Israel's Risk: Dayan Offers Cease Fire Despite Losses HAIFA (JTA)—Defense Minister Moshe Dayan said here Monday night that Israel had halted deep-penetration raids into Egypt in order to avoid possible clashes with Russian military personnel. He asserted that Israel was ready to "re-establish an unconditional and unlimited cease fire" in the Suez Canal Zone as a step toward an eventual peace settlement, even if by so doing Egypt is enabled to reorganize and put up SAM-3 missile sites. Gen. Dayan's remarks, at a question-answer session with students, constituted the first acknowledgment by a top Israel government official that air raids deep inside Egypt have been stopped. He said "We have till now had no clashes with Russians in spite of encounters over Egypt, and I am happy about it. I hope that we shall have no clashes with Russians on land and that no Russians will he hit." He added, however, that "We will continue to hold our present lines at all costs, and we shall not let the enemy undermine these lines." He said "We will be careful in attack actions that might lead to a clash with the Russians. This is the reason why we discontinued the deep penetration into Egypt." The defense minister said the recent Soviet escalation was aimed at showing the U. S. and Israel how far Moscow is prepared to go to back up the Arabs..He said (Continued on Page 6) Russian involvement has released more Egyptians for combat action and resulted in increased Israeli casualties in the canal zone. THE JEWISH NEWS Sanctimony and Reality: Struggle for Justice for Israel Commentary Page 2 VOL. LVI I. No. 8 Michigan Weekly Review of Jewish Neivs The Stunned Age . . Quest for Truth Even Among Quakers .. . More Phantoms for Israel Editorials Page 4 Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper — Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle .`'s'• 27 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd., Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075, 356-8400 May 8, 1970 $7.00 Per Year; This Issue 20c Campaign to Reach High Goal of $11,635,518 Allied Drive Victory Heralds Assurance of Aid to Israel Detroit Jewry's reply to the threats to Israel's security was demonstrated on Wednesday evening with unprecedented assured gifts of $11,635,518 announced at the victory dinner of the combined Allied Jewish Campaign and Israel Emergency Fund at the Jewish Center. An enthusiastic gathering of volunteer workers expressed its solidarity with the defenders of the Jewish state by contributing the largest sum ever raised here in the combined drive that assures sup- port for Israel's vast program of providing for the resettlement of Jews from lands of oppression, and to guarantee the continued health and education services for escapees from persecution. At the same time the campaign's victorious results will enable the continuation of health, education and related services at home and abroad through the 50 agencies that are supported by the drive that functions under the supervision of Detroit's Jew- ish Welfare Federation. There was a spirit of jubilation over the success of the Allied Jewish Campaign at the dinner meeting Wednesday at the Jewish Center, as is indicated in the photo on the right. In the center photo, Max M. Fisher (left) congratulates the campaign chairman, Maxwell Jospey, on the triumphant results. In the photo on the left are, Personnel of 10,000 Russians Take Over Egypt's Defense Force TEL AVIV (JTA)—Chief of Staff Gen. Chaim Bar Lev asserted in a broadcast interview that the Soviet Union had taken over the entire Egyptian air-de- fense system in certain areas. He said the new evidence of Soviet pilot activity on Egypt's side can be added to pre- viously known information that includes the Soviet's appropriation of air-defense of the Soviet-installed SAM-3 ground-to- air missiles, the anti-aircraft guns guard- ing those missiles, the early-warning system and the control system. (Informed sources in Washington esti- mated that Russia has about 10,000 ad- visers and technicians in Egypt now compared to about 3,500 at the begin- ning of the year. According to these sources, 1,509 Russians arrived during February and March to install and op- erate the SAM-3 anti-aircraft missile bases. In the last month, 4,000-5,000 more military personnel, including an unde- termined number of pilots and ground crewmen, arrived. They are said to have assumed primary if not total responsi- bility for Egypt's air defense.) Maxwell Jospey, chairman of the campaign, who presided at the dinner, summarized reports submitted that night by announcing a total of $11,127,118 already fully accounted for from 22,238 donors and indicated that "a careful ex- amination of major prospects can safely anticipate that the final total, from the more than 2,000 yet to be contacted, will be $11,635,518." "This means," Jospey said, "that we will pro- (Continued on Page 17) (from left) Paul Zuckerman, Hyman Safran, Alan Schwartz and Milton J. Miler. In photo on the right, (from left) are: Meyer Fishman, Sam Frankel, Mrs. Joseph Jackier, Louis Grossman, Mrs. Max Stollman and Max Shaye. All represent leadership in various campaign divisions in the drive. Shooting Deaths of 4 at Kent I.T. Deplored by Lelyveld as Campus Protest Continues NEW YORK (JTA)—The American Jewish Congress, commenting on the fatal shooting of four students at Kent University in Ohio, declared in a statement Tuesday by Rabbi Arthur J. Lelyveld, Congress president, that "It is difficult to believe that any combination of circumstances could have justified the killing of students Monday at Kent State University." He said that "Protest—even violent protest—is not a crime punishable by death. It is inconceivable that the National Guard troops on the Kent State campus had no alternative to firing live ammunition into a crowd of students because some of them were throwing rocks." "We grieve for those killed and those wounded, for their families and for the many other students who were exposed to the horror of bloodshed," he said. when "President Nixon has indicated that the only lesson he draws from the killing of the students at Kent State is that, deeply- cannot expect the dissent turns to violence, it invites tragedy. Even now,. the President does not appear to realize that we students' protest, to find expression only in the form of held feelings about our country's actions in Vietnam, the subject of the polite discussion." Rabbi Lelyveld added "the adoption of get-tough policies, such as that of GOV. James Rhodes of Ohio, who called out rifle-hearing troops to confront unarmed students, can only further exaggerate the tragic unrest on our nation's campuses. The answer of the National Guard at Kent State, when dissent spilled over into violence, was to shoot to kill. The nation must make it clear that it rejects that answer." The two slain girls, both Jewish, were described as happy, normal college coeds by their friends and neighbors. Allison Krause, daughter of the Arthur Krauses of Pittsburgh, had just celebrated her 19th birthday less than two weeks ago. Tier friends said she was a gentle girl who frequently carried her pet kitten around the Israel at 22 ryixtwri =1, Special 20-page section with ex- clusive features, honoring Israel's 22nd anniversary, in NEXT WEEK'S JEWISH NEWS campus. Sandra Scheuer, 20, daughter of the Martin Scheuers of Youngstown, O., was reportedly trying to avoid the disorder while walking to class when she was shot. Called Gittel—Goodness—by her parents, she was a junior majoring in education and was helping out at a speech clinic. She liked to cook for the two girls she lived with. At the funeral for Miss Scheuer, Rabbi Richard Marcovitz, a family friend, of Ohev Tzedek Temple, said "The hope is that her death will not have (Continued on Page 6)