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October 17, 1975 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1975-10-17

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

6 October 17, 1975

U.S.

Must Now Choose and Fund Sinai Personnel

(Continued from Page 1)

In Jerusalem last Friday,
Israel placed its full signa-
ture on the protocol initially
approved last month be-
tween Israel and Egypt in
Geneva and thus the second
Sinai interim accord be-
tween the two countries was
put into effect. Egypt had
previously signed the docu-
ment in Geneva. but Israel

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only initialed the protocol,
postponing a full signing
until Congress acted.
Meanwhile, the continua-
tion of U.S. policy to main-
tain a balance of military
power between Israel and

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Premier Yitzhak Rabin told
the Cabinet that there was
no American pressure on
Israel to open negotiations
with Syria and that he knew
of no American initiative in
that direction.
Replying to questions, the
Premier said that Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger
did not speak, in his recent
remarks, of an autonomous
Palestinian state but rather
of the possibility of granting
autonomy to the Palestini-
ans "in the framework of
peace."
At a Senate hearing Oct.

Repeat by popular demand

Just Off The Press

"THE BOOK OF LETTERS"

A Mystical Alef-Bait

by Lawrence Kushner

7, Sen. Charles Percy (R-Ill.)
said that "if the Palestini-
ans accepted Israel's right
to exist, defensible borders,
sovereignty and the right to
live in peace," would Kissin-
ger "think there would be a
desire by the Israelis to
move forward in negotia-
tions for a Palestinian state,
let us say, on the West
Bank?"

According to the Senate
committee's transcript,
Kissinger replied: "Well, I
do not want to live so dan-
gerously as to speak for
the Israeli government but
I can conceive circumst-
ances in which, if the
question of who governs in
that state is satisfactorily
settled, then a large de-
gree of autonomy could be
agreed upon but we have
never had any formal talks
with Israel on this precise
question and, therefore, I
would be reluctant to
speak, to give an assess-
ment of what the conclu-
sion of the Israeli Cabinet
might be."

This week, White House
Press Secretary Ron Nessen
declined to comment on re-
ports that President Ford
Center
ooakr8d GRiftow
HebrH
ewa Brv
would meet President Hafez
. Assad of Syria during his
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its Arab neighbors was
questioned in Washington
Wednesday after Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger
reiterated assurances to
Egypt that it will get Amer-
ican weapons at a yet un-

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specified time.

Informed sources ob-
served that while Kissin-
ger said discussions for
arms for Egypt will be
treated "in general terms"
when President Sadat
meets President Ford in
Washington, he made it
clear that the Cairo gov-
ernment will get weapons.

Sadat is due to arrive Oct.
26. The Egyptian leader is
likely to address a joint ses-
sion of Congress on Oct. 28.

KissirT,er's remarks, on
the NBC television program,
"Meet the Press," were cou-
pled by these sources with
four other factors: asser-
tions in Administration cir-
cles, particularly the Penta-
gon, against the provision to
Israel for Pershing long
range missiles to offset So-
viet missiles in Egypt's pos-
session; the pending sale of
14 Hawk missile systems to
Jordan; the continued arm-
ing of Syria and Iraq by the
Soviet Union, and the mas-

sive sale of U.S. weapons to
Saudi Arabia.
Kissinger said on the tele-
vision program that the U.S.
is prepared to discuss weap-
ons with Sadat "but at this
time not in terms of specific
shopping lists."
This was interpreted to
mean that the details of the
transfer would be ironed out
after the Sinai accord is
implemented and Congress
takes action on foreign aid
funds for Egypt, Israel,
Syria and Jordan.

Unemployed New York Jews
May Surpass City Average

NEW YORK — The rate
of unemployed Jews in New
York City may exceed the
city-wide average of 12 per-
cent, it was revealed earlier
this month at the Metropoli-
tan Conference on Career
Training for Employment
at the Carnegie Endowment
Center, sponsored by Agu-
dath Israel of America, a
national Orthodox Jewish
movement.
Federal, state and city
officials, as well as leaders
of education and industry
who attended the meeting,
heard Herbert Bienstock,
regional director of the U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics,
describe current economic
trends as "a particular
threat to the Jewish com-
munity."
The qualifications profile,
or the division of occupa-
tions, of the city's working
Jewish population is a much
larger proportion than the
city's occupational distribu-
tion.

New statistics released
by Bienstock at the confer-
ence showed that while
29.3 percent of the U.S.
Jewish male labor force is
classified as being profes-
sional and technical, in
New York City the profes-
sional and technical fields
represent only 14.6 per-
cent. About 40.7 percent of
the Jewish male labor
market is classified as
managers and administra-
tors; in New York City the
occupational distribution
is 13.3 percent.

Rabbi Menachem Lubin-
sky, director of Project
COPE, Career Opportuni-
ties and Preparation for
Employment, the man-
power agency of Agudath
Israel of America, stated
that the "majority of the
15.1 percent Jews of New
York City who are officially
designated as poor are from
the broad circles of the gen-
eral working class and not
limited to the poor elderly
Jews of Brownsville as pop-
ularly believed."
The Project COPE leader
further charged that Ortho-
dox Jews in particular con-

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