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July 06, 1973 - Image 36

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1973-07-06

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

'C£—EX91 ,6 yiut

W.TA

Dayan Notes
Separate Peace
Preferences

TEL AVIV (JTA)—Defense
Minister Moshe Dayan indi-
cated on June 27 that Israel
envisages separate rather
than collective peace agree-
ments with its Arab neigh-
bors and conceded that the
Arabs might balk. "When we
say that Israel is ready to
withdraw from most of the
territories occupied in 1967,
we must know that our with-
drawal from a major part of
Sinai will not settle our bor-
der with Syria," Gen. Dayan
told the graduating class at
the Haifa Technion last night.
"For the Syrians, the oc-
cupied lands are the Golan
Heights," he said. It is also
possible, he added, "that the
Egyptians will not make
peace with us if we with-
drew from all of Sinai but not
from the Golan Heights."
Gen. Dayan insisted that
the Middle East conflict con-
tinues "because the Arab
states refuse to accept our
stretched out hand for
peace." But he made it plain
that he regarded the idea of
a separate Palestinian politi-
cal entity as "dead." He said
the Arabs themselves killed
it in 1947 when they opted to
join with Jordan rather than.
establish the Palestinian
state envisioned by the UN
partition decision in part of
Palestine.
Dayan declared that the
Arab refugees who fled Pal-
estine in 1948 will have to be
absorbed by the Arab coun-
tries "sooner or later" be-
cause "Israel will not accept
them willingly and not by
force." He noted that Israel
ilas absorbed some 700,000
Jewish refugees from Arab
countries who left behind not
agricultural land but busi-
nesses and property which
were confiscated by the Arab
regimes.

Artlis

June 27 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Covensky, 19129
Chelton, Birmingham, a son,
Jeffrey Louis.
*
June 20—To Mr. and Mrs.
Krut (Faye Schwarz-
berg), 10405 Elgin, Hunting.
ton Woods, a son, Joshua
David.

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U.S. Stars at Maccabiah Starting July 9

By HASKELL C'OHEN

(Copyright 1973, J'SA, Inc.)

The Ninth World Maccab-
iah Games will get under-
way in Israel on July 9 with
the United States, once again,
having the largest Mega-
tion.
Through the U.S. Commit-
tee Sports for Israel, the
American squad will be made
up of more than 200 athletes.
At least 1,600 athletes from
30 nations are expected for
the Games which are being
held this year in memory of
the 11 martyrs slain at Mu-
nich.
There are athletes who
have already made a name
for themselves on an inter-

, national level. Debbie Lip-
man is the AAU indoor div-
ing champion — she easily
won the 3-Meter and 10- Me-
ter competition in the 8th
World Gaines.

As with each team, there
are a "million and one" stor-
iets concerning the back-
grounds of the athletes —
with none more unusual than
that of basketball player
Aaron Grandinson. He has
just completed high school,
which is not that unusual,
since youthful players have
been taken before — three
prep players are members
of the hoopsquad this time.
What is unusual is that he

Congress Assures Israel Aid;
Seeks 'Check on Saudi Phantoms

WASHINGTON (JTA)—An
amendment barring the
transfer of U.S. Phantom
jets sold to Saudi Arabia to
any third power was append-
ed to a foreign aid authoriza-
tion bill by a voice vote in
the U.S. Senate June 27. The
proviso, drafted by Sens.
Abraham Ribicoff (D.Conn.)
and Henry M. Jackson (D.
Wash.) did not mention Saudi
Arabia by name.
In introducing it, however,
Sen. Jackson remarked that
Saudi Arabia cannot allow
any Phantoms it may acquire
to 'be used for training any
non-Saudi pilots and is pro-
hibited from making them
available to "Egyptian na-
tionals in any capacity."
Saudi Arabia is reportedly
seeking to purchase 24-30
Phantoms as part of a billion
dollar weapons deal with the
U.S. The Israel government
has officially indicated its
anxiety to the Nixon Admin-
istration that the supersonic
fighter - bombers may be
transferred to other Arab
countries for use against Is-
rael.
T h e Jackson - Ribicoff
amendment provides that no
country receiving weapons
from the U.S. may, without
the President's consent, "per-
mit the use" of such weapons
"by persons who are not na-
tionals or employes or agents
of that country." Should the
proviso be violated, the
measure provides that "No
sophisticated weapons, in-
cluding jet aircraft or spare
parts and associated ground
equipment for such aircraft
shall be furnished under this
or any other act" to that
country "after the date" of
violation."
In another action related
to the Middle East today, the

Israel Fighting
Venereal Disease

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Health Minister Victor Shem-
tov told the Knesset Wednes-
day that his ministry was
undertaking an intensive
campaign to fight venereal
disease which he said is
especially high among the
young population.
According to Shemtov, the
incidence of gonorrhea is 150
cases per 100,000 persons
and syphilis 14 cases per
100,000.
He attributed the VD rise
to a permissive attitude to-
ward sex, sexual relations at
an early age and the lack of
proper sex education. He
said that according to health
ministry records the disease
was most prevalent in the
20-24 age bracket,

House foreign affairs com-
mittee voted without opposi-
tion to provide $50,000,000 in
supporting security assist-
ance to Israel, double the
amount contained in the ad-
ministration's aid proposal.
The increase was proposed
by Rep. Donald M. Fraser
(D.Minn.) who called for
raising the total security as-
sistance in the foreign aid
bill to $125,000,000 "of which
not less than $50,000,000 is to
be available to Israel."
The House figure for se-
curity assistance to Israel is
now identical to that adopted
by the Senate June 26. Sen-
ate Foreign Relations Com-
mittee chairman J. William
Fulbright himself sPobred
the doubling of the aid to
Israel. The $50,000,000 is con-
sidered certain to be includ-
ed in the authorization bill
when both houses finally
adopt it. The bill, however,
must run the gauntlet of ap-
propriation legislation.

af.a71, seem
.

.

T34.71 7: - Cq

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Minister in Israel

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Minis- 36—Friday, July 6, 1973
ter of State at the British
attended Yeshiva high school Foreign Office, Lord Balniel
"Art Linkletter Schools
of Queens and is black.
arrived in Israel for meet-
have a few openings left
Grandinson is a deeply re- ings with top level Israeli
in Nursery School.
ligious youngster. attending officials.
Free busing, too!"
the synagogue daily. His per-
Art Linkletter Schools
sonal convictions are such
I am for those who have
28805 Evergreen, Southfield
that there was no way he was never been mastered.—Walt
357-1215 — 588-0300
going to change his life style Whitman.
when it came to attending
college.
Early on in the recently
completed basketball season,
Chuck Daly, the fine coach
at Pennsylvania, paid a per-
to Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Covensky
sonal visit to a Yeshiva game
on the birth of their son
and same away very en-
thused about Grandinson. He
JEFFREY LOUIS ON JUNE 27
immediately offered him a
With All Our Love
scholarship.
Grandmother Sue Covensky
The New York Times held
Great Grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ponnock
the story for several week§
and, in the meantime, Colum-
bia went to work on the star
and convinced him to change
his mind. The college ar-
ranged for Grandinson to
live in a house where he
will be served kosher food
and which is located close
to a synagogue.
As luck would have it, the
Times ran the story, stating
that Grandinson was going
to Pennsylvania. The papers
couldn't have been out more
than 10 minutes when U.S.
Committee Sorts For Israel
phones started ringing.
The callers were Columbia
4 ' 4 &
alums, wanting to set the
record straight — "Grandin-
son is going to our school
and not to Pennsylvania."

-

MAZE. TOV

0 01/- d

Ernie Grunfeld of Forest
Hills (N.Y.) High School, ex-
cept for some unusual fore-
sight by his father, might
now be living in Israel. He
was born in Romania and
when he was 9, the family
left as refugees. Mrs. Grun-
feld favored relocating in
Israel. The father could see
greater opportunity, for busi-
ness and his son in America.

Woolf Phillips, who will be
a member of the first U.S.
team ever to participate in
cricket, was born in England.
Phillips was the conductor
of the London Palladium Or-
Shoa, Khurban, and "Holo- chestra for six years and
caust" have come to repre- now serves as the conductor
sent the total horror of the for such notables as Milton
attempted destruction of Berle and Donald O'Connor.
Dov Djerassi of Northeast-
European Jewry by German
ern University, another Mac-
National Socialism.
"Hunter and Hunted: Hu- cabiah, has already thrown
man History of the Holo- the hammer over 200 feet,
caust," historian Gerd Kor- more than 25 feet better than
man has assembled primary the existing meet record, is
source material in a chrono- a native born Israeli.
Joseph Garrie, a welter-
logical framework "by which
readers may be better able weight judo player, born in
to relate themselves to those the U.S., qualified for our
catastrophic events which Maccabiah team. He is study-
Western civilization produced ing in Japan and will renre-
sent that country in the Mac-
one generation ago."
His collection of 27 chilling cabiahs. It marks the first
and provocative essays is time that the flag of the
drawn from diaries, letters, "Land of the Rising Sun"
documents and transcripts will he represented in the
written by journalists. his- Games.
For the first time, the U.S.
torians, liberationist soldiers,
and, most compelling, by stands an excellent chance of
many unknown Jews who sur- capturing a medal in wom-
vived ( or did not survive) en's postol shooting. Terry
Anderson, a 16-year-old, is
the Holocaust itself.
Among the recognizable the only female on the strong
contributors are Clarence U.S. aggregation.
And coining out of retire-
Pickett, Quentin Reynolds,
Elie Wiesel, Simon Wiesen- meat will Lorraine Abram-

New Volume
Recounts `Shoa'

son, whose maiden name wa , -
thal and John Toland.
Historian Korman has di- Lotzoff. Maccabiah followel s
vided the Holocaust into will well remember her. Din-
seven distinct stages, from bed the "Golden Girl," stir
the refugee crisis in the early net Richard Abramson and
1930s to the liberation in 1945, married him. Mrs. Abram-
The intervening sections son now is living in the U.S.
cover the beginnings of the Table tennis star Le;111
war; accounts of flights, de- "Ping" Neuberger has the
portations and persecutions; distinction of being t'le firs!
the Warsaw Ghetto uprising; American athlete to visit R, , d
and detailing of the human China. She went with t!le

and moral sufferings in the Canadian team which sune--
seded the Americans' vi•ii.
concentration camps.
One sport which the U.S.
"Hunter and Hunted" is
part of the Bnai Brith Jewish hopes to improve its showing
is in soccer.
Heritage series.

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