vr,r - - 1(1, f. 11: 1'.3. 7CJril:"41' - THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 8 May 7, 1976 CARS TO BE DRIVEN Goldman Predicts U. S. Pressure on Israel Will Increase r' To any state.'-,Also drivers furnished to drive your car anywhere. Legally insured and I.C.C. licensed DRIVEAWAY SERVICE 9970 Grand River Detroit, Mich. 48204 WE 1 -0620-2 1 -22 TEL AVIV (JTA) — Dr. Nahum Goldmann, presi- dent of the World Jewish Congress, predicted that no matter who is elected Presi- dent of the United States this year, Israel will come under increasing pressure soon after the elections to withdraw to its pre-June 1967 borders with only mi- nor modifications. Goldmann who arrived here from a series of meet- An Open Invitation The Dysautonomia Foundation joins Congregation Beth Abraham — Hillel in presenting for YOUR benefit a startling insight into Familial Dysautonomia a devastating and often fate Jewish genetic disease, 8:00 p.m. — THURSDAY, MAY 13, in the synagogue's Nusbaum Hall 5075W. Maple Road West Bloomfield, Michigan 48033 Question and answer period to follow Refreshments will be served ings with statesmen and other leading personalities in several countries, based his forecast on his belief that the U.S. is fed up with the Middle East problem and wants a final settle- ment. He told a crowded press conference in Tel Aviv that he was optimistic over the chances of a final settle- ment in the Middle East because of several factors, including the American de- sire to end the status quo which may lead to another war and a corresponding desire by the Soviet Union. He said the Americans have reached the conclu- sion that a Pax Americana is unattainable and that .the Soviets will have to share in the peace-making process. Another factor, Gold- mann said, was the Arabs' realization that they cannot win a military victory over With Pan Am's non-stop 747s to Tokyo from these cities, you're only one stop toTokyo from these cities. • Seattle • Spoltane • PortJand • Eugene Minneapolis • St. Paul • Portland • • Burlington • Boston • Providence • Hartford Detroit Rochester • Buffalo • Chicago* Sacramento Pittsburgh • Omaha • Salt Lake City • • • Baltimore Kansas City. St. Louis De n • ver • • Washington 'San Jose • Oklahoma City Las Veegas Richmond • Raleigh p,,h.„ • Springs Phoenix Memphis • •Albuquerq tic -r a • • Charlotte Tucson Dallas • Ft-Worth San Diego • New Orleans • San Antonio • Orlando • • Houston • Miami Pan Am's the only airline that can get you to Tokyo from New York and Los Angeles non-stop on our new 747 SP. We also fly non-stop from San FranciSco. So from just about any place (there are cities listed above) in the country. you can hop a flight to those gateway cities on a domestic airline and get to the Orient with only one stop. From Seattle. Pan Am makes only one stop. In a very nice place to make a stop: Hawaii. SIFIVWPWIE America's airline to the world. See your travel agent. Israel and their desire to concentrate on building up their own countries while they still control much of the world's oil wealth with almost no competitors. Goldmann said that Arab terms for a settlement with Israel are admittedly tough but not insuperable. They want withdrawal from the occupied territories, demili- tarization and guarantees. The most difficult problem would be the status of Jeru- salem, but a solution may be found without dividing the city again, he said. According to Goldmann, the American solution for the Palestinian problem en- visions a plebicite on the West bank and the Gaza Strip to decide whether there should be a Palesti- nian state federated with Jordan or an independent state and whether there should be an economic con- federation with Israel or with both Israel and Jordan. There are Arabs who will accept such a settlement guaranteed by both the U.S. and Russia, Goldmann said. In New York, Edward R. F. Sheehan, an expert on the Mideast who pub- lished a controversial arti- cle on Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger's Mid- east policy in "Foreign Policy" -magazine, said that there is a consensus in Washington on a plan to settle the Arab-Israeli dis- pute, but this plan will be implemented only after the Presidential elections in the United States. Addressing a meeting of the Overseas Press Club at the Biltmore Hotel, Shee- han, a Harvard Fellow and former Foreign Service offi- cer posted to the U.S. Em- bassies in Cairo and Beirut in 1957 and 1961, said that according to this plan, Israel will have to retreat to its pre-June 1967 borders, a Pa- lestinian state will be estab- lished in the West Bank and Israel's security and well- being will be guaranteed by the U.S. and the Soviet Union and possibly other powers. According to Sheehan, no President will be able to ig- nore "this concensus" which is also shared, he said, by the international commu- nity. "The plan is an imperi- tive that will confront the next President of the United States," he stated. Meanwhile, Soviet For- eign Minister Andrei Gro- myko was in France for a three-day visit during which he discussed the Middle East with Presi- dent Valery Giscard d'Es- taing and Foreign Minis- ter Jean Sauvagnargues. This subject, French offi-* cials say, will play, how- ever, only a relatively mi- nor role in the French- Soviet negotiations. The French position on the Middle East is very close to that of the Soviet Union and French officials say that there "is little therefore to discuss." The two sides, official circles here said, fear that "there will be little diplomatic movement" in the area till after the Amer- ican Presidential elections. In a related development, the Kremlin said the Mid- east stalemate is fraught with the danger of a "new military explosion" and called for a "radical political settlement" of the situation involving the Palestinians. It accused Washington of using the U.S. presidential . election campaign as an ex- cuse to stall resumption of the Geneva peace talks, and said America's real aim was to consolidate its grip on the Mideast. Although there ap- peared to be nothing new in the Soviet statement on the Mideast, the Kremlin was taking the initiative in trying to get a resump- tion of negotiations that would include the Palesti- nians. The Soviet statement called for resumption of the Geneva conference and said a Middle East settlement should be based on the fol- lowing principles: • Withdrawal of Israeli troops from Arab territory occupied in the 1967 war. • Satisfaction of the legiti- mate national demands of the Arab people of Pales- tine, including their inalien- able right to establish their own state. • International guarantees for the security and inviola- bility of the frontiers of all Middle Eastern states and their right to independent existence and development. Mexico Plants Israel Forest, Allows PLO Office to Open MEXICO CITY (JTA) — The first trees in the new state of Israel forest were planted Friday at La Mar- quesa to commemorate Is- rael's 28th anniversary. - The forest was dedicated to Israel by the association of former scholarship stu- dents in universities and research centers in Israel and the Mexican-Israeli Cul- tural Institute. Israeli Am- bassador Hanan Aynor and Dr. Jorge Jiminez Cantu, governor of the state of Mexico, participated in the ceremonies. Meanwhile, the Central Jewish Committee sent a memorandum to Foreign Minister Alfonso Garcia Robles expressing the dee], disappointment and concern - -- of the Jewish community after an official notice was published that a Palestine Liberation Organization of. fice will be opened here. Judaica libarary Has Anniversary BUENOS AIRES (JTA) — The Latin American Jew- ish Congress celebrated the 10th anniversary of its Bib- lioteca Popular Judia (Jewish Popular Library) with a luncheon attended by the authors and translators who worked on the 180 pam- phlets published by the li- brary.