24 Friday, May 30, 1975 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Adviser Named BINGO CONGREGATION 111VAI DAVID EVERY THURS. 7:45 24350 SOUTHFIELD RD. SOUTHFIELD. MICH. ♦ ♦ BINGO AKIVA HEBREW DAY SCHOOL SANS SOUCI HALL ON 9 MILE AT MIDDLEBELT EVERY SUNDAY 7: 15 P.M . ....... BINGO CONGREGATION BETH ACHIM 21100 W. 12 MILE SOUTHFIELD WED., 7:30 P.M. REHAVAM ZEEVI BINGO BETH ABRAHAM-HILLEL 5075 W. MAPLE BETWEEN MIDDLEBELT & INKSTER MONDAYS 7:30 P.M. BINGO CONG. BETH SHALOM 14601 WEST LINCOLN OAK PARK EVERY TUES. 7:30 P.M. BINGO ST urnm; JUNE 2 Every Monday nite 7:30 P.M. 16990 W. 12 Mile JWV Memorial Home Rehavam Zeevi has been named intelligence adviser to the prime minister in Is- rael in accordance with Agranat Commission rec- ommendations. Zeevi will also continue in his post as Premier Yitzhak Rabin's Special Adviser (to coun- ter terrorism). Rabin Aligns With Knesset 'Hawks' on Territory Issue JERUSALEM (JTA) — Premier Yitzhak Rabin, evi- dently buoyed by what he said was an overall improve- ment in Israel's political position in recent weeks, lined up with the "hawkish" elements of his Labor Align- ment Tuesday who support the government's refusal to offer further territorial con- cessions without commen- surate Arab commitments to non-belligerency. In a speech that marked the end of a three-week marathon debate between "hawks" and "doves" in the Labor Alignment's leader- ship and Knesset faction, Rabin vigorously defended his government's refusal to come forth unilaterally at this time with a definitive overall peace plan including maps delineating Israel's future borders. Such a move by Israel had been urged by former For- eign Minister Abba Eban, veteran Mapam leaders Meir Talmi and Yaacov Ha- Shlikhim to Get Tighter Controls JERUSALEM (ZINS) — Reacting to public criticism of its aliya department's emissaries abroad, the Jew- ish Agency has now laid down strict guidelines gov- erning the conduct of their shlikhim. They may not purchase any housing in foreign coun- COMMUNITY LEADERS' RECEPTION tries, may not engage in any private business and must devote 100 percent of their time to their assignments in behalf of aliya. They are prohibited from taking courses at universities or en- gaging in any other activi- ties that are not connected with their official mission. zan and others who main- tained that it was up to Is- rael to take the initiative to break the present nego- tiations impasse, especially in light of its strained rela- tions with the United States. But Rabin asserted flatly that Israel would never return to its pre- June, 1967 borders and warned that if his govern- ment drafted a precise peace program at this time, what Israel offered as its maximal concessions would be taken by the Ar- abs as nothing more than an initial bargaining posi- tion that could be whittled down. Rabin, who will meet with President Ford in Washington in two weeks, presented a broad outline of future frontiers from which he indicated that Israel will never retreat. He said that Israel would insist on a per- manent presence in Sinai of a yet undetermined depth, but which must include a land link to Sharm-el- Sheikh at the southeastern tip of the peninsula. He pledged that Israel would never "descend" from the Golan Heights. He indi- cated that the future bound- aries would be determined by existing Israeli settle- ments on the Golan. "We did not set up the settle- ments there in order to take ANN ARBOR CHABAD HOUSE them down again," he told the alignment members. He said the Arabs should have learned a lesson from this. He said that on the West Bank, Israel had proposed a settlement based roughly on the so-called Allon Plan, drafted by the present For- eign Minister Yigal Allon shortly after the 1967 Six- Day War, which envisioned retention of a strip along the Jordan River and auton- omy for the Arab populated regions of the West Bank. He said that proposal and alternative "functional" ar- rangements were all re- jected by Jordan. The premier rejected the "fears and dark prophecies of some sooth-sayers" and declared that Israel's politi- cal position had improved of late. He was referring ap- parently to last week's let- ter from 76 senators urging President Ford to re-affirm America's commitment to economic and military sup- port for Israel and Israel's new trade agreement with the European Common Market which was con- cluded despite bitter pr( tests and threats from th,. Arab states. Observers believe Rabin feels that, armed with the strong statement of support from an overwhelming ma- jority of U.S. Senators, he can meet with President Ford in a position to with- stand Administration pres- sure for concessions by Is- rael. Analyzing events that followed the collapse of Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger's efforts to promote an Israeli-Egyp- tian second-stage agree- ment in Sinai in March, Rabin said Israel had achieved a major success by demonstrating that it could stand up to pressure. A PSYCHO-CYBERNETICS • • • • Group has started! Have YOU read the book? Do YOU like the book? Do YOU agree with the book? Are YOU a WINNER? This group is for POSITIVE PEOPLE to STIMULATE other POSITIVE PEOPLE. If your answer is yes, call SHIRLEY CASH 543-6488 HONORING EMMA SCHAVER Sunday IRWIN June 1st Sheraton Southfield COHN Hotel • • Chairman 1 p.m. "The Morristown Moving Spirits" SEFER TORAH DEDICATION & PARA Lubavitcher Center 14000 W. 9 Mile Road; 12:30 p.m.