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16 Friday, May 16, 1975

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Jewish Anti-Poverty Group Rift Nets Restraining Order

NEW YORK (JTA) — The
Metropolitan New York
Coordinating Council on
Jewish Poverty has obtained
a temporary restraining or-

der against the Jewish Anti-
Poverty Workers and its
executive director, S. Elly
Rosen. The order also
named Rosen as president

of the council for the Jewish
Poor, described as the work-
ing arm of the association
and Mordechai Rosen, the
official's brother.

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The order bars the Rosens
from "threatening and ha-
rassing" Rabbi Jack Simha
Cohen, executive director of
the coordinating council,
and other officers and staff
members of the agency, a
coordinating body for Jew-
ish anti-poverty organiza-
tions. The order also bars
the Rosens from occupying
any office of the coordinat-
ing council, from blocking
entrance or exit to the office
and from disrupting meet-
ings of coordinating council
officers and staff.
Elly Rosen said he had
started an eight-day hunger
strike five days ago in pro-
test against a decision of the
coordinating council to stop
grants totalling $24,000 a
year to the association. The
next grant would have been
made July 1.

The Rosen brothers and
Morris Schwartz, a volun-
teer, were arrested last
week in the coordinating
council office on charges of
criminal trespass and ha-

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rassment filed by Rabbi
Cohen. The three were re-
leased on their own recog-
nizance for an appearance
next Thursday in New
York City Criminal Court.

Elly Rosen said he, his
brother and Schwartz went
to the coordinating council
office to discuss the grant
cutoff and that police were
called immediately, though
they were peaceful. A coun-
cil spokesman said that they
banged on the window of
the receptionist's office and
on the door.
The coordinating council
issued a statement declar-
ing that its decision to cut
off funding to the associa-
tion "was made only after a
series of escalating harass-
ments and disruptions that
substantially impaired the
conduct of its business and
the functioning of the coun-
cil."

The association con-
tended that the fund cutoff
would force a drastic cur-
tailment of programs for
elderly Jews in the
Brownsville section of
Brooklyn, where the asso-
ciation maintains a store-
front center called Hartz-
ilu II. The Rosens said
that volunteers deliver
kosher food packages to
150 elderly Jews daily,
except on Saturday.

The coordinating council
in its statement said tha
the fund cutoff would "in no
way" affect funding "to
serve the Jews of Browns-
ville. Several programs to
care for these individuals
are currently being con-
ducted and plans are pres-
ently underway to create
additional communal serv-
ices for the Jews of Browns-
ville."

Eban Presents Peace Plan,
Details Future Israel Borders

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Former Foreign Minister
Abba Eban presented a
15-point peace plan, includ-
ing a delineation of Israel's
future borders, here Tues-
day, which he said the gov-
ernment should propose
without delay. Foreign Min-
ister Yigal Allon said an
overall settlement was only
one of the options facing Is-
rael at present and ruled out
Eban's suggestion that Is-
rael map its final borders
before negotiations with the
Arabs begin.
Both diplomats stated
their views at a meeting of
the Labor Alignment's
Knesset faction. The meet-
ing, surprisingly, was de-
void of polemics.
Eban, who has come un-
der bitter criticism from
Premier Yitzhak Rabin and
other Labor Party leaders
for his public criticism of
the government's policies
during the recent bilateral
talks with Egypt conducted
by Secretary of State Henry
A. Kissinger, asked, "is it
not possible for a man sin-
cerely to believe that the sit-
uation is serious and sin-
cerely to propose ways to
remedy it?"

His peace plan envis-
aged an Israel withdrawal
from the bulk of the Arab
territories occupied since
the June 1967 Six-Day
War, but recognized the
need for a continued Is-
raeli presence in "tacti-
cally significant" areas
such as the Golan Heights
and Sharm el ,Sheikh and
the permanent status of
Jerusalem as a unified city
and the nation's capital.

Other points of the Eban
peace plan were: A full-
fledged peace treaty em-
bodying the political recog-
nition of Israel and an end
to the state of war; and end
to hostile actions by irregu-
lars; iron-clad demilitariza-
tion arrangements; provi-
sions for the maritime
rights of all parties; an end
to economic warfare; an
end to hostile propaganda,
free traffic of foreign tour-

ists between countries;
trade ties, cultural relations
and the establishment of
diplomatic relations to be
implemented gradually; re-
gional cooperation; an end
to political harassment in
international forums; mu-
tual compensation for Arab
refugees and Jewish refu-
gees from Arab lands; open
borders, especially within
the boundaries of Manda-
tory Palestine.

Eban said there was no
contradiction between such
an overall peace plan and ef-
forts to achieve a step by
step settlement. Allon said
he did not rule out addi-
tional interim agreements
and that war was not neces-
sarily unavoidable. But he
insisted that Israel could
not lay out a map of the
frontiers beforehand when
those frontiers will be items
of negotiations.

Allon said he also did not
rule out a mutual defense
agreement between Israel
"and her friends." However,
he added, "Guarantees can-
not serve as a substitute for
an independent defense ca-
pacity."

Award Established
to Honor Scientist

Edythe Lutzker, New
York biographer of Walde-
mar Haffkine, has estab-111
lished an annual prize of IL
100 at a high school in Ash-
kelon, Israel, to help perpe-
tuate the scientist's name.

Haffkine, a Russian Jew
who worked for the British
in India at the turn of the
century, discovered serums
to eliminate bubonic plague
and cholera.

Many scientists consider
him to have been one of the
world's greatest microbiolo-
gists, but he has received lit-
tle recognition for his dis-
coveries that have controlled
and nearly eliminated two
dreaded diseases (see The
Jewish News, April 25, 1975,
Page 19).

