Doctor Praises Israeli Treatment of Syria ' n, POWs, Care at Front Lines By DR. MILTON MUTCHNICK (Editor's Note: Dr. Match- nick, a member of the staff of University Hospital in Ann Arbor, recently spent some time in Israel, observing the practice of medicine by the armed forces and the treat- ment of Syrian POWs during and after the Yom Kippur THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS War. A flight surgeon and Friday, June 7, 1974-17 epidemiologic officer at Luke . SUMMER DAY CAMPS, Your Choice of Two Nurseries SOUTHFIELD CHILDREN'S N URSERY 25761 Greenfield Rd. 557-5122 or HUNTINGTON WOODS N URSERY 10495 W. 11 Mile Rd. 541-5053 Children 21/2 thru 5 years of age Full or Half Day Sessions Two to Five Days A Week Qualified, Experienced Staff Transportation Available in Area REGISTER NOW FOR FALL NURSERY 1 Last Call For Camp Sea-Gull Campers—your Tee-Shirts—Sweat Shirts—Jackets—Shorts & Sweat Pants are available for you guys and gals along with all of your other camp needs. Luggage pick-up June 15th 7 Mile and Evergreen RINCETON KE 3-4310 — Detroit Thurs., Fri. til 9 Saturday til 7:30 - ForYoung Men Eight to Eighty Old Orchard Shopping Plaza Maple at Orchard Lake Rds. 851 -3660 —West Bloomfield Mon., Thurs., Fri. 9-9 Tues., Wed., Sat. til 6 Air Force Base, Ariz., in 1969 71, he was named flight surgeon of the year by the Air Force in 1971 and the Air National Guard in 1974. Dr. Mutchnick was a 1967 magna cum laude graduate of Wayne State University's medical school and holds awards for original research. This article was written prior to the signing of the Israeli- Syrian disengagement agree- ment and the initiation of the prisoner - of - war exchange, but it is illustrative of the way Israel regards human life). The facility for Syrian prisoners of war is located somewhere in northern Is- rael. In it are confined 390 Syrian, six Moroccan and 10 Iraqi prisoners. They, like their Israeli counterparts in Syria, have now celebrated a half year of confinement. This writer was recently given permission to visit the prison. The first impression on entering the prison is the high degree of cleanliness demonstrated. This rigid sanitary order is enforced for both esthetic and health purposes. The prisoners oc- cupy a series of cell blocks that encompass a central square which is open to the air and is used for exercise in the form of military drills and for leisure time. The POWs are not treated as criminals as contrasted to the imprisoned Arab guerril- las. The Arab officers are con- fined separately from the en- listed personnel. Each cell may have from two to more than 10 inmates, depending on, size. Each cell has a non- commissioned of ficer in charge, who is responsible for discipline and main- tenance of cell sanitation. The prisoner's day begins at 5 a.m. He is allowed an hour for personal hygiene. Breakfast is consumed at 6 a.m. and as with all meals, is prepared by POW cooks. MASTER CHARGE BANK AMERICARD PRINCETON CHARGE 26001 COOLIDGE HWY . OAK PARK GIRIS-SLIM DOM Enjoy a fun-filled summer while losing weight Camp Stanley is the original non-medical Slim-Down camp for girls 8-18. Complete sports program. Specialized Slim- nastics. Superb facilities include twenty tennis courts, heated pool, lake, private golf course on premises, horse- back riding, fencing and much more. Social grooming for poise and confidence. Re-education in eating habits. Unique, proven winter follow-up program . maintains weight-loss. Camp Stanley's safe"non-med- , ;;:f4 (4, i al" methods have been dramatically successful for c over 12 years. C.I.T. Program Ages 16-18. 11 Under personal supervision of Gussie Mason, founder of Camp Stanley, recognized authority on food and exercise; author of the book "Help Your Child Lose Weight". Send for Brochure Fully Accredited Camp Stanley Mrs. Gussie Mason, Director Box 701, Hurteyville, N. Y. 12747 • Tel. (914) 434-7780 • 543-3343 The food given the POWs is identical in both quality and quantity to that given the Israeli guards. The Arabs are allowed to prepare the food in their own fashion. Meat or fish is provided daily, along with the neces- sary dairy and grain prod- ucts. The Arab cooks are in- spected by the prison physi- cian and periodically exam- ined for tuberculosis, skin infections or other communi- cable diseases. Strict health measures have been insti- tuted and explain, in part, the absence of any infectious outbreaks thus far. During an unannounced visit, this writer sampled the food and inspected both the kitchen facilities and person- nel and found that standards exceeded those encountered in American penal institu- tions. Following breakfast and until 10 a.m., the POWs en- gage in disciplined exercise and drill formation. They are then confined until noon, after which they have the main meal of the day. The remainder of the afternoon is spent at leisure either in the cells or in the open square. Many prisoners occupy their time with various games, including the popu- lar `Sheshbesh,' while others read, paint, work with hobby craft or write letters. Al- though television is not avail- able, the prisoners are given Arab language newspapers and magazines. Each POW is permitted and exercises the privilege of writing two letters and three post cards each month. These corre- spondences are carried to Syria by the representatives of the International Red Cross. The POWs are allow- ed to receive packages and letters from home, again brought by the Red Cross. Officials of the Red Cross visit the prison at least once each week and make recom- mendations when needed. These officials have voiced approval of the treatment re- ceived by the POWs. Some minor changes have been suggested and imple- mented. ,These include the substitution of the Syrian favorite, feta cheese for the Israeli yellow cheese and the issuance of additional cloth- ing to each prisoner. All the POWs I saw and talked with appeared healthy. The conversation between prisoner and guard was cor- rect and at times, bordered on amicability. I asked the prison com- mander if he encountered any difficulties between the Israeli guards and their Arab wards. He replied that all guards are carefully screened to weed out those who may have personally known or have been related to any of the Israeli POWs found murdered during the Yom Kippur War. A potential guard is scru- tinized closely and given a psychological profile. If ac- ceptable, he attends a special course on the internment and treatment of prisoners of war. A colonel, who is the act- ing warden, summarized the attitude of Israelis toward their Arab POWs. "One can have great hatred toward the Syrians, particularly in view of the fact that they have conducted war against us for over 25 years. When you deal with the prisoners, who are completely at your mercy, there is no anger. That does not mean we love them. We treat them as human beings; perhaps, one day, after sev- eral generations, they will return this feeling. There have been no disciplinary problems here among the Syrians and between prison- ers and guards." The Israeli adherence to the Geneva Convention on the treatment of POWs is scrupulous. Israel has ex- pressed a constant and pro- found concern for her sol- diers now in Syrian hands. Past experience has shown that Jewish captives of the Syrian government fare poorly. It is the Israeli hope that world opinion will force a reluctant Syria to minimize the degree of mistreatment meted out toward her Israeli prisoners. * C. * MILITARY MEDICINE It is generally accepted that a large percentage of wounded soldiers who are seen by Israeli doctors will die. This is not a reflection on the quality of Israeli mili- tary medicine but rather an indication of the speed with which the wounded are brought to medical attention. The accelerated speed of recovery b r i -n g s gravely wounded patients to Medical attention, whereas in pre- vious wars these wounded would have expired on the field. The effectiveness of medi- cal evacuation in the Golan Heights during and sub- sequent to the Yom Kippur War has engendered great respect and affection for the medics among the Israeli fighting troops. This fact is attested to in part by the large number of physicians who are numbered among the 2,500 fatal casualties in- curred during the war. The concept of evacuation which is practiced is that of immediate evacuation of wounded to the nearest cen- ter where adequate treatment may be given .. One must recall that even within the newly occupied Golan Heights, ie, the salient, one is a mere hour's drive from the near settlements of the upper Galilee. The present Syrian War of Attrition has incurred Israeli casualties mostly in the form of shrapnel wounds resulting from the daily artillery ex- changes. The wounded sol- dier is first seen by the corpsmen who administer first aid. The individual is then brought to the MD by a specially designed U. S. armored personnel carrier. The physician at the unit level may be a surgeon, in- ternist, pediatrician or be- long to any of the sub- specialties. All receive in- tense training in emergency medicine and minor surgery prior to assignment. The unit MD decides whether the casualty should be lifted out by, helicopter, carried by armored carrier to a closer field hospital, or maintained locally. If a heli- coptor is utilized, ' an air force physician always ac- companies the flight and will . decide which hospital to pro- ceed toward. Thus, a neuro- logical case and orthopedic case may go to different hos- pitals where their particular injuries will receive ad- vanced and specific care. The wounded are trans- ported to civilian hospitals as there are no military hos- pitals in Israel. The military do provide physicians to the various medical centers, all university teaching facilities, who then work with their civilian compatriots on both civilian and military pa- tients. The Israeli army physician provides superb medical care and in a very large and sig- nificant way, bolsters the sense of security of the fight- ing soldier. Speed of removal from the area of battle and excellence of care provided appropriately describe Is- raeli medicine. Jewish Woman Named France's Health Minister PARIS (JTA) — The only woman in the new French government named here is also the only Jew. She °is Simone Veil, who became France's health minister. Born on July 13, 1927, in the southern French town of Nice, Mrs. Veil studied law and later made a career in the justice ministry. Her fa- ther, Andre Jacob, was an architect. Her mother is Yvonne Steinmetz. When she was 16, she and her family were deported by the Nazis during the occupa- tion. Mrs. Veil's husband, Antoine Veil, works in the finance ministry here. College Gives Funds to Jewish Newspaper — CARBONDALE, Ill. (JTA) A $3,000 grant from student activity funds has been given by the Southern Illinois Uni- versity student senate to help finance "Kol Shalom," the Jewish student newspaper at SIU. In reporting the grant to James P. Rice, executive di- rector of the Jewish Federa- tion of Metropolitan Chicago, Rabbi Earl Vinecour, SIU Hine' director, said the grant represented the first time that general study student body funds have been allo- cated to a Jewish students newspaper on any major uni- versity campus in the mid- west. There is one kind of a laugh that I always did rec- ommend; it looks out of the eye first with a merry twin- kle, then it creeps down on its hands and knees and plays around the month like a pretty 'moth around the blaze of a candle, then it steals over into the dimples of the cheeks and rides around in those little whirl- pools for a while, then it lights up the whole face like the mellow bloom on a da- mask rose, then it swims up on the air, with a peal as clear and as happy as a din- nerbell, 'then it goes back again on gold tiptoes like an angel out for an airing, and lies down on its little bed of violets in the heart where it came from.—Josh