Rabin - Led Cabinet Begins to Rule Israel (Continued from Page 1) Labor Alignment, the Inde- pendent Liberal Party and the Citizens' Rights Party commands only 61 Knesset votes, and defections are pos- sible from within the Labor Party ranks, either by ab- stentions or negative ballots. .The cabinet presented to President Katzir consists of the following: Premier, Yitz- hak Rabin; Deputy Premier and Foreign Minister, Yigal Allon; Defense Minister, Shimon Peres; Information Minister, Aharon Yariv; Min- ister of. Education and Cul- ture, Aharon Yadlin (pres- ently Labor Party secretary general); Minister of Com- merce and Industry, Haim Barley; Minister of Trans- port, Gad Yaacobi; Police Minister, Shlomo Hillel; Min- ister of Justice, Haim Zadok; Housing Minister, Yehoshua Rabinowitz; Labor Minister, Moshe Bar Am; Minister of Absorption, Shlomo Rosen; Minister of Health, Victor Shem-Tov; Minister of Agri- culture, Aharon Uzzan; Min- ister of Tourism, Moshe Kol; Communications Ministe r, Avraham Ofer. Ministers without portfolio are Shulamit Aloni; Gideon Hausner, of the ILP; and Israel Galili, of the Labor Party, who is a member of the outgoing Meir govern- ment. The position of Abba Eban is not certain. The outgoing foreign minister has made no effort to conceal his bitter- ness at being dropped by Rabin, and he .abstained in the party voting. Labor MK Mordehai Porat of the Rafi faction has threatened to vote against the new govern- ment and then resign his Knesset seat. Two other Labor MKs, Yitzhak Navon and David Koren, also ab- stained. Navon explained later that he refused to vote because one of the ministers designated by Rabin was un- suitable for the job. He did not name the minister and said he would support the government in the Knesset nevertheless. Outgoing Defense Minister Moshe Dayan also promised to vote for the Rabin regime, but only "under duress." Premier Golda Meir herself seemed to be in a dilemma. She vowed publicly not to support a government that includes Shulamit A 1 o n leader of the CRP, who has been named minister with- out-portfolio by Rabin. She has indicated that she would resign her Knesset seat- be- fore the vote of confidence comes up. But this is pre- cluded by Israeli law which requires an incumbent prime minister to remain in office until a successor is sworn in. She is expected to vote for the Rabin government, also "under duress." In a bitter speech at Tues- day night's party meeting, Eban said it was wrong to pretend that Rabin had wanted him in the govern- ment but was unable to in- clude him for technical rea- sons. He wondered aloud whether this would be the last time that Israel looks to the Labor Party for leader- ship. Rabin had included Eban in a provisional slate submitted to the party earlier in the week as information minister. Eban regarded that appointment as. a demotion and said he would not serve in the new government. In the event of defections from within Labor ranks, the new government is expected to squeak through the Knes- set with the support of the pro-Moscow Rakah Commu- nists (four votes) and the far-left Moked faction (one vote). The National Religious Party and the Aguda bloc have not yet decided whether to vote against the Rabin regime or abstain—they will not vote for it. The Likud opposition is trying to per- suade the religious parties to join it in a solid opposi- tion phalanx of 54 seats. Likud leader Menahem Begin has already denounced the new government as a national disgrace and the weakest in Israel's history. Rabin himself declared that his government would be one of continuity and change. He said it would continue the work and achievements of the outgoing Meir govern- ment and at the same time try to affect needed changes in both domestic and foreign policies. "We stand before great challenges and from the ex- perience of the Jewish peo- ple, we know that great challenges produce new and strong forces of leadership," Rabin said. Rabin's new government will not be complete when it takes office. When Finance Minister Sapir adamantly re- fused to continue in govern- ment service, Rabin was forced to select a last-minute replacement for the key post in the person of Yaacov Lev- inson, an executive of the Histadrut-owned Bank Ha- poalim (Workers Bank). But Levinson cannot assume the office for three months be- cause of previous obligations. Rabin announced that Justice Minister-designate Haim Zadok will 'serve as acting finance minister for that period. Similarly, the interior min- istry and the ministry of re- ligious affairs, traditionally held by the NRP, will be headed by an acting minister for the time being. Rabin has named Police Minister Shlo- mo Hillel for that task. He has not vet decided who will head the welfare ministry, also previously held by the NRP. The three ministries are being kept vacant on the chance that the NRP will eventually join the new coali- tion; but they will not be kept open indefinitely. Dulzin Defends Role of Likud PARIS (JTA) — Leon Dul- zin, chairman of the Jewish Agency and World Zionist Organization executives, told the European conference of the World Union of General Zionists, of which he is co- chairman, that Israel must have a government of na- tional unity "in response to the critical times." Addressing the two-day conference of delegates from eight European countries and Israel, Dulzin emphatically rejected the notion spread, he said, by the Labor Align- ment, that the Likud would hamper peace negotiations. He said that people who are not keen on giving away ter- ritory for nothing were not necessarily against peace negotiations. Jacques Torczyner, mem- ber of the Jewish Agency and co-chairman of the World Union of General Zionists, also demanded a government of national unity and called upon Zionists everywhere to make their voices heard on issues concerning the destiny of Israel "which is ultimately the destiny of the Jewish peo- ple as a whole." Delegates to the conference were from pate itself from the myth France, Britain, Switzerland, that Israel possesses the mili- BRING AD! ... GET Sweden, Denmark, Austria, tary upper-hand over the Holland and West Germany. Arabs. The Yom Kippur War has shown, writes the paper, that this is a fiction. It coun- Reaction by Arabs sels the new leadership, to Rabin's Selection JERUSALEM (ZINS)—The which must face difficult Arabic press in the Old City trials ahead, that it rid itself DISCOUNT of Jerusalem responded with of illusions and accept the OFF REGULAR PRICE, mixed views on the selection fact of the existence of a of Yitzhak Rabin as Israel's "Palestinian nation." This is premier. The Arabic paper the first step, the paper goes 154 SOUTH WOODWARD. El Sheab writes that while on, to insuring peace and NR. 15 MI. RD. all Israeli leaders are maxi- stability for the state of BIRMINGHAM, MI. MI 2-4150 Israel. malists, dreaming of a Great- ter Land of Israel, Yitzhak Rabin may be an exception in that he seems to demon- strate a somewhat newer ap- "for your next affair" proach to the Arab-Israel conflict. While you relax Tom Newby will create The Arabic journal depicts the MAGIC for your Bar Mitzvas, Weddings, the previous generation of Showers and Parties .. . Israeli leaders as a "genera- tion of arrogance, a genera- tion of the 'Greater-Israel' of Southfield syndrome, a generation of Flowers, Gifts expansionists, that humiliated Distinctive Party Creations and demeaned the Arab peo- ple." 29245 Southfield at 12 Mile 559-2560 The newspaper expresses the hope that the new leader- ship will present a new pos- ture leading to a "just and honorable peace." The newspaper Al Kuds writes' that the new genera- tion of leaders must emanci- NS SHANDELS LET'S MAKE A DATE TOM NEWBY `Unique Jewish System' Noted in Development of Yiddish NEW YORK—The recent 48th annual conference of the YIVO Institute for Jewish Re- search celebrated "A Millen- nium of Yiddish" in honor of the late Max Weinreich's classic "History of the Yid- dish Language." The work treats not only the development of Yiddish but also of the entire Ashken- azic culture, begun around 1000 CE in the Rhineland. At the opening session of the conference at the Bilt- more Hotel, Dr. Steven Low- enstein, YIVO research asso- ciate and assistant archivist, said "Although Jews as a group and Yiddish as a lan- guage system have always borrowed from non-Jews, these borrowings have al- ways been integrated into an autonomous and uniquely Jewish system. "In the course of Jewish migrations, Yiddish speakers have always adopted some language traits of the non- Jews in the areas in which they settled, while keeping some of the traits they brought with them from ear- lier places of settlement. The result of this recurrent pro- cess is that Jewish speech was never exactly the same THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, May 31, 1974-5 as non-Jewish speech in the same place." At the same session Dr. Shlomo Eidelberg, professor of history at Stern College, presented a paper on "The Historical Background of the Jewish Community in Ash- kenaz, Circa 1000 C.E." He suggested that that commun- ity was founded by Jews who had left France and .Italy in order to avoid "heretical no- tions" coming from Arab cul- tural influence. 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