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BIRM., MI 48009 PhoRdr (313) 544-1124 Since 1971 I ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT was very happy when the new government came in, but with the soldiers be- ing killed in South Leb- anon and the Katyushas in Kiryat Shemona and the murders in the territories and everywhere else, I wouldn't vote Labor today. The economy's a wreck, worse than it was under the Likud. I don't think Labor could win today because the whole country is angry." This was the opinion, given at the end of October, by Chichi Amalia, a maintenance worker in her early 40s. She was not speaking at a West Bank settlement, or at a threaten- ed town on the Lebanese or Syrian border, but at a shop- ping mall in the peaceful, central Israeli town of Nes Ziona, where she lives. Nes Ziona, a town of some 25,000 people some 30- minutes southeast of Tel Aviv, is something of a cross- section of the country: a mix of middle-class and poor, Ashkenazi and Sephardi, agriculture and industry. Like the general population, it voted Labor in the June election after previously favoring Likud. It is far from the terrorist attacks that have shaken Israel for the last month, but the disillusionment that has crept over the country, replacing the optimism that greeted Prime Minister Yit- zhak Rabin's electoral "upheaval," could be sensed even here, in a shiny subur ban shopping mall on a busy Sabbath eve. It was the end of the worst week seen in Israel since the new government took over four months ago. Five soldiers were killed and five others were wounded by a bomb planted in the army's South Lebanon security zone by the extremist Islamic terror group Hizballah. In retaliation, the army shelled Hizballah relentlessly. Hiz- ballah then fired Katyusha rockets on the northern border town of Kiryat Shemona, and one killed a 14-year-old Russian immi- grant boy. The Israeli army, it seem- ed, was on the verge of roll- ing its tanks back into the heart of the country, when Hezballah called off its at- tacks, promising more, however, in the very near future. Meanwhile, another soldier was shot to death in Hebron, and the knife at- tacks and stonings of Jews in the territories continued. So much for "personal security," which Mr. Rabin had promised to give back to Israeli citizens, after years of periodic waves of terror under the Likud administra- tion. Moaffak Allaf, head of the Syrian delegation to the Washington peace talks, did not help matters when he justified the killings of the soldiers. "The only thing responsible for such in- cidents is the occupation itself. National resistance to occupation is justified . . .," he said. No one among the Arab negotiators would condemn what was going on, and some Some have predicted the return of Jewish vigilantes to counter Arab terror. joined Mr. Allaf in openly justifying the attacks. And so one question being asked in places like the Nes Ziona shopping mall was, What was the difference between the Arab peacemakers and the Arab rejectionists? Morty Mizrachi, a building contractor from neighboring Rishon Lezion, commented: "I have a lot of Arab workers, and we have great relations, but since the elec- tion we've been talking, and I tell you, the Arab mentali- ty —you give them a finger and they want your whole arm. You tell them there's the possibility that you'll return some of the ter- ritories, and they'll want Jaffa and Jerusalem too. Saying he'll give back land on the Golan —this was Rabin's terrible mistake."