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Friday, October 28, 1977 33

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Israel and the 1980 Moscow Olympics

By HASKELL COHEN

(Copyright 1977, JTA, Inc.)

The Israel Olympic Com-
mittee is quite concerned
and disturbed over the fact
that the United States press,
particularly two columnists,
Ronald Reagan and William
, - Buckley, are proclaiming
loud and vociferously that
Israel will not be permitted
to participate in the 1980
, - Olympics in Moscow. So far
as the Israelis are con-
4- ,. 'I d they are, at this
, convinced - that the
: • • et Union's intentions
are pure and that no she-
_ nanigans will be concocted
to obstruct Israel's
participation.
Only last month a biparti-
---. san group of Congressmen,
led by Rep. Jack Kemp (R-
L N.Y.) sent the United States
r Olympic Committee a letter
in which it pointed out that
the goal of the Soviets was
to eliminate Israel as a con-
!
testant in the '80 Games.
Haim Glovinsky, execu-
tive secretary of the Israel
— -, Olympic
Committee,
y--

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advised the writer by phone
that he can't buy this ration-
alization at this time. "So
far as our relations with
Moscow are concerned, they
are correct and proceeding
according to International
Olympic Committee (IOC)
rules. We question whether
pressure, at this time, from

Black Editor Calls Carter
Mideast Position Hypocritical

(Editor's Note: The follow-
ing editorial is reprinted
from the St. Louis Sentinel,
one of the nation's leading
Black weeklies. )
Recently, the joint state-
ment issued by the two
superpowers, the United
States and the Soviet Union,
has placed the state of
Israel in an awkward situa-
tion. The statement in part
acknowledges the "legiti-
mate rights" of the
Palestinians.
The above statement may
seem trivial to some, but to
the people of Israel it has
created both bitter criticism
and skepticism of the Carter
Administration. This state-
ment is a bitter pill for
Israel to swallow because
the PLO has always refused
and continues to refuse to
recognize even the exist-
ence of the state of Israel.
The PLO's position has
always been pledged to the
destruction of Israel and
never to recognize Israel's
existence.
This new statement by the
U.S. seems to confuse our
position on the Middle East
question even more. Pre-
viously, the U.S. had the
position that the PLO must
accept- UN Resolution 242,
recognizing Israel's right to
exist, before it can enter the
peace-making process. Now
the U.S. appears to be rec-
ognizing the rights of one
(the PLO) who refuses to
recognize the rights of
another (Israel). This
seems a contradiction in
Carter's human rights
theory.
The above is called to

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the United States Congress
on any of the Olympic
bodies will be worthwhile.
As a matter of fact, that
may have the opposite
effect and could conceivably
irk the Russians into becom-
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"Our biggest problem at

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your attention because, as
we have stated earlier, the
key to the Middle East set-
dement is the resolution of
the West Bank of Jordan, or
as some call it, the Palesti-
nians' right to an independ-
ent state on the Israeli-occu-
pied West Bank of Jordan.
The establishment of this
independent state under the
PLO would certainly
destroy any defensible bor-
der Israel could have to the
east.
This new revelation by the
Carter Administration in the
Middle East conflict seems
only to add more fuel to the
already heated fires that
now exist between the Jews
and the Arabs. And to add
insult to injury, Carter's
statement came on the eve
of the Jewish New Year.
In our opinion, the only
good this joint statement
may have is to bring home
the many realities that
already exist in the Middle
East. It may make both
sides (PLO and Israel)
move toward serious nego-
tiations at peace talks in
Geneva.
In closing, we do not
endorse any peace plans
that have already been sub-
mitted by either side, but
we do DISAPPROVE of
covert endorsement of the
rights of one who overtly
denies and refuses to recog-
nize the human rights of
others.

Morning Services
Held on Train

NEW YORK (JTA)—To
most passengers on the
Long Island Railroad's 7:08
going to New York, the 46-
minute morning ride to
work is a quiet blend of
newspaper reading,- friendly
chats, card games and a
few extra winks. To others,
however, it is a religious
experience.
Some 20 men from com-
munities along the line par-
ticipated in experimental
prayer services this week.
Rabbi Noach Valley, spir-
itual leader of The Jewish
Center of Ocean Harbor in
Oceanside, organized and
led the service.
Most passengers in the
crowded first car seemed to
either ignoN the chanting
and singing or to watch with
silent interest. A number of
daily card games continued
undisturbed adjacent to the
worshippers.

If there is room for ques-
tion, something is wrong.

this moment is getting
Israel invited to the Asian
Games, which are to be held
in Bangkok, and are dis-
turbed no end over the fact
that Thailand has not
invited us as yet. We wired
them in July asking for our
invitation to the 1978 Games
without receiving a reply.
Our telegram was followed
up with a lengthy letter to
the president of the Organiz-
ing Committee of the Asian
Games, with a carbon to the
vice president in Iran and
similar letters to IOC mem-
bers in Japan, Korea, Nepal
and the Phillipines. The
copy of our letter to the
president of the Organizing
Committee was sent to the
International Olympic Com-
mittee with a request to
intervene in the matter."
In my telephone conversa-
tion with Glovinsky, I got
the impression that he felt
the Asian Games were
going to cause more of a
conflict than the Olympics
so far as Israel's participa-
tion was concerned. He is of
the opinion that the Soviets
want to make a good
impression on the rest of the
world and can do so by
keeping politics out of
sports.
Members of the United
States Olympic Committee
who have received the letter
from the Congressmen like-
wise feel that Moscow now
has twice seen what disturb-
ances can be created by the
mingling of politics in sports
what with the Munich mas-
sacre and the outrageous
elimination of the Republic
of China (Nationalist China)
from the Games in
Montreal.
The United States Olym-
pians feel that by putting on
a good show, the Russians,
at last, will find more
acceptance in other areas in _
the family of nations and
definitely are scared after
seeing ' what happened in
Canada.
Apparently, the Israelis
feel the same way about the
Soviet Union and take with
a grain of salt the writings
of Ronald Reagan and Wil-
liam Buckley, who insist
that the manner in which
Israel will be elirnin-ated
from the 1980 contests is for
the Soviets to work with the
Third World nations and the
Arab bloc to eliminate
Israel from International
Federations one by one.

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