Rabin, St. John Due at Functions Inaugurating Allied Drive Prominent personalities will appear in Detroit at a series of pre-campaign functions to inaugurate the 1971 Allied Jewish Cam. paign•Israel Emergency Fund. Israel Ambassador to the U.S. Uzbek Rabin and Mrs. Rabin will be guests at the traditional black tie dinner at Cong. Shaarey Zedek on Feb. 9. Robert St. John, noted author and lecturer, will address a women's function next Wednesday. Nine division meetings will be held during the coming week. Detailed stories on Page 34 THE JEWISH NEWS Panic Over the Handful of Extremists: Rejection of Self-Flagellation Editorial Page 4 Vol. LVIII, No. 19 Michigan Weekly gq Review of Jewish News Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper — Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle olciP#› 27 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd., Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075, 356-8400 $8.00 Per Year; This Issue 25c 'Fools' Socialism': Anti Semitism - Emerges When New Leftists Play Into Hands of Rightists Commentary Page 2 January 22, 1971 War Dangers Believed Receding; Guerrillas May Yield on Peace Israel's Peace Proposals Jeune Afrique, the news magazine published in Paris, printed what it claims to be the set of peace proposals Israel presented to Dr. Gunnan V. Jarring, the United Nations mediator, when be was in Israel twq weeks ago. The French magazine published the text in French and in English, and it was reprinted in the New York Times on Tuesday. The reported 14 points in the Israel position are: 1. The declared and explicit decision to regard the conflict as finally terminate& 2. Respect and acknowledgment by the parties in explicit terms of each others' sovereignty, territorial integrity and political independence. 3. Establishment of secure, recognised and agreed haundarlees- 4. Other additional arrangements for insuring security. 5. Withdrawal of military forces from territories lying beyond positions agreed in the peace treaty. 6. Termination of all states of war and acts of hostility or belligerency. 7. The responsibility for insuring that as warlike act, or violence, by any organization, group or individual originates from or Is committed in its territory against the population, citizens or property of the other party. 3. Termination of all discrindnatens or interferences, economic warfare in all its manifestailons, including boycott. This obligation is not dependent on anything except the conclusion et the state of war. 9. Provisions laying down the obligations accepted by the parties toward the settlement of the refugee problem, after which neither party shall be under claims from the other inconsistent with its sovereignty. 10. Arrangements concerning places of religious and historic significance. 11. Arrangement for free port and transit facilities. 12. Nonparticipating in hostile alliances and the prohibition of stationing of troops of other parties which maintain a state of belligerency against the other. 13. Noninterference in domestic affairs and noninterference in the normal foreign relation in the other party. 14. Peace must be expressed in a binding treaty in accordance with normal law and precedent. All of the points except 10 and vv also apply to Egypt, and only 10 of the 14 apply to Lebanon, with which Israel has no territorial disputes, the New York limes comments. , Zionist Federation Backs Detroit Israel Trade Fair Detroit will have an Israel Trade Fair, and the period of April 22 through May 2 has been selected for it. It will be held at the Jewish Center, and the event will conclude with the annual observance of Israel Anniversary Day—Yom HaAtzmaut. The fair, sponsored by the Detroit Zionist Federation, Israel Chamber of Commerce and the Jewish Center, will have as co- sponsors all the local affiliated Zionist groups and many other local movements, congregations and fraternal organizations. Appointment of Jerry Malamud as coordinator of the fair was announced this week by Carmi M. Slomovitz, president of the Detroit Zionist Federation. The fair will inaugurate a continuing movement to encour- age the purchase of Israel-made goods. Many products will be brought to Detroit from Israel for display at the fair, and Detroit merchants _ who already sell Israel-made merchandise are being enrolled as participants in the fair. Rabbi Moses Lehrman, vice president of the Zionist Federa- tion in charge of programing, announced a public assembly for the enrollment of organizational participants as corporate mem- bers to be held at Cong. Shaarey Zedek on March 14. Rabbi Israel Miller, president of the American Zionist Federation, will be gad apoalker at the assembly. Enroihnint - of corporate members is being conducted under the chairmanship of Rabbi Leo Goldman. Reports that the Palestinian guerrillas may cooperate in arriving at a peace settlement between Israel and the Arab states and that polit- ical moves now. in process may not be oppose d; and indications that Egypt is receding in its war threats, thus giving an assurance that the cease fire will be extended after Feb. 5, gave some hope for a possibility to an end to the Middle East conflict. TEL AVIV (JTA) — The prospect that Egypt would resume hostilities in the Suez Canal Zone next month seemed to recede Wednesday as some details of Cairo's reply to Israeli proposals became known here. According to informed sources, the Egyptian memorandum which was conveyed to Israel through United Nations media- tor Gunnar V. Jarring, contained no hint of an intention to renew warfare when the current cease fire expires on Feb. 5. Nor did it contain any hint that Egypt woule ask for a meeting of the Security Council before Feb. 5 to revise the Middle F.st resumption of hostilities on Feb. 5. The Egyptians are known to have reiterated their demand for an advance timetable of Israeli proposals. Their reply did not yield on that matter and did not, contain references to the future rights of the Palestinians. But-sources familiar with the memorandum said it did not constitute an outright rejection of Israel's proposals. Some officials here saw in the Egyptian reply some evidence that Egypt may now be ready for the first serious peace negotiations with Israel since the 1967 Slx- Day •War. Israeli 'officials report that the feeling in the United States is that there is small chance of an early solution to the Middle East conflict because the two sides are still as far apart as ever. But Washington is said to agree that there will be no resumption of 'hostilities on Feb. 5. Thant: U. S.-USSR Peace Force Would Be Problem, but Not Anglo-France Force UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (JTA)—Secretary General U Thant asserted Monday that "active participation" of the United States and the Soviet Union in a Middle East peacekeeping force would "create more problems" than it would solve, but that such participation by the other two members of the Big Four—Britain and France —would present no difficulties. Speaking at a press conference here, Thant said he had "personal doubts about the wisdom" of a Big Four peacekeeping presence in the Mid East in the foreseeable future, but that by 1980 or 1990 it "may be desirable and even essentiaL" The Big Four, Thant added, "will have a major role to play (in the Mid East) sooner or later," but they "should not be too active" in working on peace- keeping guidelines for the Security Council. The council, he said, "is the master of its own decisions" and has a "very important role to play" in the Mid East, including the determination of a peacekeeping force. The secretary general would not go beyond his view of "cautious optimism," contending it would be "damaging" to the peace talks for him to make any substan- tive" comments," as Dr. Jarring is now "in a very delicate stage of discussions with (Related stories on Page 5) the parties primarily involved." News Blackout on Riga Trial NEW YORK JTA)—Once again, a news blackout has descenced over a trial of Soviet Jews. The Jewish Telegraphic Agency reported Tuesday that four Jews of Riga, Latvia, were to be tried Wednesday, but no sources could confirm by midday Wednesday whether the proceeding has actually gotten under way. Jewish sources reported conflicting dates for the start of the trial. The local office of TASS, the Soviet Press agency, told the JTA it had received no word on the matter from Moscow. The JTA report of the start of the new trial was based on information obtained from a Muscovite Jewish family by the Israel Broad- casting Service. The defendants were said to be Ruth Aleksandrovich, 23, a nurse; Arkady Shpilberg, 23, an engineer, and Mikhail Shep• shelovich, 27, and Boris kfaftsier, 23, occupa- tions unknown. They were said to be charged with anti-Soviet activities. Meanwhile, it has been learned that Leonid Rigerman, the Russian-born computer pro- gramer recently granted American citizenship (Contused on Page 35) Kahane Pledges JDL Moratorium on Harassments NEW YORK (JTA)—Two major Jewish organizations expressed satisfaction Wednes- day with Rabbi Meir Kahane's promise of a moratorium on the harassment of Soviet offi- cials by the Jewish Defense League. Philip E. Hoffman, president of the American Jewish Committee, said. "While we share the league's concern for 3,000,000 Jews in the Soviet Union, we have consistently deplored its illegal methods of expressing this concern." Hoffman said that he assumed Kahane was referring to the AJCommittee as well as other Jewish organizations when he said the mora- torium was called at the request of Jewish leaders. "We and all major Jewish organiza- tions have expressed keen dismay with his tactics," Hoffman added. Kahane announced the moratorium Tuesday after he and seven other JDL members were indicted by a New York County grand jury on various charges of harassment and disorderly (Continued on Page 43)