- • 1. ■ -.." _ Extension of Cease Fire U.S. Aim Yosef Tekoah Tribute to a Great Jurist • Russian Jews Expose the Kremlin Vilifications Yosef Tekoah, as chief Israel representative to the United Nations, bad initial talks with the peace negotiator, Dr. Gunnar Jarring, Monday morning, and the major task as outlined from UN headquarters as well as In the State Department in Washington is to assure the extension of the cease fire betwron T"'S'a '" Egypt beyond the Feb. 5 deadline. Peace hopes dwindled when the Egyptian president, Anwar el-Sadat, made renewed war threats against Israel at a rally in Cairo en Tuesday. While these threats are general/3 ,, viewed as part of the routine means of either appealing to or appeasing public sentiments on the Egyp- tian home base, they nevertheless are viewed seriously. In Israel, too, there is skepticism over any possibility of an early peace developing from the Jarring talks. Continuation of the cease fire meanwhile is considered as a major responsibifilty in Wash- ington, and the White House and the State Department are laboring to achieve it especially with pressures upon Israel. THE JEWISH NEWS Michigan Weekly Commentary Page 2 Review of Jewish News Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper — Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle Vol. LVI I I, No. 17 '- 27 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd., Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075, 356-8400 $8.00 Per Year; This Issue 25c A Great Campaign Demands Fuller Coverage of Potential Contributors Editorial Page 4 January 8, 1971 Officially Inspired Soviet Retaliation Threats Anger U. S. as Protests Continue • Jarring Talks Under Way, Marked by Much Pessimism UNITED NATIONS (JTA)—Ambassador Gunnar V. Jarring made it official Tuesday when he announced through a spokesman that the Middle East peace talks under his auspices had "resumed" this morning—after a 131-day delay. To mark the occasion, Dr. Jarring broke from practice and disclosed his agenda for the day: a morning meeting with Israeli Ambassador Yosef Tekoah and an afternoon meeting with Egyptian Ambassador Mohammed H. el-Zayyat. Tekoah left for Israel Thursday and later will continue his efforts in Arab countries. UN Secretary General U Thant's eagerly awaited report on Mid East peace progress made its appearance on schedule Tuesday. It is a 40-page document in which his substantial comments are that "In the last few days It has become possible to arrange for the resumption of the discussions" and that "I hope that these resumed discussions will be fruitful." The bulk of the report to the Security Council consists of a chronology of Dr. Jarring's activities from Dec. 9, 1967, through Monday; the major Mid East parties' replies to 14 questions posed by Dr. Jarring in March 1969, dealing with the countries' positions on the various provisions of Security Council Resolutions 242 of Nov. 22, 1967; the parties' responses to Dr Jarring's Nov. 18, 1970, invita- tion to resume negotiations; and a restatement of the text of Reso- lution 242. (In Jerusalem Tuesday, political circles cautioned that the (Continued on Page 5) WASHINGTON (JTA)--The United States government reacted angrily Tuesday to a Soviet diplomatic note accusing U. S. authorities of conniving in acts of violence by "Zionist extremists" against Soviet personnel and property in this country and threat- ening retaliation against American citizens in Russia. The note was delivered to Acting Secretary of State U. Alexis Johnson by Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin Monday. Its text was broadcast by Moscow Radio Monday night. State Department Spokesman Robert J. McCloskey told newsmen Tuesday that Johnson totally rejected the allegation of connivance and warned the Russians that they were "raising the spectre of officially inspired retaliation" against Americans an the Soviet Union and that `Such action by the Soviet government would indeed be serious, and we consider such a threat most disturbing." McCloskey said that Johnson's reply was oral and that no written reply was contemplated. However, he said, the acting secretary of state made it clear that the U _ . S. deplores and condemns acts of violence against Soviet institutions and groups in the U. S. and has "taken enforcible stews which we hope will be effective against such acts of violence." The Soviet note claimed that Zionist extremists not only hamper the normal func- tioning of Soviet offices in the U. S. and jeopardize the U. S.-Soviet cultural exchange program, but also openly threaten Soviet diplomats and their Soviet citizens with physical violence. "The American authorities, however, contrary to their promises to take necessary measures, are in fact continuing to connive in these criminal actions," the note charged. It stressed that if the U. S. does not take necessary action to create normal condi- ditions for Soviet organizations and groups traveling in this country, "it cannot expect the guarantee of such conditions for American organizations or offices in the Soviet Union." The American reply, while reflecting anger over the Soviet threat, also constituted the first sharp rebuke at a governmental level to persons and groups that have engaged in violent actions or threats against Soviet institutions and groups in the U. S. McCloskey Pilot Residence for Retardates Wins Support, Nears Realization The long aspiration for a residence for mental retardates of the Jewish community is on its way to folt -m_ ment, with the purchase of a five-bedroom home by the Parents Association for Jewish Residential Care. Announcement of the purchase was made at the budgeting conference of the Jewish Welfare Federation last month, but Mrs. Morris Mitteldorf, vice president of the PAJRC, said several steps remain before an opening date is announced, hopefully in early spring. The five-bedroom house is located on a 61/2-acre parcel across from the projected Jewish Center and the Home for the Aged, at W. Maple and Drake Rds., in West Bloomfield Township. Yet to be accomplished are formal rezoning of the area, financing and establishment of criteria for selection of the residents. The group already has a verbal rezoning commitment, according to President Harry Berlin. The National Council of Jewish Women, which agieect w join in the pilot project 4-5 months ago, will help coordinate the efforts, based on the council's own expertise In running Orchards, a residence for emotionally disturbed boys. At the outset, the home will accommodate up to 12 residents, age 21-50, who have been living in foster homes. It has been charged that such foster situations are largely inadequate and that the special needs of isolated Jewish retardates are not met. The residents will be carefully selected as to those who will thrive in such a setting and who can work within the community or in a sheltered workshop. Mrs. Mitteldorf said the parents' association is locking for a set of houseparents and a part-time supervisor with a social work background. She added that the association still is seeking the financial assistance of the Jewish Welfare Federation. The latter has indicated it looks kindly upon efforts to extend services to the mentally retarded but is not ready to offer a specific recommendation for establishment of a housing facility under Jewish auspices. The association decided to go ahead, even without Federation backing, because "We think the only way to push through Is to show it can be done. Each little push helps," Mrs. Mitteldorf said. Late last year, the Federation Board of Governors approved a report by the health and welfare division which (Continued on Page 3) (Continued on Page 18) Czech Jews Fear Repeat of Purges Akin to 1950s; Zionists Blamed Anew NEW YORK (JTA)—The president of the American Jewish Committee revealed that the organization's Euro- pean office, headquartered in Paris, has reported in- creasing apprehension among Czechoslovak Jews and fears of a repetition of the purges of the 1950s. Philip E. Hoffman, in a statement on the re-emergence of anti-Semitism in Czechoslovakia, declared: "Clearly, the unpopular regime of Gustav Husak has unleashed its power against the pitiful remnant of pre-World War II Czechoslovak Jewry in order to stifle the struggle between Czechoslovak liberals and conservatives, and to obscure the shortcomings in Czech society." Purges of Czechoslovak intellectuals have mounted in the last few months, especially of persons who can be identified as Jews, Hoffman stated. "Jews have been blamed for many of the failures of the sociallit countries and of their allies, and the Czech radio has broadcast themes that harken back to the discredited Russian Czarist forgeries, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion," he reported. In this intensified action, the terms "Zionist" and "Zionism" have been used in place of "Jew" or "Juda- ism," thus obscuring differences for the ordinary reader or listener. The Czechoslovak Jewish community now numbers about 10,000. 4