THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, December 16, 1977 5 Cairo Conference Opens; Begin Flies to the U.S. for Talks With Carter (Continued from Page 1) Israel will submit at the Cairo Conference to Carter in an effort to ensure Amer- ican support for Israel's po- sitions. His entourage included Attorney General Aharon Barak, the government's top legal advisor. Begin told reporters at the airport that Prof. Barak was needed in Washington because there were legal problems of prime importance in the peace-making process and it as necessary to have a gal expert at his side dur- mg important talks. He said that he had informed Presi- dent Anwar Sadat of Egypt of his trip to Washington. The Premier also reiterated that Israel was striving for a comprehensive peace set- tlement and expressed the hope that other Arab coun- tries will join in negotia- tions at Cairo or elsewhere. Speculation was rife that Dayan was also about to leave for a secret meeting at some undisclosed loca- tion with a top level Egyp- tian offical, probably Acting Foreign Minister Butrus Ghali. Dayan flatly denied this at the airport. "I do not intend to leave the coun- try," he said. Begin added that Dayan's reply "needs no seconding from me." But the newspaper Haa- retz claimed that Dayan will hold secret talks with an Egyptian delegation white the Cairo Conference is underway. The paper said those plans were approved by Cabinet members in con- sultations Tuesday night with Begin and that Begin's trip to the U.S. was approv- ed at the same time. Yediot Achronot said Begin was taking maps to Washington indicating the lines to which Israel was prepared to with- draw' in the occupied terri- tories and the areas where Israel's presence would be maintained. According to that report, Israel will be ready to evac- uate almost all of Sinai to a point east of El Arish but would retain its presence at Sharm El-Sheikh and the Rafah salient. Yediot said Israel's plans for the West Bank—Samaria and Judaea—called for local au- tonomy with a certain affi- liation to Jordan while Is- rael retained overall military control of the terri- tory. While en route to the United States, Begin sent a message of good,wishes to the Cairo Conference. "People everywhere hope and pray that Cairo will be a foundation of true peace between Israel and its Arab neighbors, the peace which is necessary for Israel and her great Arab neighbors." The Cairo participants sat a circular table in the main dining room of the Mena House, which is serving as conference headquarters. In addition to Meguid and Ben- Elissar and Their aides, the U.S. was represented by Assistant Secretary of State Alfred L. Atherton. United Nations Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim was repre- sented by Gen. Ensio Sii- lasvuo, commander of UN peace-keeping forces in the Middle East. There were five empty chair at the table reserved for the Arab states, the Soviet Union and Palestinian representatives, which, so far, are boycott- ing the Cairo talks. All of the participants, in their opening remarks, ex- pressed the hope that the other parties invited would reverse their decisions not to attend and that a com- prehensive settlement would eventually emerge from these deliberations. "The conference room and table were devoid of flag or other national symbols and the chairs were unlabeled. This was apparently the result of an agreement reached during closed-door deliberations Tuesday night at which Is- rael reportedly balked at the label "Palestine" on the chair reserved for the Pa- lestinian representative. But outside the Mena House, the flags of all eight invited countries and the red, green and black Pales- tinian colors were dis- played. An Egyptian spokes- man said it was "natural" that these flags would be flown for the duration of the conference. The show of flags outside the hotel was not regarded as having,any political significance and no Israeli objections were re- ported. Divine providence was in- voked by the main pro- tagonists in their opening statements. Meguid began with the traditional "in the name of Allah" and Ben- Elissar prayed that "God grant us wisdom to suc- ceed...above all for the sake of generations to come." After the opening session the confernce participants adjourned for private dis- cussions reportedly devoted to preparing the agenda. Meanwhile, Egyptian War Minister Abdual Gamassy told Israeli jounalists in Cairo that the Egyptian army is 100 percent behind President Anwar Sadat no matter which way he goes. The journalists took this to mean that the army was supporting Sadat's peace in- itiatives but was ready to go to war if necessary. Kfar Silver Enrollment Seen Growing ASHKELON—An ex- panded' curriculum and an appreciation of its high educational / standards has led to a dramatic growth in student enrollment at the ZOA Kfar Silver campus established, maintained and directed by the Zionist Or- ganization of America. The director of Kfar- Sil- ver, Eytan Paldi, reported that Kfar Silver is beginning its 22nd academic year with 450 high school students. Of us number, 247 live in dor- , • frutories on the school's 520-' acre campus. Among the new programs which have attracted inter- est among Israeli youth are: instrumentation and controls, a new aeronautical curriculum; the modern Al- exander and Sylvia Hassan Technical High School; a new nursing course; au- tomative mechanics; mech- anized agriculture and the expanding pre-university academic program. Thirty-three members of a group of South American students, principally from Argentina, are continuing in Kfar Silver's dairy herd is their senior year after one said to be first among all year on the campus. They Israeli agricultural high are now being joined by an schools. One cow, "Esther," additional 30 Jewish boys is among the 10 best milk and girls from Latin Amer- producers in Israel. ica entering the third year The Agricultural Training of high school. Department of the Ministry The Mollie Goodman Aca- of Education is presenting a demic High School, which is small computer to Kfar Sil- part of the campus, contin- ver to aid its dairy oper- ues to provide a high school ations. The school also has program for teenagers from 125 acres of citrus groves. the United States. They share cultural and social ac- State Dept. Asks tivities as well as dormitory rooms with Kfar Silver's Is- JTA to Seminar raeli students. The curricu- WASHINGTON (JTA )- lum of the American stu- dents is geared to U.S. Secretary of State Cyrus college entrance require- Vance -has invited Joseph ments and Detroit students Polakoff, chief of the Jewish are aided by scholarships Telegraphic Agency's Wash- from the Zionist Organiza- ington Bureau, to attend the tion of Detroit. State Department's seminar Kfar Silver students for editors and broadcasters Jan. 16-18. achieved a yield of 990 lbs. The annual event dealing of cotton per dunam, corn- pared to an average of 924 with top foreign policy sub- at other farms in the region. jects attracts some 300 lead- The planting of an addition- ing media representatives. al 38 acres of cotton is This marks the first time that JTA has been invited to planned. Milk production from participate. In Jerusalem, Begin denied that Israel was under American pressure to soften her declared posi- tions prior to the Cairo con- ference. Begin spoke to reporters after concluding a two-hour meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. The Premier's denial was an indirect reference to a statement made Friday by President Carter that he ex- pected Israel to match the Egyptian peace initiative. An air of optimism pre- vailed in Israel in the after- math of Vance's visit. The feeling was based more on "atmospherics" than hard facts but it was enhanced by Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan's remarks at a For- eign Press Association luncheon which hinted that Vance had been satisfied with the degree of Israeli flexibility. Dayan said that Israel and Egypt could reach an agreement now but stressed that a separate peace was not the goal of the Cairo talks. Vance and his party toured East Jerusalem, in- cluding the Western Wall and Moslem and Christian holy sites. Unlike the pre- vious practice of visiting U.S. officials, Vance did not have the American flag re- . moved from his car when he crossed into the former Jor- danian part of the city. But he stressed to accom- panying newsmen that there was "no political signifi- cance" to be attached to his visit. He had long wished to visit the holy sites and he found the experience pro- foundly moving, he said. Vance praised "the lead- ership" which Begin and Sa- dat had shown, adding that it was "something which history will record for gen- erations to come. Begin in turn lavished praise on the Carter Adm- inistration for its efforts in the Mideast peacemaking. He recalled his own mes- sage to President Carter on the eve of Sadat's arrival in Jerusalem thanking the U.S. President for "creating this historic moment." Before Vance's visit to Syria, Syrian President Ha- fez Assad rejected Arab me- diation attempts to close the differences between Egypt and Syria. 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