Jerusalem Rioting Threat to Unified City, Kollek Warns JERUSALEM (JTA)—Rioting in Jerusalem between religious zealots protesting "Sabbath dese- cration" and nonreligious youths was angrily condemned by the cabinet and Mayor Teddy Kollek Sunday night. The cabinet unanimously de- nounced the disturbances after hearing a report from Police Min- ister Shlomo Hillel, but declined to place blame on any quarter. Mayor Kollek warned that con- tinuation of the violence posed a serious threat for the unification of Jerusalem. ght policemen and 10 others y.,,...e injured, none seriously, in Saturday night's melee which re- sulted in the arrests of an un- specified number of persons. Ten were released Sunday. Others were held for further questioning. The rioting broke out at the Central Bus Terminal where about 200 Orthodox demonstrators led by Rabbi Amram Blau of the Neturei Karat hurled rocks at buses and cars entering the city before the close of the Sabbath. The zealots were confronted by youths from the nearby Romema • quarter armed with stones and' sticks. Egged Co. buses were pelted with rocks again Sunday night on the main road in the Mea Shearim quarter, but no injuries or arrests were reported. About 200 black garbed residents of the quarter, many of them teen-agers, set up a road block forcing traffic to be rerouted. About 300 residents of the Mea hearim quarter demonstrated peacefully in the center of town Tuesday night to protest alleged "Sabbath desecration" by Egged. They marched from their Oar- ter behind Rabbi Blau. , The crowd was addressed by Rabbi Yehezkel Halberstam, the "Stropkove Rebbe," who denounced the attitude of the "Zionist state" toward religion. Some speeches ;were delivered in English. Discipline squads among the demonstrators maintained order, . in contrast to the stone throwing last Saturday and Sunday. Mayor Kollek took a serious view of the situation in the city council. He told members "We can't limit , violence. to one part of town anymore than we can cholera," hinting that disturbances confined so far to the western half . of the city could spread to East .Jerusalem with dire consequences lor Israel's image.. - Investors Funding Seven Inns in Israel NEW YORK (JTA)—Israeli and American investors will provide the funds to build seven fran- chised Holiday Inns in Israel with construction of the first beginning in Jerusalem next year and the •nd in Tel Aviv in 1973. .ne plans were announced by Kemmons Wilson, founder and board chairman of Holiday Inns, Inc., of Memphis, the world's larg- est international network of hotels and motels. Participants in the Israeli Holi- day Inns franchise agreement in- clude Israeli Inns International, of St. Louis, Sesli Investments and Solel Boneh, the construction co- .operative of Histadrut. The largest of the projected Holiday Inns, in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, will have 450 rooms and convention facilities. Israel's first Holiday Inn, to have 120 rooms, is presently under con- struction at Ein. Gedi on the Dead Sea. Other sites selected for future Holiday Inns are Kiryat Shemona, Neve Yam, Ramat Rahel, ,Gesher Haziv and Lydda Airport. t Compensation Plan for E. Jerusalem Arabs Seen to Draw Mixed Reviews JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel's proposed measure to compensate East Jerusalem Arabs for the property they lost when the Jew- ish state - was established in 1948 has drawn a cautious but general- ly favorable response from prom- inent East Jerusalem Arabs. But it has been assailed and de- nounced by the nationalist press in Beirut. Arabs across the border de- scribed the government bill, an- nounced by Justice Minister Yaacov Shapira, as a "gimmick" designed to tighten Israel's grip on East Jerusalem and its inhabi- tants. According to the Jordonian minister of information, Adnan Abu Udeh, who comes from Jerusalem, the compensation offer is a "conspiracy" aimed at changing the citizenship of Jerusalem Arabs from Jor- danian to Israeli in order "to complete the annexation of the Holy City." Another Palestinian spokesman claimed in Amman that that inter- pretation was "the only explana- tion why compensation is offered only to Jerusalem Arabs of all the inhabitants of occupied Arab ter- ritory." Nothing in the Shapira measure indicates that East Jerusalem . Arabs would have to become Is- raeli citizens in order to qualify for compensation. East Jerusalem Arabs retain Jordanian citizenship but became legal residents of Is- rael after the 1967 war and are subject to Israeli law. Arabs in the other occupied territories are not considered residents of Israel and have been allowed to retain the Jordanian legal code. A compensation bill passed by the Israeli Knesset therefore could not be applied to them. Many East Jerusalem Arabs expressed reservations over the measure, mainly because they lacked concrete details. They said the news came as a com- plete surprise. Several prominent East Jeru- salem lawyers, among them form- er Jordanian Defense Minister Anwar Nusseibeh, said they needed time to study the pro- posed legislation. Mahmoud Abu Zuluf, editor and publisher of the Jerusalem Arabic daily Al Kuds, who held property in Tel Aviv and Jaffa that is esti- mated to be worth millions, ex- pressed reservations about the method of evaluating the property and the means of payment but he thought the bill could provide "a partial settlement of the refugee problem." The measure, which Shapira has cleared with the premier and fi- nance minister, would obligate the government to pay an estimated minimum of $100,000,000 to Arab residents of East Jerusalem for property they held prior to 1948 ization for several African "free- dom fighter" movements opposed to colonialism and apartheid. The South African government ranks it as a terrorist organization. The South African press de- nounced the Israeli offer and it was also sharply criticized in a joint statement issued last month by the South African Jewish Board of Deputies and the S. A. Zionist Federation. Israel claimed that the offer to the OAU was made in response to a humanitarian appeal from the United Nations secretary general to aid victims of natural disasters. Observers here believe the South African government will shortly re- scind its ban on fund transfers to Israel- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, July 9, 11971-5 NEW CADILLAC ? in BIRMINGHAM at S. Africa to Reconsider Ban on Fund Transfers After Israel Re-Directs Gift JERUSALEM (JTA)—The South African Cabinet will meet in ex- traordinary session next week to consider rescinding its ban on the transfer of funds raised for Israel, the Israel Broadcasting Service reported. The ban was imposed last month in reaction to Israel's offer of $2,850 in food and medical sup- plies to the Organization of African Unity which infuriated the South African government. It also froze commercial transactions between the two countries. The IBS said it had its informa- tion through a telephone conversa- tion with a spokesman for the South African Treasury in Pre- toria. The reconsideration was prompted by Israel's apparent withdrawal of its offer to the OAU, the report said. The government announced Sunday night that it has decided to donate $2,850 — the sum ear- marked for the OAU — to the United Nations High Commis- sioner for Refugees to be used for the education of African refugees. in what is now Israeli territory. The compensation would be in the form of 20-year government bonds. WI LSON-CRISSMAN CADILLAC CALL BUS. MI 4-1930 RES. 642-6836 1350 N. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM : Meet a real taste mported Canada's from Oldest Distiller Canadian To tell the truth, we do not so much abandon our vices as change them, and, in my opinion, for the worse.—Montaigne. SHA ELS CAN FIT YOU! The announcement recalled that last May 18 Israel offered the OAU medicine, blankets and foodstuffs worth $2,850 for humanitarian purposes in Africa but never re- ceived a response from the or- ganization. The wording of the announcement implied that the original offer no longer stands. The OAU is an umbrella organ- AFTER-5 GOWNS $29 to$199 • Short, Long, Pant style •For Weddings, Parties, Dates •Junior, Misses, Large Sizes SHANDELS 154 South Woodward Birmingham, Mich. Mi 2-4150 Rich & Rare Whisky Impressive bottle ... individually registered at the distillery. Impressive taste ... supremely mellow, richly rewarding. X 5 11 THE FIFTH ALL TAXES INCLUDED BLENDED CANADIAN WHISKY, IMPORTED BY ASSOCIATED IMPORTERS, INC., BOTTLED IN U.S.A. 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