6 Friday, June 22, 1919 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Court Halts Alon Moreh Construction for 30 Days (Continued from Page 1) argument and "we have no denial to that under oath." PARTY-WEDDING-BRIDESMAID-BAR MITZVA LONG and SHORT DRESSES 1/2 OFF $199 GROUP $99 GROUP S59 GROUP '99 $49 '29 PETITE-MISSES-EXTRA LARGE SIZES SHANDELS 154 SOUTH WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM * MI 2-4150 AUTHORIZED SALES & REPAIRS George Ohrenstein Jewelers Ltd. Creative Jewelers Diamonds — Precious Stones — Precision Time Pieces HARVARD ROW MALL 353-3146 11 Mile & Latmer Observers noted that the state did not produce De- fense Minister Ezer Weiz- man to testify. Weizman was one of the minority in the Cabinet who voted against Alon Moreh. The land at the Alon Moreh site was seized last week "for security pur- poses." A grout; 'of Gush settlers rushed to the scene where, protected by the army and pro- vided with earth-moving equipment, tents and pre-fabricated huts by the World Zionist Organ- ization's settlement de- partment, they pro- ceeded to build an access road and lay the Daily—Hospital Sympathy If You Want to BUY 'EM We Want to SELL 'EM! See Us First! GLASSMAN OLDSMOBILE, INC. 28000 TELEGRAPH at Tel-12 Mall Just South of 12 Mile Rd. •:°: FRUIT BASKETS 3 Times Daily:::: Nation-Wide Delivery $ 1595 RODNICK- McINERNEY'S ::779-4140 772-4350 ::: 354-3300 tions for the settlement. Apart from the con- troversy over the settle- ment's security value, the Supreme Court appeared to accept the appellants' com- plaint that they had not re- ceived legal notice of the ex- propriation of their land. "The proper way to seize land is to notify the land- owners before the actual seizure," Justice Landau said. Elon Moreh and the gov- ernment's settlement policy was the subject of a furious Knesset debate last week. Agriculture Minister Areil Sharon called opponents "a fifth column," trying to halt the march of "true Zionism." Sharon was heckled throughout his speech, in which he criticized a Druze TV reporter and Labor Party leader Shimon Peres. He heckled his detractors by saying that while they argued, "We lay another meter of pipeline, another kilometer of road and build another house." Some 30,000 persons, responding to a call by the Peace Now Move- ment, masses in Tel Aviv June 14 to protest the government's settlement policy. A cable was read, signed by 62 prominent American Jews, warning that the new settlement undermined Israel's cre- dibility in the eyes of the world. Among the signatories were Saul Bellow, winner of the Nobel Prize for litera- ture, conductor and corn- poser Leonard Bernstein and actor Theodore Bikel. The Prime Minister's Office claimed Thursday that no such cable had been received. An American aca- demican, Prof. Leonard Fein of Harvard, and editor of the Jewish maga- zine, "Moment," who ad- dressed the rally, ques- tioned a statement made in Jerusalem Thursday by Theodore Mann, chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major Ameri- can Jewish Organizations, that the concensus among American Jews was that the West Bank settlements were "legal" and "neces- sary" for Israel's security. Mann did not specifically mention Alon Moreh in that connection. Fein declared that there is no concensus of American Jewry in support of the set- tlements. He said there are many American Jews who feel that Israel's settlement policy, as it is being carried out, can create serious di- visions. The cable from the U.S. expressed anxiety over the decision to set up yet another settlement on the West Bank on the eve of negotiations with Egypt and the U.S. on the future of that territory. While stating that they understand that there are legal and historic factors which prompt Jewish set- tlements, the signatories declared that "Alon Moreh undermines the credibility of Israel in the eyes of the West Bank people and the nations of the world." They also said that "A policy that requires forfeiture of Arab lands is regarded by us as unacceptable from a morall point of view and harms the democratic character of the Jewish State." Riots broke out in Nablus Monday, after the Military Governor of the West Bank prohibited a protest march by local residents to the site of Alon Moreh. About 1,000 Arab youths burned tires and hurled stones at Israeli soldiers and police in the 1' TTIAMDM OkKTELEO OTHRUDE riBrEWELEFEHAM EIMIUDDERIG' fIDIkRITTERO, MDT' OQUIORE TIMM, OkEE U/AFIBIRO, OgDER COMMO, Oen® Mumonllant OBLIADVE '1191AMI1,20 9 CMDME IIDUJACTEETO IUDDZOMO, DERFILDER QDTEITVAUTE, k0,1 OWEREID QUEMER! 00,k0OTEIRE 9 OTDICHk1 OIRIDITNIDRI. 07 TUMOR LIBiaMITT, CIEff TEI,kRTEDRO, OT°A6AZZ UkEEIDO, AAHROBEk 11°{ERTONG CHMEDR, EIDERMEDRWERPE-NEME (OECORMD0) 9 THE OFIDDICEin MILEMIDR! EIRA\DRMURE, se, INC. #‘ 1 2 11 __ \1 ► 11 ELI MODULI DDDRIPEITAUDL Located in Applegate Square Corner Northwestern & Inkster Hours: M,T,W,F,S 10-6 Thur. 10-9 1 WEEK ONLY...SAVE -50% Phone: 358-3565 A... LIMITED QUANTITIES Casba district of the town. Two soldiers and one local youth were slightly injured. The crowd was dispersed with tear gas. An Israeli army truck was set on fire by youths who fled when the soldiers fired into the air. The violence erupted after some 1,500 Nablus resi- dents gathered outside the Military Governor's resi- dence to present a petition protesting Alon Moreh. The town was quiet by evening but the air of tension re- mained. Meanwhile, Deputy Pre- mier Yigael Yadin, who re- turned from a six-day ar- cheological tour of Egypt Friday, expressed serious concern over Begin's asser- tion the night before that "there will be many more Alon Morehs." Yadin indicated that he was especially embar- rassed because, at a meeting he had with President Anwar Sadat Thursday, the issue of provocative statements by Israeli leaders was taken up. Yadin coun- tered by pointing to the bitter personal attack on Begin published in Egyp- tian newspapers but he also prothised to try to influence his colleagues in the Cabinet to avoid making statements that do not help the peace process. Mann over the weekend attacked the statement by the 62 American Jews. "The distinguished men and women who signed the June 15 communication to Prime Minister Begin have unfortunately allowed their concern over a single settlement, Alon Moreh — a concern which I share — to color their views about all future settlements on the West Bank," Mann said. He said that after his con- versations with Begin, De- fense Minister Ezer Weiz- man, Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan, Interior Minister Yosef Burg and other leaders, "I have ut- terly no doubt that Israel in- tends to carry out the letter and spirit of the Camp David accords. But if the West Bank is not to become a staging ground for PLO terrorism against Israel — as Jordan was once and Lebanon is now —then full autonomy can be achieved only in the context of effec- tive security arrangements for Israel's protection." According to Mann, "The heart of the prob- lem is to harmonize Is- rael's desperately needed security against terror with the inhabitants' need for autonomy. Jewish settlements are an answer to the first part of the equation. Great sensitivity in regard to their location is an an- swer to the second. That such settlements are legal is not only my view but the concensus view in the American Jewish community; nor is this view contested by the signers of the message to Mr. Begin," Mann said. On Friday, however, two American Lab6r Zionist leaders declared that the settlement policy of the "current Israeli govern- ment" undermines the con- census of the American Jewish community on the settlement issue and urged the Israeli government "to be cautious" in undertaking actions "which make it more difficult to maintain a unified American Jewish community in these dif- ficult times." The statement was issued jointly by Prof: Allen Pol- lack, president of the Labor Zionist Alliance and De- tpiter Frieda Leeman, president of Pioneer Women. Device Permits Shabat Driving JERUSALEM (JTA) — Orthodox engineers at the Institute for Science and Torah in Gush Etzion claim to have invented devices that will allow observant Jews to drive vehicles in emergencies on the Sabbath without violating Halakhic injunctions. Rabbi Yisrael Rosen, one of the inventors, said in an Army Radio interview that the new devices have rab- binical approval. Religious law permits rid- ing on the Sabbath in cases of dire emergency by physi- cians or security men, but it does not permit them to turn their motors and head- lights on or off because those actions are not in- cluded under the dispensa- tion. This posed a severe prob- lem for the strictly obser- vant who had to leave their motors running and lights on until the Sabbath ended. The new devices, accord- ing to the rabbi, allow the religious driver to press a button which is not linked - to any electric circuit, but causes the automatic switch-off of engine and lights. A similar device allows a pious driver to start his ve- hicle on the Sabbath with- out touching the ignition. If turned on before the Sab- bath, it feeds a small amount of fuel to the engine. The driver only has to steer and does not have to use the clutch pedal in ve- hicles with conventional transmissions. Another electronic device operates windshield wipers without the intervention of the driver. • 4M42611MTMIIIIIK77.11111111n: JEWISH NATIONAL Funo . 27308 Southfield Rd. 557-6644 c Southfield, Mich. 48076 Ve