Jewish Hostages Separated by Terrorists (Continued from Page 1) up and asked to state their Ziames, nationalities and religion. Only the non-Jews were allowed to board the bus. Only a few of the Jewish passengers are said to be Israelis. An unspecified number of others reportedly hold both Israeli and C.S. passports. Secretary of State William P. Roger; on Tuesday conferred with Israel Ambassador Itzhak Rabin. Britain's Ambassador John Free- man and charges d'affaires of West Germany and Switzerland. Present at the conference at which the situation was explored were Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Joseph J. Sisco. Undersecretary. of State L' Alexis Johnson and various spe- cialists on the Nfiddle East and international aviation expert s. President Nixon remains in close touch with the situation.. White House press secretary Ronald Ziegler said "We are doing all in our power to bring about the re- lease of the passengers and the aircraft." Sources in Washington said that short of "sending in the Marines" there was little the C.S. could do except continue to resort to di-.310- macy. One State Department offi- cial said, "we are responsible for them to the degree we can be of help to them." It was obvious that Washington officials feared that precipitate action might cause the terrorists to blow up the three planes now in Jordan with all pas- sengers aboard as they have threatened to do. The U.S. re• 2ortedly asked the Jordanian gov- ernment to refrain from provoca- tive action. The impotence of the Arab gov- ernments in this situation and their apparent fear of arousing the ire of the Palestinian commandos and the street mobs who support them indicated that these governments might be less than free agents in any peace talks in which they might participate. Militarily' the Arab governments have the power to subdue the guerrillas and cut off their supplies of arcs and other equipment. But in countries like Jordan and Lebanon such action Hi jacking Fails to Still Enthusiasm for Israel Visit Five days after she, her husbar.d and three children were involved in a foiled hijacking attempt by two Arab terrorists, an Oak Park woman still insists: "Israel is a fabulous country; I'd go back again." The Josef Feuereisen family of Rosemary Ave. is probably home today because of the presence of an Israeli security guard aboard the El Al plane that was carrying them home from Israel. When the would-be hijackers attempted to take over the plane Sunday, the security guard subdued the pair. One was killed, and the other, a woman, was disarmed. She is now being held in London. There were 144 passengers on would be almost certain' to pre- cipitate civil war. President Nas- ser of Egypt has a firmer grip than his colleagues ir. A -r-an and Beirut but is unlikely' to antagonize the guerrillas and risk the leader- shpi position in the Arab world to which he aspires. Washington sources said. Israel continues to plead with the world powers not to yield to ter- rorism and blackmail. A spokes- man for the foreign ministry warn- ed: "Once this sort of blackmail becomes successful, there will be no end to it." The managing director of El Al Airlines. Mordecai Ben-Ari. issued similar warnings and urged re- jection of blackmailers' demands. If proper precautions are taken, air piracy can be prevented, El Al and Israel government officials insist. Detroiters Join in Plea on Behalf of Hijacking Victims Western Union in Detroit report- ed a flood of telegrams Tuesday night after Jewish Community Council President Lawrenre GI:- bor.; issued an appeal to Council member organizations to wire the President secretary of state and congressmen requesting the i :- action against hijackings and to secure the release of the hostages. Several thousand telegrams had been sent out by Wednesday night. The Council alio held an emer- gency meeting of the executive committee Wednesday night to map efforts on behalf of Israel. JERCSALEM (JTA)--The Knes- set called on the world's human- itarian organizations and on public opinion Nfonday to ensure humane treatment for Israeli prisoners cf war in Egyptian and Syrian hands. A resolution adopted by •he Knesset's security and foreign affairs committee urged the "en- , lightened nations of the world. - the International Red Cross and similar groups to see to it that the prisoners are treated in strict com- pliance with the Geneva Conven- 'tion rules. The committee said that accord- ing to its information Israeli pri- soners in Egypt and Syria receiv- ed inhumane treatment. The com- mittee called on the Israeli gov- ernment to increase its efforts to have the prisoners returned. The problem of the hijacked planes and the hostages held by terrorists in Jordan was discussed in top-level government circles but no plan of action was reported. Israel is awaiting the results of Red Cross representations. The official position here is that efforts. to secure the release of the host- ages and the aircraft are the re- sponsibility of the governments wh ose carriers were hijacked. Israel holds the Jordanian go•- ernment fully responsible for the safety of the hostages. The foreign . ministry announced Monday that Israel has made diplomatic repre- sentations to several governments urging them to put pressure on Jordanian authorities to honor their international obligations. But Israeli officials concede privately that the Jordanian government is powerless to intercede even if It wanted to. efforts to free the hostages. The Swiss Embassy in Tel Aviv and the Swiss ambassador's residence in Ramat Gan received anonymous bomb threats Monday. Police rushed to the ',scene and found nothing_ Israelis are contrasting the re- sistance that foiled an attempt to hijack an El Al airliner over Bri- tain on Sunday with the submis- sion of the two hijacked American planes and the Swiss airliner. One of the American planes. a Pan , _American jumbo jet forced to land at Cairo, v-- as blown up by the terrorist minutes after its passen-; gers and crew were evacuated. A TWA. a Swissair and now a BOAC jet are in terrorist hands in Jor- dan. Israelis say that this situa- tion would not have occurred if other governments and airlines employed security measures simi- lar to those that saved the El Al plane. The El Al hijack attempt was foiled when security guards on the plane shot and killed one of the hijackers and subdued his female companion. An Israeli steward was wounded in the scuffle. But Cast. Uri Barley, who was piloting the El Al 707 jet when the hijack attempt was made, refused to say who shot the hijacker. "If we are in Tel Aviv today and not in Am. : man or Damascus, it is thanks to . the entire crew. All of them acted! marvelously," Capt. Barley said. He said no crew member carried arms. .He made no reply when asked by newsmen about the two armed security guards on his flight. Capt. Barley said the hi- jack attempt occurred 21 minutes after his plane took off from Amsterdam on a flight to New York, when it was about 13 nau- tical miles from the British coast. A stewardess, Jeanette Dar- magene, said the tv.•o hijackers shot the steward when the pilot refused their demand to open the door to his compartment. According to one source, there were 12 Israeli passengers aboard the TWA jet hijacked on a flight from Frankfurt to New York. Among them reportedly were a Rabbi Joseph Raful- Harari and his five children, Mrs. Tova Cohen and her two children and a Mrs. Goren with two children. Several Jews of U.S. nationality were said to have been on the plane. They were identified as a Mrs. Fried- man and Rabbi Itzhak Hutner of the Haim Berlin Yeshiva in New York, his wife, daughter and son-in-law. Israelis were infuriated by re- ports Sunday that the governments . of Switzerland and West Germany were ready to surrender to terror. ist demands for the release df Arab prisoners held by them in return for their own nationals. The public was not mollified by later reports that the two countries Minister of Transport Shimon decided not to make a deal with , Peres said Sunday night that Is- the terrorists pending diplomatic , rael was demanding the extradition of Laila Khaled, the female hi- nationals from a British airliner at Lydda Airport was responsible jacker aboard the El Al jet. The El Al Boeing 707 jet with for this wave of hijackings. 148 passengers aboard landed at Comdt. Jacques Landragin, an Air Kennedy Airport early Monday France pilot, disclosed that he morning, 12 hours late. had cabled Israeli Foreign Minis- A crowd of about 500 relatives ter Abba Eban urging the release and friends of the passengers of the Algerians last week and galh-ered at Kennedy Airport be. warning him that Arab comman- fore dawn. They screamed and dos would retaliate. He said he cheered as the jet landed and never received a reply from Eban. pushed into the international ar- "We have had a period of relative rivals building for emotional re- peace up to now, since the Arab governments had pledged not to unions with their kin. Capt. Barley flew home from receive hijackers," the French pilot said. "But with the detention London after reporting briefly to of the two Algerians last month Premier Golda Meir and Defense the Arab commandos found a way Minister Moshe Dayan by tele- phone. The two security guards to put the Arab governments in a very delicate position." Comdt. also returned to Israel after being Landragin implied criticism of the interrogated by Scotland Yard. Israeli crew that foiled the hi- Miss Khaled, who was born in Haifa, and her male com- jacking of the El Al airliner. "T'ne panion boarded the El Al flight Israeli crews have the same psy- at Schipol using Honduran pass- chology as the Palestinians. For ports. Security checks at the Dutch the rest of us, the safety of our airport failed to detect the arms passengers is paramount," lie said.) they carried. In addition to the two Algerians, Miss Khaled was taken into cus- Israel is holding several dozen tody when the plane made an Egyptian prisoners of war, and emergency landing at London. some 2,000 Palestinian guerrillas Peres said the crime was com- are serving time in Israeli jails. mitted aboard an Israeli aircraft Last week Israel rescued the 24- and therefore technically on Is- man crew of a burning Greek raeli soil. (British authorities re- freighter, 14 of thrm Egyptian na- portedly have the Israeli extradi- tionals who have been detained. tion demand under consideration. According to reports from London Popular Front's Stature to Rise there was some inclination to re- if It Wins Freedom of Commandos lease the girl in order to save the LONDON (JTA) — Observers hostages in Jordan from terrorist here said that if the Popular reprisals. The guerrillas have de- manded the return of Miss Khaled to Jordan along with the body of the slain hijacker.) Israel officials pointed out that the landing strip at Zerka was Jordanian territory, though admit- tedly under control of terrorists who are backed by Iraqi troops at Mafraq where King Hussein's authority is ignored. One official who asked not to be identified said, "I am pretty sure they would not kill the passengers and crew, and as for the planes, they are of much less importance than human lives." A senior official of El Al said the rash of hijackings was a direct result of the Greek government's recent surrender to terrorist demands. He referred to the release in Athens last month of seven Arab terrorists who were serving jail terms for fatal attacks on an El Al airliner and the El Al office there. They were released after the hijacking of an Olympic Airways jet and terrorist threats to kill all of its passengers and crew. (In Paris, the vice president of the French Airline Pilots' Asso- ciation claimed that Israel's seiz- ure last month of two Algerian Front succeeded in freeing Arab guerrillas jailed abroad, its stock would soar in the Arab world. The Front, though far from the largest of the guerrilla group, is the most militant and leans to the left. Its leader, Dr. George Habash, a self-proclaimed Marxist, has been described by journalists who have interviewed him as a "fanatic who is determined not only to destroy Israel but to overthrow Arab re- gimes of which he does not ap- prove." Success for the Front is also viewed here as the 'probable death knell for the regime of King Hussein of Jordan, whose authority in his own country is diminishing rapidly. Egyptian leaders also apparent- ly fear a rise in the Popular Front's stature. The semi-official Cairo daily AI Ahram was critical of the hijackings, though did not go so far as to condemn them. The paper, a mouthpiece of Presi- dent Gamal Abdel Nasser, said Tuesday that "One of the main goals of the battle (with Israel) is to gain world public opinion on the side of the Palestinian strug- gle and not to lose it. It is evident that the attack on international (Continued on Page 34) the plane. Besides the terrorists, a stewardess was wounded in the struggle. The trip to Israel represented the culmination of a dream for the Feuereisens, who spent their three-week vacation visiting rela- tives. Their two youngest, Sherrie, 15, and Andrew, 13, started back to 17, school Wednesday. Walter, starts to Wayne State University . in October. How do her children feel about returning to Israel, now that they'vt , seen the dangers that the state confronts'.' Mrs. Feuereisen said her teen-agers would love to return for a visit, but not to live. They have six days of school in Israel. - she explained. - THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS j here guarding two hijacked passenger airplanes in the desert near Amman. At the left in the and at the right the Swissair DC-8. Jordanian army vehicles are shown 48—Friday, September 11, 1970 I background is the TWA 707