J EWISH NEWS In a meeting with members of the American delegation to Mr. Rabin's funeral, Mr. Peres declared unequivocally that "the elections will be held in November '96." The pundits say that he wants to use the coming year not just to move as far as possible in the peace process, but to build his own image and record as prime minister. But a year is a long time, and rather than take a chance with the unknown, his colleagues may prevail upon Mr. Peres to go to the polls while identification with Mr. Rabin (and generalized anger toward the political right) can still be exploited. If that argu- ment fails, he might move quickly toward elections for his own sake. There are younger and arguably more nationally popular aspirants to the prime ministership in his party — In- terior Minister Ehud Barak and Histadrut Secretary Chaim Ramon. • If the new government lasts for a year, Mr. Peres must decide whether to ensure its stability by expanding its electoral base by co-opting one or more of the ultra- Orthodox parties now in opposition. The Shas Party has already declared that it will not join the new government unless at least one other party does so. The Torah Judaism Party has let it be known that its "price" for backing (though not necessarily join- ing) a Peres-led government is the replacement of Reli- gious Affairs Minister Shimon Sheetrit and Education Minister Amnon Rubinstein (to which Meretz, the key coalition partner, will certainly vigorously object). • Changes in the roster of ministers (though not nec- essarily these two) are expected anyway. One of Mr. Peres' critical decisions will be what to do with the defense port- folio (which was held by Mr. Rabin). Should he keep it for the sake of exercising direct control over the redeploy- ment, or give it to another minister? Another concern is how to relate to Labor's two "princes" (and his own po- tential rivals): Mr. Barak and Mr. Ramon. One scenario offered by political analyst Hanan Crys- tal sees the new prime minister embracing the "princes," awarding them key ministries, thus winning their loyal- ty while boosting his own chances of winning next year. If Mr. Peres keeps the defense portfolio, he may offer the Foreign Miniptry to Mr. Ramon. An even more in- triguing suggestibn is to offer it to ex-Likud leader and ex-Foreign Minister David Levy. If Mr. Peres yields the defense ministry, the obvious candidate to inherit it is Mr. Barak, a former IDF Chief of Staff. Unknown today is whether Mr. Barak and Mr. Ramon, who would have backed Mr. Rabin for another term, will display the same deference to Mr. Peres. Experience dic- tates that a struggle for succession close to election time, especially if perceived as political bloodletting, will be damaging to Labor. But if, as the spring primary rolls around, it appears that Mr. Peres is flagging, these serious, experienced can- didates from Israel's younger generation, both eager and able to joust with the Likud's 47-year-old Mr. Netanyahu, may be the formula that Labor requires. El Profile Of An Assassin amat Gan —Yigal Amir was one of some 20,000 students at Bar-Ilan University, a religious Zionist institution in this city just outside of Tel Aviv. The students, fac- ulty and administration are on the de- fensive these days, insisting that Mr. 1:411 Amir was a lone aberration who acted in total opposition to Bar-Ilan's teachings of tolerance and democracy. They are right — Mr. Amir was an aberra- tion at Bar-Ilan. But he wasn't the only one. Mr. Amir knew another student at Bar-Ilan, named LARRY DERFNER ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT Avishai Raviv, on campus and from right-wing demon- strations. Mr. Raviv, of Kiryat Arba, is in hiding now, and is probably the police's and Shin Bet's most wanted man. Patriarchs, to the Golan Heights. He asked me to come, He is the head of Eyal, a tiny but violent Kach-like or- but I wouldn't." After the assassination, the student said he went into ganization that claimed Mr. Amir as a member. Recently, about a half-dozen of them appeared on Is- the computer files and checked Mr. Amir's grades. "He rael Television wearing masks and vowing to murder was doing very poorly in his law classes — his marks were both Palestinians and "Jews who are not Jews." It is not in the 60s. But he was brilliant in computers and math — his scores were near 100." He added that Amir "always known if Mr. Amir was one of the masked men. Besides Mr. Raviv, "there is a tiny, unofficial Kach dressed sloppily. It looked like he never washed his clothes chapter on campus" of probably fewer than 10 people, or combed his hair." Mr. Amir also studied at Bar-Ilan's kollel, or adult yeshi- said university spokesman David Weinberg. All on-cam- pus political activity at Bar-Ilan is banned, but there have va. "He studied in my own class," said institute Rabbi been many small demonstrations on the bridge just off Moshe Raziel. "He was talented. He was a little, quiet campus. "Amir was one of the organizers of these demon- student who spent most of his time in the library." Rab- strations. They would go on the bridge and yell, 'Rabin is bi Raziel said Mr. Amir did not discuss politics — an off- a traitor," said a Bar-Ilan student who was in a comput- limits subject in institute classes. In their private views, however, a few of the institute's students supported the er-science course with Mr. Amir. But Mr. Amir wasn't one of the more outspoken right- Labor Party and even the left-wing, staunchly secular wing activists on campus. "If I had to name the 10 most Meretz, Rabbi Raziel noted. At a campus assembly the day after the assassination, extreme right-wing activists from Bar-Ilan, I wouldn't many hundreds of students and faculty turned out to con- have named Yigal Amir," Mr. Weinberg added. Mr. Amir hung around with a group of two or three demn the murder and to disassociate it from Bar-Ilan. like-minded colleagues, said the computer-science stu- "Our hands did not carry out this deed," read one sign. University Rector Professor Moshe Kaveh noted that dent. "He used to organize these Shabbat activities — vis- its to the Hebron settlements, to the Cave of the Bar-Ilan awarded Mr. Rabin an honorary doctorate two Bar-Ilan University tries to distance itself, but Mr. Amir was not alone there. L: "The minute a Jew gives his people and land over to the enemy, one must kill him ... The goal was to shock 1 R16 public opinion, that they should stop being indifferent to(Rabin's) neglect of tens of thousands of people." —Mr Rabins assassin, Yigal Amir-, on why he killed the prime minister