CENTRAL HIGH CLASS
of 1938! Country Club. For reservations,
Warsaw Aide Accuses Is rael of Hurting Jarring Mission, Defends Arabs I w ill hold a buffet dinner-dance call Mildred (Lubetsky) Pershin
UNITED NATIONS (JTA)—De- I
puty Foreign Minister Jozef Winie-
wicz of Poland charged Israel with
hampering the peace-seeking mis-
sion of the United Nations envoy,
Dr. Gunnar V. Jarring, and ex-
pressed support for the "Pales-
tinian underground fighters."
Speaking in the General Assem-
bly. Winiewicz claimed that Is-
rael's foreign minister, Abba Eban.
had issued an "ultimatum" in his
speech before the assembly Oct. 8.
which does not "facilitate the mis-
sion carried out laboriously and
with praiseworthy restraint by
Ambassador Jarring."
He said the UN should not "tol-
erate a persistent and cruel perse-
cution of the Palestinian under-
ground fighters, entitled to con-
tinue the struggle for the cause
of their motherland as long as a
state of war exists."
Spain's foreign minister, Ferna-
do Maria Castiella, said the Middle
6 Arab Saboteurs Killed,
Israeli Injured in Claih
TEL AVIV (JTA) — Six Arab
saboteurs were killed and one Is-
raeli soldier was wounded slightly
in a clash in the Jordan Valley
Oct. 17. Six saboteurs were cap-
tured by the Israeli forces, includ-
ing a wounded man.
(Reports from Amman said that
two Jordanians were killed and six
others, including a woman, were
wounded in two artillery duels be-
tween Jordanian and Israeli forces
Oct. 16. According to a Jordanian
military spokesman, the Israelis
opened fire with heavy artillery
near the Damiyah Bridge.)
Six Israeli settlements from the
Golan Heights to the northern
Jordan Valley were subjected to
heavy shelling by Jordanian ar-
tillery Oct. 16 forcing hundreds
of civilians to take refuge for
hours in bomb shelters. At one
point the Jordanians used their
"Long Tom" long-range artillery
to shell Kibutz Masada, Shaar
Hagolan, Ashdod Yaacov, Mevo
Ham at, Gesher and Menahamiya,
but no casulaties were suffered
at any of the settlements. A mili-
tary spokesman said the damage
was mainly to electric and tele-
phone wires, which were soon
repaired, but some buildings in
the settlements were damaged.
Israeli artillery returned the fire
and scored hits on Shuneh, a
Jordanian village that was aban-
doned by its inhabitants and
taken over by terrorist bands.
The Oct. 16 shelling, the first in
many weeks on so large a scale
and so wide a front, seemed to
belie mounting rumors of some
sort of accord between Israel and
Jordan. A military spokesman said
that the shelling escalated from
small arms fire which came from
the east hank of the Jordan. Tar-
gets were Israeli units on the west
bank. Soon automatic weapons and
bazookas were replaced by mor-
tars and finally by cannon. Israeli
forces returned the fire, bringing
up artillery only in response to
Jordanian artillery, the spokesman
said.
358-5518, or Mort Lesser, 8 68-9659,
East crisis demonstrated the im- certain cases, Israeli armed forces re union 8 p.m. Nov. 30 at Hillcrest
penetrated deep into Jordanian ter-
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
16—Friday,
October
25,
1968
ritory south of the Dead Sea in
portance of the UN in resolving a
dispute. "One member of the UN
last year committed aggression
against several other members and
continues to occupy their territor-
ies," he said, adding that his gov-
ernment supports the Arab states.
The Jordanian representative
to the United Nations submitted
a list to Secretary-General U
Thant containing 51 instances of
alleged Israeli violations of the
cease-fire agreement said to have
taken place between Aug. 5 and
Sept. 29, 1968.
In a letter accompanying the list,
the Jordanian ambassador, Mu-
hammad H. el-Farra, said "Most
of the 51 Israeli attacks cited .. .
were directed against Jordanian
villages and farms." He said "In
utter disregard of the armistice
agreement."
El-Farra said Jordan held the
Israeli authorities fully responsible •
for the alleged attacks and asked I I
that his letter and accompanying
list be circulated as an official I
document of the General Assembly I
and the Security Council.
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FOR
BETH YEHUDAH SCHOOLS
54th ANNIVERSARY
COBO HALL SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1968
I. Wm. Sherr
Ruben Grevnin
Reubin Dubrinsky
General Chairman
Co-Chairman
Co-Chairman
Beth Yehudah
serving 700 boys and girls in two divisions; Yeshivath Beth Yehudah, and Beth Jacob
School; and offering a maximum Hebrew education combined with an outstanding
secular education from nursery and kindergarten through the 12th grades. Also ad-
vanced classes in post-graduate Hebrew education in the Beth Homedrash and
Seminary.
Slayer of Guard
at Shaarey Zedek
Gets 40 Years
The slayer of Shaarey Zedek
night guard Aice Green was sen-
tenced Tuesday to a maximum of
40 years in prison.
Edward Trudeau, 34, of Wyan-
dotte, was convicted Oct. 15 of
breaking into the synagogue and
bludgeon-beating Mr. Green, 62,
before taking $150 from an office
safe last November. The victim
died a day after the beating.
For breaking into the synagogue,
Trudeau was sentenced to an addi-
tional 5-10 years, to be served con-
currently. He also had been sen-
tenced to 71/2-10 years for an ear-
lier post office burglary.
Trudeau was convicted of second-
degree murder by a jury of 11
women and one man in the Oak-
land County Circuit Court of Judge
Frederick C. Ziem.
Jack Carmen
Kenneth Fischer
Honorary Chairman
Beth Yehudah
Honorary Chairman
OUR CONTRIBUTION TO JEWRY'S SURVIVAL
OUR PROMISE FOR A FLOURISHING JEWISH FUTURE
For Reservations Call 353-6750
Daniel A. Leven
Honorary Chairman