Capital for Israel Holds 'Inaugural'

At the Capital for Israel 1969 inaugural dinner held in the
Casino Room of the Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel last weekend are (from
left) Lou Levitan, director of Israel Bonds;.: Leon H. Keyserling,
president of the Conference on Economic Progress, guest speaker;
Rabbi Leon Fram of Temple Israel, the toastmaster; and Rabbi Moses
Lehrman of Bnai Moshe.

Unprecedented Special Session
of UN Aviation Body Takes Up
Airplane Attack—by Israel Only

By MICHAEL SOLOMON

(Direct JTA Teletype Wire
to The Jewish News)

MONTREAL — Fourteen Arab
and African countries blasted Is-
rael Tuesday for atacking Beirut
Airport last Dec. 28 at the special
session of the International Civil
Aviation Organization (ICAO), but
failed to agree on a Lebanese de-
mand that the Israelis be penalized
by the association for the reprisal
raid.
Walter Binagi of Argentina,
president of the 27-nation council
of the United Nations aviation
agency, called a recess until Thurs-
day morning and said he honed
the issue could be resolved then.
Lebanese delegate Dr. Assad Ko-
taite won general suport for his
country's complaint that Israel
violated in' 'rnational agreements
by the attack that destroyed 13
commercial airlines at the inter-
national air-ort, including several
foreign jet liners. But the council.
governing body of the 116-country
organization. with headquarters in
Montreal, tried to stay clear of rul-
ing on what many delegates said

Jarrinr Continues
Mission on Quiet

(Direct JTA Teletype Wire
to The Jewish News)

WASHINGTON — Ambassador

Gunnar V. Jarring, United Na-
tions special envoy to the Middle
East, has been utilizing the tern-
porary resumption of his regular
post as Swedish ambassador to
Moscow as a cover for continuing
his Middle East peace-seeking
mission without attracting atten-
tion, Washington Post correspond-
ent Robert H. Estabrook reported
from the UN Wednesday.
Estabrook reported that, accord-
ing to reliable sources, Dr. Jarring
met secretly with Israel's foreign
minister Abba Eban in Switzer-
land earlier this month. The Soviet
peace proposals for the Middle
East, contained in Moscow's Dec.
30 note to the United States and
other Western powers, were pre-
sumably discussed with Eban at
the meeting, Estabrook said.
He said that Dr. Jarring was

was a political issue beyond ICAO
jurisdiction as a technical agency.
The United Nations Security

Council already has condemned
Israel for the raid.

At Monday's ICAO session, Israel
missed by two votes having in-
cluded on the agenda an Arab
hijacking of an El Al jet last
summer and a ground attack by
Arab terrorists on an El Al jet in
Athens on Dec. 26.
Twelve countries, including the
United States and Britain, voted
to include the Israeli motion on
the Agenda but fell short of the
needed majority of 14 vote".
Lebanon has demarded that
ICAO invoke the strongest po"sible
sanctions against Israel, which,
Dr. Kotaite explained later, in-
cluded- banishing Israel from the
agency which acts as the supreme
arbiter in international air dis-

said.

One of the major modern con-
tributions t6 astronomical photo-
graphy, Dinsmore Alter's "Lunar
Atlas," is now available from Do-
ver Publications in its first re-
printing as a paperback. This im-
portant work, originally issued by
North American Aviation in a lim-
ited edition of 500 copies, contains
219 of the finest telescopic photos
of the moon ever printed—overall
shots, detailed views, dramatic
close-ups. So sharp and clear are
these pictures that the book re-
ceived the American Institute of
Aeronautics and Astronautics G.
Edward Pendray prize for "the
outstanding contribution to astro-
nautical literature during the year
1964."
The photographs, taken by the
Mt. Wilson, Lick, Palomar, Yerkes,
and McDonald observatories, as
well as French and Russian ones,
are grouped into five sections. 21
plates show overall views of the
moon, following it through cres-
cent, full, and waning phases; 2
plates—mounted on a grid for ,
identification of lunar features-1
depict the waxing and waning of
the half moon; 9 plates divide the
lunar surface into twelve over-
lapping sections; 106 plates concen-
trate on the most interesting lunar
features; 9 plates—including two
views of the lunar farside as photo-
graphed by Russia's Lunik III—
have historical significance as
well. The majority of these plates
are printed one to a large-sized
(101/2x12?=1) page.

The detail of these really strik-
ing photos is remarkable. Tiny
craters around the rim of Coperni-
cus, the black northern spot with-
in the crater Atlas, the "ghosts"
of old formations on the floor of
Mare Nubium — all are clearly
shown.
The Dover edition of the "Lunar
Atlas" contains a new preface by
Dr. Harold C. Urey.
Amateur photographers whose
apetites were whet by the "Lunar
Atlas" will also want to read Do-
ver's greatly revised and enlarged
edition of "Skyshooting — Photo-
graphy for Amateur Astronomers"
by R. Newton Mayall and Margar-
et W. Mayan (paperback, $2.50).
Writing in language that is neither
too technical nor too simple, Mr.
and Mrs. Mayall show how ama-
teur skyshooters, equipped with
ordinary cameras and easily-built

mounting equipment, can photo-
graph aurorae, meteors, stars,
comets, and clusters and nebulae;
the sun, the moon, and planets.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, January 24, 1969-7

Vernco

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Nation: A group of men who
speak one language and read the
same newspapers.
—Friedrich Nietzsche.

putes.
According to informed sources,

negotiations were to take place
Wednesday out of the council, and
it was hoped that they would lead
to a general condemnation of ter-
roristic acts wherever they occur.
In his presentation Monday Dr.
Shabtai Rosenne, are representing
Israel, argued that the ICAO should
concern itself with questions in all
countries and not turn those ques-
tions into a political debate here.
The safety of all civil airlines is
in danger, and definite measures
to stop terrorist attacks should be
taken at once, he said.
The ICAO special session was
unprecedented, observers her e
said.
The session was held under tight
security precautions sparked by an
anonymous telephone call that a
bomb was hidden in . the building.
No bomb was found however. Ear-
lier in the day, vandals spray-
painted anti-UN slogans on the
outside walls of the ICAO head-
quarters. One slogan consisted of
the letter U followed by a large
swastika. Another consisted of the
Communist symbol, a hammer and
sickle, followed by the arithmetic
equal sign and the letters UN.
Five Israelis constitute the dele-
gation. In addition to Rosenne,
the deputy, permanent representa-
tive to the UN, it consists of Dov
Sinai, consul general in Montreal,
and three representatives of Is-
rael's civil aviation department.

known to have conferred with
the Egyptian ambassador in
Moscow and was also thought
to have talked with Soviet for-
eign minister Andrei Gromyko, Kosher Hotel Damaged
who paid a surprise visit to
Cairo last month before the by Argentina Vandals
Soviet proposals were submit-
BUENOS AIRES (JTA) — A
ted.
kosher hotel and restaurant in Mar
del
Plata, an Argentine sea resort,
officials
acknowledged
Tues-
U.S.
day that President Nasser, of was severely damaged by vandals

Egypt, wrote to President Nixon
last week "hoping for better
things," the Washington Post re-
ported Wednesday.
Officially, the State Department
said only that a letter from Nas-
ser had been received, involving
the Middle East situation and that
there had been no reply as yet.
The letter was believed to have
reviewed past Egyptian-U.S. rela-
tions and indicated that Nasser
sought an improvement but did not
ask for a resumption of diploma-
tic relations which Egypt broke
after the June 1967 war, the Post

Remarkable Photo of Moon in Dover's Two Paperbacks

who left virulent anti-Semitic in-
scriptions and swastika daubings.
The attack was made during the
absence of the owners. Much of
the furniture was destroyed.
Abraham Rubinstein, chairman
of the Mar del Plata section of the
DAIA, the central representative
agency of Argentine Jewry, de-
nounced the vandalism in a state-
ment to Raul Nava, the Buenos
Aires provincial government min-
ister.

True happiness is of a retired na-
ture, and an enemy to pomp and

noise. —Joseph Addison.

Abner C. Rosenzweig

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