Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, September 30, 1982, Page 12, Image 12

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Craft Center
Offers open studio space, tools, and craft supplies
for sale downstairs in the EPB Memorial Union.
CRAFT CENTER WORKSHOPS
OFFERED IN:
Ceramics, B & W and Color
Photography, Stained Glass,
Metalsmithing, Weaving, Basketry,
Silk screen, Woodworking, Bike
Maintenance, Quilting, Drawing,
Calligraphy, Paper making, Book
Binding, and four Children s
Workshops
REGISTER NOW
Membership is $6 per term. Lockers available
CRAFT CENTER FALL HOURS:
Monday - Thursday 10:30 a.m. -10 p.m.
Friday 10:30 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Saturday 10:30 a.m. - 8 p.m.
Sunday 12:30 p.m. - 6 p.m.
For more information, call the Craft Center 686-4361 or
stop in and see us
Room 69 of the EMU.
V
Israelis’ caught in moral crisis
over refugee killings in Beirut
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - The
slaughter of Palestinian
refugees in Beirut is scarring
the Israelis' soul with guilt.
“The day after the pogrom in
the refugee camps in Beirut, I
stood before the mirror for my
morning shave, and I spat in my
face," wrote Shalom Rosenfeld,
a former editor-in-chief of
Israel's prestigious daily
newspaper Maariv.
A crisis of moral values is
wracking the Jewish state and
threatening the stability of
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin s government
“Something has broken,”
says his predecessor, Yitzhak
Rabin. But the critics are not
just Begin s political foes, like
Rabin They also include people
like Rosenfeld, Israelis from the
prime minister's own id
eological camp
The breakdown is somewhere
in the psychological machinery
that drives Israelis to try to live
up to the image created by the
founding fathers of Israel — a
striving to be a new breed,
different from their ghetto
forefathers, removed from the
Old World of hatred, wars and
Holocaust
Just as today s Israeli is proud
to believe he would never go like
a lamb to the slaughter, so he is
proud to think that he would
never treat people the way Jews
have been treated
What has horrified Israelis is
not only that Christian
Phalangists entered the refugee
camps with Israel's approval,
but the suspicion that the army
or government let the massacre
continue without intervening
immediately.
What may ultimately help
purge the guilt is that the Israeli
government, under public
pressure, is facing up finally to
the questions raised by the
Beirut bloodbath.
Defense Minister Ariel Sharon
said that when Israel took con
trol of west Beirut two weeks
ago, the Israeli forces helped
plan and provided support for
the Christian Phalangists' move
into the camps, an operation
aimed at Palestinian guerillas
believed holed up there
Sharon said the Israeli army
acted to stop the massacre as
soon as it became clear that
innocent men, women and
children were being killed
But there have been conflict
ing accounts of when the Israe
lis learned of the killings were
going on, and questions about
why the Phalangists were still in
the camps a day after Israeli
officials knew about the
slaughter.
Few here can escape an
analogy — however simplistic —
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iu uidiyea frequently maae Dy
Israelis that the Western world
stood aside while the Nazis
massacred Jews before and
during World War II.
Haig pondered
resigning post
‘fairly early on’
NEW YORK (AP) - Alexander
Haig decided "fairly early on"
that he had erred in signing on
as Secretary of State and
thought of resigning "for
months" after deciding his
views sometimes were opposed
"merely for the sake of oppos
ing those views "
Haig made his comments
during his first interview since
resigning June 25 At that time
he would not elaborate on his
reasons for stepping down
beyond quoting a letter he wrote
Pres. Ronald Reagan saying
that American foreign policy
"was shifting from that careful
course which we laid out."
In the interview, made Sept
16 and scheduled to air
Thursday on ABC's "20-20"
news magazine and "Nightline"
shows, Haig talked about
several of his foreign policy
differences with the Reagan
administration but did not say
which, if any, caused him to
resign
He spelled out his opposition
to Reagan's sanctions against
the Soviet natural gas pipeline
Haig said that to impose
retroactive sanctions on a pipe
line conceived In the mid-1970s
for which contracts were signed
and jobs and projects were
assigned "was going to result in
a number of international
hiccups, doubts, concerns and
tensions without allies."
according to a partial transcript
released Wednesday by ABC
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