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April 18, 1975 - Image 14

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1975-04-18

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

14 Friday, April 18, 1975

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

`Israel Aim o Achieve Just and Durable Peace'

DALLAS, Tex. (JTA) —
Israeli Foreign Minister
Yigal Allon told a standing-
room-only audience of more
than 325 regional Jewish
community leaders at a din-
ner-meeting Tuesday that
"the main purpose of our

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foreign policy is to achieve a
just and durable peace with
the Arab countries . . . if
we cannot do this, let-us at
least avert a war for as long
as possible. To do this we
have to be strong . . . and if
we cannot avoid o'r postpone
war let us not be forced to
fight on all fronts simulta-
neously."
Community leaders as-
sembled on short notice
from Texas, Oklahoma,
Louisiana and New Mexico
to hear Allon, Moshe Rivlin,
director-general of the Jew-

ish Agency, and Frank B.
Lautenberg, general chair-
man of the United Jewish
Appeal.
It was the second leg of a
chartered flight, "Operation
Israel," which was in Miami
earlier in the day and in-
cluded top UJA officials as
well as UJA Executive Vice
Chairman Irving Bernstein.

Following the formal
meeting, Allon met with
campaign chairmen of the
more than 25 communities
represented. Mrs. Sylvia
Hassenfeld, national UJA
Women's Division chair-
man, and former Women's
Division chairman, Mrs.
Bernard Scaenen of Dal- _
las, met with women's
leadership to discuss ways
of implementing UJA's
goal of $100 million in cash
by the end of May.

ganization which embraces
the entire American Jewish
Community — it represents
the will and determination
a united people."

In Jerusalem, Premier
Yitzhak Rabin strongly
defended Foreign Minister
Allon's trip to the U.S. in
the Knesset and angrily
denounced Likud for de-
manding a debate on the
subject especially "during
this week of national unity
and identification."

Rabin addressed a special
recess session of the Knes-
set called at the insistence
of Likud. The House," by a
vote of 43-27 with six ab-
stentions, decisively de-
feated a Likud motion pro-
testing Allon's visit to the
U.S. during which he will
meet with Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissinger.
Young leaders met- sepa-
Rabin spoke briefly and
rately to discuss each city's forcefully and without
current problems and ways notes. Ire demanded to
to inspire and initiate new know "what right" Likud
responses to meet the ever- had to question or doubt the
growing needs of Jews= in government's resolve to
distress.
in the new enclosed Orchard Mall
stand firm on the positions
Earlier in the day, Allon it took during the bilateral
on Orchard Lake Road
met with more than 200 negotiations with Egypt
Jewish leaders from south- conducted by Kissinger
1 /2 mile north
east Jewish communities in which were suspended
Miami at the opening meet- March 22. He declared that
of Maple Road ing
of "Operation Israel."
his government considered
Allon
told
the
Jewish
itself
strictly bound by its
Phone: 851-9080 leaders that "on behalf of decisions
of last month
the people of Israel, I would which were approved at the
Open daily 10 to 6 p.m.
like to thank American Jew- time by the Knesset.
Thursday-Friday evenings till 9 p.m. ish leaders for responding
The premier said that he
so quickly to the major himself had asked Allon to
Saturday till 6 p.m.
goals of the UJA campaign respond to the United Jew-
by accelerating your efforts ish Appeal's request that
Sunday 12 to 5 p.m.
for human needs in Israel." Israel dispatch a top minis-
He called the UJA "an or- ter to participate in a major
fund-raising and informa-
tion campaign in the U.S.
and that, in fact, he wanted
to send the minister, Allon,
who was most directly in-
volved in the recent unsuc-
cessful negotiations so that
By Order of Irving I. Boigon, Trustee under Trust Security Agreement, Assets of
Israel's position would be
most effectively and author-
itatively explained.

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Allon, who attended the
weekly Cabinet meeting
only hours before his de-
parture, told reporters at
the airport that "Israel
remains prepared to re-
open, through the good
offices of Dr. Kissinger,
the negotiations broken off
by Egypt on March 22."

But he made it clear that
Israel has not retreated
froth the position it held on
that date and stressed that
pressure could not bring Is-
rael to compromise beyond
what it had offered during
the-ill-fated bilateral talks
conducted by Kissinger.
"Any compromise that Is-
rael would not allow itself to
make from the defense
viewpoint will not be made
under pressure," Allon de-
clared.
He told reporters, "I am
not carrying any new in-
structions or limitations
since the Cabinet adopted
no new decisions and since
no new developments have
taken place."

Allon admitted that he
could "feel the signs of some
kind of pressure upon us"
from the U.S. but he
stressed that there was no
crisis in relations between
Jerusalem and Washington.

Kuwait Firm Will Develop
S.C. Island as Protests Fail

CHARLESTON, S.C.,
(JTA) — The Charleston
County Council rejected
protests from Charleston
Jews and conservationists
and voted preliminary ap-
proval to a zoning change to
allow a Kuwait-owned cor-
poration to develop a barrier
island near Charleston into
a luxury resort.
Local environmental and
Jewish groups had lobbied
strongly against the pro-
posal since the Kuwait
sheikhdom and Kuwait
investors purchased the
5,500-acre Kiawah Island
for $17 million in 1974.
The vote by the council
members, acting as the
council's finance committee,
apparently cleared the way

for a full council approval
next month of a change in
the classification of the is-
land from general agricul-
tural to a planned develop-
ment area.

Frank Epstein, attorney

for the Kiawah Defense
Fund, which was'organ-
ized by local environmen-
tal groups to battle the
Kuwait project, said that
the issue might be taken to
the courts.

In response to objections
from the Charleston Jewish
community, the Kuwait
owned corporation issued
non-discrimination pledge,
which was made part of the
preliminary approval vote
by the council.

Religious Youth Protest Against
Sabbath Showing of Movie

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Pol-
ice used water hoses to dis-
perse religious demonstra-
tors — mostly yeshiva
youths — who tried to break
into a Tel Aviv movie house
last week to stop a film per-
formance on the Sabbath.
The demonstrators were
led by Tel Aviy Rabbi Israel
Lau and Deputy Mayor.
Chaim Bassuk, of the Na-
tional Religious Party. The
incident is expected to fur-
ther endanger the uneasy
Likud-NRP coalition that
governs the Tel Aviv munici-
pality under Likud Mayor
Shlomo Lahat.
Traditionally, all movie
and theatrical performances
are banned on the Sabbath
in compliance with the so-
called status quo that has
governed relations between
Israel's secular majority
and Orthodox miniority
since the inception of the
state. But several movie
houses have opened in Tel
Aviv on Friday nights with-
out interference from the
authorities.

from the coalition in pro-
test.

Last Friday night, masses
of yeshiva students joined
by worshippers leaizing syn-
agogue services converged
on the Allenby Cinema on
Allenby Road where an old
American film, "From Here
to Eternity" was being
shown. The demonstrators
confined themselves to
shouting at first but when a
group attempted to storm
the theater, they were
blocked by a cordon of pol-
ice.

Eventually, a police water
tanker was summoned and
the hoses brought into play.
Non-religious youths
taunted the demonstrators
with exhortations to join the
army and do their fighting
on the front.

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