Eban Asks Only a Week to Provide
Settlement of Territorial Problems

(Continued from Page 13)

encouraging Jordan to bring its
complaint against Israel's Inde-
pendence Day parade in Jerusalem
before the Security Council. Eshkol
said the secretary-general should
not be surprised to learn that his
image in Israel is now "a little
tarnished."
Israel assured Romanian Fo-
reign Minister Corneliu Manescu. ,
president of the General Assem-
bly, that it would not initiate
any debate in the assembly, be-
cause it believed in the need
for all parties to cooperate with
Ambassador Jarring, • Ambassa-
dor Yosef Tekoah told Manesca
that Israel felt public debate on
the Middle East would be harm-
ful to the Jarring mission. The
Middle East is on the agenda of
the assembly.
However, Tekoah added, if a de-
bate was started, Israel would
place responsibility for the present
situation on the Arab states and
would spell out in detail the dese-
crations perpetrated by the Arab
regimes in the territories they
grabbed in 1948 which Israel occu-
pied last June.
In the United Nations, a docu-
ment containing photographs pur-
porting to show evidence of Israeli
desecration of Moslem shrines and
Christian churches in the Israel
sector of Jerusalem since 1948 was
made public last week. The docu-
ment, submitted by Jordan to the
secretary-general on April 19, was
prepared by "The Institute for
Palestine Studies." The Institute
describes itself as "an independ-
ent non-profit Arab research orga-
nization not affiliated to any gov-
ernment, political party or group,
devoted to a better understanding
of the Palestine problem."
Foreign Minister Abba Eban
said in Jerusalem that Israel would
require no more than one week to
come up with a solid position on
occupied Arab territories should
an Arab state, tomorrow, announce
its readiness to negotiate. Eban
made the statement at a press
conference when asked about the
conflicting views within the gov-
ernment on the future status of the
occupied territories. "For the pres-
ent there is no need to be unani-
mous as the contingency of a
peace offer has not arisen," he
added.
The foreign minister said that
all major questions are negotia-
ble and, in reply to a question,
said that this included certain
- matters concerning Jerusalem.
In the latter category he men-
tioned negotiations with Israel's
Arab neighbors and other parties
on the status of Moslem and
Christian holy places in the city.
Earlier in the day, Ambassador
Jarring conferred for 90 minutes
with Eban and his aides.
Eban opened his press confer-
ence with a review of the past
year's events and Israel's situa-
'ion on the eve of the 20th anni-
versary of its independence. "The
-past year began in agony and
• eril and ended with the recogni-
tion by most of the world's free
rxmntries that something new must
be constructed in the Middle
East," he said. "No longer is their
talk of armistice demarcation lines
but of secure and agreed bounda-
ries."
However, Eban said, the recon-
struction of the Middle East in-
volves juridicial, political, emo-
tional and territorial problems. He
said that Israel's attitude remains
firm — that the cease-fire lines
must be maintained until a nego-
tiated agreement is achieved.
Earlier, Eban, in a speech Mon-
day night, charged that the atti-
tude of the Arab.countries, inspired
by Egyptian hostility and oPposi;
tion to any talks, blocked the way

Secretary General U Thant and
G e n e r al Assembly President
Corneliu Manescu, the Roman-
ian foreign minister, who was
assured that Israel will not be
the one to raise the Middle East
question at the UN's current ses-
sion.

to establishing peace with Israel.
He stressed Israel's firm decision
that there could be no settlement
unless permanent peace was first
secured. He asserted there will
never again be a divided Jerusa-
lem. Nevertheless, he said, Israel
was not slackening in its continued
efforts to find a solution leading
to peace.
(Egypt's President Nasser, in
what was described as his most
belligerent speech since last
May, declared Monday that
United Nations peace efforts
have come to nothing and that
"the sequence of events indi-
cates the batttle is inevitable."
Nasser, addressing army, navy
and air officers at a military
base somewhere in Egypt, said
that Ambassador Jarring has
achieved nothing and has utterly
failed. In his speech which was
broadcast by Cairo radio, Nasser
said renewed warfare against
Israel was inevitable "because
the Israelis speak peace but are
deceiving the world."
(He cited the Independence Day
parade in Jerusalem on May 2 as
an example of "Israeli defiance of
the United Nations." He disclosed
that he had spoken to El Fatah
irregulars who fought against the
Israelis on March 21. "They told
me there is nothing supernatural
about the enemy. The enemy is not
unbeatable," Nasser said.)
(President Houari Boumedienne

of Algeria, in a message to King
Hussein of Jordan, called again for
a renewal of war against Israel
and urged "encouragement of
Palestinian resistance," according
to Paris reports from Algiers. Re-
ferring to the peace efforts of the
United Nations, he rejceted "the
diplomatic or intermediate solu-
tions" in the Middle East.)
Israeli army planning for the
current year is based on the as-
sumption that the army will re-
main on present cease-fire lines
which will require an increased
use of troops, Brig. Ezer Weiz-
mann, chief of army headquarters
branch, reported. He said that
American Skyhawk fighter-bomb-
ers and Bell-250 helicopters would
be used in expansion of the Air
Force but he stressed that the
army will always be ready to ab-
sorb the French-made Mirage-V
supersonic jet planes if and when
France ends its embargo on their
shipment to Israel.
Military sources her said that
Russian technicians, advisers and
instructors are functioning in all of
Egypt's armed forces. They indi-
cated that Soviet penetration and
presence was never stronger in
Egypt than it is now.

Brandeis Bible Exhibit Valued at $5 Million

WALTHAM, Mass. — One of the
most comprehensive and important
Bible exhibitions ever organized in
the United States will be displayed
at Brandeis University's Rapaporte
Treasure Hall Sunday through June
10.
The exhibition, which will have
an insured value of more than
$5,000,000, will display the evolu-
tion of art and scholarship in the
Medieval and Renaissance Bible.
Entitled "In Remembrance of
Creation," the exhibition, which
was conceived and organized by

Brandeis, will include such items
as the complete first issue of the
Gutenberg Bible, a Bible once
owned by the family of Massachu-
setts Colonial Gov. John Winthrop
and the oldest known account of
The Deluge.

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No Place for Anti-Semites
in Church, Says Prelate

NEW YORK (JTA)—Archbishop
Terence J. Cooke of New York said
here Tuesday that "we Roman
Catholics are more than ever con-
vinced that anti-Semitism should
never find a basis in the Catholic
religion and must never find a
place in any Catholic's life."
The archbishop spoke at a lunch-
eon tendered him by the American
Jewish Committee. It was his first
appearance at a public event ar-
ranged in his honor by a Jewish
group since his investiture.
Archbishop Cooke noted that "the
pursuit of justice in civil rights
and the resolution of our serious
urban problems" are areas in which
the cooperation of Jews and Ro-
man Catholics "can bear rich
fruit." He paid tribute to the Amer-
ican Jewish Committee as an or-
ganization that "has always given
distinguished service to the cause
of all brotherhood and has worked
earnestly' to promote the Welfare
of all God's children on earth."

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

14—Friday, May 3, 1968

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