110 Jet Plane Sale Speculated (Continued from Page 1) wing Mapam party were among the strong opponents of the plan. Mapam advocates withdrawal tied to demilitarization. as suggested in Security Council Resolution 242 of Nov. 22, 1967. Therefore, the proposed Egyptian canal crossing is as unacceptable to Mapam as to anyone else. An official communique noted the "continuing efforts" of the participants to reach an agreement on a partial settlement. On Thursday, Sisco conferred with Eban and other foreign min- istry officials on matters not con- nected with the canal, such as loans and grants and other eco- nomic issues. A report in the New York Times Wednesday that the Nixon admin- istration was pondering plans for a three- to four-year commitment to sell Israel an additional 100 jet warplanes was considered here a deliberate leak by the United States to indicate a promise of "com- . pensation" to Israel for a more "flexible" attitude toward Sisco's proposals. The consensus of Israel's lead- ers was reported to be that the Sisco proposals were not satis- factory and that they will be rejected by Mrs. Meir but that the rejection will be phrased diplomatically. Details were lack- ing but the reports were that the turndown will be phrased in a manner to give Sisco some lever- age when and if he goes to Egypt to continue his efforts there for an interim Suez Canal agreement. for an interim Suez Canal agree- ment. The American sources also said if Sisco does go to Egypt, he is likely to go via Cyprus and be joined by Michael Sterner, head of the State Department's Egyp- tian desk. Sterner visited Cairo last month for a series of con- sultations with Donald Bergus, chief resident diplomat in Cairo, on the interim settlement pro- posals. WASHINGTON (JTA) — Knowl- edgeable sources here voiced skep- ticism over the New York Times story that the Nixon administra- tion was considering a proposal to modernize Israel's aging air force by agreeing to sell as many as 110 Jet planes over the next three to four years. White House and State Department spokesmen both said they had no information about any such plan. The sources said that the report- ed planning did not fit into any- thing that was known about Is- raeli-United States discussions on military assistance and dismissed the story as possible "wishful thinking." Other sources, however, indicated there was some basis for the Times report that such a plan was under consideration as a political action to give Assistant Secretary of State Joseph Sisco a powerful "carrot" in his as yet un- successful efforts in Israel to per- suade Israeli leaders to be more "flexible" on U. S. proposals for an interim Israel-Egyptian agree- ment to permit reopening of the Suez Canal. 14—Friday, August 6, 1971 Record -A- Call Will automatically answer your telephone .. . in your own voice . . . greet the caller .. . faithfully record all messages . . . and solve all your communication problems. And with the exclusive DECORDER" you can truly put your telephone in your pocket! Outright Purchase or Lease Available From As Low As $15.00 per month. Advanced Electronic Systems Eye Doctors Prescriptions Filled 23077 GREENFIELD PRESCRIPTION OPTICAL CO. 26001 Coolidge THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 543 3343 - ADVANCE BUILDING SOUTHFIELD PHONE 557-6131 Classified Ads Get Quick Results Michigan Bell Report to Customers A clarification of facts concerning your telephone service and usage Hebron Religious Status Demanded by Its Settlers JERUSALEM (JTA) A dispute has developed between Orthodox Jewish settlers in Hebron and the housing ministry over who can live in the new Jewish quarter being built by the Government in that West Bank, formerly all-Arab town. Housing Minister Zeev Sharef said that he was advising young couples who could not find flats in Jerusalem to apply for one of the new housing units rising in i Hebron. Sharef :made it clear that the group calling itself the "He- bron Settlers" will not decide who is and who is not eligible for hous- 1 ing there. The housing ministry has taken • the view that the new quarter, to ' be called Kiryat Arba, should re- flect the average composition of the Israeli population and not any single community. Leaders of the Hebron settlers, all Orthodox Jews, have denounced the plan. They insist that Kiryat Arba must become an exclusively religious settlement or, as they put it, a "tradition bound community" which means enforced observance of the Sabbath and other religious customs. They said, however, that they did not object in principle to non-religious settlers, apparently as long as they submitted to religious rules. The Kirvat Arba project was originally initiated against the gov- ernment's own wishes under pres- sure from the roligft)es parties and the nationalist. Herut faction. The Hebn-)n settlers established themselves in the town two years ago in defiance of military govern- ment orders. They were quartered Arab hotel and laler moved into the in government. compound fur pi- oiecOon. They and their supporters have been agitat- ing ever since for adequate hous- ing which the government finally agreed to build with public funds. The cost ofyour interzone and long distance c will not be affected by the new proposed rates. Don't expect the new proposed rates to make a big difference in your phone bill. Because they won't. The new rates would apply mainly to your basic monthly service charges and would not in any way affect the charges for interzone or long distance calls within Michigan. For example, you can make a one-minute call from Detroit to Traverse City for 35c c less (depending on wheth- er you dial direct), That same call would cost exactly the same under the new rate proposal. But, as always, the more toll calls you make, the more you pay. Though the new rate proposal will not increase interzone and long distance rates, your bill will still go up or down in direct proportion to the number and length of such calls. So, to a great extent, the size of your bill is up to you. You can lower it by making fewer and shorter interzone and long distance calls, if you choose. If you have any doubts as to what constitutes an "interzone" or "long distance" call, please don't hesitate to call your Michigan Bell Business Office. We want to help. Michigan Bell