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Jews Qualify

HOW

By DAVID SCIIW.%RTZ
(Copyright 1972, JTA)

Pollee Chiefs

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Mission to Iraq Seen as Step
Toward Rapprochement With Arabs

fitted for police ' embassy there.
51 r .
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The Belgian goyernm: rt he
becn handlina American:ahcro '
is Irait since the flaandad
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- 0•:41 , une tr,,tt trouble

on patrol dut•
:Ind he pa,,es a synagogue lie
CS nn , t resist tnr temptation to
m and hear the Kazan .

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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Forest

as high constable front
U • S •
about 1802 to is.40. The mayors o
New York always were chana-
ing, but no mayor would think of
letting hart go. Ile was something
WASHINGTON* (JTA) — The
The U. S. resumed diplomatic
of a national institution Vi aring
nis big cockade, he led all the United States government is send- relations with Yemen a month ago
parades and no one was as good ing a diplomatic mission to Iraq and with the Sudan last week.
in getting control of a brawl . He in a move that was interpreted
Bray said that resumption of
hart his °am little ' karate" sys- , here as a further indication of
diplomatic relations pith Yemen
t•r For
instance.
he would American rapprochement with
and the Sudan plu= the ataffing of
k a fellow's ha: off and when Arab governments with which it
the American interest 0 rhino in
fe!:,
tt , 1 died down, ard: to has not had formal diplomatic re-
Iraq are fruits of ;merit .n efforts
he ,null chose hi rn
lations since th• Six-Day War.
m recent year; t.hich we r e in-
..grid He was very good
pired directly by Secretary of
State Department spokesman
irk. Ile became Some-
State William P. Rogers' view that
It.
;ond in his
n days. ;Charle, Bray announced that for-
etgn
service
officers
Arthur
Lowrie
the
U. S. had compedima reasons
, hreat n
' '•
m i a b..1,. e d . : and Ronald Slain will go to Rauh_ to reopen or mai itain a e..plornatic
tai: if they
, dad to establish an American in- dialogue with as many states as
i il 1 Ilar. ' wouldget them.
Belgian possible.
section
at the
I
■ oncluded that Jew s really ' terest

What Yiddish-speaking Jew does
not recall that old favorite, ' Da,
Greeneh Koosineha" It told of a
pretty young cousin, newly ar
rived from the 01 , 1 country, hence
"grenneh " She was "pretty as
gold," her feet seemed always
wanting to dance and her "becke-
lach' or cheeks are like ''rote
pomerantzen
The song. of our se had no
erence ta chiet of Tr , 6: le, of VI .• • ..
Reach Itock:, l'omeranee
but Iv
•••1 - PIS to be as
popular. The N.•••. ■
,
York Time
devoted noire
Imo:
half a pane to tell of the, remark
a ate chief. We I iateneO to him on
television and he talks hike a col-
le ee
more
are eminently
teethe I'.merant
At., . .•• a di.
T
.. irk
•,,

Ito.

6—Friday, August 4, 1972

erved

I. S. and Iraq had aureed

follow iota the 11,7 break that
am country would be Fri., to
establish a diplomatically staffed
;M•rest
section in the ,slier
country'. Iraq imniediately set
up o three-man staff in Wash.
ington, but the I". S. had not
taken a similar step.

Hills Issue
Nearing Solution

not fairly reflect the enormity of
the need for low' inctnne housing."

Seymour said the compromise is
something " all people concerned
can support as a realistic effort
at keeping alive the concept of
scatter-site housing as a viable and
honest attempt to provide
greatly needed housing for this
nation's lower-income population
Cuomo and Mayor Lindsay were
congratulated ^on the results of
what we are certain was a very
difficult and time-consuming task "

:,te:tt erect

that '

"ICS - .11

UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON T
FIND A FINER WINE THAN

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Detrwt, M•cS.

seoto- r.

Marcus told the JTA that Sadat
said he was "all for peace" but ;
that he was - not prepared to give
up a single inch of Egyptian terri-
tory." Ile also told the group he
had been the first Arab chief of
state to "recognize" Israel and
that "I :•ave not changed my posi-
tion then." Ile apparently
did rot mspiain the nature of the
1.-cognitoin.
The French deputes also visited
syria and Lebanan as guests of •
the Aral, League .
Marcus also MI I the JTA that
M had taa n umiMe to meet with
, I .1 Je,•.

VI) / CADILLAC?

SEE OR CALL

in BIRMINGHAM at

Cray said that the U. S. is estab-
lishinu the interest section now
. aecatise it is a propitious time but
rye did not elaborate.

WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC

MI 4-1930
RES. 642-6836
1350 N. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM

CALL EUS.

VOTE AUG. 8

STAN

STEVENS

DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE

OAKLAND COUNTY TREASURER ,. Pei Ad.

Elect an ABLE Man

SPREEN

FOR SHERIFF

OAKLAND COUNTY!

* Police Commissioner, City of Detroit (July 1968 to
January 19701
* Career officer, New York City Police Department (1941-1966)
* Member, Michigan Commission on Law Enforcement and
Criminal Justice 1969-71.
*Member ; Michigan Association of Chiefs of Police.
* Member. International Association of Chiefs of Police.
* Low Enforcement Consultant, Oakland County Prosecutor's
Office, 1970

* Education, B.S., John Joy college of Cringing! Notice, City University

of New York, 1966.
* Master of Public Administration, John Jay College of Criminal
Justice, 1968
* Teaching Experience, let, t,;. - cter, N.Y. Police Academy. 1 9S 2-5S.
* Lecturer on police scienre State University
New York, Farm-

ingdale, L.I., 1966-67; .-ires Jev College of Cr. ,inel Justice, 1970-72.
* Associate Pr.:Tessor, !sy College of Criminal Justice, 1970-72
* Coordinator, Law Enforcement and Protection Program, Mercy College
of Detroit, it11-72.

(Political advertisement paid for by Spreen for Sheriff Corromi , tee)

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ASSIST BETTER LAW ENFORCEMENT

ARC 'T

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was not then called chief of police —
but high constable. Jacob Hart

PARIS (JTA)—President Sadat
has indicated he is ready to meet
Lraell Premier Golda Meir, pre-
sumably for peace talks, but only
on the condemn that representatives
of the four major powers " be ores- '
em at the meeting and have the
final say " it was disclosed here.
Ile made that statement to a five
member French parliamentary
group which visited him last week
in Cairo, according to one of its .
members, a Jewish deputy named
Claude Gerard Marcus.

tc

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the te•chma could be relied
on for present police problems In
New York any the teachers need
untie protection They are not LuEravacher Camps Draw
like the old Hebrew teaelmr-,
Record 5,000 Enrollment
The - melamed" was something,
Ni-'AS 17ftK (JTA — Merkoa
a policeman himself. If a Tana!
L'In)onei Chinach. the educational
0a , n o t attentive he might giv•
arm of the her movement
tom a good • track in pa, ni
so,
a m .o., the face r pull h:s announced a amm- at crrol!ment of
J. 0 04, ttr-t,z , ter, the
car , '1 here v.,- ro mik of "meta
ne ore
than a do,mn Luba itabea
rued brutalit
Prohably the om, other toss its summer camps lo,-sited on six con,
tment
etc,elot: Miami Reach which have
A spokesman for the hasidic or -
Jewiah chiefs of police are in
.rael vet New York City in its ganization reported that the
early days had a sery famous youngsters in the boy, camps,
Jewish chief of police Jacob Hart called Gan Israel, come from a
was his name ' Old Hart" was variety of backgrounds, observant
the great "thief catcher." The job' and non-observant.

Sadat, Meir to Talk
If Rig 4 Say OK

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IF YOU TURN THE

Bray was asked why •ha time
55'
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"propitious' other
a montl., ago, nat;anali7(-1
, hared la• Arne•—
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(Continued from Page I)

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