Tcsitie: 22 Friday, March 2, 1979 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Arab MK Resigns Over Israel's `Soft Attitude'; Tension Studied 4144 fide a ih AelricY aie JERUSALEM (JTA) — A veteran Arab member of the Knesset, Seif A-Din Zuabi, has resigned. He said he did so for reasons of health and because of "the deteriora- tion of relations between Jews and Arabs" in Israel. He accused the government of taking too weak a hand against Arab extremists. Zuabi comprised the one-man Arab List affil- iated with the Labor Alignment and had served in every Knesset since the first. His departure was viewed as the end of an era in relations between Jews and Arabs in Israel. He was always a supporter of the es- tablishment. In announcing his resig- nation he charged that the weak hand taken by the government against Arab extremists was creating anarchy in the name of democracy and was the main reason for the recent upsurge of anti-Israel views among Arab citizens of Is- hel p 1 w att YES—to the Jewish .National Fund JNF land supports- the whole Israel economy — it grows food — on it stands Israel's religious, 'educational and welfare institutions. A bequest to the JNF is a bequest to the entire Jewish people, linking the name of the Testator with Israel in perpetuity. For informai ion and ad. ice in -Ariel confidence apid ■ to FOUNDATION FOR JEWISH NATIONAL FUND 27308 Southfield 557-6644 Southfield, Mi. 48076 Experience Del Mar window fashions in your home. Instantly, rooms come alive with exciting, colorful woven woods. Exquisite yarns and warm, imported woods-available in over a hundred distinctive patterns-bring you into an elegant new world. Styles include beautiful shades, dramatic draperies, unique folding door treatments, valances, canopies and special accent pieces. Experience the Del Mar Originals in person. . I —' _ rael. The former MK, who is known to have a heart con- dition, rarely appeared in Jerusalem during the 18 months since the Ninth Knesset was elected. He spent most of his time at his home in Nazareth, where he had served as mayor for 10 years. His political decline fol- lowed his defeat in the last mayoral elections by the Communist Party candi- date, Tawfik Zayyad. At that time, Zuabi blamed the Labor Alignment for failure to give him sufficient sup- port against the well-oiled Communist Party machin- ery. He will be replaced in the Knesset by a Bedouin, Sheikh Hammad Abu Rabia, who served in the Eighth Knesset. Last week, Education Minister Zevulun Hammer urged students . and univer- sity heads alike to work to- gether toward easing the present tension between Arab and Jewish students. Hammer spoke in the Knes- set in reply to six motions on the agenda dealing with the recent tension in Israel's universities. Now, more than ever, he said, it is necessary to main- tain intellectual open- mindedness, patience and tolerance toward differing views. - However, Hammer said, there were exceptions to this: those who call for the destruction of the state, those who justify its enemies, and urge support for their campaign against Israel. Hammer said that as far as he knew there were only a few Arab students who identified with these views. Hammer has been meet- ing with Knesset members and academicians to im- prove the education of Is- rael's Arab population. "The Arab education sys- tem should be conducted in a spirit of loyalty to the country without causing the Arabs to lose their iden- tity," Hammer told report- ers. But one of his chief aides, Eliezer Shmueli, director general of the Education Ministry, blamed the shortcomings of Arab edu- cation primarily on Arab teachers and the Arab municipalities. "The main reason for the slow de- velopment of the educa- tional system in the Arab sector was the failure of the Arab municipalities to es- tablish education depart- ments," Shmueli claimed. Hammer disclosed some of the problems that have been discussed at the meet- ings held in his office. One was the political factors that influence the appoint- ment of Arab teachers. . Often a good teacher is not accepted because of his political views, and vice versa. Another problem was the insufficient number of training programs for the Arab education system. It was pointed out that many teachers are forced into the profession for lack of other suitable jobs. Finally, Hammer warned that if there is no change in the negative attitudes of the Jewish society toward the Arab society, the process of de-Israelization of the younger Arab population will be accelerated. • Shmueli said that a close look at the Arab sector would show that ari Arab teacher, to be accepted by his own society, must em- phasize the negative as- pects of the education sys- tem. He said that the teachers should have the courage to point to the great progress already achieved in Arab education. He noted that despite the manpower freeze, addi- tional Arab inspectots have been appointed and despite budget cuts, the Ministry doubled its development budget for Arab schools. TAU Discovery in Isotope Study TEL AVIV — A new method of separating isotopes, which could have far-reaching implications in the process of atomic energy production and many other fields, has been developed by Tel Aviv University sci- entists Prof. Uzi Even and Aviv Amiray. The existing system of isotope separation used in uranium enrichment in the United States requires tre- mendous plants using vast amounts of electricity — each plant uses more elec- tricity than the total elec- trical consumption of the state of Israel. The new Tel Aviv Uni- versity method of separat- ing isotopes is based on an entirely different and sim- pler principle. While the present -system of isotope separation is based on weight differences between isotopes, which are • only slight, the new method is based on magnetic dif- ferences, which are greater. The isotopes in the form of cold gas are forced through a nozzle into a vacuum and then passed through magnetic fields, where they are separated. ti I 0.4 I Rabbis' Council, JNF Will Meet NEW YORK - The first Rabbinical Council of America — Jewish Na- tional Fund Mid-Atlantic Leadership Conference will be held on Wednesday in Bethesda, Md. Religious leaders from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina, Georgia, Vir- ginia, West Virginia and Washington D.C. will gather to learn of new JNF directions and goals. The conference will also mark the inauguration of a new JNF project in Israel, the Rabbinical Council Forest in honor of Rabbi Leo Jung, to be planted in Safed. Some 3,000 Israeli Arabs made the traditional pil- grimage to Mecca in 1978. Agudat Israel Blasts. Ecumenical Spirit of Holocaust Observance INCOMING FREIGHT ADDED • INSTALLATION AVAILABLE. W101111111C PAINT & WALLPAPER. PARK, 542-3315 AT 9 MI. 23061 COOLIDGE HWY., OAK NEW YORK (JTA) — The Agudath Israel of America has charged that the initial plan advanced by .President Carter's Commis- sion on the Holocaust to mark the week of April 22-29 as "Days of Remem- brance" for victims of Nazism has offended the sensibilities of Orthodox Jewry. • Noting that the week's activities are scheduled to open with ceremonies at Temple Emanu-El in New York and conclude in the National Cathedral of the Episcopal Church in Wash- ington, the Orthodox Jewish organization said that the program appears designed to reflect the "ecumenical aspirations of some of the Commission's participants rather than to authentically project the theme of Remembrance." Calling upon the Com- mission "to rethink its entire attitude" and to "come up with a program that will be an honor for the memory of the martyrs," the Agudath Israel declared in a statement: "In honoring the mem- ory of six million martyrs, we must bear in mind that a major segment of them were uncompromis- ing in their Orthodoxy, and because of their reli- gious convictions would have avoided participa- tion in religious cere- monies held in any house of worship other than an Orthodox synagogue .. . A combination of a tem- ple and a church is hardly the place to per- petuate their hallowed memory. "If its is the Commission's intentions that the week's activities include as broad a spectrum of participants as possible and be effective in commemorating the Holocaust, it should avoid any particular religious identifications foreign to the spirit of the Holocaust victims. One would expect that a U.S. government- sponsored commission would refrain from steps that would offend both the memory of the Holocaust victims and many Ameri- can religious Jews who would choose to honor them." 41 -4 I