Premier Rabin Warns: Israel Watches Egypt's Suez Actions (Continued from Page 1) Malta, said the Palestinians should not be ignored. Rabin replied that no one wants to ignore the 'Palestinians but the key factor in achieving peace in the Middle East was Egypt. Rabin indicated here that his country is prepared to make territorial compromises for the sake of peace in the Middle East, but warned that compromise must be re- ciprocal and observed that negotiations between Israel and its Arab neighbors will not have any meaning unless and until they are conducted on a bilateral basis. "A piece of peace for a piece of territory would be a handy formula," he told a bipartisan group of Biitish members of Parliament at a meeting in his hotel suite. Peace will not come, he said, until the Arabs are recon- ciled to Israel's existence. Rabin told the .MPs that while a final peace settle- ment is still far off, Israel is ready to negotiate the next step "so that we may come a little closer to peace." He said Israel will be watching to see whether Egypt opens the Suez Canal to Israeli ships and whether Syria and Egypt begin working on "re- construction" rather than preparing for another war. Rabin said the next step would be between Israel and Egypt since Egypt is the key to peace in the Middle East, but any Israeli concessions must be reciprocated. The Premier said the rea- son for the increase in ter- rorist activities since the dis- engagement agreements have been signed is that "someone is interested to put pressure on us. I would not exclude the Soviet Union." Tekoah Questions Sincerity of Sadat's Peace Stance UNITED NATIONS (JTA) —Egyptian President Sadat's announced support of terror- ist raids against Israel and his readiness to assist Leba- non against Is r a el have Bronx Chief Says He Lost Party Backing Due to His Religion NEW Y 0 R K — Borough President Robert Abrams of the Bronx charged that the Democratic State Committee had denied him its designa- tion for attorney general "primarily" because he is Jewish. Abrams said the rejection was a result of an effort by some Democratic leaders to get a statewide ticket bal- anced ethnically and by re- ligion. He called the tactic "irresponsible, inflammatory, discriminatory and histori- cally discredited." Abrams' attack on the practice within his own party conflicts with the endorse- ment of the practice earlier by Howard J. Samuels, the party's gubernatorial desig- nee, who also is Jewish. He also termed as "irre- sponsible" a statement by Matthew J. Troy Jr., the Queens Democratic leader, made on a recent television interview. According to the New York Times, Troy said he was concerned about the possi- bility of the party's candi- date for governor being "saddled" with a ticket that was predoinintntly Jewish or Irish or "predominantly any one race." He noted that be- cause of primary fights the Democrats "could end up with five of the seven candi- dates being Jewish" and HE FAMOUS AWRY THOMA CLOTHING SALE OW IN PROGRESS SAVINGS FROM 20% to SO% SUITS reg. $135-$275 ow $ 89 5°. $ 119-$ 139 5 SPORT COATS Reg $95-$135 NOW S59.50469.50 AND TAILORED SLACK Reg $25-$35 From S16.95 ARRY THOMAS Fine Clothes for Over 38 Years 24750 Telegraph at 10 Mile ally to 6 P.M. Thurs. to 8 P.M. OPEN SUNDAY 11 to 4 said that that would be a disaster. Answering the charges by Abrams, Troy added "To even suggest I am anti a Jewish candidate is ludi- crous, since I am supporting Howard Samuels for gover- nor." The Anti-D e f a m a t i o n Le a g u e, in response to Abrams' charge against his party declared that "we de- plore the selection of candi- dates on any basis other than their individual merit and qualifications." Abrams, in a letter to the ADL, had asked the agency to take a stand in assuring that "considerations of ethnic background or religious af- filiation are not permitted to dominate the process of selecting candidates for elec- tive public office." Responding for the ADL, Seymour D. Reich, chairman of ADL's New York board, wrote that "any political organization which makes its choices of candidates upon a racial, religious or ethnic basis should be condemned as violating a fundamental concept in the American elec- tion process." Report on Dutch Nazi Aide Is Due AMSTERDAM (JTA) —A 1,000-page report on the ac- tivities of the Dutch Nazi collaborator Friedrich Wein- reb during the occupation of the Netherlands is nearing completion and should be published this year, it was announced here. Based on eye-witness ac- counts, some by persons still living, and compiled by the Netherlands State Institute of War Documentation, the extensive report also will in- clude interviews with Wein- reb himself, ' who currently lives in Switzerland. In 1948, Weinreb was sen- tenced to six years imprison- ment for collaboration with the Germans. The report showed that he had been re- sponsible for many deporta- tions while pretending to be a protector of Dutch Jews. raised "serious questions" for Israel about Egypt's• in- tention to move toward "a new relationship of peace and understanding" with Is- rael, Yosef Tekoah, Israel's Ambassador to the United Nations, said here. Emerging from a one-hour meeting with UN Secretary General Kurt Waldheim, Te- koah told newsmen he had also expressed formally his surprise and dismay about Dr. Waldheim's disclosure he had met with Palestinian representatives in •Khartoum, in the Sudan. Tekoah listed the terrorists Waldheim met as Zuhayr Muhsin, comman- der of El-Saiqa in Lebanon, the group that called the Kiryat Shemona massacre "heroic" and took responsi- bility for many of the terror- ist activities; Faruq al Qa- dumi, who represents El Fatah in the Palestine Lib- eration_ Organization; and Khalid al Fatum, chairman of the National Palestinian Council of PLO. Waldheim told him the meetings with the terrorists was a "chance encounter" and that he was not aware of the identity of the terrorists he met. Gur Warns Lebanon on Outside Arab Weapons TEL AVIV {JTA)—Chief of Staff Mordechai Gur warned Lebanon that it would "become a battlefield" if it brought in war planes, anti-aircraft missiles and oth- er weapons from Arab coun- tries. His remarks at a press conference here were viewed as a response to repprts that the Lebanese government is considering a,s kin g other Arab countries for military aid against Israeli air raids, on terrorist encampments in Lebanon. Such aid reportedly has already been offered by President Anwar Sadat of Egypt. He claimed that Israel's armed forces had recovered and 'in some respects ex- ceeded their :pre-Yom Kippur War strength and were capa- ble of meeting a combined attack by Egypt, Syria and Jordan. He said in that con- nection that Israel was tak- ing seriously the warlike re- marks of President Sadat. Asked why Israel's option to declare war was not exer- cised when Syrian and Egyp- tian forces were massing for their attacks last October, Gur replied that it was the government, not the army, which makes such decisions. "This does not mean that under certain conditions this option would not be put into action," he said. Gen. Gur replied to Syrian charges that Israeli forces deliberately destroyed the Golan Heights town of Ku- neitra before they withdrew. He said the army leveled some houses that might have served as shelters for snipers firing on nearby Israeli set- tlements. But most of the damage, he said, was sus- tained when Kuneitra was a battlefield in the Six-Day War, the Yam Kippur War and more recently during the war of attrition on the north- ern front. Vatican Spokesman Condems Raids on Lebanon ROME (JTA) — Vatican spokesman Prof. Frederico Alessandrini has vigorously condemned Israeli air raids against terrorists in Lebanon. He called them "true acts of terror," in an article pub- lished over the 'weekend and implied that the raids were tied to Israeli expansionist interests in southern Leba- non. In the article in the Vati- can periodical L'Ossevatore Della Domenica, Alessandrini flatly rejected as "morally inadmissable" Israeli claims that the raids were carried out to prevent Palestinian terrorist attacks. He implied the raids were rooted in Is- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 10—Friday, July 5, 1974 raeli interests in acquiring the waters of the Litani and Hasbani rivers in southern Lebanon. The Israelis "have never made a secret of their interest in the hydraulic re- sources present in southern Lebanon," wrote Alessan- drini. The Vatican spokesman implied that in order to ac- quire this "economically in- teresting" territory, Israel is deliberately working toward an 'all-out war with Lebanon. He described the raids as preparatory operations lead- ing up to more "decisive" Israeli actions against Leba- non. ( ipr f-- -\\ Optical Co. \\ LEATHERS- SUEDES Cleaned and Refinished With the Masters Touch We Can Renew Your .4 • JACKETS • COATS • SHEEPSKINS To Look Factory Fresh Leather Experts For 40 Years Kleen All Leathers 19138 W. McNichols 2600i COOUDGE HWY OAK PARK 543 3343 • • • • • • • • • • 838-3666' LET'S MAKE A DATE • • "for your next affair" • • • the • • • • • • • • • • • • KE 2-3320 While you relax Tom Newby will create MAGIC for your Bar Mitzvas, Weddings, Showers and Parties . TOM NEWBY • • • • of Southfield Flowers, Gifts • Distinctive Party Creations 29245 Southfield at 12 Mile 559-2560 10••••••••••••••••••••••••0011100 41 1 BUY TODAY . . . YOU'LL . • • • SAVE $100's '74 TORONADO '74 olds 98-IS '74 DELTA 88 '74 WAG. 9-Pass. . . '74 CUTLASS Sup.. . '74 CUTLASS "S" . . '74 OMEGA 2-Dr. . . -- $5782_0 $5125 • $4178 $4163 A $3826 $3562 di $2846 'a USED CARS FROM $595 BRING YOUR WIFE AND TITLE 4 HOUR DELIVERY ■ Op – • • • • • ERV (BEAR) BEHRMANi.„ . OB SAKS OLDSMOBILE1 1 3 Kentucky Buyers to Assure You of Highest Trade-in • ■ 4 • -4 35300 Grand River at Drake Rd., Farmington, Mich. 48024 \ • •4 • 478-0500 _ • -4 •••0••••••••••••••0•••••••••. fresh air, 0 Gm ( 9 cllvae go country Around our lake and amidst our giant trees we're building apartments to match the land. Spacious residences — 1, 2 & 3 bedrooms with all the amenities. The location is superb and easy to reach. The Oaks is located one block from the only Orthodox Synagogue in Broward County (Young Israel of Hollywood). d -• 1 From $24,900 the oaks 4151 Stirling Road, Fort Lauderdale, Broward County, Florida 33314 Broward: 791-1870 Dade: 944-0416 —4