Friday, March 2, 1919 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS VILLAGE NUTRITIONAL & HYPNOTHERAPY CLINIC INC. DR. RALPH SANDLER DIRECTOR Hypnotherapy Because The Problem Is In Your Mind • • • • • • • • • Insomnia • Nervousness Stress Lower Nigh Blood Pressure Lose Weight • Self Hypnos sis Relax • Self Improvement Learning Disabilities Drug and Alcohol Addictions Stuttering Vitamin Therapy office hours by appt. only Israel Feels Vindicated by Carter's Invitation to Begin (Continued from Page 1) sues that fall directly within his jurisdiction, he should "draw the neces- sary conclusions." But in an interview published in Davar, Dayan declared flatly, "I shall not resign. There was no question of IBM Typewriters Selectric, 559-5577 28035 Southfield Rd. Suite 203 Lathrup Village, Mich. 48076 etc. $400 Add 'n Type 862-1300 342-7800 1114.4e freo le ell Conte AT GLASSMAN OLDSMOBILE... "WE WONT SELL YOU A CAR .. . WE'LL HELP YOU BUY ONE" "Come in test drive a new Diesel." 28000 TELEGRAPH RD. • SOUTHFIELD• PHONE 354-3300 principle over which I should resign. The gov- ernment simply did not accept my opinion. The time will come when I am proven to have been on the right side," he said. He added that he was "happy that Begin will go to Washington. I hope that following his meet- ing with Carter, the negotiationA' will con- tinue, not only with Car- ter but with Sadat as well." Weizman, too, said it was important that Begin goes to Washington and the whole issue is brought to an end. "It is a pity to waste even one hour," he said. But he still insisted tnat Tues- day's Cabinet decision was unnecessary. "The Prime Minister should have gone without the onus of a decision not to go," he said. Although President Car- ter said Tuesday that he might invite Khalil or Sadat to join himself and Begin if the situation war- rented, Begin's aides stressed that the President mentioned no such possibil- ity in his telephone conver- sation with Begin. "Carter spoke only about private talks with him," Begin's personal aide, Yehiel Kadishai, said. Carter dis- closed that he had spoken to both Begin and Sadat by telephone before the. Begin invitation was announced. Meanwhile, the Likud Knesset faction asked Begin to consult with it be- RENAISSANCE JEWELERS 20% to 40% OFF DIAMONDS and FINE JEWELRY 14 & 18K Gold Expert Watbh & Jewell)/ Repair We also service Pulsar watches 968 0450 Greenfield Plaza, suite 313 - 21700 Greenfield, Oak Park 48237 All Bankards Honored Mon.-Fri. 9-5:00, Sat. 9-3 MEN & WOMEN IN MOTION CHOICE STOCK 20 to 50% OFF 3 Days Only—Friday, Saturday and Sunday (NEW OWNER) DAILY 10-6 LOVE THURS. 10-9 SUN. 11-3 N S ORTS 557-4418 EVERGREEN PLAZA-12 Mile at Evergreen—SOUTHFIELD fore he left for Washington. The request was initiated by MK Moshe Shamir, a Likud hawk, who had wel- comed Tuesday's negative decision by the Cabinet but was taken aback when Begin decided to accept Car- ter's second invitation. Begin told reporters he was going to the U.S. "in order to better clarify Is- rael's stand to President Carter and his staff. I have no intention of meeting with Premier Khalil, in - the event that he is also in Washington. At this point, such a meet- ing would be detrimental to the negotiation proc- ess." He added that Israel would reject any American attempt to pressure Israel into changing its stand. Begin added that the Egyptian stand as pre- sented at Camp David II constituted "a serious radicalization of posture," which contradicted both the Camp David agreements and the significance of a peace treaty. The latter, the Premier noted, could easily become a "war treaty." and in war, one does not need treaties, only cannons." Three issues apparently form the basis of Egyptian hardened stand. They in- clude: • The idea of linkage — cairo is apparently now de- manding that autonomy on the West Bank become an integral part of the peace agreement with Egypt. • Exchange of ambas- sadors — Cairo is again un- willing to commit itself in writing to the exchange of ambassadors with Israel. • Status of the treaty — Cairo is apparently now de- the treaty preference over those previously signed be- tween Egypt and other Arab countries. , Carter told Tuesday's press conference he did not "share the opinion" that the propositions put forward by Secretary of State Vance during meet- ings with Khalil and Dayan at Camp David II were "contrary to the Camp David agree- ments" or would make an Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty "meaningless." Referring directly to Be- gin's rejection of a meeting with Khalil, Carter said, "I regret that such direct negotiations were not possible at this time. I am concerned with the possible `impact' on a Mideast peace. "If we allow prospects for peace in the Middle East to continue to dim and, per- haps even die, the future at best is unpredictable," he warned. "If we allow this hope to vanish, the judge- ment of history, df our chil- dren, will condemn us." The President said that the U.S. would honor its commitment to supply Is- rael with oil should that country need it. But Carter said-Israel has not re- quested an American sup- ply of oil after the Iranians cut off oil sales to Israel with the overthrow of the Shah. Carter noted that Israel's oil consumption is only one percent of American con- sumption and therefore supplying oil to Israel will not disrupt American con- sumption. Bartov's Popular Israel Novel in Halkin English Translation Israel's most popular nar- rative writings, made available in English trans- lations, create another link between Israel and the Diaspora. The Jewish Publication Society popularizes this task with an important work, "Whose Little Boy Are You," by Hanoch Bar- tov, translated by Hillel Halkin. This novel by a . leading Israeli author, originally published to wide praise in Hebrew in 1970, is a notable addition to the growing body of Israeli fiction that deals with the pioneering epoch preceding statehood. It chronicles the childhood of Nachman Spiegler, son of Polish immigrants, in an agricultural village in Palestine in the 1930s. TLe Jews who inhabit Nachman's village had left Europe in search of a new beginning, hoping to realize their dream of a Jewish state. This was the period of Arab riots, of conflicts between reli- gious continuity and sec- ularization, of debates on the employment of Arab labor as opposed to Jewish labor. It is against this back- ground that the account of Nachman's gradual, often painful, progress toward discovery of an identity un- folds. The story is told by a narrator who follows the boy from the age of three, through childhood acci- dents and illnesses, various kinds of schooling experi- ences (including the dif- ficult days spent attending the small school at which Yeshiva Univ. his father taught), first friendships. Develops Test Above all, the novel NEW YORK — Superior high school students and explores the boy's response college undergraduates are to his practical mother and for the first time being of- idealistic father, and to fered standardized tests in their marital, family and Jewish history developed by economic problems. The Yeshiva University to story ends on the day of achieve college credit or ad- Nachman's Bar Mitzva, the symbolic coming of age, vanced standing. According to Dr. Ab- - which occurs on the eve of raham Zuroff, adviser to the Nazi invasion of Po- Yeshiva University land. The boy thus enters cooperative program stu- manhood in a world that is dents, the exams are open to about to be destroyed. all high school and college "Whose Little Boy Are students and may be taken You?" affords a remarkable at the end of each academic concrete sense of what semester under supervision Palestinian life was' like in at the student's high school the 30s. The portrayals of and at the university. the family and their fellow pioneers are alive and clear, the setting photographi- cally sharp. The novel's real force, however, lies in its convincing rendering of the experience of childhood. It describes a small boy's world with complete, un- sentimental authority; in so doing, the novel conveys something truthful and im- portant about the quality of human life. The author, Hanoch Bartov, is a prominent Is- raeli novelist, journalist, and playwright, who has served with the Embassy of Israel in London as counselor for cultural af- fairs. He is the author of five novels, three collections of short stories, and two travel books. His plays have been performed on the Israeli stage, and over radio. Facing Turmoil? NEW YORK (ZINS) — According to International Political Surveys, the coun- tries which face the most risk of political turmoil dur- ing the next 18 months are Rhodesia, Nigeria, Turkey, Lebanon, El Salvador, Libya, Portugal, Italy, Argentina and Zaire. Countries in the middle range of risk: Algeria, Brazil, Chile, Egypt, Ghana, India, Israel, Mexico, Pakistan, the Phil- lipines, South Africa, Spain, Uruguay and Zambia. 4477!MORIIM711111111K77.111111111,54 JEWISH mown Funo cra4--"= 27308 Southfield Rd. 557-6644 r!, 14., Southfield, Mich. 48076 t-