Mideast Peace Talk Activity Should Not Lessen, Eban Says ATLANTA (JTA) — For- ' mer Foreign Minister Abba Eben of Israel said here that the "new momentum of ac- 1 ivity" which the disengage- ment agreements have set in notion toward a Middle East to,1 I peace settlement should not be allowed to lessen. "It is dangerous to have a diplo- matic vacuum," Eben said in an address at the 66th nnual convention of Hada- ssah here. - "We must end the six-year ate on procedures and ...ctics and get back to the concrete issues," he said, 'ling that it did not matter ether the next round of greements is with Jordan or with Egypt. :_--- Eban, who is in this coun- try as a visiting professor at Columbia University in New York, stressed that the time has come to think ahead in the Middle East toward the regional development of the area. He envisioned future cooperation between Leba- non, Israel and Jordan along the lines of the Benelux na- tions, "in a reciprocal en- tangelment of projects and ideas where boundaries are at once respected and trans- cended." Meanwhile, Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D. Wash.) warned that the stability of the Mid- dle East could be under- ft fined by pressure on Israel to make further territorial concessions in the absence of U.S. Hospitals Better Equipped to Treat War Wounds of Israelis By SUE MACY NEW YORK (JTA) — Al- though Israel has developed a remarkable network of medical services in her short history, the continual strains of war occasionally leave the country with soldiers whose I medical needs can be met best abroad. Ever since 1948 Israel has sent wounded war veterans -for medical help in other countries, including the Un- ited States, and as the diag- -noses of Yom Kippur War veterans were made these past few months, those who could not obtain adequate help in Israel were sent over- seas for care. Israeli war veterans in the -- U.S. are sent here by Israel's department for rehabilitation in the ministry of defense, - which pays medical and hos- pital bills, plane fare, and - living expenses for the vet- eran and his escort (usually a wife; brother, or other family member). When they reach the U.S., the veterans and their com- panions are met by repre- sentatives of the Israeli Consulate in New York, who take them to a hotel, register them, and help arrange medical — and social — activ- ities. Rivka Sivan, the head of the consulate section in the Consulate-General of Israel in New York, coordinates the activities of the veterans and their escorts, many of whom do not speak English and have never before left their homeland. Consulate staff members often take the vet- erans to dinner, help their -- -impanions shop and arrange sits to the hospital if the veteran must stay in one ' while his companion waits for the rehabilitation process to end. While some veterans are in the U.S. for as little as four weeks, others must stay as long as one year, said Mrs. Sivan. "They will not leave the U.S. until everything pos- sible is done for them," she said. "Many have children at home and don't like to stay away too long, but when they come here the boys are will- ing to get as much care as they can." Mrs. Sivan said that al- though the veterans' medical problems are far-ranging, a great many come for treat- - ments on their eyes, includ- ing the removal of foreign bodies from the eye and ( training in the use of seeing- eye dogs. Israel once had a seeing-eye dog institute, but when the head of it died some years ago, the country found that it was too expensive to maintain such an institute. Now Israelis in need of guide dogs must come to the U.S. for a four-week training pe- riod. Mrs. Sivan said very often hotels and doctors forego payment from Israeli veter- ans, or charge them only a nominal fee. She said that hospitals always take full payment, but both Jewish and non-Jewish doctors are often very willing to charge less. "One non-Jew said he didn't want to take the full fee from the state of Israel," she said. "He said it was a privilege to treat an Israeli boy." Local Jewish organizations also do their best to help visiting Israelis adjust to the U.S., said Mrs. Sivan. Women in the U.S. working for the welfare of Israeli soldiers, and the Jewish War Veterans in America have been espe- cially helpful, she said. Also, some Jews who own hotels in the Catskills, including the Concord and Grossinger's, in- vite the veterans for week- ends as their guests. Bormann Dead Dentist Argues NEW YORK—It was re- ported here that Dr. Reidar Sognnaes, professor of oral biology and anatomy at the University of California, at Los Angeles, reported in London Tuesday that he has conclusive evidence that Martin Bormann', Hitler's one-time right-hand man, is dead and not hiding in Ar- gentina. Acknowledged as one of the world's foremost "dental detectives," Dr. Sognnaes told the world congress of the International Dental Fed- eration that Borman commit- ted suicide in Berlin in 1945 by biting a cyanide capsule. The doctor, who helped es- tablish, through dental for- ensic means, that a charred body found by Russians in 1945 was that of Hitler, writes in the International Journal of Forensic Medicine that he based his conclusion that Bormann is dead on his ex- amination of a skull and den- tal bridge uncovered in 1972 in Berlin. genuine, negotiated progress toward peace. "In view of the unrelenting flow of sophisticated Soviet arms to Syria it is unreason- able to expect further Israeli withdrawals from the rela- tively favorable defensive positions they now hold," Jackson said. The senator addressed about 2,500 delegates attend- ing the four-day convention here. Jackson reiterated his sup. port for a Middle East set- tlement that would leave Is- rael with the kind of de- fensible borders that the Is- raelis . themselves,.. without American forces, can main- tain and defend. Jackson expressed "the gravest doubt" about the wisdom of supplying nuclear THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS reactors to the Middle East. "There is no way adequate to safe-guard a 600-mega- watt reactor against Egyp- tian expropriation," he said. "The mere possession of such a quanity of plutonium would expose the United States to blackmail and coercion. We would have to evaluate every move in the Middle East in terms of whether the prob- able Egyptian reaction might be the abrogation of nego- tiated safeguards aimed at preventing Egyptian acquisi- tion of nuclear weapons." Noting that the promise of reactors to Israel and Egypt was made by President Nixon when he visited the Mideast in June, Jackson urged the Ford Administra- tion to "at once reconsider" this move. 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