THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Report Shows Continuing Flow of Western Armaments to Middle Eastern Countries By MAURICE SAMUELSON ' LONDON (JTA)—With new weapons continuing to flow into the Middle East, i-nainly from Western na- 'tions, advanced aircraft, tanks and missiles, includ- ing battlefield surface-to- surface rockets, are now commonplace in the region. The extent of the build-up emerges in a report by the inter 'oval Institute for St-rat. ..! Studies, "The Mili- tary Balance 1977-1978." It shows that virtually every Middle East country signed a major arms agreement in the course of the 1976 and the beginning of 1977. In two separate deals, >Egypt is buying from France unspecified quan- >t;ties of Cratale surface-to- air missiles (SAM) and two Agosta-class submarines. The SAMs are due to be de- livered this year. , >--- Syria's arms agreements were with Austria, France and Italy. Austria is selling her 2,000 trucks; France, 2,000 Milan anti-tank guided wespons and a quantity of Gazelle helicopters; Italy is supplying six helicopters. — Jordan will receive 14 bat- Aeries of improved Hawk SAMs from the United =States as well as 100 Vulcan anti-aircraft guns. Israel's six arms deals, all with the United States, were for 125 medium tanks, guns, self-propelled guns, Sidewinder air-to-air mis- siles, as well as 700 ar- mored personnel carriers and 200 Tow antitank mis- siles. Saudi Arabia will receive from the United States 2,000 Sidewinder air-to-air mis- siles, six batteries of im- proved Hawk anti-aircraft missiles and 400 Maverick missiles. Britain agreed to sell her 11 strikemaster training aircraft. Iran contracted the big- gest number of separate arms deals in the year under review — no less than 12— with Britain sup- plying Rapier SAMs and Scorpion tanks; Italy, heli- copters; and the United States a wide range of mis- siles, aircraft and helicop- ters. _ A separate section of the report shows the array of forces which Middle East countries deploy. Israel's medium tank force had reached 3,000, compared with 2700 last year. They in- clude 1,000 Centurion tanks, 650 American-made tanks, Detroit Jewish Blacksmiths Had Other Communal Roles By ALLEN A. WARSEN >(-- Jacob Lang was Detroit's first Jewish blacksmith and - one of its first settlers. In 1850 the United States ›-Census recorded that he was 34 years old and born . in Germany. His wife, Eliza. 30 years old, also > was born in Germany. Their son, Joseph, age one, =was born in Michigan. Lang, it is worthy of note, , was a founder of Cong. Beth El. Sol Wolfson was another -,early Detroit Jewish black- smith. His advertisement in the "Detroit Yiddish Direc- tory of 1907" reads: "Horse- shoeing can be done by any blacksmith. But not any blacksmith can really satis- fy. Only Sol Wolfson is long known as the best horse- , shoer in Detroit and doesn't have to praise his work. - When your horse injures his foot and develops blood- poisoning, don't take it to a doctor, bring it to me and the horse will be cured. "1- .v wagons are made .,.. r. All work is guaran- teea. _ "402 St. Antoine St., cor. High." (Translated from 1 Yiddish) George Trute, who began shoeing horses at age 13 was one of Detroit's last Jewish blacksmiths. He came to Detroit from Russia in 1915 at age 20. At first he worked for another employer. Then in 1921 he built his own shop at the corner of Owen Ave. and Cameron in- the heart of the troit Jewish community. . Trute named his shop Ornamental "Owen Works. W Known for his financial assistance to poor peddlers, Trute was also one of De- troit's first artisans to con- struct railings for porches by hand. He operated his shop for 25 years until he no longer could compete with modern transportation—the automo- bile replaced the horse and wagon. the liquidating After smithy and until reaching retirement age, as if it were an irony of fate, Trute worked for the Ford Motor Co. His children, college and musically educated, are prominent in the Jewish community's cultural and social life. Trute died in 1975 at age 80. as well as converted Soviet tanks and Israeli-devolped Chariots. But there was only a slight increase in the number of combat air- craft—now put at 549. Syria, which has doubled the size of her armed forces to 227,500 men in the past five years, has also in- creased her number of tanks to 2,600, compared with 2,000 in 1975. The Syr- ian navy has also taken pos- session of two Petya class frigates. No significant change was shown in her air force but some aircraft are believed to be in stor- age. Egypt's arsenal, ham- pered by lack of substantial new supplies from the So- viet Union as well as spare parts difficulties, appears• to have dwindled in some items, such as tanks—a de- cline of 750—while she waits for deliveries from the West. Nevertheless, Egypt's tank force still has 1,930 heavy and light tanks. All this build=up is reflect- ed in the amount of money being devoted to defense by Middle East states, accord- Maimonides said: "The mind needs to relax by look- Friday, September 9, 1977 2: ing at pictures and othe beautiful objects." ing to the report. Israel's expenditure in 1976 is put at $4.27 billion. Although this was a slight gross increase over last year, the propor- tion of the GNP spent on de- fence-35.3 percent— -was considerably lower than the 40.8 percent of the GNP in 1973. Israel's defense burden is, however, was at least partially offset by her emer- gehce as an arms exporter as well as purchaser. The report noted that she is list- ed as a primary supplier to no less than five Latin American countries—Chile, Ecuador, Guatemala, Hon- duras and Mexico. Egypt's defense expendi- ture in 1976 was $4.36 bil- lion. As a proportion of her GNP it had risen to 37 per- cent from 31 percent in 1973. This was the first time that the proportion of the GNP was greater than in Israel. Saudi Arabia's 1976 de- fense bill was given in the report as $7.53 billion, com- pared with $9 billion in 1975, $6.7 billion in 1974 and $1.8 billion in 1973. MAY THE NEW YEAR BRING NEW INSPIRATION AND HAPPINESS TO YOU From THE DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS Yugoslav Singer to Make U.S. Tour NEW YORK—The Jewish Welfare Board lecture bu- reau has announced that Breda Kalef, prime donna of the Belgrade Opera of Yugoslavia, will join the Belgrade .Jewish Chorus on its first tour of North Amer- ica next March. Dr. Samuel Freeman. di- rector of the JWB Bureau. said that requests for the chorus have already started to come in. Communities wishing to book it must make arrangements with the JWB Lecture Bureau. 15 East 26th St.. New York. N.Y. 10010. far in advance. The cost of the tour is sub- sidized by the Republic of Serbia. the City of Bel- grade. and the Government or Yugoslavia. There's a Liberty State Bank & Trust Office hi Your Neighborhood. Liberty State Bank & Trust "Full Service Saturday Banking" West filt>omfield Township of)95 Orchard Lake Rd Waterford Township 4330 Highland Rd. Other Offices. Sterling Heights. Clinton Township and Hamtramck