•w •tr t' t •i Rabin Says U.S. and Israel Agree on M.E. Arms; Aid Assured to Israel WASHINGTON — Premier Yitzhak Rabin of Israel con- cluded four days of talks with President Gerald Ford last week, and said that the U,S. and Israel have agreed on how to proceed with Middle- east diplomacy. He added that the U.S. has also given assurance to Is- rael that it will meet her military needs. (Speaking on the NBC "Meet the Press" program Sunday, Prime Minister Rabin was optimistic about the af- fect of his talks with Presi- dent Ford and Seeretary of State Henry Kissinger, and said that Israel is prepared to make "'territorial conces- sions in the interest of peace.") Rabin said that both the U.S. and Israel were concen- trating on new talks between Israel and Egypt as the most fruitful follow-up to the troop separation accords Israel r ea c h e d with Egypt and Syria. Rabin stressed that Israel would not withdraw from ter- ritory unless the other side issued a pledge of non-bel- ligerency. American officials called this the opening state- ment in negotiations for an Israeli pullback from occu- pied Egyptian lands in the Sinai Desert in exchange -far security guarantees. American sources said in- cluding Jordan in negotia- tions was also discussed, but that Israel prefers to deal with the Egyptians first be- cause a Jordanian deal would cause serious political prob- lems in Israel and probably force a national election. It could also lead to seri- ous problems with the Pales- tinians, who have refused to agree to Jordan's negotiating . for the Palestinians on the West Bank of the Jordan River. - Continuation of American military support for Israel had been forecast in advance of Rabin's visit but its dimen- sions are still uncertain. Israel is reportedly asking for $1.5 billion annually in military assistance for the next five years. A high Is- raeli official said, hOwever, that the kind and amounts of armaments are under discus- sion, not their current costs. Sources said Israel is seek- ing 200 U.S. M-60 heavy tanks, and - supplies of laser- guide "smart bombs," mis- sile-firing helicopters and ground-to-ground, missiles. U.S.-Israeli military discus- sions were expanded when Gen. Mordechai Hod, an ad- viser to Rabin met with De- fense Secretary James Schlesinger. Hod, command- er of Israel's southern com- mand, was not named in the anginal list of Rabin's en- tourage. The White House announce- ment of continued support came against a background of reports that the Soviet Union has resumed ship- ments to Egypt of war planes and spare parts for the planes, tanks and mis- sile installations Moscow had previously supplied to the Sadat government. There also were reports that the Soviets have in- creased their arms shipments . to Syria and have made that country the strongest air power of all of Israel's neigh- bors. The Russians were also re- ported to be supplying Iraq with the latest fighter-bomb- ers. Before returning to Israel, Rabin spoke to 750 Ameri- can Jewish leaders_Saturday at a dinner in New York sponsored by the Unit e d Jewish Appeal and the Coun- cil of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds. He stressed that immedi- ate economic and military aid from the United States to Israel was indispensible to Israel's security and to the success of any Mideast peace negotiations. Rabin said the major is- sue and stumbling -block was not territory, but the Arabs' refusal to recognize an in- dependent Jewish state. Government Congressional Leaders Attend Dinners Honoring Israeli Premier WA GTON (JTA) — Government and congression- al figures and leaders in American-Jewish life attend- ed a dinner last week for Israeli Premier and Mrs. Yitzhak Rabin given by Am- bassador and Mrs. Simha Dinitz. Many of the guests also at- tended a State dinner for the Rabins at the White 'House. The 40 dinner guests who dined with the Rabins in- cluded vice-presidential nom- inee Nelson A.' Rockefeller and Mrs. Rockefeller; Secre- tary of State and. Mrs. Henry A. Kissinger; Treasury Sec- retary William Simon; Secre- tary of Defense James Schlesinger; White House Chief of Staff Gen. Alexander M. Haig; AFL-CIO• President _George Meany; and Lt. Gen. George S. Brown, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Among the members of Congress and Jewish leaders were Sens. Frank Church; Jacob K. Javits; Stuart Sym- ington; Edward Kennedy; Walter Mondale; and ' Rep. John Rhodes; Max' Fisher, chairman of the Board of Governors of the Jewish Agency; Rabbi Israel Miller, chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organiza- tions and Paul Zuckerman, general chairman of the United Jewish Appeal. Premier and Mrs. Rabin made their first visit to Washington since they left here 17 months ago at the end of Rabin's 'term as Is- raeli Ambassador to the U.S. l ,1 ''' t 4 ' , 31t,1444 4 4 • " Collegians Study in Israeli Schools 4 • 14--Friday, Sept. 20, 1974 44444444 e. THE-DETROIT JEWISH NEWS NEW CAM- •AC? NEW -YORK—Almost 300 American and Canadian col- lege students, and graduates of Yeshiva High Schools be- tween the ages of 17 and 22 left recently for a year of intensive Judaic Studies in Israel, it was announced by Rabbi Mallen Galinsky, act- ing director of the Torah education department of the World Zionist Organization- American Section. The students are selected on the basis of scholaristic achievement, serious interest and commitment and recep- tiveness to Jewish religious and ethical ideals. The cur- riculum is geared to their future involvement in the field ,of Jewish education, communal leadership or the rabbinate. A group of 25 10th grade students, aged 14-17, part of 90 students participating in the new youth aliya one-year study program in Israel, left recently for the Sde Boker educational complex in the Negev. Marking a new departure in youth aliya programming, the new program is geared to teen-agers who are not yet considering aliya. Classifieds Get Quick Results BUY OR LEASE FROM ANDY BLAU In -BIRMINGHAM at WILSON-CRISSMAN CADILLAC RES. 642-6836 CALL BU,S._ MI 4-1930 1350 N. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM Now is the time to give that secret dre some serious thought , As long as you can remember, Israel has been on your mind. You've shared her triumphs and suffered her anxieties. And you always dream about living there. Well stop dreaming. Now is the time to give your secret dream some serious thought. Now you have the cha.9ce to find out what life is like for Americans living in Israel-jobs, housing, education, everything you'd need to know.You'll hear why tha; went on Aliyah and why they're staying. We'll tell you what tc expect and what not to. So if you've been thinking about living in Israel, or if you just want more information about Aliyah. You've put it off long enough. There will never be a better time than right now to get the facts you need. 4 Ask us. WO're the people you talk to, because we're the people who know. - 04' ISRAEL ALIYAH CENTER 17520 West Twelve Mile Road, Suite 111 (Detroit) Southfield, Mich. 48076, (313) 559-6755 Immigrants' Second Generation Led Jewish Climb 'in Academia NEW YORK — A study in Science magazine - reveals that Jewish groups have ad- vanced to second position among 13 denominations in the U.S. in the production of scholarly and scientific doc- torates and that an upsurge in such productivity among Middle Atlantic schools re- flects the high output of Yes- hiva University. The study was made by Kenneth R. Hardy, professor of psychology, Brigham Young University, "based on exhaustive data gathered over a 40 year period, and includes "state and regional analysis and individual col- legiate institutions, specifi- cally focusing on religips variables." In the study, Prof. Hardy contrasts productivity reg- ionally and among "denom- inational" schools between 1920-39, and during 1950-61. Surveyed were 295 schools, 81 of which were "under the control of some religious de- nomination." productive state is Utah; and that the most striking change during the past 40 years has been - the great surge - of Middle Atlantic states from seventh to second place in regional productivity, led-bb New York. He writes that "The most likely explanation for the upsurge of Middle Atlantic states . . in the later period is the impact of Jew- ish second generation immi- gant. youth." ' He also states that "In the case of the -Jewish faith, the great productivity of 'Yes- hiva University in the later period is mirrored' in cer- tain New York (and possible other North Atlantic Sea- board) schools.": In noting the high academ- ic productivity of Jewish groups, which were second from last during 1920-39, Prof. Hardy points to a 1969 survey which showed that Jews now constitute a dis- The denominations studied proportionate percentage of included: Quaker,• which con- university faculty in the tinues to rank top from 1920; U.S. Jewish; Church of the Breth- This, he .says, "is more ren; Presbyterian; Re- pronounced among the formed, Christian Reformed; younger faculty more than Evangelical; E.U. Brethren; the old, and is more pro- M o r m o n; Congregational; nounced among the presti- Methodist; Baptist; Luther- gious schools." an; Roman Catholic; and Further, of the 67 Ameri- Disciples of Christ. cans who were scientific Prof. Hardy states that Nobel laureates up to 1965, some denominations, such as 18, or 27 per cent, were Episcopal and Unitarian, are- Jewish, he says. not represented because "they do not operate col- SHARE IN leges." Prof. Hardy reveals that in FREEDOM general, the northern states ,:,\, inns Bonds are much more productive of scholars than the south- * Freedom Shares ern states; that the most . The Directors And Officers Of The Crown Life Insurance Company in Toronto, Canada Join With The Detroit Center Agency And Their Many Agents And Associates In The State of Michigan To Wish Policyholders, Clients And Other Friends The Very Best Wishes For A Healthful And Prosperous Happy New Year