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February 21, 1969 - Image 39

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1969-02-21

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

''''''-'' ''''•-.,-=',".. T2W-3TOIETTFWV<VS ITTEI,Ter,TS7.

1..e.,e,11--ti-V•e.,,S.,AZ.T.:

Brookings Institution's 'Agenda for the Nation'
Views Middle East in U.S.- USSR Relations

Drawing upon the views of 18
authoritative analysts to deal with
major domestic and foreign policy
questions, Brookings Institution,
with headquarters in Washington
devotes an important portion of its
new work, "Agenda for the Na-'
tion," to a discussion of the Arab-
Israel conflict.
Edited by the president of the
Brookings Institution, Kermit Gor-
don, this volume deals with mat-
ters related to the Negro and the
urban problem, the schools situa-
tion, unemployment and inflation,
crime and law enforcement, bud-
get alternatives after Vietnam;
and on the foreign scene with
Russia, the U.S. and low income
countries, military strategy as
well as the Middle East.
"The Middle East" is dealt
with by John C. Campbell, a
former member of the staff of
the State Department. Review-
ing the existing situation, the
Israel-Arab struggles, the atti-
tudes of Russia and the United
States, Campbell points to Is-
rael's "determination to hold the
present lines of defense until the
Arabs offer equivalent security
by making peace," but he does
not bold ont hope for a speedy
peace. He declares: "They (the
Arabs) cannot be expected to
sign a treaty dictated by Israel
or to accept a series of restric-
tions on what are the normal
attributes of any state's sover-
eignty. It is a fiction that some-
how a treaty will bring peace
to the Middle East regardless
of deeply rooted Arab attitudes.
The fact is that distrust and hos-

tility on both sides will remain;
whatever the form of settlement
and that the best chance of tem- '
pering and gradually wearing
down these feelings is to search
for a form that contains the ele-
ments of compromise and can
gain international support. The
United States should hold no
brief for Arab intransigence or

Says Argentine Jews 'Lag'
in Language Assimilation

LONDON (JTA) - A leader of
Argentine Jewry described the
Jewish community in his country
as one that has "not yet reached
the point of linguistic and cultural
assimilation which British and
American Jews have reached."
According to Simha Sneh, gen-
eral secretary of the Zionist Organ-
ization of Argentina, the Jews
there "are now at a point at which
British and American Jews were
some 30 years ago."
Sneh, who stopped over in Lon-
don en route from a Jewish leader-
ship meeting in Israel, spoke at a
reception given for him by the
World Jewish Congress Yiddish
committee and the Association of
Jewish Journalists.
He said one sign of the relative
lack of assimilation among Argen-
tine Jewry was the publication of
two Yiddish dailies in Buenos
Aires in addition to Davke, a jour-
nal sponsored by the WJCongress
but written and edited in the Ar-
gentine capital. Sneh said that 20
per cent of all Jewish children in
Argentina attend Jewish day
schools.

MOVIE GUIDE

Grand Circus Park

ADAMS

Free Parking after 5 p.m.

WO 1-0525

NOW AT POPULAR PRICES

Anthony Quinn, Oskar Werner in

"THE SHOES OF THE FISHERMAN"

FRI. & SAT. 11:15, 2:15, 5:15, 2:05, 10:45
SUN. THRU THURS. 11:15, 2:00, 4:45,
7:30, 10:15.

Wed. LADIES DAY 75c

2211 Woodward-WO 14494
2ND BIG WEEK
Double horror in shock shown.
both in color.
Christopher Lee in

FOX

"DRACULA' HAS RISEN FROM
THE GRAVE"

and

"CHAMBERS OF HORRORS"

EVERY WED. LADIES' DAY
LATE SHOW Friday and Saturday
For Schedule Information Call WO 1-7917

GRAND CIRCUS

tta r f.raalo

Clirc%

31/2 hrs. free parking after 5:30 p.m.
Dean Martin is Mat Helm in

Birmingham

at

4,`-2,!?!

Gina Lollobrigida, Peter Lawford,
Shelley Winters in'

"BUONA SERA, MRS. CAMPBELL"

Mon. thru Fri. 7:05, 9:15 Sat. 6:00, 2:05,
10:15 Sun. 9:05, 4:15, 6:25, 2:35
Recommended for mature audiences.

.
blks. S. 15 MI.
Wward 2 MI 4-6006
Bridge the generation gap,
with laughter!

BLOOMFIELD

"THE IMPOSSIBLE YEARS"

with David Niven & Lola Albright
Mon. thru Fri. at 7:00 0. 9:00
SAT. 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00
SUN. 2:00, 3:40, 5:40, 7:40, 9:40.

I Reserved. seats tickets for "OLIVER"
now on sale at our box office

CAMELOT W. WarreL at Miller Rea

Christopher Jones

"3 IN THE ATTIC"

6:25, 8:25, 10:25 SAT. SUN.
2:00, 4:05, 4:05, 2:15, 10:20

Persons under la not admitted unless
accompanied by parent or guardian.

"THE WRECKING CREW"

MAIN, ROYAL OAK Main al 411180M"e

"UP THE McGREGORS"

"SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON"

12:35, 4:00, ras,
plus

10:50

1nd SMASH WEEK
All Walt Disney Family Entertainment

11:05, 2:25, 5:50, 9:15

and

Ladies' Day Wed. 75c

"GNOME MOBILE"

Baglez v at Grd. River

MICHIGAN

Rd.
at
at Farmington Rd.
GA 741400 & KE_4-6400
Strictly for Adults
Susannah York, Beryl Reid

MAI Kill

Susannah York, Beryl Reid in

"THE KILLING OF SISTER GEORGE"

11:35, 2:25, 5:15, 11z05, 10:35
Strictly for Adults

"THE KILLING OF SISTER GEORGE"

5:30, COO, 10:35
CHILDREN'S SPEC. MATINEE
SAT. & SUN.
OPEN 11:30 out 4:45

Wed. LADIES DAY 75c

TELENEWS

"FROZEN DEAD" S "FUMANCHU"

1540 Woodward-WO 1-0543
Harley Mills, in
-

REDFORD

"THE TWISTED NERVE"



Technicolor
Plus

"TORTURE GARDEN"

Wed. LADIES DAY 75c

9 MI. 7t Greenfi
44444
35
Order Sharif in

AMERICANA

c 8 1.314

"MAYERLING"

Mon. thru Fri. 7d/0, 9:25
Sat. & Sun. 1:25, 3:40, sas, 8:15, 10:35.

BERKLEY

12 Mlle-C.00ndge LI 2-0330

Kirk Douglas in

"A LOVELY WAY TO DIE"

FRI. MON. TUES. OPEN 6:45 shown 7:00
10:40 Sat. Eve. re-open 6:45 shown 9:00
only Sun. open 12:45 shown 3:00, 7:45,
10:30.
plus John Wayne, Vera Miles

"HELLFIGHTERS"

Lanser0 at Grand River
KE 7-256ark
P Free-Cooled
Hayley Mills in

"TWISTED NERVE"

FRI. open 5:30 shown 5:45, 8:10, 10:20
Organ Interlude 7:50 only SAT. open
3:45 shown 4:05, 6:10, 8:20, 10:30 SUN.
open 12:45 shown 1:05, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30,
9:40 Week nights open 7:00 shown 7:30

9:40.

W. 7 Mile av Moyers UN 4-8800
Par k
Dean Martin & Elke Sommer

ROYAL

"THE WRECKING CREW"

WEEKNIGHTS & SAT. OPEN
6:45 shown 7:05, 10:45
SUN. open 2:00 shown 2:25, 6:10, 9:50
plus Charlton Heston, Jan Hacket in
"WILLPENNY"
& S AT . 9:00 only
WK. NI
GUNS
SU
4:15 , M OO

Fourth, R.O.
315 W. L I 1-2812
Last 5 Days

ROYAL OAK

"GONE WITH THE WIND"

Fri. Mon. Tues. 8:40 only Sat. Eve. 7:00, MON. thru FRI., COO only; SAT., 3:30
10:40 Sun. 1:00, 4:45, 8:30.
& 11:00; SUN. 3:30,, 7:30.
Starts Wed. All Academy nominee
Sat. Spec. Matinee open 1:00 starts 1:20 "RACHEL, RACHEL" "THE HEART IS
Over 4:35 "A MAN CALLED FLINT" &
A LONELY HUNTER.
I. .
"HIGH . WILD A FR gE!' • •• •

Arkb vows to fight again after
a temporary period of peace. It
cannot condone an Arab position
based on the Khartoum formula
of no recognition of Israel, no
negotiations and no peace. But
neither should it be tied to an
Israeli position which the Arabs
see as a demand for capitula-
tion."
In relation to the arms race and
Russia's role, Campbell declares
that "only if the dangers or the
costs of the arms race bring
changed views in Cairo or Moscow
can the United States do much to
control it."
Still, he sees "an opening for
further diplomacy" in the Russian
agreement with the United States
"to keep nuclear weapons out of
the hands of local governments."
It must be taken into account
that this view was expressed be-
fore the Israel-Lebanon conflict
and before the most recent Rus-
sian proposals for a peace plan
that has been rejected by Israel.
It is important to note also
this additional view by Camp-
bell: "The Soviets may win
propaganda victories in the Arab
world, but unless they can deliv-
er victories over Israel or guar-
antee the fulfillment of promises
the Arab leaders have made to
their own people, they may pay
the price of Arab frustration.
They must already have doubts
about the stability and reliability
of their client states. Arab na-
tionalism, which Moscow has
done so much to encourage, is
hostile to domination by all out-
side powers, including the Soviet
Union. The ideological ties, the
common devotion to the ideas
of socialism about which is
heard from both sides, would
fade away once the 'Arab social-
ists' saw behind the proclaimed
solidarity a Soviet attempt to
impose its own type of socialism
on them. Moreover, the radical
Arab states are engaged in com-
petition among themselves, caus-
ing their patrons to do a balanc-
ing act in order to maintain in-
fluence with all of them. In the
conservative oil-producting states
there is little chance for Soviet
gains short of revolution, and
the revolution itself would be
nationalist rather than socialist. "
Continuing to view the Russian
position in all seriousness, Camp-
bell states as a concluding view:
"Whether or when the two great
powers will find common ground
in the Middle East, beyond the
urgent interest in avoiding nuclear
war, is an open question. We
should work to enlarge the possi-
bilities of agreement, being tough
or conciliatory as the changing
situation may demand and always
recognizing that the Middle East
is not the only or the determining
factor in the Soviet-American rela-
tionship. Should the trend be to-
ward agreement or away from it,
the United States can best prepare
for either contingency by estab-
lishing and maintaining a durable
position of its own in relation with
the people- of the Middle East."
Former Detroiter Marshall Shul-
man, professor of government and
director of the Columbia University
Russian Institute, is the evaluator
of the Russian situation in the
essay in this book on "Relations
With the Soviet Union."
In "Agenda for the Nation,"
President Richard M. Nixon's ad-
viser on foreign affairs, Henry A.
Kissinger, is the author of the con-
cluding essay on "Central Issues
of • American Foreign Policy."

Israeli Art in Romania

tDirect JTA Teletype Wire
to The Jewish News)

BUCHAREST - An exhibition of
contemporary Israeli painting
opened here Tuesday in the pres-
ence of several high government
officials and Israel Ambassador
Eliezer Doron. The exhibit con-
tains 89 paintings by 24 Israeli art-
ists. It was compiled by Yona
Fisher, art director of the Israel
Museum.

,,-,--..

5-,COTS,Oit.,..,-,,

..o-w..... .,•••••••••,..•••• •■ •••^•-••••••-••••- ■ ••-••• •-•

-• • -

Friday, February 21, 1969 39

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

-

Okker Heads Ranking Tennis Players

By JESS SILVER
(Copyright 1969, JTA Inc.)
Tom Okker has earned high rank-
ings for his tennis play last season.
The Flying Dutchman was No. 3 in
one recently published world list
and No. 5 in another. His No. 3
ranking equals Dick Savitt's best
ever by a Jewish player. In the
first year of Open tennis, the pres-
ent list includes professionals as
well as amateurs. Savitt gained his
ranking in 1957 when he won Wim-
beldon. Both men are former World
Maccabiah Games singles cham-
pions, Savitt winning in 1961 and
Okker in 1965.
The 24-year-old Okker played in
35 tournaments and won nine in-
cluding the South African and Ital-
ian championships. He shared an-
other title and was the runner-up in
eight other tournaments. Okker was
8-4 against members of the world's
top ten: 1-0 with Laver; 1-3, Ashe;
1-0, Rosewell; 3-0, Graebner; 0-1,
Drysdale; 1-0, Gonzalez and 1-0,
Ralston. He also registered victor-
ies over the Jewish players, Torgen
and Jorden Ulrich of Denmark;
Pierre Darmon, France, and Len
Schloss of the U.S.
Julie Heldman did well on the
distaff side. The New York City girl
was No. 2 in the national rankings.
It was the highest U.S. rating ever
for a Jewish girl. The best previous
showing was by Helen Bernhard
who was accorded a No. 4 ranking
in 1942.
Miss Heldman, daughter of
Gladys M. Heldman, editor and
published of World Tennis maga-
zine returned to tournament tennis
after sitting out a year. She re-
corded wins in Mexico, Italy, Switz-
erland, Sweden and Germany as
well as the United States. With one
exception, all her losses were to

players in the World's top ten.
Only amateurs made the national
rankings this year.
The national list contained the
names of other Jewish girls. Pam
Richmond of Mission Hills, Kansas,
was ranked No. 18 and Marilyn
Aschner of New York gained the
No. 21 spot. In addition Miss Hich-
mond was No.6 in the 18-and-under
division. Nancy Ornstein of Wash-
ington, D.C., was No. 10 in the 16-
and-under and Susan Epstein of
Miami was No. 4 in the 14-and-
under national rankings.
Pierre Darmon won the French
Closed title for the ninth time and
repeated as his nation's No. 1
player. He was elected to the di-
recting committee of the French
Tennis Federation.

Southwoods ORT Hosts
Benefit Run of 'Oliver!'

Southwoods Chapter, Women's
American ORT, will host a benefit
performance of the film "Oliver:"
7 p.m. March 9 at the Bloomfield
Theater. Proceeds will be donated
to ORT project installations. For
ticket information, call Mrs. Fred
Walters, 353-6368.

,

"DRACULA
HAS
RISEN
FROM
,00% B.s. THE
g1/4°"'''
GRAVE"
You just can't keep

0

a good man down.

Center Lights Focus
on "Light Up the Sky"

-PLUS-

In its second week, "Light Up
the Sky" will be presented 8:30
p.m. Saturday and 7:30 p.m. Sun-
day at the Jewish Center Theater.
Further information on the play
can be obtained by calling the Cen-
ter, DI 1-4200, Ext. 240.

HORRORS
6

FO

NOW

as 1-1Sti
Mr Nautili

The Detroit Institute of Arts Concert Series
Edith .1. Freeman, Chairman
i
CLAUDE KIPNIS, French-Israeli Star, and his
1 MIME THEATRE COMPANY in "Men and Dreams"

Friday, Feb. 21 at 8:30 p.m. AUDITORIUM
i Tickets: $5, 54, $3. $2.50 at Detroit Institute of Arts (832-2730); Grinnell's
and J. L. Hudson Ticket Services.
.••••••• ■ •••••••••

L

Lt

MASONIC AUDITORIUM

SAT., MARCH 8-11:2411 P.M.

FERRANTE & TEICHER

America's Most Popular Duo-Pianists
95.5044.5043.50 at Masonic Temple, J.G. Hudson's & Grinnell's.
(Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope)

"THE MOST ADULT
FILM ON THE
SCREEN TODAY"

-N. Y. Daily News

SAPPHO
DARLING

NOW:

RAN

Exchavely at...

aw

YVONNE DANGERS. CAROL YOUNG-ALYN DAM',

M In COLOR

WOODW.0 MC. e MAC • TO ass

I

ME
lluseamM
IM11111ENXII
IN II

CENTER THEATRE

Presents

"LIGHT UP THE SKY"

By Moss Hart, Directed by Hal Youngblood
SATURDAY, FEB. 22 AT 8:30;
SUNDAY, FEB. 23 AT 7:30

At the

Jewish Community Center

Meyers of Curtis

For Ticket Information CoU . DI 1-4200.

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