THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, May 22, 1970-5 Power Balance at Stake, U.S. Told Metzenbaum in Orbit (Continued from Page 1) claim that the military balance in the Mid East has been changed to its detriment: the construction of Soviet-made SAM-3 anti-aircraft missile launchers operated by Rus- sian personnel at Alexandria, Cairo and the Aswan High Dam; evi- dence that Soviet combat pilots have been flying operational mis- sions over Egypt in Egyptian MIGs; evidence that the Russians have begun building SAM-3 sites in the Suez Canal zone which Israel considers absolutely vital to the de- fense of its Suez Canal lines. While U. S. officials question the latter evidence, the U. S. has confirmed the activities of Russian pilots through independent intelligence sources. (Egypt officially denied for the second time in two weeks that So- viet pilots• were flying defensive missions over Egypt. Ahmed Amis, an Egyptian spokesman, issued the denial at a press conference in Cairo Wednesday when he was questioned by a Japanese news- man about the "widely circulated facts" concerning the presence of Soviet pilots. Amis said, "I should emphasize that since the 1967 Arab- Israeli war we have never denied the presence of Russian experts here. But we stress that not only is the Russian effort defensive but the Egyptian military effort is als3 of defensive nature." (East E u ra opean diplomatic sources said Tuesday that Russian soldiers will fire the SAM-3 ground- to-air missiles at Israeli Phantom jets crossing the Suez Canal when the sites the Soviet Union is install- ing in Egypt are ready for action. (Sources said that if Egyptian pilots trained to fly MIG-21 jets prove inadequate, Russian pilots will take over and fly them in com- bat against Israeli planes behind the Suez lines.) Eban's visit to Washington is in- tended to press the Nixon adminis- tration once more for a favorable decision on Israel's long-standing request for 50 additional Phantom jets and other military planes. MONTREAL (JTA) — Foreign, Minister Abba Eban told a Jewish audience here Sunday night that Israel will "never go back to the juridical anarchy, the political chaos and to the demarcation line" of 1967. "This time, nothing less than peace within rational, secure and permanent boundaries with our neighbors" will be accepted, he said. "Never shall there be a Middle East without an Israeli sovereign state in the area." Eban, who arrived here from London Sunday, drew a crowd of 18,000 described as the largest single gathering in the history of Mont- real Jewry. He came to Canada to discuss Middle East problems with government offiicals. Eban drew an emotionhl response from his audience when he declared that the Golan Heights, the Gaza Strip, Sharm el-Sheikh and Jerusalem Politics brings a smile to the face of Clevelander Howard Metzenbaum. The 52-year-old mil- lionaire attorney and parking lot magnate defeated former astro- naut John Glenn, America's first man in orbit, for the Democratic nomination for U.S. senator. Yevtushenko Poem Dedicated to Kent Coed in Pravda LONDON (JTA) — The Soviet Communist Party newspaper Pravda published a poem Monday dedicated to Allison Krause, the 19-year-old Pittsburgh girl who was one of four students shot to death by National Guardsmen at Kent State University in Ohio May 4. The poem was written by Yev- geny Yevtushenko, author of the famous poem "Babi Yar," which described the Nazi massacre of Jews in the Ukraine during World War II. Miss Krause and two others of the slain students were Jewish. The poem was titled "Flowers and Bullets." Its theme was based on reports that on the day before her death, Miss Krause put a flower in the muzzle of a guards- man's rifle and said, "Flowers are better than bullets." "Don't give flowers to the state, where truth is punished," Yevtushenko wrote. "Such a state's gift in return is cynical and cruel. And the gift to you In return, Allison Krause, was a bullet that pushed the flower back." In another verse, the poet declared, "Arise, murdered Allison Krause, like an immor- telle of the epoch, a thorny flower of protest." An immortelle Is a flower frequently placed on graves. Yevtushenko, once considered a voice of truth in the Soviet Union, fell from official grace in recent years and has lately produced poetry that critics regard as poor and conformist. "Flowers and bul- lets" was described as both a good poem and one that met the Krem- lin's propaganda needs. However, students of Yevtushenko's work saw in it a two-edged sword aimed at repression in the Soviet Union, as well as in the United States. Bronze Age Utensils Found in Burial Cave JERUSALEM—Discoveries of the first Bronze Age, about 2,000 BCE, such as pottery, bronze spear- heads and rare oil lamps have been found in a burial cave at Menahemiya in the Jordan Valley. An Israel Antiquities Department spokesman said that the cave had been the burial site of nomadic tribes and that the articles dis- covered had probably been buried with human beings. The cave, nine yards long by three yards wide, hewn out of rock, was unearthed by , a bulldozer driver digging foundations for a shelter. "will never be torn from our hearts." He promised, however. that when Israel's negotiating team goes to the peace table it will carry "many positive proposals for a secure and lasting peace. We don't want to rule one and a half million Arabs," Eban said. "What we want is a boundary, similar to those existing between the Scan- dinavian states." Eban attributed the absence of peace in the Middle East to the re- fusal of the Arabs, particularly Egypt's President Nasser, "to give up their slogans of passion and hatred and to overcome their psy- chological illusion that Israel can be destroyed. If a new war should break out, and we hope it won't happen," Eban said, "the result will be the same as in 1967 be- cause we are fighting for our sur- vival, and without victory there can be no survival." Dr. William A. Wexler, president of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organiza- MURRY KOBLIN ADVERTISING tions, reported on a 45-minute 8440 W. 9 MILE • 548-5600 meeting with Secretary of State William P. Rogers by a conference delegation. He said Rogers had de- scribed the Soviet military inter- vention in the Middle East as "ominous" and that the U. S. was intensely reviewing the situation. INCORPORATED Dr. Wexler said the delegation told Rogers that-the Soviet build- up was "not only an encourage- ment to Arab intransigence and a fueling of the war of attrition against Israel, but a challenge to America's interests and a repudia- tion of American efforts to secure (Continued from Page 1) a cease fire and genuine peace that the selling of more jets to in the Middle East." Israel by the United States could "seriously alter" Arab-U. S. rela- . tions. He did not elaborate, but it was assumed he was threatening 20 010 ,James Came n s Drive curtailment of American oil ties Detroit 35, Michigan with Arab lands, as did Syria last week. He repeated the continuing -Coen-pate exavAteest.. Arab charge that U. S. aid to Is- Phone:342-5666 rael would constitute "aggression" similar to its drive into Cambodia. He referred unfavorably to reports of American sales of bombs to Israel. But Benhima had kind words for U. S. Ambassador Charles W. Yost's May 14 council plea for mutual respect for the cease fire. (The Arabs contend Israel vio- lates it.) In his remarks then, Yost for the first time recommended the inclusion of the Palestinian Arabs as a party to a "just settle- ment" in the Mid East. The thrust of that speech, however, was that the Arabs, especially Syria. were largely responsible for Mid East tensions, and that Israel was being forced to defend itself. The U. S. mission declined comment on the implication of Yost's reference to • FAST EFFICIENT SERVICE the Palestinians. THGrant Arab Envoy Warns of Strained Ties ' ,Artistry E I T FinC,Jewels TEE OFF ON A GREAT BUICK DEAL at TAMAROFF "Michigan's Newest and Best Buick Facilities" • COURTEOUS SALESMEN • BEST DEALS What UJA Gift Does Contributions to the United Jewish Appeal finances vast wel- fare, medical, reconstruction and immigration programs on behalf of more than 850,000 destitute Jew- ish men, women and children throughout the world. 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