THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine EBAN BLASTS SYRIA .srael demands POWs Mideast Big Four' discuss oil embargo JERUSALEM (Renter) - Israel will seek the release of its soldiers held prisoner in Syria as the first item in any negotations with Damascus on a separation of forces, Foreign Minister Abba Eban said here yesterday. But Eban also reassured the Knesset (Parlia- ment) that Israel will not negotiate with the Syrians until they first hand over a list of names of the prisoners - which Israel believes number about 100 and allow the Red Cross to visit them. HE SAID THERE were grounds to believe that Egypt was helping in efforts to get Syrian agree- ment on this point. As Eban spoke, the agreement reached last month on separating Egyptian and Israeli forces was mov- ing, apparently smoothly, into its fourth stage. This:involves a final withdrawal of Israeli forces from the West Bank of the Suez Canal and a con- tinuing thinning-out of Egyptian forces on the East Bank. MAIN ISRAELI ATTENTION, however, re- mained focused ,on the Golan ,Heights front with Syri-, the scene of fierce artillery exchanges ear- lier in the week but quiet since Tuesday when four Sv~'a shells fell in the area. Two cixilians have been killed and at least six soldiers' wounded on the Israeli side in this week's shelling, and there have been shooting incidents on 12 of the last 17 days. The contrast is sharp with the Suez front, where the third stage of Israeli evacuation of the west bank was completed Tuesday, leaving Israel holding only slightly more than one-third of the 640 square miles of territory it captured on the waterway's West Bank in the war last October. EBAN SAID ISRAEL was carrying on a "night and day" struggle on the issue of getting a list of prisoners from Syria. He was speaking in a debate called for by the center-right Likud Party. Its leader, Menachem Begin, said the government should insist on the re- lease of the prisoners as a prior condition to ne- gotiations. r ALGIERS (Reuter) - Leaders of the Arab "Big Four" assembl- ed here yesterday to discuss progress towards a Middle East peace settlement and the use of the oil weapon since the Israeli- Egyptian disengagement agree- ment. The oil question was expected to dominate the two-day Arab summit meeting being held at the white-domed people's palace here. THE HURRIEDLY convened summit coincided with an an- nouncement by United Nations Secretary General Kurt Wald- heim that contacts were being made with the Syrian government for a disengagement on the Sy- rian front. Disengagement of forces on the Syrian front and the ques- tion of Palestinian representation at the next phase of the Geneva peace negotiations are expected to be the main items discussed. Algeria made clear today that the Arab oil embargo against the United States would also be one of the dominant issues at the restricted summit conference. ACCORDING TO well-informed sources here, the Algerian gov- ernment is resisting the idea of easing the oil embargo at this stage. Following the Israeli-Egyptian military disengagement, which has been progressing without a hitch, Sadat is reported to have called on Arab oil-producing coun- tries to lessen the embargo against the United States. People! Music! Food! BACH CLUB is BACK! (disregard posters to the contrary) and is featuring Bill GOODWIN, piano Celia WEISS, violin John DUNHAM, cello PERFORMING MOZART: Trio in B flat Major BEETHOVEN: Presto from Trio in G Maj. opus 1 & 2 EVERYONE INVITED! No musical knowledge needed ADMISSION 50c THURS., FEB. 14, 8 P.M. E. QUAD, Greene Lounge palate pleasing CHEESECAKE with cherry, strawberry, & blueberry toppings Further Info 761-9578 GIVE THE GIFT OF LIFE AT THE U-M STUDENT BLOOD BANK MON., Feb. 11 ... 11 a.m.-5 p.m: TUES., Feb4.12....] a.m.-5p.m. WED., Feb. 13... 11 a.m.-5 p.m. THUR., Feb. 14.. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 2nd Floor-Michigan Union INFO. CALL 761-6075