NEWS "Great suit. Did you come into money?" "No. I went into Van Dykes." YOU DON'T HAVE TO COME INTO MONEY TO DRESS LIKE YOU DID. YOU JUST HAVE TO COME INTO THE NEW VAN DYKES. 18211 10 MILE RD. JUST W. OF SOUTHFIELD RD. MON.-FRI. 10-9 • SAT. 10-7 • 569-4630 HUGO BOSS • ANDREW FEZZA • CANALI • V 2 BY VERSACE Speaking for Themselves Interviews with 25 young Israelis, including Druze, converted Catholics, pious Jews and atheists, form a unique and poignant portrait of a land in crisis. Translated by Jean Steinberg Pantheon Books $19.00 At Borders $17.10 BORDERS BOOK SHOP Novi Town Center • 347-0780 Also in Ann Arbor and Birmingham 44 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1991 La•rg Paul makes FURNITURE NEW. Custom Restoration, Lacquering, Refinishing of new or old furniture, antiques, office furniture, pianos. For Free Estimates 681-8280 Israel Continues Shelling Lebanon Tel Aviv (JTA) — Guer- rilla warfare of increasing intensity in southern Leb- anon has drawn a strong military response from Israel and stern warning of massive reprisals from its commanding general in the region. The Israeli air force has been pounding Shi'ite villages north of the southern Lebanon security zone for more than a week, assisted by the allied South Lebanon Army. It was reported that Israel had ceased shelling posi- tions, possibly because of pressure from the United States, after Washington expressed concern such ac- tivity could derail the Mid- dle East peace conference in Madrid. But according to the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, about 40 shells were fired into the Tubeh area of southern Leb- anon last week. The targets are villages suspected of supporting guerrillas of Hezbollah, or the Party of God. But a Beirut newspaper reported that most Hezbollah militiamen left the area eight days ago for the safety of Beirut or the Syrian- controlled Bekaa Valley in eastern Lebanon. Maj. Gen. Yitzhak Mordechai, the Israel Defense Force commander in the northern region, said that Israeli forces would take more severe measures to curb attacks and infiltra- tion attempts by Hezbollah and other radical groups. Maj. Mordechai, touring the hostile area with a group of reporters, said the recent air raids and artillery bom- bardments represent only a fraction of the IDF's capabilities. "I recommend that Hez- bollah and those around it keep away and keep the peace," he said. "I recom- mend that Lebanese living outside the (security) zone ensure peace and quiet in the zone and along our borders." The cost of protecting the border area has been heavy. There have been 100 in- cidents inside the security zone since the beginning of the year, reporters were told. Half of them involved road- side bombs which Hezbollah boasted it planted. Nine IDF soldiers and 12 SLA militiamen have been killed and 30 SLA men wounded. Most of the fatalities were caused by the concealed explosives trig- gered by the victims or detonated by remote control. The explosive charges are planted along roads used by the IDF or SLA. About 33 out of 50 were sophisticated radio- controlled devices. But a Beirut newspaper said the guerrillas were resorting to the "old- fashioned" tripwire type since the IDF developed electronic methods to neutralize the radio- controlled bombs. Nevertheless, reporters touring the region under tight military protection were impressed by the cau- tion taken. No vehicle mov- ed along a road that had not first been checked by foot soldiers. Meanwhile, Housing Min- ister Ariel Sharon, an outspoken Likud hawk, urg- ed that Israel reoccupy southern Lebanon up to the Litani River, as it first did in 1978. Mr. Sharon, who as defense minister at the time was architect of the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, told reporters the security zone should be expanded to the Litani so that the IDF could attack terrorist bases further north. Meanwhile, Maj. Gen. An- toine Lehad, commander of the SLA, which is trained, equipped and funded by Israel, said the bilateral peace talks between Israel and Lebanon would have no effect on his largely Chris- tian militia or the security zone it patrols. Speaking at his head- quarters in Marjayoun, the center of a Lebanese Chris- tian enclave just outside the security zone, Lehad said neither the zone nor the SLA would be dismantled. He said Israel would not comply with U.N. Security Council Resolution 425, which requires it to quit Lebanese soil entirely, until the Beirut government and its regular army proves capable of clearing the southern region of terrorists. Up to now, the Lebanese regulars have disarmed the Shi'ite Amal militia but not the radical Hezbollah. The Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera reported that terrorist organizations are training recruits for hang- glider attacks on targets in Israel and moderate Arab countries.