Six Young Immigrants From Argentina Among 11 Hurt in Hebron TEL AVIV (JTA) — Officials re- ported Wednesday that none of the 11 kibutz members who were the targets of a hand grenade explo- sion in the market place in Hebron in the occupied West Bank were injured seriously. They were flown to Hadassah Hospital by helicopter after the blast Tuesday. A number of suspects have been detained in Hebron in the search for the young Arab who threw the grenade into their passenger truck. Six of the 11 members are new immigrants from Argentina, offi- cials said, clarifying an earlier re- port that all 11 had emigrated from that country. The 11 are part of a group of 20 young men and wo- men, between 14 and 18, most of whom are members of the Lamber- hav Pioneer Movement. They are staying one year at Neot Morde- cai in Upper Galilee and later will join a unit of Nahal, the para-mili- tary program combining agricul- tural and security functions in new border settlements. The Argentine newcomers were touring Israel with a group of kibutz members and were just end- ing their visit to Hebron when the grenade hit their vehicle. Officials also reported that not a single Arab came to the aid :of the victims from the hundreds filling the market square when the grenade detonated. Instead, they closed their shops and dis- appeared in alleys, just as the young Arab suspect had done. Seven Nahal soldiers, includ- ing two girls, were injured Tues- day when several bazooka shells exploded in their settlement in Kibutz Hanita Again Pays Price of Freedom HANITA (JTA) — This kibutz near the Lebanese border, attack- ed by Arab hordes on its first day of existence and long the symbol of heroism against great odds, Monday buried one of its mem- bers. Capt. Ehud Ram. who was killed in the Israeli raid on Egyp- tian-held Green Island. just south of the Suez Canal. Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, attending the funeral, said: "We join you, parents of sons lost in battle, we join you in your be- reavement. We are here together in mourning, together with all our hearts and souls." Capt. Ram. he said, "represents a legend, which became' reality. reality of independence, homeland, Jerusalem, mountains and deserts, waters, trees and flowers. But it is also a reality of blood, battles. funerals; bullet-pocked bodies re- turned to us on stretchers at dawn. "All that is left for us to do is embrace them with our in- describable love and with knowl- edge that nothing is dearer or more beautiful to us than they." Established in the late 1930s dur- ing the height of Arab disturbances, Hanita was attacked the night of its establishment by hundreds of Arabs. The defenders repulsed the attack and the two bodies of its defenders were buried in the new cemetery. "We thought that we had paid the dearest price so that our chil- dren could live in peace and work the land," one Hanita elder said. "However this hope did not ma- terialize. Our children are paying the price themselves." the Sinai Peninsula, east of Kan- tara. They were members of Nahal Yam, a fishing settlement—Is- , rael's first—on a lagoon on the Mediterranean. An investigation revealed that several bazookas had been set up to be fired in the direction of the pioneer settlement. Unified shells were dismantled. Nahal Yam had escaped attack previously. Artillery duels broke out anew Monday along the Suez Canal following a four-hour ground and air battle Sunday that saw the first Israeli air attack on Egyptian ground installations in nearly two years. An artillery and tank battle near the Bitter Lakes, Firdan Bridge spanning the canal and north of Kantara injured two Israelis, according to a military spokesman. Egyptian authorities invit e d newsmen to see remnants of 19 Israeli planes which they claimed were shot down in Sunday's fight- ing near Port Suez but canceled the tour at the last minute. claiming that the area was under heavy heavy shelling. An Israeli spokes- shelling in that area Tuesday. A military spokesman said that Israel bombed and strafed Egyp- tian ground-to-air missile bases, anti-aircraft positions and artillery installations between Port Said and Kantara. The Israeli Air Force was reported to have lost two jets, but the pilots bailed out safely into Israeli-occupied Sinai. Israel said Egypt lost five jets— two Sukhoi-7s. two MIG-17s and MIG-21s—all of which were said to have crashed in Egypt. Cairo Radio claimed that its pilots and anti-aircraft artillery downed 19 Israeli planes and that Egyptian aircraft struck a tank column, three radar installations, artillery emplacements. an ammunition dump and a Hawk missile site in the Israeli-occupied Sinai. Egypt reported one plane lost. An Israeli military spokesman said that the attack was the cost- liest since military operations of this nature began last year. He re- jected Egyptian claims that 30 Is- raelis were killed and a Mirage jet was shot down in the raid on the artificial island fortress con- structed atop a submerged rock in shallow waters, some two miles south of Port Tewfik. The fortified base safeguarded the southern en- trance to the 100-mile-long canal. It has long buildings and a wide courtyard and housed radar-con- trolled anti-aircraft guns and other weapons. Egyptian artillery con- tinued pounding the island during and after the raid, an army spokesman said. The clashes came after "850 violations of the ceasefire by the Egyptian forces" across the , canal, said Kol Israel, Israel's national radio. It accused Egypt of staging at least 10 commando raids and 50 mining incidents. Another spokesman said that Is- raeli jets attacked Egyptian po- sitions because of Cairo's "total disregard" of the 1967 cease fire agreement. Dr. Mohammed H. el-Zayyat, the Egyptian govern- ment spokesman who will soon be ambassador to the United Nations, termed Israel's air raid "vindic- tive operations against civilian as well as military targets and very serious escalation, escalation to- ward what I don't know." President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt was reported Monday to Mrs. Meir to Visit Nixon Sept. 25 JERUSALEM (JTA) — T h e Premier's office Tuesday confirm- ed the White House announcement that Mrs. Golda Meir will visit Washington Sept. 25-26 as Presi- dent Richard Id. Nixon's guest. "It seems obvious that one of the major subjects to be discussed in Washington will be the strength- 30 Friday, July 25, 1969 — ening of Israel's power so it can balance the influx of Russian arms to Egypt and other Arab states," a kell-placed diplomatic source said. Mrs. Meir will spend three days in New York meeting with Jewish community leaders. The visit to the United States will be her first as premier. have conferred with his top mili- tary officials. The clashes Sun- day were the most violent since last March 8 when Egyptians in- tensified their military action along the canal, action that has continued daily together with threats and open statements of belligerence, an Israeli official noted. He said the latest measures were designed to prevent further escalation. (In a speech at Cairo University Wednesday, Nasser said the Arab world now had the military strength to fight Israel and regain land oc- cupied in the Six-Day War. He accused the United States of in- creasing arms shipments to Israel in an attempt to force an Arab surrender. ("It is not only our right, but our duty to fight to regain the occupied land and evict the Israeli forces," Nasser said in his speech marking the 17th anniversary of the over- throw of King Farouk. (He listed Jerusalem first as the occupied territory to be regained. Then, he said, Egypt would take the West Bank, Golan Heights and Gaza. The Arab plan was to wear down Israel. "We are prepared for a long battle," he said. (Nasser "defined" the meaning of a cease fire: "It means that we are implemeting Israel's policy and the policy of the United States which supports Israel in order to usurp parts of Arab land. There- fore, we have to fight." he said.) Egyptian forces lobbed mortar shells at Red Cross and United Nations personnel to frustrate attempts to return the bodies of three Egyptian soldiers killed several wet ks ago during a com- mando raid on Israeli positions on the east bank of the Suez Canal. Israeli forces returned the fire, but recovery of the bodies had to be abandoned. The return was to have taken place two weeks ago at Kantara under Red Cross supervision. But Egyptian gunners fired on the ap- proaches to the town making it impossible. Egypt afterwards ac- cused Israel of "inhuman behav- ior" for allowing the bodies to "moulder" on the sun-baked shores of the waterway. Israeli officials noted that it was Egypt's aggressive action that prevented the removal of the dead soldiers. Fire Ruins Rabbi's Many Valued Records MANCHESTER, N.H. (JTA) — A fire, apparently set by arsonists, gutted the rabbi's study at Temple Adath Yeshurun here and destroyed valuable records and other docu- ments including all copies of the manuscript of a book the rabbi was writing, the Boston Jewish Ad- vocate reports. But Rabbi Samuel Umen hesitated to attribute the act to anti-Semitism. He noted that there had been similar attacks re- cently on buildings of other reli- gious denominations. "Anti-Semit- ism just isn't something you charge without real concrete indications — I really hope my fears are un- grounded," he said. Adath Yeshurun, one of two synagogues in this town, was not the only Jewish target. Four months ago an attempt was made to set fire to the Jewish Commun- ity Center across the street from the temple. According to Raymond M. Kalman, director of the Center which serves Manchester's 500 Jew- ish families, vandals spread chemi- cats in the building ' s hallway last I February but they failed to ignite. New Tree-Planting Center JERUSALEM — A tree-planting center for tourists was recently dedicated in the Jerusalem Peace Forest, situated in the former de- militarized zone of the "high com- missioner's palace." Minister of Tourism and Development Moshe Kol called the forest "a contribu- tion to our efforts for peace in this beautiful and holy city once torn THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS by hatred". Today's events bore out the Israeli claim. An Arab saboteur was killed in an encounter with Israeli units in the Jordan Valley after his com- rades retreated across the river. A military spokesman said that a Russian-made Kalachnikof rifle was found on the body. A military tribunal in Nablus has sentenced an El Fatah mem- ber, convicted of participating in a clash with an Israeli army patrol that left one soldier and two officers dead, to life im- prisonment. Sentenced was Yussef Sayid Abed Mustaffa, 22, a resident of Kuwait, who was one of nine El Fatah members in the incident. Seven of the saboteurs were killed and the other escaped. The defendant refused a court- appointed lawyer and stated he was a freedom fighter and had asked to be permitted to take up arms to "liberate" his homeland. He was born in a village near Nablus on the West Bank. The saboteurs had crossed the Jordan River reportedly under the eye of El Fatah leader Yassir Arafat, and was encircled by an Israeli unit the next day. Hiding in a cave, they placed an Arab woman with a baby at its en- trance, and when the woman told Israeli soldiers she had not seen any strangers, they opened fire, killing the three. WE DO OUR OWN COLOR ! . Sala- 3ettinz Photographers UN 441785 At Kutsher's, you can stand in the lobby and watch people in our pool, on our lake, and golfing on our 18-hole course. Kutsher's may be a paradise of hundreds of acres of meadows, gardens and pine groves, but all our facilities are within moments of your room. Which means after a day of swimming, swinging and playing around, you won't have to call a taxi to get home. You'll be home. It also means if you do want to spend a day in the country, walk II few steps and you're there. Just give us 10 minutes, and we'll pack you a picnic lunch. And when you're bored with the country, a few steps and you're back into the action world of Kutsher's. FLY DIRECT TO THE NEW SULLIVAN COUNTY.AIRPORT VIA MOHAWK AIRLINES Kutsher's Country Club IN TIE CATSKILLS OF SULLIVAN COUNTY ON THE PREMISES: 18 hole gout course, Indoor Ice skating, all-weather tennis courts, indoor & outdoor pools, health club, private lake, fishing a boating, horseback riding, miniature gall. top entertainment, 4 bands, children's camp, (Waft program. Monticello, New York • (914) 794 6000 - WRITE DIRECT OR SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT OPEN ALL YEAR We designed our course with the masters in mind. Build a golf course In the mountains. Weave its fairways around lush islands of maples and spruce. Place Its velvet greens high on scenic hills. Tuck them away in the shaded valleys. Nestle them near a peaceful duck pond. Or near a lazy little brook. Do all this and you create more than you ever hoped for. Besides developing a golf course of superior quality, you have a popular center for budding landscape artists as well This is what has happened at Grossinger's. For those who want to master the game of golf, our course offers the unique challenges of an uncommon terrain. There are uphill lies, downhill lies and great rolling stretches of green land. And for the masters who come to paint instead of putt, our 18-hole championship golf course offers breathtakingly beautiful countryside. g itoma SINGLE RENDEZVOUS WEEK: Aug. 17-25 i defuveA, GROSSINGER. N.Y. 12734 CALI. YOUR TRAVEL AGENT, HILTON RESERVATION SERVICE 963-6030 OR OUR TOLL-FREE WATS NO. DIAL 1-800-431-6300