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April 27, 1979 - Image 21

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1979-04-27

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

■•■■•■■■•,/ , R.-

Friday, April 21, 1919 21

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Tension Reported in Jordan Over PLO

JERUSALEM (JTA) — A
surge of political tension,
punctuated by violence and
suspected assassinations,
was reported from Jordan.

THE HONORABLE

JACOB K. JAVITS

Senior U.S. Senator from New York

will speak on -

"IS PEACE REALLY COMING

TO THE MIDDLE EAST?"

Sunday *April 29, at 7:30P.M.

at

TEMPLE BETH EL

Telegraph & 14 Mile Road

Senator Javits is one of the most re-
spected political leaders of our times. He
is a man equally at home in the arena of
doMestic humanitarian pursuits and the
complex world of international diplomacy
and economics.

Open to the Public

Admission Free

The tension is believed to
stem from a deep division of
opinion between King Hus-
sein and his heir apparand
and brother, Crown Prince
Hassan, regarding Jordan's
steady drift towards the re-
jectionist group of Arab
states led by Iraq and Syria.
While Hussein has been
pushing in this direction
ever since Camp David,
Hassan is growing more and
more unhappy with it —
and he is supported by sig-
nificant sections of the offi-
_ cer corps and of the Jorda-
nian indigenous (as opposed
to Palestinian) elite.
Clashes on Amman
University's campus re-
cently between Palesti-
nian and other students
are explained as a reflec-
tion of the tension in the
governing echelons.
Haaretz carried a report
compiled by Arab affairs
monitor Oded Zarai of the
various stories and rumors
of growiiig unrest in the
Hashemite kingdom.
The Haaretz headline
said the U.S. was planning
for the evacuation of Ameri-
can citizens and companies
from Jordan. The story it-
self reported that the U.S.
Embassy in Amman had
been angrily questioned
about this by the Jordanian
government and had re-
sponded that the con-
tingency plaits were merely
routine and were not con-
nected to any particular
political situation.
-The Haaretz report cited
Jordanians visiting the
West Bank, and West Ban-
kers known for their close
ties with the royal house, to
authenticate the signs of
tension in the neighboring
state.

A group of prominent
West Bankers protested
to Amman last week at
the method by which
police had broken up the
campus demonstrations
— apparently because in-
juries were sustained by
Palestinian students.

Jordanian travelers re-
ported that prices on the
Amman stock exchange
were falling and that key
families involved in com-
merce were moving funds
out of the country.
Meanwhile, the not-
entirely-reliable Phalan-

Youth Orchestra
Has Openings
at Summer Camp

NEW YORK — Sixty
Jewish high school musi-
cians will be able to spend
the summer with the Na-
tional Jewish Youth Or-
chestra at. Kutz Camp,
Warwick, N.Y., according to
the Union of American He-
brew Congregations.
For information, contact
Rabbi Allan Smith, Union
of American Hebrew Con-
gregations, 838 Fifth Ave.,
New York 10021. .

gist radio station in Leba-
non reported that a Palesti-
nian aeronatical engineer
had been arrested in Jordan
on 'suspicion of trying to
plant a bomb aboard the
King's plane as it was about
to fly Hussein to Vienna. As
a result, security had been
tightened on all Alia Air-
line flights, the radio said.
The Haaretz report also
discussed two mysterious
recent accidenth in Amman
in which high-level political
allies of Hassan had met an
untimely death. In one,
Sheriff Nasser Ben-Jamil,
an uncle of the King, and
passionate foe of the PLO,
lost control of his car and
crashed to his death. "There
are rumors rife in court cir-
cles," according to the re-
port, "that the car was tam-
pered with."
In the other incident,
the chief of internal secu-
rity, another close sup-
porter of Hassan was kil-
led at Amman Airport on
his return from Qatar. A
brief official statement
said only that his car had
collided with another ve-
hicle.
There has also been a
spate of explosions in
Amman in recent weeks,

The Sensati7 .11114‘

which
government
authorities there have at-
tributed to "Zionist agents."
In a related development,
Hussein has lashed out at
American's role in the
Mideast and indicated he'll
side with the Soviets in fu-
ture peace efforts.

PEOPLE'S CHOICE

Quartet

• 4 Singers +Horns +Guitar
• Recent U.& Tour -
• Russian Shers to Disco

Call for appt. to hear band

699-3593

WORKMEN'S CIRCLE CENTER

26341 COOLIDGE, OAK PARK

NOW AVAILABLE FOR RENTALS

MEETINGS - PARTIES

WILL ACCOMMODATE UP TO 120 PEOPLE

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL

545-0985

Mo.-Fri. al to 3 P.M.

559-5206

Evenings & week-ends

CONGREGATION B'NAI MOSHE
presents a CANTORIAL CONCERT

Featuring Cantor Jacob Ben-Zion Mendelson
-
Sunday, May 6, 1979 — 8 P.M.

Congregation Beth Achim

Proudly Presents

"BEHIND THE SCENES

WITH

BEGIN AND SADAT"

with

DAN PATTI R

Counselor and Press Secretary
to the Prime Minister of Israel

at

CONGREGATION BETH ACHIM

21100 W. Twelve Mile Rd.
Southfield, Mich.

SUNDAY, MAY 6, 1979

8:00 P.M.

For information Call 352-8670

Donation $2.00

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