____andt Promises to Raise Soviet• Jewry Issue in Moscow —Story on Page 18 ;Cornrminications Muddle: How Jewish Press is Grossly Misrepresented in the U. S. Parve Inspires Language Study USSR Jewry's Michigan Weekly Editorial Page 2 Role in Kremlin Propaganda Campaign Review of Jewish News Commentary Page 4 Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper — Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle LX, No. 26 410i..1 17515 W. 9 Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 356-8400 $8.00 Per Year; This Issue 25c March 10, 1972 Peace Formula, , .Egyptian lit,' Fatah Halt Stir M. E. o Israel OK'd in Congress; Seeking Funct-for USSR Jewry WASnalannWilJTA1-,.The Senate has ap- •pr,oved the And - step in the foreign aid legislation by a *At 'Of-45,48_ and has sent the measure to the White House to be signed into law by. President Nixon. The House had Previously aPProjed the measure by 213-187. The Senate action took place last Thursday afternoon; The legislation, which calls for appropriations tetaling. $3,189,437,000, carries a grant of $50,- 000,000 in economic support to Israel and also authorizes the President to provide Israel with mill tary sales credits of. up to $300,000,000 for this fiscil year which ends June 30. /n addition, Israel will share in a fund of $20,000,4400 for American- authorized schools and hospitals abroad. The House subcommittee on State Department organization and foreign - operations will recom- mend to the -House Foreign- Affairs Committee that 1t:approve the appropriation of $85,090,600 to provide financial help to Israel for the support of Soviet Jewish immigrants. The subcommittee's approval was voiced by chairman Wayne L. Hayes (D., Ohio) after a one- day hearing on a bill introduced in the House by Rep. (Continued on Page 6) JERUSALEM (JTA)—Israel is preparing to take the offensive toward reactivating the Jarring peace mission 'by pressing the United Nations envoy to adopt a formula that can lead to resumption of talks, informed sources said. The first step will be - to ask Dr. Gunnar V. Jarring in effect to dissociate himself.specifically from the Egyptian-inspired General Assembly resnIntion of last December which called on 'Israel to make an affirmative reply to his aide memoire of Feb. 8, 1971, asking Israel for a commitment to withdraw prior to peace negotiations. Dr.' Jarring will be asked to make this repudiation in the form of a letter to Foreign Minister Abba Eban stating that he is not bound by the UN General Assembly's resolution but solely by Security Council Reso- Community Gears for JC Drive lution 242 of Nov. 22, 1967. Dr. Jarring will be asked by Israel to suggest an agenda for the resump- tion of his mission that does not con- tain reference to his Feb. 8 memo. - It is believed here that Dr. Jarring (Definitive statement by Secretary of State Rogers on U.S. policies in Middle East and the Russian situation, Pg. 23) Paul Zuckerman Leon Dulzin. David Schoenbrun Paul Zuckerman, national chairman of the United Jewish Appeal, the major beneficiary of the Detroit Allied Jewish Campaign, and David Sc.hoenbrun, noted commentator, will address the opening dinner of the AJCampaign, at Cong. Bnai David, March 22. The food division pre- campaign dinner, March 15, will be addressed by Leon Dulzin, treasurer of the Jewish Agency for Israel. Detailed story on Page 5. himself may feel that his demand of a year ago need not stand in the way of a resumption of his peace mission at this time and that other subjects could be brought up first. Israel Am- bassador to the UN Yosef Tekoah left for New York and is expected to re- sume contact with Dr. Jarring. (Continued on Page 20) Henry Ford II Affirms Strong Link to Israel - By Philip Slomovitz Henry Ford II utilized an eight-day visit in Israel for multiple purposes: to solidify a 35-year industrial relationship with the Holy Land, to cement friendships with Israeli and Jewish leaders, to extend an interest in an ancient historical inspira- tion—and to socialize. Every aspect of the Israel visit by America's leading industrialist was, from all_ indications, a marked success. He met with the people who represent the Ford Motor Co. and he has assigned a company vice president to study the conditions that may call for expansion of auto assembling in the Jewish state. He met with Israel's leading government officials. He returned with a fascination for the archeological aspects. There was the normal question for an interviewer searching for an explana- tion of so noted a Christian's impression of the Jewish state. Mr. Ford was puzzled. He explained: he didn't go to Israel—his first visit in a Middle Eastern country— with an ethnic, racial or religious preconception, but as an American, a human being, with an interest in a developing country. The spell of his seeing the country throbbing with activity remains. He is fascinated: he was introduced to antiquity, to a 5,000- year-old history which functions in so much modernity. He was aware of the arche- ological revelations and his admiration for the links created—the antiquity merged with modernity—overwhelms him. He turned to his book shelf, pulled out a copy of General Yigal Yadin's latest book, "Bar Kokhba," and expressed appreciation for an opportunity to become more intimately informed about diggings that prove historical authenticity in an ancient land now redeemed by modern builders. Mr. Ford's intimacy with his own interests—the Ford cars and their distribu- tion in Middle Eastern countries—was a subject for serious concern in a rare interview by a great industrial leader about the Middle East—and the Jews who have begun work of redemption. But he gave an indication of more vital interest in his meeting with Arabs. One Arab, he said, affirmed to him that his kin and coreligionists in Israel are 100 years ahead of Arabs in other hands. Then he spoke with animation about the reception given him and his companion on his visit, the eminent national Jewish leader, Max M. Fisher, by notables in Nazareth, including the city's Arab mayor and three Arab members of the Knesset. He hesitated to say it but smilingly recalled that at that party he was encour- aged to play a big role In creating peace in the Middle East. The Arab leaders told him how well they live now, what good the Ford assembly plant in Nazareth does for them—creating jobs and raising their economic standards—and they prayed for an early peace. "Couldn't you be a peace maker?" they asked Mr. Ford. (Continued on Page 5) , Henry Ford tl (center) visited the Detroit Laboratories in Aero- nautical Engineering at Technion, Israel Institute of. Technology, in Haifa. He is seen with Max M. Fisher (left), and Prof. Ehud Lenz of Technion, who explained complex"- metal turnings produced at the Detroit labs by a computer-cohtrolled_laser. Technion President Alexander Goldberg is on the 'right. • Technion, with an enrollment of 8,000, is the major center for tech- -nolOgical educ.ation and research in Israel. The labs are a project of Detroit Chapter of the American Technion Society. •