LAST
WEEK

20%-80% off

5`)%

;5,.

j"

Sport Coots

,,\0 +

(0,,

""D

Come In For

FALL

BACK TO
SCHOOL

PREVIEW

IRV

SOL

PRINdiTO
SHOP

20072 W. 7 Mile

RE 3-4310

Watch for the opening of
, tow
unit in the Old
Orcnord Center . in

01.

BEAUTIFUL DOWNTOWN
WEST B1 OOMEIELD

8—Friday, August 4, 1972

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Davin Plan Catlin., for Equal Riuhts
for Arabs Draws Rebuff From Sapir

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Defense
Minister Moshe Dayan's contro-
versial call on the government to
draft a "clear policy" of equal
rights for the Arabs in the admin-
istered territories has been re-
buffed by Finance Minister Pinhas
Sapir, a fellow laborite cabinet
member.
In a television interview Mon-
day, Sapir said that while econom-
ic ties between Israel and those
Arabs were likely after a peace
settlement. Israel should resist
pressure to integrate them into
the Jewish state in more substan-
tial ways.
Dayan believes that any politi-
cal, social or economic discussion
which overlooked the fact that
1,300.000 Arabs now live under
Israeli rule would take place in
a vacuum, isolated from reality.
He advocates maximum co-

operation between Israelis and
Arabs, and argues that Arabs
should be granted equal rights
as well as be the beneficiaries

of efforts aimed at raising their
standard of living in the oc-
cupied areas.
Dayan hopes that his program,
which he calls an open bridges ap-
proach, will be included in the

‘TotalEnvtronment
Center' for Youth
Begun by WZO

JERUSALEM (JTA)—Thousands
of youngsters from abroad are ex-
periencing a new idea in tourist
accommodation here this summer.
The students, most from the U.S..
are staying at Kiryat Moriah. "a
total environment center" for Jew-
; ish youth just opened by the World
1 Zionist Organization's Youth and
Ilechalutz Department.

Kiryat Moriah. built on a site
on the outskirts of Jerusalem
where Abraham is believed to have
stopped on his way to sacrifice
Isaac on Mt. Moriah, may be part
of the solution to Jerusalem's
pressing need for more hotel space
during the summer months.
But, stresses Haim Ganel,
rector general of the Youth and
llechalutz Department, Kiryat
Moriah is much more than just a
place to stay: its spacious facili-
ties include classrooms, library,
an infirmary, "day rooms" where
students can congregate, a dining
room, a cafeteria, and a small
synagogue now under construction.
The center will not stand empty
during the winter months either;
when the tourists go home Kiryat
Moriah will house three training
institutes: a six-month course for
youth leaders: a three month
course for emissaries: and an "in-
stitute for Zionist education of
Israeli youth," which will run a
series of four-day seminars on
Zionism, life in the galut and
Israel's social problems.
Now in its initial stage of opera- I
tion, Kiryat Moriah has dormitory
space for 320 but all facilities have
been planned to serve eventually'
as many as a 1.000 youngsters at a
time.

Unique Outpatient Clinics

A revolution in the method of
handling patients at the liadassah-
! Hebrew University Medical Center
has resulted in a vast expansion in
the use of the outpatients clinics.
There are 43 departments and
units in the outpatient clinics j
at the M , to ,' Center. Pa.% nient
I 0% a mean , test. A
patiem
11 I .116
ra
the !
■ •
tht.

Labor Party platform in time for
the 1973 elections.
Sapir agreed that the Labor
Party and the government, which
it rules, should decide on the nat-
ure of Israel's relations with the
territories, but he warned that
the Jewish majority in Israel could
be outnumbered by art escalating
Arab birthrate.
Sapir said he feared that Arab

labor in Israel would imperil the
fabric of Israel society, cause a
deterioration in Jewish-Arab re-
lations and, in the event of a re-
cession, force Israeli firms to
choose whether to lay off Israelis
or Arabs.
Sapir has long objected to
integrating Arabs and favors the
importance of preserving what
he calls the integrity of the Jew-
ish state.

Meanwhile in Jerusalem, Mayor
Teddy Kollek warned that Jews
may become a minority in Jeru-
salem if the intensive develop-
ment of the city continues, em-
ploying Arab manual laborers
from the West Bank.
Addressing an economic sym-
posium Mayor Kollek noted that
10,000 'hotel rooms are to be built
in Jerusalem over the next 10
years. The main manpower build-
ing the hotels are Arabs from the
West Bank and they will settle in
the city and may become the maj-
ority, he said.
Kollek said there were 70,000
Arab residents of Jerusalem out
of a population of 270,000.

Bomb Defused Near Old City Walls

JERUSALEM (JTA) — A small watchman who called police. It
home-made bomb was found in was estimated to contain 300 !,
Jerusalem near the Old City walls. grams of explosives. The bomb %%as
The device was spotted by a safely defused.

Hen00 ,00cS2 9. 9.;

.PRIM,

In $.35(kIN
1111En

I (1141INI,

I

ot rni shmg*

CASH ON
All Sales Fi

Mesday olod Tbers4sy 'NI f — 04ber Days '1111 11:30

PRICING BUICKS?

YOU'LL DO
BETTER AT

MORRIS

DRIVI A
BUICK SAINIAIN

DISCOUNT CENTER

"SERVICE THAT SATISFIES"

MORRIS BUICK

14500 W. 7 MILE

342-7100

In America's Best Interests

CONGRESSMAN
WILLIAM
BROOMFIELD

should be returned to his seat for his efforts
in defense of this nation's most urgent interests
in crucial matters.
As a member of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee, Congressman Broomfield is
one of the most active, best informed and
dedicated supporters of justice for the op-
pressed and in defense of the State of Israel.

As sponsor of basic legislation in Israel's de-
fense, Congressman Broomfield has earned
the gratitude of the American people, and the
proper expression of appreciation is to labor
for his return to Congress.

Signed
MAX FISHER

