Pressures Mounting as Sunday Deadline Looms- (Continued from Page 1) tions mediator Gunnar V. Jarring last Friday. It was disclosed that the note contains no references to future boundaries but makes it clear that Israel will not return to the bor- ders that existed before the June. 1967 Six-Day War. Addressing a group of British settlers in Tel Aviv, Eban said the gist of the Is- raeli note was that Israel is pre- pared to discuss all points at issue with Egypt as long as Cairo is ready to discuss peace with Israel but that there could be no precon- ditions to such discussions. Eban hinted that the movement toward peace was being hindered by the indirect nature of the Jarring talks. Conflicting assessments of the Nixon speech and future relations with the United States emerged. Deputy Premier Yigal Allan intim- ated in a radio interview that the government does not feel that Is- rael has been "let down" by the U.S. But foreign ministry circles took the view that Nixon has aban- doned his policy of all-out support of Israel which he adopted six months ago, while the late Egyp- tian President Nasser was alive. The circles said that Nixon is an- xious to improve relations with Cairo and believes this to be pos- sible under the Sadat regime even if there is no chance of ousting Soviet influence. One observer said, "Don't be surprised if you hear talk of negotiations for an American loan to Egypt in a few months." Allan agreed that the U.S. wants to "get its foot in the door" of Cairo but argued that this was pos- sible only with a strong Israel. This being the case, he said, it was still possible to persuade • Nixon to abandon the Rogers Plan. Foreign ministry circles said that Nixon's speech indicated that he stands squarely behind the Rogers plan, even knowing that the Israel gov- ernment rejects it categorically. Eban reportedly said privately that American pressure on Israel can be expected soon. He said what the U.S. wanted at this stage was not a concession by Israel but a map. Secretary Rogers was said to have told Israeli Ambassador Itz- hak Rabin in Washington last Fri- day that an appropriate counter- move by Israel to Egypt's explicit offer to make peace would be a map stating Israel's minimum ter- ritorial claims. Israel appears de- termined to resist this. Govern- ment sources conceded that sever- al committees are working on the "border question" but insisted that no maps have been drafted. How- ever, observers here said it was not certain how long Israel could hold out against Washington's de- mands for specific boundary pro- posals to Egypt. Government sources said Israel was not opposed to a solution of the Palestine refugee problem but was perturbed by Nixon's stress on it in his foreign policy message and feared that the Arab concept of a solution might somehow filter into the U.S. approach. In his radio interview, Allan re- ferred for the first time in many months to the so-called Allan Plan for Israel's future bounda- ries with Jordan. He discloied for the first time that his plan also deals with the Golan Heights and the Sinai. In Allon's view, Is- rael must retain the Sharm el- Sheikh strong point at the south- ern tip of Sinai to control navi- gation to and from Eilat and must have a connecting land strip along the western shores of the Gulf of Aqaba. These bounda- ries are considered to be more or less the same envisaged by De- fense Minister Moshe Dayan al- though Alton presented the plan in his own name only. Some ob- servers said that he might have been launching a trial balloon at the government's request to test reaction in Washington without committing Israel. The foreign ministry announced Wednesday that Israel has begun a round of diplomatic contacts with member nations of the United Na- tions Security Council. Most observ- ers believe it is an attempt to forestall a Soviet move to convene the Security Council in order to pressure Israel to backtrack from its refusal to return to the pre-June 1967 borders. The first contact took place Tues- day when Premier Golda Meir and Foreign Minister Eban met with the United States charge d'affaires, Owen Zurhellen. Eban received the Belgian ambassador, P. Willems, Wednesday and was to meet Thurs- day with the Japanese ambassador E. Tokura and the Argentine am- bassador G. Kasai. The Italian for- eign minister, Aldo Moro, was due here Thursday on an official visit. Eban also is scheduled to meet with the Italian ambassador in the next few days. The Soviet Union has been at- tempting, without result so far, to get the Four Powers to pres- sure Israel into changing its stand on borders. But Moscow has not asked for a Security Council meeting. (In Washington, the Nixon ad- ministration has imposed silence on official dealing in the Middle East because of the delicate state of the Jarring talks. Some diplo- matic sources said that Israel's re- fusal to withdraw completely from the Sinai was not entirely inflex- ible. They said the issue could be negotiated, provided that Egypt satisfied Israel by making its de- mand for total withdrawal a "nego- tiating position" rather than a pre- condition.) Israel Galili, a member of Pre- mier Golda Meir's "inner circle," disclosed Tuesday night she had recently indicated Israel's willing- ness to consider an "interim solu- tion," one that would not bring (Alin°to t=-4(q- ju larteLo l ,":1! lcosiaen FRANKFURTERS "MD PURE BEEF Kashruth Supervision by prominent Orthodox Rabbi; Rabbi Ben Zion Rosenthal and two steady Mashpichim a.11ettl.nellINIMI WILNO KOSHER e7 ...O. ITV::: sawn • FRANIUTURTILLS • CORN= BUY • BOLOGNA Distribotod be Detroit •sul Alkbigea by: JULIUS. POLLAK, 14558 Wyoming, Detroit Tel.: 931-0300 fi P,S)1 : 1!i:Ot peace but would preclude a new war in the Middle East. He said he would not rule out the possibility that a deadlock in the Jarring talks might cause this subject to emerge again in the future. Galili, a minister without port- folio in the Meir cabinet, told mem- bers of the Labor alignment Knes- set faction that Israeli leaders have made it clear in Washington what the basic elements of Israeli policy on territorial matters is. Neverthe- less, he said, the U.S. has ex- pressed dissatisfaction with the latest Israeli note sent to Cairo through UN mediator Gunnar Jar- ring. He said Israel was presently Involved in a "strenuous argu- ment" with the U.S. Egypt, on the other hand, for all of its dis- play of dissatisfaction with the Israeli note, has not said that it would quit the Jarring talks, Galill observed. The Knesset house committee Tuesday night rejected an appeal by the Gahal opposition faction against a presidium decision not to debate Presjdent Nixon's state of the world message. o Big 4 Peace Force Unworkable; 'Insubstantial' Changes Explained JERUSALEM (JTA) —A highly placed foreign ministry source slated categorically Monday that a Big Four Power peace-keeping force in the Middle East would never work because it was unthinkable that Soviet troops would fire on Arabs violating a peace agreement or that American troops would fire on Israelis. Referring to the United States' insistence that border changes must be insubstantial, a phrase Israel's No. 1 Woe in Economy: Heavy Defense Expenses JERUSALEM (JTA)—An official of the finance ministry said the ad- vent of peace in the Middle East will not lead to mass unemploy- ment in Israel or create lasting economic problems. According to Efraim Dovrat, the ministry's as- sistant director general, the main problem confronting Israel's econ- omy stems from heavy defense expenditures which create labor shortages, require heavy imports and create a foreign trade imbal- ance and a deficit. Dovrat, who made his remarks at a lecture in Haifa, is the third government official in recent days to refer to the Impact of peace on Israel's economy. The subject was brought up by Finance Minister Pinhas Sapir last Week and was referred to Feb. 24 by Dr. David Horowitz, governor of the Bank of Israel, at a meeting with foreign newsmen. The author of the "Horowitz Plan" for aiding underdeveloped nations, said that no more than one or two years would be needed to reconvert Israel to a peacetime economy after an establishment of peace. -Dr. Horowitz said he did not share the fears of Sapir that such a process would take much longer. Horowitz noted, however, that the conversion would not be easy, considering that 25 per cent of the country's gross national product is now allotted for defense and Israel's external debt comes to $1,200 per capita. But a great deal can be done to develop and increase Israel's exports, he said. Dovrat explained that conversion to a peace-time economy would be gradual because it will take years before Israel can be certain that the peace settlement is lasting. Is- rael's industry is expected to sup- ply more and more of the items needed by the defense establish- ment and will have to increase its labor force to provide production for export, he said. In that connec- tion, the official mentioned that Is- rael's arms exports had to be cut by 18 per cent in the past year due to local arms demands and the scarcity of skilled manpower. mw-ike ice .sllivisM nanrisii- ,DOITITLY, reiterated last week by President Nixon in his state of the world message, the source said that in- substantial is not necessarily the same as unimportant. The source noted that he would easily imag- ine changes in the Golan Heights or Sinai that might fit the defini- tion of insubstantial while still being important for Israel's secu- rity. According to the source, Israel's difficulties with Egypt could be ironed out "if we had face-to-face talks with the Egyptians" but even though it was hard to see how peace could be achieved without direct contacts, Israel was not making this point a condition for its continuation with the Jarring talks. The source was most emphatic on Big Power guarantees which Is- rael insists cannot be a substitute for secure and defensive borders. "The Big Powers would be ineffec- tive if called to act," the source said. He disclosed that Egypt was still adhering to "vague formulas" in its replies to United Nations mediator Gunnar V. Jarring on the critical question of free navigation for Israel. These formulas were the same that excluded Israel from the Suez Canal for more than 20 years. Similarly, he said, Egypt has of- fered Israel navigation through the Straits of Tiran "in accordance with the principles of international law," a formulation that has been established diplomatic relations but created a complex network of trade and cultural relations and mutually interlocking economic interests that made war unthinkable today. lie also expressed optimism regarding the outcome of the current differ. ences between Israel and the U.S. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 16--Friday, March 5, 1971 used against Israel in the past. The source said that the "ideal" peace between Israel and its Arab neighbors should follow the pattern of_ the Franco-German settlement after World War II which not only CHEVROLETS Newt/ Used Can & Trucks e Jay H. Diskin at MIKE SAVOIE CHEV , INC 1900 W Maple 15 Mile Rd.) . C Troy 644 2735 So Good, It's Wrapped in Gold QUALITY PRODUCT OF YONTNEY•FIDALGO SEAFOODS. INC. SEATTLE, WASHINGTON From Israel Tel Aviv String Quartet Wednesday March 17, 1971 - 8:30 p.m. Community Arts -Amlitorium Wayne State University presented by CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF DETROIT .naErs $4.00 avai , et Adier-Scheee—Tel. 962-9530 `""` MON l Hodson's Ticket Office t f•-• cup,