Summit Meeting for Peace Plan Received Favorably by Senators (Continued from Page 1) resented the foreign minis- ter's own views, not neces- sarily the whole govern- ment's. Now however, Dayan made his pro- nouncement after clear cabinet endorsement — and Begin has subsequently re- echoed them. - Vance will now seek to secure from Israel a specific commitment not just to dis- cuss these issues, but to be prepared to renounce sovereignty and control over parts of the West Bank. Begin, in announcing his acceptance of Carter's invi- tation to join with Carter and Sadat at the summit conference, denied rumors that Israel had made any change in its negotiating position. He also denied that Vance had asked Israel to change its position when the secretary held his talks with Israeli leaders last weekend. Sadat, in making his announcement of accept- ing Carter's invitation, fielded reporters' ques- tions as to whether Israel had changed its stand enough to justify his meeting Begin. Asked whether he had received any private assurance from Washington to prompt him to attend the summit, Sadat said "All I ask in Camp David is that President Carter on be- half of the United States acts as a full partner. Whenever I am assured of this, I shall always answer any invitation from President Carter." Sadat also called on all sides to let bygones be bygones. The summit "is in my opinion an new page. Let us not look back," he said. Prior to the White House announcement of the trilat- eral meeting, President Carter disclosed his initia- tive to leaders of the House and Senate. Afterwards, those meeting with repor- ters praised the President for his action which was de- scribed as "a gamble" and the best chance for progress toward peace. Sen. Frank Church (13- Idaho), who will head the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in January said "it may well be the last best hope for peace in the Middle East. Sadat and Begin have indicated willingness to have another go at it and President Carter is to be commended for his initia- tive and determination in getting the talks going again. Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.) said that he be- lieves the President is doing the right thing to have Sadat and Begin confer with him "quietly" at Camp David. He said it was a "gamble" in trying "to find some ground on which progress can be made." Javits said that the trilateral meeting means that the "United States has not fallen for the idea of a peace plan of its own which would be a disaster or a prelude to disaster." Sen. Alan Cranston (D- Calif.) the assistant Senate Democratic leader, warned that the camp meeting would not necessarily result in a significant break- through and that he did not expect Israel and Egypt will sign a peace agreement in the near future. Cranston said he felt Carter would not offer a peace plan, but would act as a mediator and that his "formula is to get people together." The assistant House leader, John Brademas W- ind.) said Carter should have the support of all Americans, saying that without "such leadership from the United States the prospects for peace would be very bleak." Sen. Richard Stone (D-Fla.), the Senate Foreign Relations Middle East subcommittee chairman, said he was "optimistic" over the trilateral meeting. Meanwhile, Time magazine reported that the peace initiative launched last year by Sadat came after Israeli intelligence secretly warned Egypt of an Arab extremist plot to over- throw the Cairo govern. ment. The report said the Mos- sad, the Israeli intelligence service, learned in July 1977 that leftist Arab ex- tremists were plotting to overthrow the governments of Egypt, Sudan and Saudi Arabia. The magazine also said the Sadat's trip to Israel last November also followed a promise by Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan that Israel was ready to make "generous compromises" in a peace formula. Time said the Dayan statement came in a series of talks with the leaders of Jordan, Iran and Morocco and with Egyptian officials. Dayan evidently "promised far more than Begin was prepared to deliver." said the proper role of the United States in the Mideast should be "to bring the parties together — not to favor one side over the other or impose its own sol- ution." Meanwhile, U.S. Am- bassador to Israel Samuel Lewis told sev- eral members of Vice President Walter Mon- dale's mission to Israel when they were theere on the July 4 weekend that "Menahem Begin is the best chance for peace in the Middle East." In Washington, Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.) said that Secretary Vance's upcoming trip to Israel and Egypt should have been cancelled and Ambassador Alfred Atherton should have been recalled from the Middle East after Egyptian President Sadat's speech re- jecting further talks with Israel. In a related development, the United States insisted that Saudi Arabia "remains committed to the peace pro- cess in the Middle East as we have always said," but it refused to say on what basis it continues to hold this view. Department State spokesman Hodding Carter, under sharp questioning about the be- lief that the Saudis in- duced Egypt to issue its demand that Israel with- draw completely from all areas taken in the Six- Day War, declared to re- proters that the U.S. posi- tion of last spring about Saudi Arabia being in support of the peace pro- cess "is still a valid argu- ment." In Washington, Congress is demanding a tougher U.S. position towards Syria and Saudi Arabia. Jewish Orphans Reunion Planned CHICAGO — The first reunion of the Chicago Home for Jewish Orphans, since closing 35 years ago, will be held Sept. 3 at the Max Dolnick Cultural Center in Chicago. A nationwide search for former residents, called "home kids" or "Aitchkays," is under way. Staff mem- bers and others associated with the home are also in- vited. Those attending are urged to bring old scrap- books and mementos. The Chicago Home for Jewish Orphans was founded about 1893 and soon became an agency of the predecessor of today's Jewish Federation of Met- ropolitan Chicago. The home housed boys and girls from age 4 to 18 years. For information, write to Roy Klowden, 6517 N. California, Chicago, Ill. 60645. In New York, Theodore R. Mann, the newly elected chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organi- zations, declared that the Carter Administration will make "a serious error" if it pressed Israel now to make concessions to Egypt in view of the impasse in negotia- tions between the two coun- tries. Mann charged President Sadat of Egypt with respon- sibility for the present dead- lock in the Mideast peace negotiations. He said that President Carter must insist now that Egypt resume negotiations with Israel, since it was Sadat who broke off the talks between the two coun- If you want to be consi- tries after the recent foreign ministers summit meeting dered smart, agree with in Leeds, England. Mann everyone. Friday, Almost 11, 1973 23 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS LORD: on SLAW Clothiers W. 0E1111U LUE Everything, But Everything Spring & Summer Must Be Sold! LAST WEEK ONLY! 50 % off & More LORDS & LADS 4341 Orchard Lake Road West Bloomfield, Michigan (in Pine Lake Mall) Hours Mon., Thur., Fri. 10-9 Tues., Wed., Sat. 10-6 Alterations at Cost All Major Credit Cards Honored New Arrivals Neckware and Dress Shirts 20% off