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3DOOR RUNABOUT'
The Schweid & Ehrlich families
are celebrating their 40th anni-
versary in the resort business
with a spectacular Pinto-a-week
giveaway!
in "dribs and drabs" from
U.S. officials.
But they did not conceal
their surprise and dismay
that stories leaked to Ameri-
can newspapers last week re-
vealed that the sale of ever-
larger and more sophisticat-
ed weaponry was being nego-
tiated with the Persian Gulf
states.
It was learned from reli-
able sources that the Israeli
government is not in posses-
sion of full information on
the arms deals and will
await the final results of the
continuing "clarifications" in
Washington before making a
definitive assessment of the
itj:s:Ati ct7o p i tstr situation.
Spring and n
One official here, noting
Summer in
that the State Department
the Mountains
has more or less confirmed
the press reports of the ex-
tent of the U.S. arms sales
BRICKMAN • BROWN'S being negotiated, said Israel
still hoping that the re-
NEVELE • GROSSINGER'S was
ports were exaggerated.
CONCORD • RALEIGH Israel is especially alarmed
reports that the U.S.
KUTSHER'S • TAMIMENT by
plans to sell F-4 Phantom
jets and high speed gun
boats to Saudi Arabia.
Circles here said that once
all the facts are known, the
government will try to per-
suade the U.S. to decrease
or decelerate the flow of
sophisticated arms to the
Saudis.
According to officials here,
HARVARD ROW - SOUTHFItLD
Israel still has time to in-
5811
THE PINES FOR
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RESERVATIONS CALL COLLECT
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JERUSALEM (J T A) —
Concern continued to mount
in official circles here over
reported massive U.S. arms
sales to Saudi Arabia.
Israel's ambassador to
Washington, Simha Dinitz,
meet with presidential ad-
viser Henry Kissinger on the
matter Saturday and was at
the State Department twice
last week for clarification of
the arms deals.
Israeli officials denied that
he was getting information
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Israelis Express Concern at Arms Sales to Saudis
DORPAC44;
TRAVEL AGENCY
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I
SPECIAL WEEKS
fluence Washington because
negotiations with Saudi Ara-
bia are still not far enough
advanced to preclude quan-
titative changes.
Failing that, Israel would
press the U.S. to redress the
arms balance in the Middle
East which cabinet sources
made clear must continue to
mean over-all Israeli super-
iority.
Neither the White House
nor the State Department
would discuss details of the
visits by Dinitz.
But late Monday afternoon
the State Department said
that it has assured the Is-
raeli government that "we
will take a further look at
Israel's views" on the sale
of U.S. arms.
This statement was made
by a department spokesman
to the Jewish Telegraphic
Agency after a newsman had
inquired for details of the
discussions between Dinitz -
Fulbright Launches Strongest
Attacks on U.S Policy to Israel
WASHINGTON ( J T A) —
J. William Fulbright
(.D. Ark.) charged that U.S.
policy is to give Israel "un-
limited support for unlimited
expansion" and "mainten-
ance of the results of the
1967 war."
The chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations Commit-
tee, in what was perhaps his
strongest public attack yet
on U.S. policy towards Is-
rael, urged U.S. cooperation
with the oil-producing coun-
tries and reiterated his ad-
vocacy of the Rogers Plan
which the Nixon administra-
tion and its author, Secretary
of State William P. Rogers,
had set aside more than two
years ago.
'Sen.
Essentially the plan called
for Israel's withdrawal from
virtually all territory it had
occupied in the Six-Day War
without a negotiated agree-
ment that would give her
secure borders.
Fulbright expressed these
views toward the close of
the first session of two-day
hearings he initiated on the
energy situation.
He encountered direct and
'indirect opposition. Midway
through the questioning of
three experts on oil, Sen.
Jacob K. Javits (R. NY),
apparently sensing the direc-
tion the hearings were to
take, declared that their
"purpose is to find out how
much oil there is" and it is
"particularly important not
.to fuzz up" the oil situation
by putting the blame on
hostility between Israel and
the Arab states.
"There are a lot more rea-
sons than that" for the en-
ergy problem, he declared.
S. David Freeman, direc-
tor of the Ford Foundation's
Energy Policy Project who
resigned Sept. 1, 1971, as an
executive in the President's
Office of Science and Tech-
nology, provided the basis
FOR SINGLES: July 8-15 & August 19-26
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About Our New Million Dollar Conference Center.
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CAMP GROSSINGER • MILE-WIDE LAKE: BOATING, FISHING, SWIMMING
27 HOLES OF GREAT GOLF: THE "BIG G" AND THE "VISTA NINE"
and Joseph J. Sisco, assistant
secretary of state.
Paul J. Hare, a State De-
partment spokesman, said
that the U.S. "will not make
any military sales that would
put Israel's security into jeo-
pardy."
He declined to provide de-
tails on the sales but noted
that this was not a sudden
reaction to new problems but
a continuation of the U.S.
policy "to encourage Iran,
Saudi Arabia and Kuwait
and smaller states in the
area to cooperate with one.
another to insure the secu-
rity of the area."
He said this policy was in-
itiated when Britain with-
drew from the Persian Gulf
in 1968. A senior U.S. admin-
istration official reportedly
said the sale of Phantom jets
would take a year to com-
plete and another year or two
before the planes were de-
livered.
Tsur Is Thanked
JERUSALE M—Argentin a 's
new president, Hector Cam-
pora, sent a warm message
to Jewish National Fund
Chairman Yaacov Tsur,
thanking him for his congrat-
ulations on Campora's elec-
tion. Tsur served' as Israel
ambassador to Buenos Aires
in the 1950s, when Campora
was speaker of the Argentina
Parliament.
for most of Fulbright's at-
tack on U.S. policy.
In his prepared statement,
nearly all of which was de-
voted to the energy situation,
Freeman had pointed o u t
that Venezuela, Indonesia
and Iran "are suggesting that
oil revenues can be a means
for improving the life of
people in other nations
around the Persian Gulf and
in the Middle East."
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
•Friday, June 8, 1973-23
Weizmann Institute
Gets Friends Society
REHOVOT—A group
of distinguished Israeli in-
dustrialists and businessmen,
headed by Abraham R. Tai-
ber, has established the As-
sociation of Friends of the
Weizmann Institute of Science
in Israel. This body, like in-
stitute 'committees in other
countries, will foster inter-
est in institute research,
basic and applied, as well as
strive to increase public sup-
port for that research.
At the founding meeting,
held recently at the home of
Dr. Zvi Dinstein, Israel's
deputy minister of finance
and chairman of the Insti-
tute's executive council, the
association decided to estab-
lish an endowment fund, in-
terest from which will be
used to provide scholarships
and research grants at the
Weizmann Institute.
29 New Americans
NEW YORK (JTA) —
Twenty-nine m e n , women
and children arrived at Ken-
nedy Airport on four separate
flights to begin new lives in
the United States and Can-
ada, it was announced by
Gaynor I. Jacobson, execu-
tive vice president of United
Hi'as Service.
The arrivals, most of them
coming to join relatives,
were from the Soviet Union,
Romania, Egypt, Morocco,
Hungary and Poland.
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