8 Friday, October 20, 1918 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Quick Peace Treaty Not Expected 46th Annual Balfour Concert SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12 - 7:30 P.M. Cong. Shaarey Zedek 27375 Bell Rd., Southfield Guest Artist BORIS BELKIN Russian Violinist Accompanied by: Roberto Bravo Guest Artists IRAUllfr ` •= #1, (Continued from Page 1) One Israeli proposal is for an exchange of letters, to accompany the treaty, in which the linkage would be spelled out in mutually ac- ceptable language. But Egypt is considered un- likely to agree to this. President Carter is un- derstood to have personally attempted to tackle this problem in his meetings with the two delegations on Tuesday. It was his first di- rect involvement with the current talks. A major difficulty, accord- ing to some reports, is that the future of Jerusalem has proved to be a special stick- ing point. The exchange of letters between Carter, Begin and President Anwar Sadat of Egypt after the Camp David summit con- ference last month disclosed different views over Jerusalem by the three principals. Egypt insisted on full Arab sovereignty over East Jerusalem. Israel affirmed that un- ified Jerusalem will al- ways remain its capital. President Carter's letter referred to statements by the U.S. at the United Na- tions in 1967 and 1969 that the U.S. did not rec- ognize Israel's annexa- tion of East Jerusalem but left the future of the city undetermined. Some observers have noted a subtle shift in the U.S. position that would indicate an American lean- ing toward the Arab percep- tion eliminating Israeli con- trol over East Jerusalem. In a Voice of America telecast last week, the White House specialist on Middle East- ern affairs, William Quandt, referred to "occu- pied Jerusalem," language that has not been used be- fore by an authorized American spokesman, at least not publicly. Meanwhile, Israeli Sup- reme Court Justice Aharon Barak joined the Israeli negotiating team Monday. He went in response to a special appeal for his presence by Foreign Minis- ter Moshe Dayan and is ex- pected to handle legal as- pects of the treaty. Barak helped draft the Camp David accords as Premier Menahem Begin's legal advisor at the Camp David summit. At Bethlehem Uni- veristy Monday, a major- ity of West Bank mayors hardened their stand against the Camp David agreements and ex- pressed support for the Palestine Liberation Organization. The meet- ing was the third gather- ing of West Bank leaders since the summit confer- ence. Israel lifted its ban on political meetings in the hope that the West Bankers would reassess their opposition to Camp David. But even the moderate Elias Freij, mayor of Bethlehem, joined his col- leagues in condemning the Camp David accords as a "betrayal of the Palesti- nians" and upheld the PLO as the Palestinians' sole representative. This was a 1978 Nobel Laureates MICHELLE SAHM STUART DUNKEL Oboist Flutist JULIUS CHAJES MISHA RACHLEVSKY Conductor Concertmaster CANTOR JACOB BARKIN PLUS. 13 MEMBER SYMPHONIC ENSEMBLE Tickets: $500, $250, $50, $30, $18, $10 and $7.50 Sponsored by: Detroit District - ZIONIST ORGANIZATION OF AMERICA 18451 W. 10 Mile Rd., Southfield 569-1515 • (Continued from-Page 1) escaped the Nazi dragnet in his native Germany, was named co-winner of the 1978 Nobel Prize for physics. Penzias, 47, is di- rector of radio research at the Bell Laboratories in Holmdel, N.J. where he lives. He will share the award with Dr. Robert W. Wilson, a colleague at the Bell Lab, and Prof. Piotr Kapita of the Soviet Union. Penzias was born in Munich of parents who had immigrated to Germany from Poland. In 1938, his family was placed on a train with other Jews of Polish origin for deportation to Po-, land. The Polish authorities refused to admit them and the train was turned back at the border. In 1939, Pen- zias, then aged six, and his brother Gunther, five, were sent to London for safety. They were joined by their parents in 1940 and man- aged to secure passage to the United States. Penzias grew up in the Bronx where he attended public schools and later City College of New York. After serving in the U.S. Army Signal Corps he received a doctorate in physics from Columbia University and joined Bell in 1963. He and Wilson gained interna- tional attention for their collaboration which led to the discovery in 1965 of "background" radiation in the far reaches of space Which supports the "big bang" theory of the creation of the universe. departure from Freij's lavish praise of the Camp David agreements after they were signed on Sept. 17. The rally in Bethlehem was seen as a response to U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Harold Saunders' ef- forts to persuade King Hus- sein of Jordan to join in the Israeli-Egyptian peace process. Saunders flew to Amman Sunday with the American replies to ques- tions posed by Hussein on the future of the Palesti- nians and the West Bank. Most of the speakers were careful not to attach Hus- sein, presumably so as not to tilt him toward Camp David. An exception awas Mayor Karim Khalaf of Ramallah who denounced Hussein as "a partner to the conspiracy!' at Camp David. CASUAL FAMILY PORTRAITS photography in. 30790 Southfield At 13 Mile Road 146-8484 KEEP your County Commissioner Larry PERNICK A LEADER . . . In Government . . . In The Communi CHAIRPERSON - BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS, 1972 CHAIRPERSON - JEWISH COMMUNITY COUNCIL'S CIVIL LIBERTIES COMMITTEE VICE CHAIRPERSON - COUNCIL OF GOVERNMENTS PRESIDENT - VICTORIA WOODS HOMEOWNERS' ASSOCIATION BOARD MEMBER - TEMPLE ISRAEL BROTHERHOOD - TRAFFIC IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION CHAIRPERSON - COMMISSIONERS' DEMOCRATIC CAUCUS PAST CHAIRPERSON - FINANCE. LEGISLATIVE & HUMAN RESOURCE COMMITTEES COMMITTEEMAN - NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF COUNTY OFFICIALS DEMOCRAT SOUTHFIELD-LATHRUP VILLAGE Paid For By Citizens for Pernick Committee 24901 Northwestern Hwy, Southfield, Mich.