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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
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Friday, July 13, 1973-9
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Six Israel Embassy Diplomats Leave U.S. for New Positions
WASHINGTON (JTA) —
Six of the Israel Embassy's
principal diplomats, includ-
ing two of its three officials
with the rank of minister,
are leaving Washington for
new assignments.
In addition, t w o of the
embassy's eight counsel-
generals in the U.S.—those
in San Francisco and At-
lanti—are due for replace-
ment by the end of this year.
Embassy officials told the
JTA these were routine
transfers at the end of nor-
mal tours of duty. Several
of the diplomats, however,
have served longer than the
usual three-year span.
Career diplomat Simha
Dinitz replaced Ambassador
Yitzhak Fabin early in
March after the latter had
been in the post for five
years but it was emphasized
to the JTA that the shifts
currently being made have
no connection with the am-
bassadorial assignment to
Dinitz by Premier Golda
Meir.
The ministers departing
are Avner Idan and informa-
tion director Zvi Brosh.
Idan who is leaving this
Favorite Girl" -
week for Jerusalem, is ex-
pected to be appointed Is-
raeli ambassador to Sweden.
In Washington since June
1971, he had been charge
d'affaire of the embassy dur-
ing the absences of the am-
bassador.
Idan came here from the
post of minister of the em-
bassy in Bonn. His successor
is Mordehai Shalev,• who is
now in Washington.
Shalev came here from the
position of director of the Is.
rael Foreign Ministry's Af-
rican Affairs Department. He
previously served as coun-
sel-general in Los Angeles
and subsequently as Ambas-
sador to Ghana.
Brosh, who is the minister
of information, is returning
to Jerusalem in mid-July for
a senior post in the foreign
ministry.
He arrived in Washington
in July 1970 after four years
as ambassador to Burma and
Ceylon. Previously he was
press counselor at the mis-
sion in West Germany. His
replacement is Moshe Arad,
who until now was deputy to
the counsel general in New
York. Arad was posted to
New York last September.
after four years as press
counselor in London.
Economic Minister Ze'ev
Sher, whose office is in New
York, is continuing in his
post. He arrived in the U.S.
a year ago.
Political Counselor Zvi
Rafiah arrived this week to
replace Counselor Amos
Eiran, who left the post last
fall. Rafiah was with the
foreign ministry's research
department in Jerusalem.
Israeli Doctors End Strike;
Accept Government Wage Limit
TEL AVIV (JTA) — The I
doctors' strike ended July
5, 29 days after it began,
When the National Physicians
Council voted 54-1 to accept
the terms of an agreement
hammered out in two days
of marathon negotiations.
Both sides claimed a victory.
The 6,000 salaried phy-
sicians, employed by govern.
ment and sick fund hospitals
and clinics, won their claims
for extra pay for Saturday
and night duty and a revision
of the wage grading system,
but their pay hikes do not
exceed the 45.6 per cent
ceiling set by the govern-
ment.
FILT1z2
Health Minister Victor
Shemtov welcomed the re-
turn to work and expressed
thanks to the doctors who
treated patients in need of
medical attention even while
they were striking.
The end of the strike
brought no rush to hospitals
and clinics. Hasharon Hos-
pital in Petah Tikva had only
half of its 400 beds occupied
and a similar situation was
reported by other hospitals.
Meanwhile, the Cabinet
SUPER KING
has asked its committee on
OR KING
wages to negotiate with His-
tadrut on a law proposed by
co.
Finance 'Minister Pin ha s
SUPER KING: 20 mg."tar",1.3 mg. nicotine. KING: 20 mg."tar",1.4 mg. nicotine, ay. per cigarette, FTC Report FEB. '73. Sapir which would abolish
H o w od it 1
Winston tastes good,
when a cigarette should,
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
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-
Ex-Nazi Officer
Jailed for Murder
BONN (JTA) — Oskar
Baecker, a 64-year-old tailor,
was sentenced to life by a
Bonn court which found him
guilty of murder, complicity
in murder and attempted
murder of Jews during
World War II.
Baecker had maintained
his innocence, claiming mis-
taken identity, although 77
witnesses including many
from Israel offered testi-
mony against him during the
six-month trial.
In 1942, Baecker served
with a frontier police unit at-
tached to the Gestapo in
Krosno, Poland where he
shot the wife and two small
daughters of a Jewish glass-
worker when they resisted
joining a deportation trans-
port.
Baecker also murdered a
rabbi and shot a young Jew-
ish woman for possession•of
a fur muff after furs were
confiscated by the Nazis, the
court found.
He 'was a c q u.i tte d of
charges of complicity in mur-
dering 3,000 Jews transport-
ed to the Belzec extermina-
tion camp.
The court was unable to
prove that Baecker, who
worked as a guard on the
transport, knew of his pris-
oners' fate in Belzec.
Soviets to Screen
Israel Film, 'Siege'
ia.33man
28000 TELEGRAPH AT TEL TWELVE MALL
the practice of retroactive
salary payments.
Sapir told the Cabinet
Sunday that all future wage
contracts should be ended
before the existing contracts
expire and salary contracts
in all the various sectors of
the economy should be for
the same time period.
The finance minister said
the economy was harmed by
the existing practice of sign-
ing wage contracts late and
then giving employes large
sums in back pay.
Labor relations also suffer
because of the delayed con-
tracts, Sapir added.
•
SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN
•
TELEPHONE 354 3300
-
JERUSALEM (JTA)—Sov-
iet authorities have permit-
ted the screening of the Is-
raeli film "In Siege" at the
International Film Festival
which opens in Moscow.
The film, however, will not
be included in the official
list but will be shown in a
public hall.