THE WOMEN OF
JEWISH NATIONAL FUND
1BNISH
1141101W
WM)
invite you to attend their
(KEREN KAYEMETH
LEISRAEL) INC.
63rd
ANNUAL DONOR EVENT
Please support the Women of JNF in their campaign to
establish Home Sites near Beer Sheva
Join us at 12:00 Noon
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1992
CONGREGATION SHAAREY ZEDEK
27375 Bell Road, Southfield
Enjoy a Musical Program of Operatic Arias,
Yiddish and Russian Folksongs
Featuring
IRINA LEKHTMAN
Mezzo soprano newly arrived from Moldavia.
Has performed throughout Russia, Bulgaria,
Italy, France and Romania.
For reservations call:
JEWISH NATIONAL FUND
557-6644
ZINA ASTRAKHAN
Pianist and graduate of the
Leningrad Conservatory.
Reservations must be received
by November 19
Luncheon tickets will
be at the door
Bess (Mrs. Jacob) Axelrod, Program Chairman
Shirley (Mrs. Jules) Kraft, President
Bea (Mrs. Julius) Feigelman, Vice President-Fund Raising
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Iran, Syria Fuel New
Palestinian Attacks
DOUGLAS DAVIS ORE G CORRESPONDEN
S
erious questions about
Syrian and Palestinian
intentions toward
Israel and the peace
process have been raised by
the recent bloodshed that
left a total of six Israeli
soldiers dead in two separate
incidents.
The most serious of the two
occurred in the badlands of
South Lebanon, where a
bomb, planted by the ex-
tremist Hezbollah move-
ment, detonated under an
Israeli Army convoy patroll-
ing the security zone, leav-
ing five dead and five
wounded. A sixth Israeli
soldier was slain by Pales-
tinian gunmen in the West
Bank town of Hebron.
The killings came just five
days after Israeli Chief of
Staff Ehud Barak warned
that Syria was permitting a
fresh infusion of arms to
reach the Islamic fundamen-
talist fighters from their
Iranian allies, who are
implacably opposed to the
peace process.
Addressing the Knesset
(parliamentary) Foreign Af-
fairs and Defense Com-
mittee last week, Mr. Barak
said Syria had turned a
blind eye to the delivery of
war materiel to Hezbollah,
which operates against
Israeli targets from South
Lebanon.
The weapons are intended
to allow Hezbollah to
escalate its attacks against
Israel and must pass
through Syria, therefore re-
ceiving at least a wink from
the Damascus regime.
Senior officials in
Jerusalem, who were near-
euphoric in their assessment
of prospects for an Israeli-
Syrian accord just weeks
ago, were plunged into
despair at the latest twist
and privately expressed
disillusionment with their
Syrian neighbor.
Mr. Barak said also that
the recent upsurge in
violence in the territories
reflected a determination by
certain Palestinian elements
to torpedo the peace process.
Some attacks were intended
to inflame antagonisms bet-
ween Jews and Palestinians,
he said, while others were a
manifestation of intra-
Palestinian rivalries.
Just days before the two
deadly attacks last weekend,
two Israeli soldiers were in-
jured when Palestinian
gunmen sprayed their car
with gunfire. On Sunday,
Brigadier-General Moshe
Ya'alon, the Israeli Army
commander in Hebron, said
he believed the same men
were responsible for the
weekend killing of the
soldier at the Tomb of the
Patriarchs, the burial place
of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob.
A total of 122 Israelis have
been killed by Palestinians
since the start of the intifada
in December 1987.
The weekend death toll not.
only unleashed a predictable
Israeli military reprisal
against Hezbollah bases
Israeli
demonstrators
opposed to
territorial
compromise
trapped Prime
Minister Rabin in a
Jerusalem hotel.
near the Syrian border in
the eastern Lebanese Bekaa
Valley, but also prompted an
eruption of fury among
Israelis opposed to ter-
ritorial compromise.
Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin, whose office
has been besieged by pro-
testing Israelis for weeks,
was trapped in Jerusalem's
King David Hotel on Sunday
by angry demonstrators
after hosting a lunch for
visiting Portuguese Prime
Minister Anibal Cavaco
Silva.
He was finally extricated
and whisked away, but not
before police reinforcements
were brought in to hold back
hundreds of angry, chanting
demonstrators. Roads
leading to the hotel were
blocked with army jeeps and
barricades.
The number and intensity ,=
of the demonstrators took
security forces by surprise.
"We were expecting perhaps
15 or 20; we got 600," said
Jerusalem Police Chief
Chaim Albaldek.
"We have never seen such