Mrs. Meir Asks el-Sadat
to Sit Down and Talk Peace
(Continued From Page If
tional honor* and international
responsibility," she said.
The premier said the current
situation and recent developments
%indicated Israel's policy of the
past two years—its decision to
agree to the cease-fire of Aug.
1970 and its rejection of UN Me-
diator Gunnar Jarring's initiative
of February 1971.
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Mrs. Meir repeated Israel's
readiness to accept Egypt's sug-
gestion for a "Special arrange-
ment" to reopen the Suez Canal.
She said "such a settlement could
make a real contribution toward
an overall agreed peace settle-
ment."
Soviet Jets Stay
in ME to Shadow
American Fleet
<Continued From Page 1)
Soviet naval base at Merseh Mat-
ruh and other' strategic points in
Egypt. The departure of Soviet
personnel has not affected the Rus-
sian naval bases at Alexandria,
l'ort Said and Merseh Matruh or
the smaller one at Solum.
Egyptian
aviation
authorities
were reported to have asked the
airport control tower at Nicosia,
C ■ prus, for additional landing per-
mission for Soviet transports ferry-
ing personnel out of Egypt. The
planes have been-using Cyprus and
Turkey as refueling and mainten-
ance points enroute to Russia. The i
flights have more than doubled
in the past week and Cypriot
authorities have complained of
congestion at the airport during
the peak of the summer tourist
season
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JERUSALEM (JTA) — Sheikh
Mohammed Ali Jaabari. the mayor
of Hebron, wants a Palestinian to
replace United Nations special en-
voy Gunnar V. Jarring as mediator
of the Middle East conflict.
stressed her country's strengthen-
ed ties with the U.S. and Israel's
gratitude to the U.S government
for its decision to resume the sup-
ply of Phantom jets.
She cited Secretary of State Wil-
liam P. Rogers' recent observa-
tion that the Middle East is the
only remaining area in the world
where the process of negotiation
hasn't been tried. This political ap-
proach, which found expression
"Boldness and political responsi-
in the words of the U.S. Secretary
bility have been rewarded," Mrs.
Meir said. She declared that Is- 1 of State, is shared by an ever in-
creasing number of nations around
rael was stronger than ever and
the world," Mrs. Meir declared.
ISRAEL ALIYAH
CENTER, INC.
Hebron Mayor
Wants Palestinian
as M.E. Mediator
341-3800
Jaabari said in a radio interview
that the Jarring mission has failed
and that a Palestinian personality
would be best qualified to mediate
a peace settlement between Israel
and the Arab states.
Jaabari suggested several pos-
sible candidates, including for-
mer Jordanian Defense Minister
Anwar Nusseibe and the former
Jordanian commissioner for
Jerusalem, Anwar el Khatib.
Both are residents of East Jeru-
salem.
Mayor Jaabari told
Israeli
Transport Minister Shimon Peres
that the Israel Army was treating
the Arab population on the West
Bank fairly.
He asked Peres to use his influ-
ence to increase the number of
residents from neighboring Arab
states permitted to visit their rela-
tives on the West Bank.
Peres remarked that the situa-
tion between the Jordan River and
the sea, as it exists today, is the
best testimony to peaceful co-
existence between Arabs and Jews.
Mayor Jaabari, who maintains
friendly relations with both Is-
raeli and Jordanian officials, has
been invited to visit Amman by
King Hussein-
The invitation w as contained in
letter from the Jordanian ruler
which travelers delivered to the
Hebron mayor from Amman.
a
6—Friday, July 28, 1972
Institutionalized Aged Better Off
On Their Own, Malben Head Says
JERUSALEM—More than half
of the Jewish aged presently in in-
stitutions or applying to get into
them would be better off outside,
residing in the community.
This was the opinion of Harold
Trobe, director-general of Malben,
the .Joint Distribution Committee
program in Israel, as expressed
befo rethe "International Confer-
ence on The Communication of
Values" held here earlier this
month. The conference was spon-
sored by the New York Board of
Rabbis, The Jewish Conference
on Communications Media
and
other American and Israeli organ-
izations.
Trobe reported that half of the
2.200 aged being cared for by
JDC/Malben are reasonably in-
dependent and most would be bet-
ter off living in the community.
"This is not possible at pres-
ent, however, because of the
lack of proper communal ser-
vices and facilities," he said.
"ft is one of JDC-Malben's prim-
ary aims to help create such
facilities in order to reduce the
population of healthy aged in
institutions and make more room
for the ill who have no other
alternative."
Trobe said such a program could
eventually free more than 4.000
of the 6,000 presently in institu-
tions and go a long way toward
providing some 7,000 beds which
the country needs for the chroni-
cally ill aged and those aged who
are unable to care for themselves.
"Society should avoid putting
people in institutions since they
rob the resident of his individual-
ity, his self identification, his free
NEW YORK (JTA) — Recent I
elections to the Poverty Board in
the Rockaways, N.Y., resulted in
Jews winning two seats. But three
other Jewish candidates were dis-
qualified on a technicality and are
challenging the elections in court.
The Jewish winners are Joseph
Koenigsberg and Bernard Fuchs.
"Furthermore." he said, "the
results give the Jewish community
in Arverne absolutely no repre-
sentation."
The three candidates charged
their disqualification was illegal in
view of a letter they had received
June 20 from Corinthia Shaw,
chairman of the CAP's Central
Board of Elections. The le t t er
- 'at ,, '
my pleasure to
P.ar
In the long run, Trobe conclud-
ed, the taxpayer will save by such
a program while the aged and
society as a whole would benefit
physically and spiritually by giv-
ing the aged new respect and
"adding life to years as well as
years to life."
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The Tire People
Jerome Hipscher, Murray Gold-
stein knd Rabbi Herschel Solnica
of the Young Israel of Rockaway
were informed by telegram, three
days before the elections, that they
were disqualified because they
lived outside the designated pov-
erty area in Arverne, a heavily
Jewish-populated area with a large
percentage of elderly Jewish poor.
Rabbi Solnica called the deci-
sion an "outrage" in view of
CAP's election master pl a n
which, he said, stipulates that
all major ethnic groups may
supply an alternate candidate
to the one disqualified. "We
were disqualified unconstitution-
ally without a hearing and with-
out due process," be claimed.
spirit and his independence,"
Trobe said.
Groner,
The invitation was seen as a step
toward reconciliation between the
Hashemite regime and the tradi-
tional Arab leadership on the West
Bank. Mayor Jaabari has been a
strong advocate of a separate
Palestinian entity, a possibility
that Amman views with disfavor.
3 Ruled Out of NY
Poverty Elections
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