6 Friday, Jae 2, 1973 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS U.S. Pressure on Israel Seen CAIRO (ZINS) — U.S. State Department envoy Stephen Spiegel told a Kuwaiti newspaper that Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's peace initiative has been weakened by 'persis- t MANNY CHUDNOW'S BETTER BUSINESS EQUIPMENT CO. lAtt coorrizo MON 211.111 EWE C/LIENATINS 44. end Roo 14.3.4. ■ MINNS INCIIN31.91 KW-MO ANTI/SID RENTALS • LIAM • TRAMPS WII INN UM ousInusi 1 rAr 548-64041 231 W. NSW IC 54 Nod MM Mood s...4 tent Israeli intransigence" and that President Carter may speak out against Is- rael within the next two months. The envoy said the President may warn Israel that he will be forced to take "drastic measures" against the Israeli administration. DISTINCTIVE Lighting & Accessories X X X X rgtePl e? Zero Neckband Shirts 100% Cotton Solid & Stripes from 527.50 Long & Short Sleeves 31455 Southfield Road (between 13 & 14 Mile) Phone: 645-5560 Operr 9-6 daily (to 5:30 Sat.) 9-9 Thurs. & Fri. BUDAPEST (JTA) — Dr. Zoltan Papp, a Dutch rail- way employee who al- legedly organized' the de- portation trains for Jews from western Hungary to Germany during World War II, is under investiga- tion by Dutch authorities and may stand trial, accord- ing to information received here from The Hague. Papp was a captain in the Hunga- rian secret police in 1944. Emigrant Doctors limned edlt,ons or mel rycus 4200 Orchard Lk Rd Orchard Lake 682.7255 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx X X Now at Railway Worker War Criminal? NATANYA (ZINS) — Since 1970, 2,600 physi- cians have emigrated to Is- rael from the Soviet Union, making up one-third of the doctors in Israel.' Many of the Soviet doc- tors work for the Histadrut Sick Fund, the army or Magen David Adom. They say their major problem is the Israel Medical Associa- tion, which does not recog- nize Soviet medical standards. Israel Featured WASHINGTON — April and May issues of Aviation Week and Space Technol- . ...... - X ogy magazine carried a X lengthy series of four arti- ,gfet0 t4.1 X cles by Philip J. Klass on Is- _ _ _ • ?( c ample parking/credit cards accepted •• • rael's aviation and elec- tronic industries. XXX X. X XXX XX )0(XXXXX XX /X XXXX X X XXX I Don't Want to Sell You A Car. I Want To Help You Buy One You work hard for your money. So do I. --- But I don't think that a low price alone is enough to get you to spend your money at Jerry Glassman Olds, or any other car dealership. I believe people want to buy their car from a dealership they can put their trust in. A dealership that'll work as hard for their money as they did. Making sure things are right — before, during and atter the sale. When you visit Glassman Olds, we'll help you pick out a car that's - right for the kind of driving you do. Then we'll quote you a fair price. A price as low as any in town. Maybe lower. And, after the sale, you'll find our smiles are just as wide, our handshakes just as friendly when you come in for a free warranty check. That's the way I run things at Jerry Glassman Oldsmobile. Come in and see for yourself. Glassman Oldsmobile 12 Mile and Telegraph Phone (313) 354-3300 Secret Israel-Morocco Link Told By EDWIN EYTAN (Copyright 1978, JTA, Inc.) PARIS — The French- Arab weekly, Jeune Af- rique, recently revealed a secret chapter of purported close Israeli-Moroccan con- tacts which included a visit to Morocco by Premier Yit- zhak Rabin and two similar visits by Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan, the most re- cent of them last January after Dayan met with the Pope and while he was sup- posed to pay a one-day pri- vate visit to Sicily, accord- ing to Jeune Afrique. The paper, earlier this month, also said that Pre- mier Menahem Begin was also scheduled to visit Morocco and, like Rabin and Dayan, meet with King Hassan. Begin's visit to Rabat was originally due to take place in November, immediately after his scheduled official visit to London. The weekly, with close ties to the Moroccan regime, said that these plans were disrupted by Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's sudden trip to Jerusalem. Begin cancelled his plan to go to Britain and thus the scheduled trip to Morocco was shelved as well. A few weeks later, the contacts were renewed. Now, strengthened by Sadat's trip to Jerusalem, Begin is demanding that he be received openly and officially, Jeune Af- Inventor Endows Orthodox Home NEW YORK — A dying Jewish inventor, Harry Ocko, has donated land on his Munsey, N.Y., farm and set up a $500,000 trust fund to build an old age home for Orthodox Jews. The State Health Plan- ning Commission cut through red tape at the urg- ing of Ocko's lawyer to ap- prove the plan before Ocko dies. Nazi Ban Set BONN — The West Ger- man government is plan- ning to introduce a law banning the sale of records of speeches of Hitler and his propaganda minister, Josef Goebbels. A government minister said the step is being taken to combat the growing sale of Nazi and neo-Nazi prop- aganda in West Germany. Ambassador Hits British Press LONDON —Israel's Am- bassador to Britain, Av- raham Kidron, has assailed the British press for being "increasingly hysterical and decreasingly informed" about Israel and the Middle East. rique said, to which the Moroccan government has replied: "We are pre- pared to welcome you secretly unless Israel recognizes the Palesti- nians' right to a home- land of their own." The paper described in some detail the three visits which did take place. The first was by Rabin, who left Paris for Morocco in October 1976 aboard a small Moroc- can jet plane accompanied by a prominent Moroccan personality. Rabin spent two days in Morocco visiting Fez, Rabat, Tangier and Casablanca. He met both King Hassan and Moroccan Prime Minister Ahmed Osman speaking English with both of them. Osman, a former Moroccan ambas- sador in Washington, speaks English fluently. Jeune Afrique said that Rabin and Hassan did not discuss the possibility of a meeting between Rabin and Sadat. But this subject was to be brought up later dur- ing Dayan's visits to Morocco, the paper said. During Rabin's visit, the two sides elaborated on their views on a Middle East settlement. "There were no practical political conse- quences to be expected," the paper said. For one year, there were no more top level Moroccan-Israeli contacts. But several Moroccans vis- ited Israel and an Israeli ag- ricultural mission visited Morocco. The renewal of the top level contacts started in September 1977 when Dayan, by then foreign minister, mysteriously "disappeared" in Brussels. He was discreetly picked up by a Moroccan plane and brought to the Royal Palace of Ifrane to meet the king. The paper added that Dayan politely brought with him an autographed copy of his latest book which he presented to the king. The second Dayan trip to Morocco took place last January while the foreign minister was on an official visit to Rome during which he met the Pope. This correspon- dent was in Rome at the time and suspected a possible secret meeting when Dayan again mys- teriously disappeared for one day. An Israeli spokesman said instead that he only paid a visit to Sicily in compliance with Italian protocol. According to Jeune Af- rique's story, it appears that Dayan flew out of Rome, aboard a Moroccan plane and returned that same evening. The flight takes slightly more than an hour. The weekly said that Dayan had a "warm - and friendly approach" compared to Ra- bin's which - was cold and taciturn. The paper said Dayan discussed both the possibility of a Sadat-Begin meeting and Begin's own scheduled visit to Rabat at this meeting. The weekly stressed nevertheless, that the real author of the Sadat-Begin meeting in Jerusalem was Romania's President Nicolai Ceaucescu. It said "Rabat helped set a better climate between Israel and Egypt and helped organize the first preliminary meet- ings and contacts. King Hassan and hisaides did not organize the Sadat-Begin meeting itself." The Moroccan king, Jeune Afrique said, has stubbornly pressed Israel to recognize and negotiate with the Palestinians as the only way to settle the Mid- dle East conflict. He also tried hard, but in vain be- cause of Dr. Nahum Goldmann's refusal, to set up a meeting between Goldmann, president of the World Jewish Congress and PLO leader Yasir Arafat, the weekly said. The king also occa- sionally used the Moroc- can Jewish community to further his country's interests. This, Jeune Af- rique reported, was especially visible during Morocco's quarrel with Algeria over possession of part of the Sahara Des- ert in 1974. At the time of the Moroccan march into the Sahara, the vice president of the Moroc- can Jewish community, Serge Berdugo, was re- ceived by the king. He told Hassan that Moroc- can Jews could help ex- plain their country's position on this issue abroad. In September, 1975 the leaders of the Jewish com- munity, Serge and Georges Berdugo, Jacques Tolano, Armand Amzalleg, Dr. Benzaquen and Rabbi Chalom Messes (now Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem), met the king. They said they would send an official mis- sion to the United States to explain Morocco's position. The king has tenaciously followed the belief that peace in the Middle East will come through an im- provement of relations be- tween Arabs and Jews, Jeune Afrique said. An example of this took place a couple of months ago when this correspondent, to his great surprise, received an official invitation from the Moroccan Ambassador in Paris to attend the embas- sy's official reception on Moroccan national inde- pendence day. Apparently, it was part of a program aiming at strengthening re- lations between Arabs and Jews. JEWISH NATIONAL nine 22100 Greenfield Rd. Oak Park, Mich. 48237 • 968-0820 OFFICE HOURS: MON.-THURS: 9 TO 5 FRI 9 TO 4 St/N. 10 a.m.lolpm • is r 11-411