14 Friday, February 4, 1977 CARS TO BE DRIVEN TO ANY STATE M C 125985 pc.c. . DRIVEAWAY SERVICE 4713 Horger at Michigan Ave. P.O. BOX 1264 Dearborn, Mich. 48126 Tel. 584-4000 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Polls Show Preferences for Israeli Candidates TEL AVIV (JTA) — Premier Yitzhak Rabin may be the most popular candidate with Israeli women but he, makes a very poor showing among university students ac- The Most Profitable Way to Sell Your Household and Personal Possessions is through K & B ASSOCIATES HOUSEHOLD SALES— ESTATE LIQUIDATIONS — APPRAISALS 569-0237 No obligation of course eaR fide At g ace Mat help afe 2 ispaet YES—to the Jewish National Fund JNF land supports the whole Israel economy — it grows food — on it stands . Israel's religious, educational and welfare institutions. A bequest to the NJF is a bequest to the entire Jewish people, link- ing the name of the Testator with Israel in perpetuity. For information and advice in strict confidence apply to FOUNDATION FOR JEWISH NATIONAL FUND 22100 Greenfield Rd Oak Park, Mich. 48237 968-0820 cording to the results of a series of polls. Women who responded to a questionnaire se- lected Rabin as their favorite by 20.6 percent, followed by Defense Minister Shimon Peres (17.5 percent), Likud leader Menachem Beigin (14 percent) and Yigal Yadin, leader of the Dem- ocratic Movement for Change (4 percent). On the Haifa Technion campus, however, stu- dents favored Yadin's movement by 27.8 per- cent, followed by Peres (26.6 percent) and Rabin, a poor third (13.9 per- cent). Beigin almost tied Rabin with 13.6 percent approval. Gen. Ariel Sharon, head of the Shlomzion move- ment, trailed with 8.3 per- cent. - Peres topped the list at Bar Ilan University where he was favored by 21 percent of the student body followed by Beigin (20 percent), Yadin (13.5 percent), Sharon (6.4 per- cent) and Rabin and former Foreign Minister Abba Eban tied with 4.3 percent each. Former Defense Minis- ter. Moshe Dayan polled only 3.2 pecent and former Interior Minister Yosef Burg of the Na- tional Relgious Party got only 1 percent of the stu- dent vote at religious- oriented Bar Ilan. At Tel Aviv University, Likud swept the field with 74 percent of the student vote. Meanwhile, Mapam went on record Monday as opposing Defense Minis- ter Shimon Peres in his bid to oust Premier Yitzhak Rabin as leader of the Labor Party. The leader of the Labor That's the Tamaroff Sales. Pblicy. - Tamaroff Buick-Opel will make it possible for you to stop getting the run-around when you buy a car. We will not bounce, bump or hassle you. 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The Mapam conven- tion, in agreeing by a 527-313 vote Sunday night to -remain in the Alignment, did not only make it conditional on the Labor Party accepting the recommendation of its political subcommittee that Israel express willingness for territorial' changes- on -all 'fronts. It also set a condition that Labor nominate for Premier a man who can identify himself with this policy and be trusted to implement it when he comes into office. This was seen as official opposition to Peres who is considered a hardliner on the issues of the ter- ritories. Mapam also demanded that the Labor Party be ready to move "toward a socialist economic policy, a softer attitude toward Israeli Arabs and the creation of Labor-Mapam forums at which policies could be worked out. The Labor Party's an- swer will come at its con- vention. Thus far, the party has agreed on the agenda of its convention to be held Feb. 22-24 with the par- ticipation of 3,000 dele- gates. The convention will de- termine the party's future course and future leader- ship but the manner of electing a new leader is still a matter of hOt debate in party circles. Continued political wrangling has shown the wide gap in the political views of former Foreign Minister Abba Eban and Defense Minister Shimon Peres. But the two men, each of whom hopes to replace Premier Yitzhak Rabin as head of the Labor Party, agree that major reforms in Israeli gov- ernment and society are long overdue. Both are on the cam- paign trail to let the pub- lic know what changes could be expected should one or the other attain * * * Kook Favors Rabbi Kahane JERUSALEM (JTA) — Rabbi Meir Kahane, founder of the Jewish De- fense League and leader of Tnuat Kakh (Thus), has been endorsed in his bid for a Knesset seat by _Rabbi Zvi Yehuda Kook, son of the first Chief Rabbi of Israel and the spiritual leader of the Gush Emunim. Kook had been a staunch supporter of the National Religious Party but broke with them in 1974 when they entered the Rabin government over his opposition. The JDL leader, who expressed delight with this support, said he plans to concentrate his efforts to win a Knesset seat by campaigning, -among Kook's' folloivers. . the Premiership after the May 17 elections. Eban, a scholar and probably the most eloquent diplomat Israel has produced, has no illu- sions about his chances. He lacks a constituency within the Labor Party whereas both Rabin and Peres enjoy support from powerful factions within Labor. Most political analysts believe — and Eban prob- ably concedes it — that the party would turn to him for leadership only if Rabin and Peres became hopelessly deadlocked. Yet Eban appears to enjoy the campaign diol- gue. 'At a press confer- ence at - Sokolow House last week he stressed not his doveish views on foreign policy but the re forms he would institute during his first year in of- fice if elected premier. Peres has also taken to the hustings. He is speak- ing and answering ques- tions all over the country. He recently spent sev- eral hours with student groups discussing his own plans for internal reform. He said he would nate or reshuffle at least six ministers — he did not name them — and de- clared that he wanted at least one woman in the Cabinet, a statement that drew applause from the women students. He also said that a Peres Cabinet would in- clude a representative of the new immigrant town- ships and that he would have a ministerial post for Eban. Peres insisted that a Labor team under his - leadership would garner more votes than one led by Rabin. In the meantime, the Labor Party is trying de- sparately to prevent the defection from its ranks of a powerful and influen- tial group of Histadrut industrialists — many of them high-ranking re- serve officers — which seems about to join•orces with Prof. Yigal Yadin's new Democratic Move- ment for Change. The group, known as the Histadrut Economic Network, is headed b Gen. (res.) Meir Amit, fo nearly 10 years the direc- tor general of Koor In- dustries, the giant His- tadrut conglomerate. Other members include Res. Gens. Tzvi Zamir, former head of the army security services and presently director gen- eral of the Haifa oil re- fineries; Abraham Botzer, former comman- der of the Navy and now director general of the Eilat-Ashkelon pipeline Immo &Id 14 4 company. Also Col. Iska Shadmi, a combat veteran who is di- rector of a Koor sub- sidiary; and Itzhak Raviv, acting director of the Is- rael Ports Authority. Another member of the group is David Golomb, a prominent economist employed by Koor. Amit and his associates have been conferring for weeks with leaders of Yadin's movement and appear to be convinced that the Labor Party, as it is presently consti- tuted, cannot effect the internal reforms that Is- rael urgently needs. til Jews Demand FTC Head's Resignation for. Racial Slur WASHINGTON (JTA) — Jewish members of the Senate and the House emerged Wednesday in the forefront of deinands for the-resignation or re- moval of Federal Trade Commissioner Paul Rand Dixon because of his ra- cial slur aimed at con- sumer advocate Ralph Nader who is of Lebanese descent. Dixon spoke of Nader as a "dirty Arab" and "son of a' bitch" in a recent speech to a business group. Sen. Abraham Ribicoff (D-Conn.) declared that "No individual, appointed or elected to public office, should continue to serve in any position of public trust who has demon- strated such poor judg- ment and lack of sensit- ity." Rep. Edward I. Koch (D-N.Y.) announced that he would introduce im- peachment proceedings against Dixon. Rep. Benjamin Ro- senthal (D-N.Y.) deputy Whip of the House, dis- patched a letter to Presi- dent Carter urging him to use his "statutory au- thority" to remove Dixon "for cause." The letter was co- by 1.5 i nth Pr Hniisp si fFrn members, seven of them Jewish. Rosenthal, who is chairman of the House subcommittee on com- merce, consumer and monetary affairs, which has jurisdiction over the FTC, also wrote to Dixon demanding his resigna- tion to "assure that fu- ture decisions (by the FTC) will not suffer from the same disability" of my "your bias." That. letter too was co- signed by the same 15 Congressmen who signed the letter to the President. Dixon, -so far, has indi- cated he would not resign. He has apologized to Arab Americans but re-. fuses an apology to Nader. Israel Suggested as U.S. 51st State TEL AVIV (ZINS) — Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan, 95-year-old founder of the Reconstructionist had searched his geneal- in Israel, suggests that Israel become America's 51st state. He contends that Israel can no longer thrive as a soverneign state and that America would gleefully neclPryt- Trrn al • •