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November 24, 1978 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1978-11-24

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

6 Friday, November 24, 1918

Caricatures

for your party



By

SAM FIELD

Call

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Hospital Annual Meeting Pays
Tribute to Eisenberg, Chiefs

Retiring Sinai Hospital of Monday at the 26th annual
Detroit President Sol meeting of the hospital.
Eisenberg was presented
Eisenberg was the recipient
of a surprise presentation with a plaque "in recogni-
tion of his services to the
hospital" by retiring chief of
staff Dr. Lloyd J. Paul on
ypewriters Selectric, etc.
behalf of the medical staff.
The annual meeting,
$400
marking the 25th anniver-
Add 'n Type
sary of the hospital, was
862-1300
_also the occasion to pay
342-7800
tribute to those who have
served as the hospital's
chiefs of staff and to others
who have rendered service
of note to Sinai.
Among the former
chiefs of staff who were
on liand to receive the ac-
colades were Dr. Harry
Saltzstein, Dr. I Jerome
Hauser, Dr. Hyman Mel-
len, Dr. Eli M. Brown and
Dr. Paul. Tribute also
was paid to the second
chief of staff, the late Dr.
Saul Rosenzweig. =-
Retiring president of the
Sinai Guild, Jane Blum-
berg, was honored, and the
projects begun during her
administration, "Service
With Love" and the lan-
guage interpretation pro-
gram were cited. _

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A Ruling Against 'Linkage'

(Continued from Page 1)
Nations which at that time
had the fullest respect of all
Dr. H. Saul Sugar, former parties involved. Directing
chairman of the eye, ear, the negotiations in behalf of
nose and throat depart- the UN was the late Dr.
ment, also was recognized Bunche, who succeeded
for his achievements.
Count Folke Bernadotte
The meeting also was oc- after the latter's assassina-
casion to elect six'board
members. They are Martin tion.
Dr. Eytan, who later
E. Citrin, William M. served as Israel's ambas-
Davidson, Rose L. Green- sador to France and in
berg, Milton J. Miller, A. numerous other capacities
Alfred Taubman and Dr. in behalf of his government,
Gertrude Zemon-Gass.
explains that " 'Rhodes'
Citrin brought greet- meant negotiation — and
ings from the board of the agreement — between Is
Jewish Welfare Federa- rael and each of the four
tion, where he is conclud- Arab countries separately.
ing a three-year term as There was Israel-Egypt,
president. He cited the Israel-Lebanon, Israel-
role of the Shiffman Transjordan, and finally
Clinic and its work in aid- Israel-Syria. None of the
ing newly arrived Soviet Arab states concerned had
Jewish immigrants. He any part or say in the
referred to the newly negotiations between Israel
formed medical endow- and the three others."
-
ment fund and praised
The lumping of all Arab
the guild "for all their states in a process of
good work."
negotiating with Israel
Eisenberg recognized the proved blunderous at a
hospital's department conference subsequent
heads, personnel and the to Rhodes, held at
guild. Speaking in praise of Lausanne, Switzerland.
the hospital, Eisenberg said Dr. Eytan exposes that
the hospital's bed occupancy error in a statement in
was operating at 90 percent which he had warned of
plus.
the difficulties that
He said talks are in the would be encountered in
offing with Henry Ford permitting now a re-
Hosptial for a cooperative newal of a Geneva meet-
program with its West ing in which the Soviet
Bloomfield branch. New Union would have a role.
methods of financing are Dr. Eytan pointed out:
being sought to expand the
"At the Lausanne Con-
Detroit facility and to be ference, from April to Sep:
used for suburban expan- tember 1949 — where the
sion. •
object was to transform the
He also noted that armistice into a final peace
negotiations were being — the Palestine Concilia-
carried on with the tion Commission made the
Michigan Cancer Found- fatal mistake of lumping
ation to make Sinai a the Arab states together. No
cancer research center. A representative of any of the
new emergency room will four Arab countries ever
soon be completed, and appeared before the com-
approval for a new mission except in the
obstetrics and gynecol- presence of the representa
ogy wing is pending.
tives of all the three others.
A documentary film, re- Each country's business
calling the establishment of was the business of all —
the hospital and its history and the result, inevitably,
was shown. . - Dr. Julien was extremism and frustra-
Priver, executive vice tion."
president and chief execu-
Just as "linkage" has be-
tive officer of the hospital
since 1951, whose retire- come a disconcerting factor
ment will officially be an- in current peace planning
nounced next year, was the with Egypt, so, also, did it
occur at Lausanne, and it
narrator for the film.
Alfred Deutsch, vice was then that Dr. Bunche
president, also participated ruled against any .interfer-
ence with an Egyptian-
in the program.
Israeli agreement. Dr.
Eytan recalls:
AZF President
"A few days after the
NEW YORK — Rabbi Israel-Egypt negotia-
Joseph P. Sternstein, im- tions got under way at
mediate past president of Rhodes, on Jan. 12, 1949,
the Zionist Organization of the UN's acting mediator
America, was elected received messages from
president of the American both Lebanon and Trans-
Zionist Federation at its jordan, asking to join in
annual convention last the talks. Without even
consulting the Israel
week.
At the convention, Israel delegation, Dr. Bunche
Ambassador to the United replied in the negative.
"He said, in effect, 'one
Nations Yehuda Blum
stated that Israel would thing at a time.' At present,
never turn over Jerusalem he told them, we were busy
negotiating with Egypt. As
to the Arabs.

-

soon as this was satisfactor-
ily concluded, the turn of
the others would come —
and he would be happy to
welcome them, equally but
separately.
"The result was that in
the discussions between Is-
rael and Egypt, nothing was
brought up that was not
germaneto the relations be-
tween these two countries.
Similarly, at a later stage,
Israel and Transjordan
negotiated only on w at
concerned them bot
rectly (and likewise, f
course, Israel and Lebanon,
and Israel and Syria)."
Thus, Rhodes had roles
both as a "system" and a
"principle," as Dr. Eytan
has defined the earliest
negotiations for an armi-
stice. This is applicable at
this time to the talks for
peace between Egypt and
Israel, yet "linkage," an at-
tempt at calamitous inter-
ference, emerges anew as a
threat to peace.
• Israel's Prime Minister
•Menahem Begin did not
overlook Rhodes in briefing
President Jimmy Carter on
the issues now under con-
sideration. This is an estab-
lished fact: President Car-
ter has been made aware of
what had occurred at
Rhodes and, hopefully, he is
aware of the firmness exer-
cised at the time by Dr.
Bunche. It is such firmness
that is now required from
President- Carter in the
-necessity of rejecting a
catastrophic "linkage."

.

TAU Prof Probes
Student Growth

TEL AVIV — The
number of university stu-
dents in Egypt has grown
from. 177,955 in 1970-71 to
more than 400,000 in 1976,
according to Tel Aviv Uni-
versity lecturer Dr. Haggai
Erlich of the Shiloah Center
for Middle Eastern and Af-
rican Studies.
In a research project on
"The Student During the
Sadat Regime," Dr. Erlich
suggests that this rapid
growth not only reflects a
new wave of enlightenment
and education in Egypt, but
primarily indicates an at-
tempt on the part of the
Egyptian government to
solve its pressing problems
of unemployment and its
inability to absorb these
high school graduates in to
• the employment force.

ADL Honorees

NEW YORK —
Chancellor of NBC, W
-
Cronkite of CBS and
bara Walters of ABC will
receive the Hubert H.
Humphrey Freedom Prize
of the Anti-Defamation
League of Bnai Brith on
Tuesday for their historic
interviews with Prime
Minister Menahem Begin of
Israel and President Anwar
Sadat of Egypt.

0.7111111M7V1111M !.t 7,
JEWISH NATIONAL FUND

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14.
Southfield, Mich. 48076

411 "T/

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