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Universal Kosher Tours 119 N. Park Ave. Rockville Centre, NY 11570 (516) 766-5140 = - Toll Free-US & Canada (800) 221-2791 Every year, your heart pumps 2,625,000 pints of blood. Surely, you can spare a few. American Red Cross 118 A subscription to jii It, blood again. It will be felt lar a lifetime. ~ THE JEWISH NEWS 1-810-354-6620 Jerusalem (JTA) — One day af- ter a ministerial committee au- thorized continued, but slower, building in the communities sur- rounding Jerusalem, Jewish set- tlers took to the hills to stake their claim to lands they said were slated for development. Residents from Ma'aleh Amos, located in the Gush Etzion bloc of settlements south of Jerusalem, set up caravans on three hilltops in the area, saying they intended to build at the site. Bedouins from the nearby vil- lage of Kissan protested the move. The Civil Administration ordered the caravans to be taken down at two of the hilltops, say- ing they lay outside the settle- ment's development plans. But the Civil Administration was reviewing the third site, which was closest to the Bedouin village and about a mile from Ma'aleh Amos, but apparently within the settlement's develop- ment boundaries. Earlier, residents from Kochav Ya'acov, near the West Bank town of Ramallah, moved trac- tors to an undeveloped plot of land, where they planned to build a new neighborhood. Palestinians from the area threatened to demonstrate, and the Civil Administration ordered the work halted. Residents of the settlement, along with members of the Coun- cil of Jewish Communities in Judea, Samaria and Gaza, said the land is part of the set- tlement. Elhanan Rappoport, a resident of Kochav Ya'acov, told Israel Ra- dio why the community had de- cided to start work now. "We want to remove any doubts over ownership," he said. "Maybe the land is outside the current army fence" surrounding the settlement. "But this land belongs to the settlement," he said. "If [Palestinians] perceive our ac- tions as provocation, that is up to them. This is part of the settle- ment." The ministerial committee on building in the territories autho- rized the completion or construc- tion of some 4,000 privately financed apartments in Jerusalem's so-called satellite communities. This included retroactive approval of apart- ments that had already been sold. The committee approved the sale of 800 apartments in Ma'aleh Adumim, as well as the gradual building of 1,000 additional apartments over the course of the next two years. The ministers approved the completion of 1,000 apartments in Betar, as well as a plan to build 900 more. The committee also authorized the completion of 340 apartments in Givat Ze'ev, and the planning for 800 more units, all to be lo- cated on private lands within the settlement's existing boundaries. Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said that the government had also approved the completion of 7,000 apartments, which are in advanced stages of construc- tion. Settlement leaders at first crit- icized the ministerial committee's decision, saying it was mislead- ing the public by authorizing apartments which had already been approved. But leaders of the communi- ties surrounding Jerusalem lat- er met with Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and emerged say- ing they were satisfied. In the words of Ma'aleh Adu- mim Mayor Benny Kashriel, "We got what we wanted." The Palestinian Authority re- acted angrily to the ministers' de- cisions on construction. It warned that any continued building violates the Palestinian self-rule accord and could lead to further unrest and demonstra- tions. Palestinians protesting Israeli settlement activity launched demonstrations in several West Bank towns, including Hebron, Tulkarm and Nablus. IDF Officer To Be Disciplined Jerusalem (JTA) — An Israeli army officer will face discipline for sexually offensive statements he reportedly made during a lec- ture to Jerusalem high school stu- dents. Addressing students at the Re- havia High School, Col. Gershon Hacohen reportedly said that "men are meant to be warriors, just as women are meant to be prostitutes." Col. Hacohen was also quot- ed as having said that women sol- diers serving in clerical positions in the Israel Defense Force could easily be replaced by computers and telephone answering ma- chines. Col. Hacohen later apol- ogized for the remarks. In an interview on Army Radio, he did not deny having said "something to the effect" that prostitution is a female occupation just as fight- ing is a male one. "I made a mistake. It just slipped out. I wasn't thinking," he said.