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August 27, 1993 - Image 78

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-08-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

SINAI HOSPITAL

Sinai Hospital's Department of Psychiatry
is proud to host the symposium,

"Post-traumatic Stress and
Holocaust Survivors: 50 Years Later"

from 8:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Tuesday, September 28, 1993 at
Sinai's Zuckerman Auditorium
• • •

Keynote speaker Henry Krystal, M.D.,
an expert on post-traumatic stress disorder,
will provide an overview of the Holocaust
and its - psychological effects on survivors.

Additional speakers include:
Linda. Hotchkiss, M.D., Alfred Lessing, Ph.D.,
and Charles Silow, Ph.D.

• • •

General admission is $20; student admission (with I.D.) is $10.
For reservations or additional information, please call 493-6259.

e.ti n al

DONALD E. GALE, D.D.S. 353-2200

DENTURE
CENTER

HARVARD ROW MALL
21774 WEST 11 MILE RD.
SOUTHFIELD, MI 48076

FOR HEALTHY
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EXTRACTIONS
DENTURES & PARTIALS
RELINES & REPAIRS

QUALITY DENTURES AT AFFORDABLE PRICES
30 YEARS EXPERIENCE

THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER

Israel Warns Syria
To Curb Attacks

Jerusalem (JTA) — Israel
has put Syria on notice that
if it does not restrain the
Islamic fundamentalist
Hezbollah movement from
attacking Israeli troops in
southern Lebanon, Israel
will do so itself.
Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin told members of his
Cabinet during their weekly
meeting that he had con-
veyed this warning to
Damascus during a tele-
phone conversation over the
weekend with U.S. Secre-
tary of State Warren
Christopher.
Mr. Rabin said he had ask-
ed the United States to put
political pressure on Syria to
curb Hezbollah attacks
against Israel, which last
week claimed the lives of
nine soldiers in a single day.
Mr. Rabin, who also serves
as Israel's defense minister,
and senior officers of the
Israel Defense Force have
come under intense criticism
from right-wing opposition
parties for the relatively
large loss of Israeli lives in
the two Hezbollah attacks in
southern Lebanon last week.
But a preliminary army
investigation indicates that
the soldiers' deaths were the
result of the particular cir-
cumstances of the incidents
themselves rather than of
any failure to abide by army
regulations.
Seven IDF soldiers were
killed and two wounded on
the morning of Aug. 19
while on patrol in the
western sector of the border
security zone, when a bomb
planted in the road by the
pro- Iranian guerrillas was
detonated by remote control.
A second attack occurred
that evening, when two IDF
soldiers were killed and an-
other wounded as the result
of bomb blasts in the same
area as the first attack, near
the village of Shihin.
The Israeli air force
retaliated some hours after
the first attack with an air
raid on four Hezbollah
targets in eastern Lebanon's
Bekaa Valley. . According to
reports from Lebanon, two
guerrillas were killed in the
raid.
Cabinet ministers said
Israel would not be drawn
into a full-scale assault in
southern Lebanon, although
they did not rule out limited
strikes in the region.
"We have to continue to
hit the Hezbollah every

Binyamin Ben-Eliezer:
`Hit Hezbollah everywhere.'

place and everywhere," said
Housing Minister Binyamin
Ben-Eliezer, a former IDF
general.
According to reports from
the region, Israel began
moving reinforcements and
large artillery into southern
Lebanon.
In Lebanon, Sheik
Mohammed Fadlallah, spiri-
tual leader of Hezbollah,
warned over the weekend
that if Israel hit civilian
targets in Lebanon, Hez-
bollah would respond with
firing Katyusha rockets at
northern Israel.
This was echoed by the Pa-
lestinian Islamic Jihad
organization, operating in
Lebanon side by side with
Hezbollah.
Despite last week's
violence and the dire warn-
ings by both sides, the
understanding that ended
Israel's five-day intensive
shelling of targets in
southern Lebanon in late
July appeared to be holding.
Under that tacit agree-
ment, Hezbollah said it
would cease firing rockets at
settlements in northern
Israel but reserved the right
to continue attacking Israeli
and allied positions in Leb-
anon.
That understanding has
come under fire from, among
others, Knesset member
Ariel Sharon of the opposi-
tion Likud bloc, who as
defense minister spearhead-
ed Israel's 1982 invasion of
Lebanon.
Mr. Sharon charged that
the U.S.-brokered deal gives
legitimacy to guerrilla at-
tacks on IDF soldiers.
Other opposition leaders,
including former Prime Min-
ister Yitzhak Shamir of

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