New War Threats Extend Israel's Defensive Plans (Continued from Page 1) Health Minister Israel Bar- zilai, said that in the next six months there will be either a further improvement in Is- raeli-Arab relations or an- other war. He said Israel can- not stand on the status quo following the disengagement greements. Peres told the Knesset that the Soviet Union was also supplying the terrorist organ- izations with arms and equip- nt. He said other East i. opean countries as well as /- Syria, Libya and Iraq were 31so providing the terrorists ' with weapons presumably with the knowledge of the Soviet Union. The fear of an outbreak of a new war centers on Israeli intelligence reports that Syria is planning another attack ,:.oupled with the heavy Soviet military buildup of t hat country. At the same time, the Israelis have been point- Ing to Syria's failure to begin rebuilding and repopulating ' the Kuneitra area on the Golan Heights and the slow- YOUR CHANCE TO VOTE JUSTICE INTEGRITY BERNARD L. KAUFMAN ELECT AND PROMOTE • BERNARD L. AUEmAn FOR JUDGE COURT OF APPEALS ' ND DISTRICT down of Egyptian efforts to return the Suez Canal area to normal civilian life. Israe- lis have stressed that a re- turn to normalization of the two areas as provided in the disengagement agreements would be proof of Arab will- ingness to reach a Mideast settlement. Another cause of concern in Israel was the arrival of King Faisal of Saudi Arabia in Cairo for a nine-day visit to Egypt. Faisal crossed the Suez Canal Thursday to see the positions Egyptian troops have taken up since the Is- raeli - Egyptian ,disengage- ment agreement. The main purpose of his visit is report- edly to discuss with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat how Saudi oil wealth and diplo- matic leverage can be com- bined with Egyptian military strength in support of the Arab cause against Israel. Sadat is expected to seek Faisal's support in his at- tempt to reconcile King Hus- sein of Jordan with the Pal- estinian terrorists. The warnings of a new war began picking up in intensity here Tuesday when Gen. Mordehai Gur, the chief of staff, told a meeting here of the Israel - American Chamber of Commerce that the Arabs could start a new war by the end of the year. He stressed that Israel must prepare itself spiritually, mentally and organizationally for the eventuality of a new war. His warning followed a similar one from Peres in a television interview. Their remarks are seen as part of an effort to convince the mil- itary and the public of the seriousness of the situation and the need for all-out pre- paredness. As part of the new pre- paredness, the army extended its work day as of Wednes- day, to run until darkness. More reserves are scheduled to be called up, particularly those in storage and main- tenance who will be working around the clock in order that combat vehicles should be ready for use. The army is also preparing for trial call-ups of reserve units and at least one will be conduct- ed over the radio. As part of the increased preparedness of the military in the wake of renewed war threats, the Nahal units have been ordered to increase the time spent on military exer- cises. Nahal is a corps of the army whose members , live in border settlements devoting part of their time to agriculture and part to mili- tary defense. New methods have enabled the time devoted to agricul- ture to be shortened. The army has put a prior- ity on readying tanks, armor- ed cars and other vehicles for combat. Reserves who are garage mechanics in private life have been called up to beef up the regular main- tenance units. A visit to a maintenance unit showed that each tank needs between 800 and 1,000 working hours to put it into service. In addition to the tanks damanged or over-used during the war, necessary al- terations are being made on the hundreds of Soviet tanks captured in the Yom Kippur War. The afternoon newspaper Yediot Ahronot, in an edi- torial Tuesday, said Gur's statement was a warning to the Arabs that if they should prevent renewal of the ar- rangement for United Nations forces in the buffer zone, this could mean war. Gur said that if the UN was ousted from the buffer zone Israel would have to decide wheth- er "to wait for a second move by the Arabs or shall we be the first to strike." Syrian President Hafez As- sad's regime is extremist in nature. The ruling Baath Party is a minority party which rules over the masses. To maintain power, the Syrian government has to have a massive supply of weapons. The Soviet Union has come to the aid of the Baathists. Seeing that the party may lose ground at home as it has lost ground among the Arab states to Egypt, the Soviet Union has switched its Major Federation Finally Aids Kansas City Jewish Day School KANSAS CITY (JTA) — The board of the Jewish Fed- eration and Council, respon- ing to a committee report that Kansas City was the only sizable Jewish com- munity whose federation was not providing financial aid to a Jewish day school, has voted to provide such aid to the Hebrew Academy of Greater Kansas City: Federation help will be in the form of tuition scholar- ships to the academy, the only Hebrew day school in Greater Kansas City. Classifieds Get Quick Results I aid efforts from Egypt to Syr- ia. While hardly a Soviet ship has come to an Egyptian port since the Yom Kippur War, Syrian ports are filled with Russian ships unloading steel, tanks, artillery, planes and sophisticated missiles. - Materially, the Syrian army has been making great strides, and it may now be the strong- est air-power in the Arab world. Syria lost 222 of its 300 war planes in the Yom Kippur War but it now has some 400 planes, and its air force is now believed to be stronger than the Egyptian air force. Syria also has been given by the Soviets at least 24 MIG-23s, the newest and most sophisticated of the Russion planes, and 200 MIG-21s, the first-line interceptor. It has the lethal, mobile anti - air- craft SAM-6 missiles which were successful against Is- raeli planes during the war, and has 40 missile batteries and many tanks, although they may be lacking tank crews. Syria lost 1,100 tanks in the war, but it has received 900 newer and better ones from the Soviets. The Syrian army is being continually trained by some 3,000 Soviet technical advi- sers and instructors, most of whom in Syria after the Yom Kippur War. Efforts are being made to dissuade Jordan from joining the Syrians. The recent state- ment by King Hussein and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in which Sadat agreed that Hussein represents the Palestinians, may indicate an attempt on Sadat's part to keep Hussein on his side and not to force him into war, which is apparently the in- tention of the Syrians. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, August 2, 1974-5 WE CAN FIT YOU! — OVER 1500 SIZES 6 TO 44 OWNS $29 J99 FOR WEDDINGS, PARTIES AND PATIO SHANDELS 154 SO. WOODWARD nr. 15 MILE RD. BIRMINGHAM, MICH. SERVICES • Watch Repair • jewelry RePairs • Custom Design 14 kt. 8 18 kt, Gold Work MI 2-4150 Martin • Bead and Petal Restringing •Jewelry Restyling • Engraving All Work Done on Premises 2 - 3077 Greenfield. — Advance Bldg., Suite 354, corner of 9 Mile & Greenfield 557-5544 Mon.-Fri. 9-3; -sat-. 9-3 Milt's 9 Mile & Coolidge Standard Servicecenter Milt Gorelick Moe Caplan Nationally certified Mechanic USING THE LATEST EQUIPMENT • Electronic Front End Alignment • Electronic Engine Analysis Equipment (With Infra-Red for All the Latest Emission Checks) • Disc Brake Specialist • All Foreign Cars Serviced 4 Mechanics on Duty 7 a.m. -9 p.m. LI 7-4250 . HI HLY QUALIFIED 1 •Elected by his peers to the Workmen's Compensation Council of the State Bar of Michigan, 1970 through 1973 • Appointed Arbitrator of the American Arbitration Association • Associate Editor of the Journal of the American Trial Lawyers As- sociation, 1959 to present • Am.Bar Assoc. Litigation Section • Appointed to Lawyer to Lawyer Consultation Panel • Associate member International Association of Industrial Accident Boards and Commissions • Detroit Bar Association •S. Michigan Trial Lawyers Assoc. • Fellow of International Academy of Law and Science AUGUST 6, TUESDAY OLDS NOW WHERE PEOPLE STILL COME FIRST GLASSMAN OLDSMOBILE INC 28000 TELEGRAPH RD. •• SOUTHFIELD •• PHONE 354-3300