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September 21, 1979 - Image 22

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1979-09-21

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

22. Friday, September 21, 1979

The memory of the right-
eous shall be for a blessing;
but the name of the wicked
shall rot.

LOWEST PRICES

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

New President of the General Assembly
Opens United Nations Assault on Israel

which Israel will find it-
self under during the
scheduled 13-week ses-
sion.
Salim, who is also the
Tanzanian
ambassador to
342-7801
Cuba and who attended the
recent Conference of Non-
Aligned Nations in Havana,
praised what he termed the
fresh and dynamic impetus
generated by that gather-
ing. President Fidel Castro
of Cuba, the new leader of
the non-aligned nations, is
due to address the General
Assembly.
Israel is expected to be the
target of an attempt by the
Arabs to deprive it of its
credentials to participate in
the proceedings on formal
and technical grounds. Is-
raeli diplomats, noting that
this tactic was used suc-
cessfully in the past against
South Africa, told the
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
that the Israeli Mission is
Free Estimates On
aware of the possibility and
10 years of service
Installations
is taking measures to
thwart it.
According to the Israeli
diplomats, the three-month
session will be "a battle-
ground against peace in the
Middle East" as the Arab
extremists and their tradi-
tional allies, the Soviet
Union and Third World
countries, will do every-
thing possible to subvert the
ongoing negotiations be-
tween Israel and Egypt and
the prospects that other
Middle Eastern countries,
such as Jordan, will join in
the negotiations.
Israel Ambassador
DEPARTMENT OF MICHIGAN
Yehuda Blum, address-
& LADIES AUXILIARY
ing a luncheon sponsored
by the American Jewish
JEWISH WAR VETERANS
Committee, said the Gen-
OF THE UNITED STATES
eral Assembly will be
OF AMERICA
even more difficult this
year as far as Israel is
RUTH WEISS
concerned than the two
Sanford Rosenthal
yy
previous sessions. He re-
Auxiliary President
Department Commander
called that the General
- 41(
Assembly of 1977 and of
LT. ROY F. GREEN POST
LT HENRY J. BODZIN
1978 both were over-
IX
N. 529
• SILVERMAN-DETROIT
POST NO. 414
shadowed by President
Irwin
Chodak,
Commander
.40( POST NO. 135
Milton Duchan, Commander
Shiites Snider, Auxiliary President
Anwar Sadat's first visit
Manuel Heitman, Commander
to Israel and the signing
Tess Kominars, Auxiliary President LT. RAYMOND BLOCH-GEN. MAURICE
9(
SOL YETI, MORRIS COHEN
of the Camp David
ROSE
POST
NO.
420
4(
POST NO. 530
agreements, respec-
Morris Smith, Commander
LAWRENCE H. t JOSEPH JONES
Harry
Friedman,
Commander
Dorothy Cohen, Auxiliary President
AUXILIARY NO. 190
401(
Sarah Kaminsky, Auxiliary President* tively.
Marlon Biondy, Auxiliary President
l
He said the anticipated
PVT. ROBERT J. RAFELSON
attacks on Israel this year
HARVEY
DATER
POST
LT.
ELI
LEVIN
POST
NO.
230
POST
NO.
431
.401(
will have one major pur-
NO. 559 (Lansing)
Alexander Nemoff, Post Commander Henry Mills, Commander
pose, "to hinder and
Frieda Samosa, Auxiliary President Corrine Oppenheim, Auxiliary President Bernard B. Friedland, Commander
.10(
obstruct, or at least slow
LT. LARRY S. Will;
FLINT POST NO. 231
PFC. JOSEPH L. BALE POST
down the peace process"
*
Max Linder, Commander
NO. 414
OAK PARK POST NO. 716
currently underway be-
Zelda Soho, Auxiliary President
Murray Greenwald, Commander
Rubin Zissman, Commander
41(
tween Israel and Egypt.
Laena Hoening, Auxiliary. President
Rita Goyer, Auxiliary President
At the same time, the Is-
41(
LT. RAYMOND ZUSSMAN -
PFC. DORAN GOLDFARB-
raeli diplomats said the
SOUTHFIELD POST NO. 333
SGT. CHARLES SHAPIRO
4(
Edward Bunin, Commander
TRI CITY POST NO. 121 (Saginaw)
Palestine Liberation
POST NO. 510
Martha Hauptman,
*
Dr. Lewis !merman, Commander
Irving Davis, Commander
Organization which has
Auxiliary President
Shirley Sontag, Auxiliary President

gained in public opinion and
.4101(
diplomatic prestige as a re-
sult of the Andrew Young
affair, will continue to push
41C
toward legitimizing itself in
the eyes of the international
community. The PLO is ex-
pected to concentrate on
making inroads into U.S.
public opinion and diplo-
WAR VETERANS MEMORIAL HOME ASSOCIATION .* macy and will also press its
campaign for Palestinian
the diplomats said.
16990 W. 12 Mile Road, Southfield
* rights,
"We believe that as long
as the peace process pro-
JAY SCHWARTZ, PRESIDENT
gresses in the Middle East,
the PLO and its supporters
************************** will increase their efforts

Cassette
Dictating
Transcribing
Machines

UNITED NATIONS
(JTA) — Salim Ahmed
Salim of Tanzania, the
president of the 34th Gen-
eral Assembly, began this
season's proceedings Tues-

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day by denouncing Israel's
"senseless bombings of civi-
lian targets" in south Leba-
non and declared that the
Palestinians have a right to
self-determination and an
independent state.
The 37-year-old ambas-
sador also referred to the
Palestine Liberation
Organization as the repre-
sentative of the Palestinian
people. "The core of the
Middle East problem is the
continued denial of the in-
alienable rights of the
Palestinian people to self-
determination and the right
to establish an independent
state," he said.
The "necessary condi-
tions" for peace in the
Mideast are "the realization
of that right, the refusal to
give legitimacy to the fruits
of conquest, the respect of
the right of all states in the
area to an independent
existence," Salim said, fol-
lowing his election by ac-
clamation.
His speech focused at-
tention of the world
body's preoccupation
with the Mideast and was
a foretaste of the attacks

4 44 4 4644-4 4-4********
Happy
New Year

/( VISIT THE MEMORIAL TO OUR HEROIC
iur
JEWISH
WAR
DEAD
'
*
-0(
JEWISH

1

against it at the UN," the
Israelis said. Those dip-
lomats also admitted .that
Israel in some instances will
find itself almost "com-
pletely isolated" without
even the support of the U.S.
and Western Europe.
This is considered
likely to happen in con-
nection with resolutions
before the General As-
sembly concerning Is-
raeli settlemetns in the
administered territories
and Israel's preemptive
attacks in south Leba-
non, the diplomats said.
But, they added, if the
Americans keep to the
spirit and letter of the
Camp David agreements,
Israel need not worry
about its major interest:
peace.
The Palestinians will
culminate their efforts to
improve their image on
Nov. 29 which has been
designated by the UN as
Palestine Day. It is the 32nd
anniversary of the UN par-
tition decision.
The Palestinian cause
will be celebrated and fea-
tured on that day with
films, exhibitions, speeches
by UN dignitaries on behalf
of Palestinian rights and a
special gathering of the
General Assembly corn-
memorating the occasion.
It is not yet clear if PLO
leader Yasir Arafat will
attend the General Assem-
bly. Arab sources say there
is a strong likelihood that
he will appear in person.
According to the Israelis,
the Arabs will also try to re-
vive the resolution equating
Zionism with racism by re-
calling and referring to that
1975 anti-Zionist resolution
in various news resolutions
that will come before the
Assembly.
Israeli diplomats said
that while in the past, the
Western countries fought
against such attempts by
the Arabs, they seem un-
likely to do so this year.
The Israeli delegation to
the 34th General Assembly
will consist of about 20
members, seven of whom
are permanent members of
the Israeli Mission to the
UN. Foreign Minister
Moshe Dayan is scheduled
to address the General As-
sembly next Thursday af-
ternoon.

Time's Report
on Begin Denied

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Officials at the premier's
office flatly rejected a report
in the latest edition of Time
magazine that Begin was
recently checked by three
foreign medical experts who
advised him not to work
more than three hours a
day.
Begin's press advisers
said Begin gets to work
every morning around 8
a.m., and stays at the office
until 1 p.m., when he c
home for lunch and an :,..-
ternoon rest. He returns to
the office around 4 p.m.,
where he stays until the
evening.
Dan Pattir, Begin's press
adviser said that not only
was Begin not checked by
any foreign expert, but
neither were similar chec-
kups conducted by any Is-
raeli doctor.
Shlomo Nakdimon, an-
other press adviser,
charged that political
elements were responsi-
ble for the publication of
the story. He did not
elaborate.
Prof. Jack Fein, who re-
portedly checked Begin, de-
nied the report in a tele-
phone conversation with
Maariv from New York.
Fein said he had been in Is-
rael several weeks ago on
family matters, but there is
no foundation to the story
that he was asked to see Be-
gin.

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"YOU'RE
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CJF Cites Postal

NEW YORK — A special
Smolar Award for Excel-
lence in North American
Jewish Journalism was pre-
sented by the Council of
Jewish Federations on Sun-
day to Bernard Postal.
Since 1970, Postal has
been the associate editor of
the Jewish Week in New
York and author of its
weekly column, "Postal
Card." Founder and editor
of the monthly magazine,
the Jewish Digest, Postal
served as director of public
information for the Jewish
Welfare Board from 1946-
1970, as founder and editor
of "the JWB Circle" and
editor of "This is JWB."

AL KLINE



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