Lebanon First Arab Country to Get Rid of the Commandos LONDON (JTA)—A high Lebanese official confirmed in Beirut that Arab commandos were withdrawing from Lebanese soil. According to various estimates, the commandos number 1,500-3,000, mostly members of the Saiqah, a guerrilla group sponsored by the Syrian Baathist Party, and of El Fatah, the largest Palestinian guerrilla organization. Withdrawal of the commandos, whose presence and activities on Lebanese soil led to the bloody rioting and the downfall of Premier Rashid Karami's government in Beirut on April 25, was first reported last week by Pierre Gemayel, a leader of the right- wing Phalangist Party. He said the withdrawal began about 18 days ago and was continuing. About half the commandos were said to have left so far. According to Gemayal, El Fatah leaders were instrumental in getting the Saiqah guerrillas to withdraw. The Lebanese government crisis was precipitated tby popular support of the guerrillas and government attempts to curtail their raids on Israel from Lebanese territory. Lebanese authorities feared reprisal raids by Israel and possible Israeli occupation of south- ern Lebanon if the raids did not cease. Lebanese students, Palestinian refugees and others had demanded a free hand for the commandos who were concentrated on the slopes of Mount Hermon, just north of the Israel border. Observers here said the departure of all the commandos would constitute a diplomatic victory for Lebanon, which still has been unable to form a new government. JEWISH NE Characteristics of Peoples Affected by DE T R O IT Assimilation A Weekly Review I Commentary Page 2 Confrontation and Reality on the Campus Israel Tourism Undeterred by Terrorism MICHIGAN of Jewish Events Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper — Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle VOLUME LV — No. 15 27 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd., Detroit 48235—VE 8-9364—June 27, 1969 Editorials Page 4 $7.00 Per Year; This Issue 20c rithodox Council to Maintain Draft of Chaplains; Rejects Conservative, Reform Ruling Bomb at Western Wall, Ilaifa Oil Refinery Damage, Growing Casualties Mark M.E. Conflict Retaliation for attacks on Israeli villages and for bomb- ing of the Haifa oil refineries and an area close to the West- ern (Wailing) Wall, as well as increased fighting at the Suez Which accounted for numerous casualties marked a week of increased fighting on Israel's borders. Warnings have been issued to King Hussein that Israel will retaliate unless there is an end to attack on civilians. JERUSALEM (JTA)—Israel's cabinet denounced last Friday's bombing of a street leading to the Western Wall in Old Jerusalem as security officials planned measures to prevent similar incidents in the future. Six persons, including an Arab man and an Arab child, were injured when three 10-pound bombs exploded in rapid succes- sion in the 16-foot-wide Share el Wad (Street of the Valley). The bombs detonated at 7:15 p.m. local time. Only an hour earlier, the street was thronged with Orthodox Jews making their way to the wall for evening prayers. The cabinet described the bombing as "a dastardly act carried Out by saboteurs against women and children who come in the thou- sands to pray on the Sabbath at the holiest place to the Jewish nation." Gen. Moshe Dayan, the defense minister, accompanied by senior military officials visited the area to plan security measures. (Continued on Page 16) FALLSBURG, N.Y. (JTA)—The leading Orthodox rabbinical organization in Amer- ica rejected Tuesday selective conscientious objection to the military chaplaincy and voted to maintain the draft of military chaplains in contrast to the Reform and Conservative movements in Judaism which have eliminated it. The resolution as introduced by Rabbi Zev Segal of Newark, president of the Rab- binical Council of America, and passed inanimously by the organization at its 33rd annual convention here, also called on Orthodox rabbinical seminaries to maintain the draft of newly ordained rabbis, or to reinstitute it if it has been eliminated. The Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary of Yeshiva University, at which most of the 1,000 members of the Rabbinical Council were ordained, has dropped the draft. Rabbi Segal said that it was a "sacred and unquestionably moral obligation to serve the religious needs of Jews in the armed services," and he declared that those who refuse to serve would not be admitted into membership in the rabbinical organizaton. This pro- hibition would make it difficult for such rabbis to obtain pulpits, he said. (At the annual convention in Houston, Tex., last week, the Reform Central Confer- ence of American Rabbis voted, 123-108, to end its participation in the American rab- binate's self-imposed draft for military chaplains. Detailed story on Page 37). "Whether rabbis approve or disapprove of our country's military involvement in Vietnam bears no relation to the fact that young Jews require the service of their clergy- men," Rabbi Segal's resolution declared. "Men who are being drafted into the military services are not asked whether they are for or against the war in Vietnam and they are entitled to spiritual guidance and assistance during their service. "The need for chaplains to lead religious services," teach the principles of their faith, provide pastoral counseling, perform religious rites and represent the small minor- ity of Jews in the military does not diminish because the United States is right or wrong in being in Vietnam, the measure stated. • _ in Sponsoring; Sponsorii Nixon Said to Be Hoax Visit of Widow, Daughter of Egyptian Pilot TEL AVIV (JTA)—Official sources here and well-informed Israelis in Washington claimed Tuesday that Egyptian authorities apparently perpetrated a hoax on President Richard M. Nixon, who entertained the widow and daughter of a deceased Egyptian pilot in the White House Mon- day. The sources said that the late Capt. Hadayat SCusuf Hilmi, who piloted a plane that carried Mr. Nixon during his 1963 visit to Egypt. died in a crash in September 1967 and not as claimed by Cairo in the June 1967 Six-Day War. They said the Egyptian government was trying to exploit the visit of Mrs. Hilmi and her 14-year-old daughter, Nagla, to Washington for propaganda purposes. The invitation to the Hilmis was extended in response to a letter Nagla wrote to President Nixon reminding him that in 1963 he had invited her father to visit Washington. Sources here said Egyptian government circles prompted the girl to write and instructed her to assert that her father was a victim of the Six-Day War. They said that Capt. Hilmi's accidental death in the crash of an air transport three months after the war ended was duly noted by the Cairo newspaper Al Abram in September 1968, the first anniversary of the crash. (Continued on Page 5) Rabbi Segal stressed that as long as the armed forces of this country consist primarily of draftees and not volunteers, "it is our solemn duty to support the imposition of a similar draft upon the spiritual leaders whose committed goal is to serve their flock under all conditions. When and if the U.S. government decides to substitute a volunteer army for that based on conscription, a similar option should be granted to rabbis, allowing them to determine whether or not they wish to serve in the military." The Rabbinical Council, Rabbi Segal stressed. maintains that while "laymen may refuse to participate in military serv- ice because of the dictates of conscience, the recourse to selec- tive conscientious objection on the part of rabbis does not constitute a valid reason not to serve as chaplains." He also said that "experience of World War II and the Korean War confirmed the truth that chaplains serve the needs of their men and not the political-military objectives of governments." (Continued on Page 11) Factors in Medieval Anti-Semitism Invaded French City _ . By EDWIN EYTAN (Copyright 1969, JTA, Inc.) city—well-fed and prosperous-looking bour- geois. They dress carefully and speak in ORLEANS, France—Orleans is less than slow, ponderous tones. Other Frenchmen two hours away from Paris by road. It is a say that "there is nothing as reasonable and bright, modern, even smiling city, with calculated as an Orleanese" and historians white houses and small flowering squares. claim that Joan d'Arc, when she came to The Loire River flows peacefully through deliver their city from the English siege, ills center and a few miles to its south begins one of France's most popular tourist tegions. There 'is Nothing sinister or medi- eval about the city apart from its huge Gothic cathedral from whose top little stone Carved details stick their tongues out at had to fight the battle alone—the Orleanese watched as spectators from the top of their walls. And yet, it was within this most unlikely setting that a strange story started to spread some two weeks ago—Jewish store- keepers were drugging and kidnaping wom- passing humanity. • . The Orleanese are a projection of their en customers to sell them into white slavery. At the corner of the Rue de Bourgogne and la Rue du Charriot, passers-by stopped and watched. At the busy corner of the Rue de La Republique and La Place de la Gare, the crowd was milling about. Behind the cathedral, in small white stone houses where the windows are always covered with sorry situation. Another rumor pretended to explain the mechanics of the operation. The shops were connected with each other by means of a secret network of under- ground tunnels, though many were as far as two miles apart. Another tunnel con- nected them to the river, where an eye- witness had reportedly seen "a mysteri- ous ship" waiting for its human cargo. How did this strange, absurd story start, chintz curtains, elderly women were whis- pering into one ear and then another. Every one had a "new detail." One woman told of bow a husband had burst into one of the shops and found his wife and what made it spread? This is what I gagged and bound in the basement, wait- tried to find out during my two-day stay in ing to be sent abroad. Together with her Orleans. (Continued on Page 9) were two other women in that same