Surgeons Will Shift Site
of World Parley Unless
Israelis Can Attend
UNITED NATIONS (JT•) —
A Security Council meeting on Is-
raeli practices in East Jerusalem,
reported earlier as almost certain
for the end of this month, will not
be held until August, if at all,
Western diplomats said Monday.
They said most of the 15 mem-
bers of the council feel that noth-
ing "productive" can come out of
such a meeting until after the up-
coming re-visit to Israel by the
American assistant secretary of
state for Near Eastern affairs, Jo-
seph J. Sisco.
Diplomats here said Sisco would
leave Thursday for a five- or 10-
lay stay in Israel, meaning that
he will not return to Washington
until Monday at the earliest. He
will then need additional time to
report to his superiors.
The council president for Au-
gust will be Piero Vinci of Italy,
TEL AVIV (JTA)—The Inter-
national Surgeons Association will
shift the site of its annual con-
ference from Moscow to Brussels
if necessary unless two Israeli
surgeons receive entry visas en-
abling them to attend, the Israeli
section of the association was in-
formed by letter.
The group set Sunday as dead-
line for the issuance of visas to
the eight top Israeli surgeons who
applied for them.
The deadline was intended to
counter a familiar Soviet tactic
used to prevent Israelis from at-
tending international events in the
USSR. In the past, Soviet author-
ities have withheld final decision
on visas until it was too late to
change the site of the meeting.
Bayh Clarifies
Position on Golan
and although Israel would
rather not have the council
meeting at all, if it were un-
avoidable she would presumably
prefer to have it under the
chairmanship of the Italian
rather than of Jacques Kosciu-
sko-Morizet of France.
The Near East subcommittee of
the House Foreign Affairs Com-
mittee heard testimony Wednes-
day in support of the view that
the interests of Christians, Mos-
lems and Jews would be best
served if Jerusalem remains a
unified city.
The testimony was presented by
Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum, direc-
tor of the national interreligious
affairs department of the Ameri-
can Jewish Committee, who was
invited to appear before the con-
gressional body.
Other authorities invited to tes-
tify were Dr. James ICritzeck, of
Notre Dame University, a theologi-
cal adviser at the Second Vatican
Council; and Muhammed Abd al-
Rauf, of the Islamic Center in
New York. Rabbi Tanenbaum also
serves as co-secretary of a joint
Vatican-Jewish international com-
mittee and a, joint World Council
of Churches-Jewish Committee.
The hearings before the sub-
committee are part of a series
devoted to the Middle East con-
flict that include testimony on -the
re-opening of the Suez Canal, bor-
ders and the Palestinian problem.
Rabbi Tanenbaum notes that
during the period of Jordanian
occupation theke was a sharp
drop in the number of Chris-
tians in Jerusalem—front 25,000
in 1948 to 10,800 in 1967.
"It is now evident that some
20,000 Christians emigrated from
Jerusalem during that period of
Jordanian occupation and that it
has come to a halt in 196'7. Against
the background of the mounting
departures of Christians from such
Arab countries as Egypt, Jordan,
Lebanon and Libya, it seems that
the Christian community in Israel
has become one of the most stable
and flourishing," said Rabbi Tan-
enbaum.
Rabbi Goldman's Trial
Postponed; to Be Oct. 18
NEW YORK (JTA)—New York
- City, Criminal Court Judge William
Suglia has agreed to postpone the
,
trial of Rabbi A. Bruce Goldman
:
and a Columbia University grad-
_ 0) late student until Oct. 18.
In accepting the defendants' mo-
..
tion for the delay, which was con-
curred in by the District Attor-
ney's office, Judge Suglia post-
-
poned the trial set fpr July 20 by
Judge Edward Pincus, who on July
14 denied the motion.
The defendants, with the ac-
•.-tily* quiescence of the prosecution,
wanted to put off the hearing
.44: until after the Jewish holidays,
since until then their witnesses
—including Rabbi Abraham
: Joshua Heschel of the Jewish
Theological Seminary of Amer-
ica—would be abroad.
Rabbi Goldman, spiritual leader
of the Radical Jewish Union at
Coltunbia, and Victor Levin are
charged with unlawful disruption
- of services at Temple Emanu-El
last summer in their attempt to
arouse till congregation to action
to end the Vietnam war. Their
trial had been postponed several
times previously.
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Friday, July 30, 1971-5
Psychoanalysts Cheer the Return of Anna Freud
VIENNA—Anna Freud, 76-year-
old daughter of Sigmund Freud,
was given a standing ovation by
2,000 psychoanalysts meeting in
Vienna on her first return to the
city since the Freuds were driven
out by the Nazis in 1938.
The International Psychoanalytic
Association is holding its first con-
gress in Vienna, where Freud de-
veloped his theories of mental
function and human behavior.
Until now, the association had
shunned Vienna because many of
its members believed that both
Freud and his findings were badly
treated by the authorities and
medical community here.
However, the official climate
has changed, most notably with
the dedication of a museum in
what was Freud's home and office
for 47 years. A reception Tuesday
night tendered for the association
by Burgomeister Felix Slavik also
was seen as a mark of respect for
Freud.
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WASHINGTON —In a clarifica-
tion of remarks incorrectly attri-
buted to him, Sen. Birch Bayh
(D-Ind.) has issued a statement
that he believes the Golan Heights,
Straits of Tiran and Gulf of Aqaba
should not be returned by Israel
to the Arabs.
An earlier report on his speech
before a Bnai Brith group in In-
dianapolis was carried by Associ-
ated 'Press and picked up by the
Jewish Telegraphic Agency (Jew-
ish News, July 9). In that wire
story, Sen. Bayh was reported to
have said that in exchange for a
permanent peace, Israel should
give up most of its occupied terri-
tory, including the Golan Heights,
the Tiran Strait and Gulf of
Aqaba.
In fact, Sen. Bayh had said:
"Without proper safeguards (in
these areas) the state of Israel,
confronted with past experience,
can hardly feel secure . . . I would
not want to live in a kibutz at the
foot of the Golan Heights if the
Syrians had control of the upper
'reaches."
Stating that he is "unalterably
..opposed to an imposed settlement,"
Sen. Bayh said in his clarification
letter that "Handing back to the
Arabs such strategically sensitive
areas as the Golan Heights and
Sharm el Sheikh . . . does not
seem to me to be a prescription
for secure boundaries or for perm-
anent peace in the Middle East."
4
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Security Council Members Dubious
on Usefulness of Jerusalem Meeting
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