sat-
urday near the Nablus
casbah. He had been kid-
napped Friday from the
garage where his car was be-
ing fixed, and was then shot
in the head.

.

26020 Greenfield Road
101/2 Mile and Greenfield in Lincoln Center
Oak Park • 967-4222

The Bright Idea:

Jerusalem (JTA) — Five
Palestinians suspected of
collaboration with Israeli
authorities were murdered
by fellow Arabs, and four
more wounded, while dem-
onstrations in support of
Saddam Hussein continued
in the administered ter-
ritories.
The most gruesome of the
murders took place in Rafah,
at the southern end of the
Gaza Strip.
Ashraf al-Gharbali, 25,
was in his father's home
when six masked men arriv-
ed and tried to attack him.
After closing all entrances to
the house, Mr. Gharbali
pulled out a gun and began
shooting in the direction of
his attackers.
Hundreds of Rafah
residents surrounded the
house, throwing stones,
bricks and axes. Mr. Ghar-
bali's father, fearing his
family's safety, tried to open
the door to the attackers,
and was stabbed in the back
by his son.
When the younger Mr.
Gharbali ran out of am-
munition, he went out into
the street wielding a large

Please call

352-2264

Gulf Crisis Threatens
Israeli Tourism, Culture

Tel Aviv (JTA) — The Per-
sian Gulf crisis is having a
negative impact not only on
tourism to Israel, but also on
the local cultural scene.
Hotel owners report some
decline in the number of
tourists arriving and book-
ing ahead. They fear the
degree of cancellations may
increase if the uncertainty
and threat of war continue
into the winter season.
In public at least, the
Tourism Ministry is pain-
ting a far more optimistic
picture of the situation than
leaders in the tourism in-
dustry itself. The ministry
claims tourist arrivals are
actually up compared to
previous years.
But cancellations by a few
celebrities from abroad have
made a deep impression on
the public at large.
The Soviet Union's
prestigious Red Army
Chorus, which was due to
arrive this week for a series
of concerts, canceled at the
last minute "because of the
situation."
Meanwhile, the organizers
of "Jazz on the Red Sea," a

jazz festival that opened
Sunday night in Eilat, spent
the weekend looking for
substitutes for the American
band Spyro Gyra, headed by
saxophonist Jay Beckens-
tein and American guitarist
Barney Kessel.
To make matters worse,
78-year-old French violinist
Stephane Grappelli pulled
out at the last minute be-
cause of a sudden illness.
By Sunday morning, hours
before the jazz festival open-
ed, the organizers has
managed to line up as
replacements American sax-
ophonist Wayne Shorter and
drummer Elvin Jones.
The audience at the fes-
tival in Eilat. will have a
grandstand view bf the Jor-
danian port of Aqaba, across
the bay less than 10 miles
away, where ships can be
seen unloading cargo bound
for Iraq or intercepted by
U.S. and European naval
vessels as they try to ap-
proach the Jordanian port.
The Gulf crisis has been a
boon for hoteliers in Eilat,
who are reporting almost
complete bookings, thanks

