Two Memorials Sunday in Tribute to the Victims of the Holocaust The Detroit area will have two major programs on Sunday in conjunction with international events next week marking Tuesday as Yom Hashoa - Holocaust Remembr- ance Day in Israel and ceremonies and memorial services throughout the U.S. being sparked by the President's Commission on the Holocaust. At noon Sunday, Shaarit Haplaytah (Survivors of the Holocaust) will sponsor their annual Memorial Academy at Cong. Bnai David. The program is co-sponsored by the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit and the Detroit Round Table of the National Conference of Christians and Jews, which are members of the interfaith Cruelty of Domination * Neo-Nazism's Rising Tide a Problem for Bonn Commentary, Page 2 coordinating committee sponsoring a second event, at 3 p.m., at the . Community Arts Auditorium at Wayne State University. Shaarit Haplaytah's Memorial Academy will be attended by a number of Detroit area church groups, with the delegations wearing the yellow Star of David that Jews were forced to wear under the Nazis. A major ceremony of the Memorial , Academy will be the lighting of six candles in memory of the Six Million Jews who perished in the Holocaust. Each candle will be lit by (Continued on Ptige 6) HE JEWISH NEWS A Weekly Review Strength in Productivity Remembering Wallenberg Editorials, Page 4 of Jewish Events VOL. LXXV, No. 7 17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 424-8833 $12.00 Per Year: This Issue 30c April 20, 1979 Belgians Asked to Oust PLO as Europe Tightens Security I s rael, Egypt Halt Dispute, Peace Process Continuing, By DAVID LANDAU JERUSALEM (JTA) — The bitterness between Israel and Egypt over the • "priority of obligations" issue that soured the post-treaty signing atmosphere last week seems to have died down, with both sides plainly determined to "put a lid" on it. Egyptian Prime Minister Mustapha'Khalil, whose statements re- garding Egypt's right to aid Syria in an attack on the occupied Golan Heights had triggered the row, was conciliatory in an interview on Israeli television over the weekend. He said he was certain both sides intended to carry out their obligations under the treaty to the letter. The exchange of instruments of ratification was scheduled to be held Sunday or Monday at the U.S. electronic monitoring facility at Umm Hashiba. By mutual consent it has been decided to keep the event "low-key." Original plans for Foreign Minister. Moshe Dayan and Egypt's Minister of State Boutros Ghali -to be present were scrapped. The scheduled transfer of El Arish to Egypt — the first tangible move under the treaty — is still set for the end of May and will be the occasion for another summit meeting between Prime Minister Menahem Begin and President Anwar Sadat. Begin used his newly installed "hot line" to Sadat for the first time last week as part of the effort to cool the dispute over the priority of obligations issue. The conversation was reportedly convivial, although Begin made the point firmly that Israel could not accept Khalil's interpretation. According to the Israeli reading of Article VI, para- graph 5 of the treaty, Egypt would be barred from intervening in any war triggered by an attack upon Israel by an Arab state. Khalil explained that if Israel refused to negotiate over the Golan with Syria on the basis of the Sinai solution, meaning total withdrawal for full peace, and if, then, Syria attacked the Golan in a "defensive (Continued on Page 10) BRUSSELS (JTA) — The Arab terrorist attack at the Brussels airport Monday has resulted in tighter security measures at other European airports and brought demands from the or- ganized Jewish community of Belgium to oust the Palestine Liberation Organization represen- . tatives from the country. The Coordinating Committee of Belgian Jewish Organizations sent telegrams to Justice Minister Renate Van Elslande and the minister of foreign affairs, Henri Simonet, urging the government not to permit "those directly or indirectly responsible for the Brussels airport attack to remain and Work in the country." Specifically, thd committee which represents Belgium's four major Jewish organizations asked for the closure of the PLO's liaison offices in the country and the expulsion of its representative in Brussels "before it is too late." The government officially condemned the attack and "whatever motives promoted it." The communique recalled that Belgium has ratified the West European treaty against terrorism and promised to take all necessary measures to prevent a repetition of the incident. Meanwhile, police sources said the two captured terrorists, Khaled Dayed Dogket and Mahmoud Hosseini, confessed that they had intended to injure as many El Al passengers as possible at-Zavantem International Airport. They were quoted as saying that they threw a hand grenade . into a crowd of waiting passengers when they realized that security measures prevented them from reaching passengers -LOS ANGELES (JTA) — The Anti-Defa'matiori waiting for or disembarking from League of Bnai Brith has expressed outrage over recent an Israeli airliner. All of the 16 anti:-Jewish incidents at the University of Southern California and the University. of California, Riverside, persons wounded in the attack where inflammatory anti-Jewish tracts were distributed , were Belgian citizens. Arabs Distribute Blood Libel on Two California Campuses by the Organization of Arab Students on both campuses. The ADL requested that action be taken to prevent- further distribution of a flyer which states, "Isareli (sic) foods are mixed with the blood of Arab children." "We are not surprised that the head of the Jewish Student. Union was physically attacked by Abdullah Soofi, the head of the Iranian Student Organization at UC River- side during the distribution of these flyers," ADL Western (Continued on Page 5) The two terrorists arrived in Bel- gium last month with Iranian passports. They admitted that a woman helped them but refused to disclose her identity. The PLO repre- sentative in Brussels, Naim Khader, said on a Belgian radio interview (Continued on Page 14) Allied Jewish Campaign Inspires Supplementary Aid r Depressed Israeli Areas Through Project Renewal Israeli President Yitzhak Navon, right is shown visiting Shoshana and Yaacov Abutbul in their one- room apartment in the Hatikva Quarter of Tel Aviv. Responses to the 1979 Allied Jewish Carripaign were reported this week to be exceeding the generosity of prev- ious years in the form of supplementary gifts to Project Renewal, whose purpose is to provide assistance to the nearly 300,000 Oriental Jews who are in need of added housing facilities and increased educational opportunities. Some $5,000,000 in additional pledges have already been made towards that goal for a five-year period in this year's drive, which will conclude with a volunteer workers' cocktail reception at Cong: Shaarey Zedek next Thursday evening. Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Ephraim. Evron will be the guest speaker. Project Renewal activities are highlighted in many achievements already recorded in planning for relief of oppressive conditions among a large section of Israel's population. The following stories were written by United Jewish Appeal staffers and show what Israel hopes to do, and is (Continued on Page 17) Israel Goodovitch displays a model of his housing plan for Tel Aviv's Hatikva Quarter.