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July 18, 1969 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1969-07-18

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

ell Sheikh
Da` an Insists: 3Inst Bold Sharm
our terminology to make a clear

ago at a kibutz movement conven-
distinction between peace and non
lion.
Egypt. G en. Dayan said, s till belligerency," Gen. Dayan said.
the
stands on the "Three Nos" of
Gen. Dayan expressed distrust
1967 Arab summit conference in of either Egyption or UN forces
Khartoum—no peace with Israel. based at Sharm el Sheikh or inter-
no negotiations and no recognition national guarantees on freedom of
of Israel. In those circumstances, navigation through the Straits of
the defense minister asserted. Tiran.
Israel should prefer holding on to
The demand by Egyptian Presi-
Sharm el Sheikh to a return to the dent Gamal Abdel Nasser for
Gen. Dayan's remarks marked pre-June 1967 lines.
withdrawal
of UN forces from
the second time this week that he
Gen. Dayan dismissed Soviet Sharm el Sheikh and its reoccupa-
has spoken out on what he con- proposals for a Middle East settle.
tion by his military forces are
siders Israel's essential security ment because they do not contain
generally regarded as causes of
frontiers. (See story on Page 1).
the element of peace." Moscow the 1967 war.
calls
merely
for
both
parties
to
Gen. Daya told the Knesset:
Egypt threatened to blockade
"I prefer to sit in Sharm el Sheikh deposit declarations of non-belli- the narrow straits for ships bound
without peace than have peace and gerency with the United Nations to and from Israel's Red Sea port
return Sharm el Sheikh to Egyp- Security Council and while Israel of Eilat. Israel captured the
tian hands." He recalled having does not belittle non-belligerency. strongpoint during the war.
said the same thing several weeks "we should be• precise enough in
Israeli security forces have killed
119 Arab guerrillas and saboteurs
in clashes between January and
Selection of Two Jewish Advisers
July 7, 1969 Dayan reported to the
Knesset. Nineteen killed this week
Does Not End Columbia's Conflict
brought the total to 138. Gen.
NEW YORK (JTA)—Rabbi A. cent reappointment under this can- Dayan said that only 41 out of
Bruce Goldman, who, has been celled contract but that he would 26.000 Arabs who returned to Israel
no ried as one of two rabbinical seek compensation for "damages following the 1967 Six-Day War
student advisers at -Columbia Uni- at all levels." He assumed his new have been detained for subversive
versity. said that the City Human duties as one of the two Jewish activities and sabotage. He said
Rights Commission would continue advisers on July 1. He said Rabbi among the 41 were 10 Druze
it- planned investigation of the de- Sheer would begin his assignment tribesmen from the Golan Heights
and one Arab from the Gaza Strip.
cision by the university not to ex- Aug. 1.

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Defense
Minister Moshe Dayan told the
Knesset that Israel must retain
pcssession of Sharm El Sheikh. the
strongpoint guarding the entrance
to the Straits of Tiran. Qualifying
this view as his personal opinion.
Gen. Dayan said, however, that on
this issue he and Foreign Minister
Alba Eban were in full agreement.

tend his contract for the coming
year.
Rabbi Charles Sheer. 27-year-old
associate rabbi of the Riverdale.
N.Y.. Jewish Center was named by
five Jewish student groups as their
religious adviser. They are Kadi-

ma. Ikan, the Sabbath Meals

Committee. and the Yavne So-
ciety. an Orthodox group,=and the

Committee on Soviet Jewry. Rabbi
Goldman was selected by the Radi
cal .lewish Union.
Previously, religious advisers.
.4-wish and Christian, had been
named and their salaries paid by

church and synagogue bodies ap-
r -fired by the university. including
the Jewish Advisory Board, made

up of alumni. That board decided
nit to renew Rabbi Goldman's con-
t-act. leading him to charge that '
the action was taken because he
hod supported student rebellions
a' the university. The New York
City Human Rights Commission
agreed to investigate the charges.
Under t h e new arrangements.
disclosed last week, any group of
st•dents may name its own ad,
iser and obtain funds to pay for
his campus services. The Jewish
Advisory Board is being changed

into a foundation with student and
faculty members, as well as alum-
ni. The board will meet Rabbi
Sheer's office expenses. Rabbi
Goldman said private sour c e s
%,ou'd pay the expenses for his
counselorship.
Robb: Goldman said also that if
the human rights commission sus-
tained his complaint that he had
been dismissed for his support of
student rebellions at the univer-
sity kst spring, he would not ac-

New Technion Building
Honors Philadelphians

HAIFA. Israel—Construction has
begun on the Rosen Solid State In-
stitute Building at the Technion-
Israel Institute of Technology.
The building honors Maurice M.
Rosen. board chairman of the
American Technion Society, and
his brother, Ruben P., both promi-
nent members of the Philadelphia
Jewish community, who attended
the dedication ceremony.
The Rosen Building will house
researchers , from the physics,
chemistry, materials engineering
and electrical engineering depart.
nients. according to Alexander
Goldberg, Technion president.
They will concentrate on solid
state research for Israel's expand.
ing science based industries, he
said.

Kolleck Treatens to Run
Anyway if Not Nominated

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Mayor
Teddy BOA announced he will
run for re-election on a separate
list if the Labor Party fails to
nominate him as its mayoralty
candidate.

10—Friday, July 15, '1969

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Hostility Remains

ROME — Three-and-a-half years
after the Vatican Council banned
hostility to Judaism and other non-

in Catholic Texts

Catholic faiths in texts. Italian
and Spanish books on religion still
express such attitudes.
This was disclosed here in a
study published under the title
"Religion and Prejudice: a Content
Analysis of Catholic Religious
Textbooks in Italy and Spain."
The Most Rev. Giuseppe Mara-
fini, bishop of Veroli-Frosinone
and chairman of the Ecumenical
Commission of the Italian Epis-
copal Conference, said that next
year four new texts would re-
place the literally hundreds of
texts, many containing offensive
material, now in use.

tive" comments, heavily out-
weighed the 36 references to Juda-
ism identified as positive.
In the Spanish texts studied,
there was a higher percentage of
favorable references (116 out of
331), but there were still 197 nega-
tive and 18 positive-negative cita-
tons with reference to other
groups.

It's Nice
To Deal With
Joe Slatkin's

DEXTER
CHEVROLET

A total of 167 "negative" pass-
ages, along with 24 "negative-posi-

20811 W. 8 Mile

IF YOU TURN THE

virsyk

between Southfield 1. Telegraph

534-1400

DPSION DOWN YOU WON'T
FIND A NAAR wale THAN

Prices Quoted Over
The Phone.

7/7/

Milan Wineries.. Detre% Mick

NATIONAL BANK
OF DETROIT

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET—JUNE 30, 1969

ASSETS

$1,015,319,930

Cash and Due from Banks
Securities—At Amortized Cost:

Main Onto., Woodward at Fort

Board of Directors

498,263,785

United States Government
Obligations of Federal Agencies

8,426,031

A. H. Aymond

Chairman-Consumes Power Company

Henry T. Badman

Obligations of States and Political
Subdivisions

474,743,795

31,766,884
1,013,200,495

Other Securities

60,900,000

Federal Funds Sold

°mime., of the Board

Ivor Bryn

Chairman-Mclouth Steel Corporal.%

Harry B. Cunningham
Chairman and President-
S. S. Kre.g• Company

William M. Day

Loans:
Commercial and Consumer

Chairmen-The Michigan tell Telephone
Company

$1,537,994,817

Real Estate Mortgage

Leland I. Doan

543,444,398

Chairman, Eleoutivo Committee-.
The Dow Chemical Company

2,081,439,215

Less Allowance for Possible
Loon Losses

47,063,724

Charles T. Fisher III

2,034,375,491

Executive Viu President

Edward F. Fisher

Detroit, Michigan

Bank Premises and Equipment (at
cost less accumulated depreciation
of $22,713,078)

Other Assets
Total Assets

42,308,319

A. P. Fontaine
Chairman and President-
The Sandia Corporation

48,048,870

John B. Ford

$4,214,153,105

Director-Wyandotte Chemicals Corporot.oa

John F. Gordon

Director-Cmnerol Motors Cotporotioe

LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL FUNDS

Deposits:
Demand
Individual Savings and Time

Joseph L. Hudson, Jr.

President-The J. L. Hudson Company

Ralph T. McElvenny

$1,713,613,603
1,364,037,801

449,575,978

Other Savings and Time

3,527,227,382

F. W. Mitch

Detroit, Michigan

Portner-Monaghan, McCronre,,
Campbell & Crewmen

$ 187,598,000

190,202,102

Capital Funds:
Convertible Capital Notes
(5% Due 1993)
-t • • • 1 •
Common Stock, Par $12.50
(Authorized 5,800,000 Shares;
Outstanding 4,800,000 Shares).

1.• roo • •.•• ■ ARO 11=10 ONO

Undivided Profits . s t

Chairmen of the Executive Committee

Peter J. Monaghan

Other Liabilities:
Funds Borrowed
Unearned Income and
Sundry Liabilities

Surplus

Chairman-American Natural Gos Cancan?

Ellis B. Merry

1 1 • - •

■ rve

George

377,800,102

3,905,027,484

E. Parker, Jr.

Detroit, Michigan

Robert B. Semple

Prmident-Wyandotte Chemicals Corporation

Nate S. Shapero

Henerery Chairman end Director-.
Canninghom Drug Storm, Inc.

50,000,000

Austin Smith, M.D.

Chairman end President-
Parka, Dorris & Company

60,000,000

140,000,000
59,125,621

George A. Stinson

President-National Steel Corporates

309,125,621

Dwight L. Stocker

Cenultent-{town Conwitena

Robert M. Surdam

Total Liabilities and
Capital Funds

Preeident

$4,214,153 , 105

Assets carried at approximately

$289,000,000 (including U. S. Government Securities carried

$91,578,921) were pledged at

June

30, 1969 to secure public deposits (including deposits

$41,846,666 of the Treasurer, State of Michigan) and for other purposes required by low

Donald F.

Valley

Chairman, Finance Committee-.
S. 5. Kraeo Company

at

of

Michigan's Leading Bank

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Cenaoralkel

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