Confrontation With Egyptians 3 Detroiters (Continued from Page 1) UNEF team supervising the disengagement in Sinai were advised of the incident and they made efforts to get the detainees returned under the disengagement accord which provides for the return of anyone who unintentionally strays beyond the UN lines. The UJA Young Leader- ship Cabinet members ar- rived in Israel do Monday. The group comprised 60 members from various cities the U.S., including some ies. The men left early inesday on a sightseeing tour of the Sinai battlefront where women are not per- mitted, and the wives re- mained to take tours inside Israel. When the bus reached the westernmost Israeli outpost in Sinai, facing Egypt's Second Army, the visitors stopped to take pictures near a UNEF checkpost. The bus driver discovered that the road at that point was too narrow to turn his vehicle around. UN soldiers suggested that he enter their zone for a short distance to a point where a U-turn was possible without bogging down in the sand dunes that line the road. The bus was permitted to pass the UN roadblock, pro- ceeded for about 100 meters Available at SPITZER'S just published The JEWISH CATALOG A Do-It-Yourself Kit $5. 5 0 Published by the JPS SPITZER'S Hebrew Book & Gift Store CI Mile & Coolidge In the Dexter Davison Center • a \4 and was making its turn when Egyptian soldiers ap- peared and captured the en- tire party at gunpoint. They ignored protests by the Is- raeli military escort and the UN people at the nearby checkpoint. When Israeli authorities received news of the incident they contacted the tripartite team and demanded the im- mediate release of the bus and its passengers. There was no response from Egyp- tian authorities and several hours later the Israelis re- peated their demand. Meanwhile, tensions mount- ed at the Dan Hotel in Tel Aviv, headquarters of the UJA mission, when the wives returned from their tour and learned of the incident. In- structions were issued not to provide a list of the UJA people on the bus. Women, asked by reporters if their husbands were on the bus replied, "No comment" or "No names please." Army officers were in touch with the group at the hotel throughout the day. After the release to Israeli authorities of the detainees, a list of the UJA people was provided. They included, in addition to the three Detroit- ers: Harold Siegel, Joseph Mirbick, Allen Rothenberg and Gene Waldman, all of Philadelphia; Robert Cope- land, Dr. Henry Albinder, Dr. Allan Jaffe, Warren Ka- resh and Dr. Warren Sachs, all of Norfolk, Va. ; Michael Bryan, Rabbi Fred Neulander and Sam Lear, all of Cam- den, N.J.; Stephen H. Cohen and Iel Ginguld, of Syracuse, N.Y.; Robert Gerber and Marshall Grossman of Los Angeles; Paul Fierstein of Newark; Marcus Hirsch of Baton Rouge, La.; Leonard Wein Jr., of Miami Beach; Howard Stone of New York: and Sherwin Weinstein of Rochester, N.Y. Three others believed ' to have been guests were iden- tified as William Milgrom, Howard Sherman and Leon Miller. Their addresses were For the Most Elegant Bar Mitzva Suits in Town with the Finest Fit Slims and Huskies Too! SOL PLUS all the latest Fashions for men 8 to 80! • Id Orchard Shopping Plaza Maple at Orchard Lake Rds. 851-3660 - West Bloomfield Mon., Thurs:, Fri. 9.9 6 Tues., Wed., Sot. IRV RINCETON ForYoung Mon Eight to Eighty 7 Mile and Evergreen KE 3-4310 — Detroit Thurs., Fri til 9 Saturday til 7:34 0 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS MASTER CHARGE BANKAMERICARD PRINCETON CHARGE SAY WI H not immediately available. The UJA group, upon their release, told how the bus driver was advised by Fin- nish UNEF officers to pro- ceed a short distance into the UN zone in order to make a turn. "We advanced and sudden- ly we saw a military jeep approaching us. The soldiers made signs for us to stop and in a moment it was ap- parent we were held by Egyptians," Detroiter Nach- man said. He said the Egyp- tians seemed as surprised as the people they captured. "They simply did not know what to do. They awaited in- structions from, higher quar- ters." Dr. Sachs said the Egyp- tions "ordered the passengers out of the bus but did not display force." He said the entire party milled around outside the bus for about two hours while the soldiers awaited instructions. When lunchtime came, the Ameri- cans and their Israeli escorts ate their box lunches as the Egyptians looked on. When orders came "we were told to mount the bus and to cover our eyes," Mer- bach recalled. "I put a hand- kerchief over my eyes and others pulled their jackets over their heads," he said. He said they were driven across the canal by way of an earthen bridge construct- ed by Israeli engineers but did not glimpse the water- way. They were taken to a large museum-like building in which were hanging -pic- tures of President Anwar Sada t and the late President Gamal Abdel Nasser, Dr. Sachs reported. He said the only time they were apprehensive was when the Egyptians separated the Americans from their Israeli escorts for questioning. Nach- man said the Americans were concerned over their Israeli companions and agreed not to leave without them. But they were re- lieved when, after four hours of questioning, the entire party was assembled in one hall. Nachman said the Egyp- tians behaved correctly, of- fered them soft drinks, cof- fee, cheese and bread. After dark they were put back on the bus, blindfolded and driven to the tripartite com mand post where they were released. The adventure ended with a champion supper at the Dan Hotel in the early hours of the morning. The wives of the UJA leaders listened with interest to their hus- bands' stories. Their "busy day" had consisted of visits to a deaf children's school, vocational schools and a stop at Kfar Silver. The group is headed by Howard Stone of New Jersey, director of the UJA Young Leadership Cabinet. Friday, March 1, 1974-5 Jewish Schooling Studied by AAJE NEW YORK — The Ameri- can Association for Jewish Education (AAJE) announced it has undertaken four nation- wide studies dealing with Jewish high schools, teachers in Jewish schools, budgets and functions or local. cen- tral agencies of Jewish edu- cation, and federation alloca- tions for local Jewish educa- tion. 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