THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 70 Friday, March 1, 1980 40—BUSINESS CARDS 40—BUSINESS CARDS JULIUS ROSS TED'S WALLPAPER REMOVING MOVING CO., INC. Free Estimates. Insured. Serving tri-county area. Custom work, household mov- ing, offices, packing, piano and appliances. Local and State of Michigan. 531-7555 357.2674 53—ENTERTAINMENT SINGING guitarist, violinist plus Disco tapes. 398-2462. VERSATILE sophisticated party music. 272-7586. Our Classified Ads Get Fast Results THE JEWISH NEWS %cr.. cf.. 1101 , ,1 tZtt t:.1..S ..7: J32:1". ^ 1 rf:tu, 172•1i: f..37::51" 4•3 17('—•:f• t:Sir" • produced by today's latest space age technology, yet still bargain priced! Like most of our other readers and advertisers, you prob- ably aren't fully aware of the fact that just about everything on our pages has been produced via the very latest elec- tronic, computerized word-processing equipment. We've invested to bring you a belier, more accurate and easier- to-read product. This newspaper is a product of millions of dollars in research and technology, yet it remains one of today's best bargains. —I I To: The Jewish News I 17151 W. 9 Mile Rd., Suite 865 1 Southfield, Mich. 48075 1 1" 1 1 1 Please send a year's gift subscription to: NAME I ADDRESS CITY I OCCASION . I FROM: 1 1 STATE ❑ $15 enclosed ZIP 1. Sports Diplomacy: Israel, Egypt Prepare for International Game By HASKELL COHEN (Copyright 1980, JTA, Inc.) CAIRO — A group of mediators, selected by both the Israel Basketball Fed- eration and the Egyptian Federation to discuss ways and means of establishing a basketball relationship be- tween the two countries, met here several times dur- ing the week of Feb. 18-23 with Egyptian hoop offi- cials. Considerable progress was made in the establish- ment of what should be, ul- timately, a good relation- ship in basketball between the two countries involved. Prior to coming to Egypt, as one of the mediators, I met with Fouad Abdul Kheir, the technical direc- tor for basketball in the Egyptian Basketball Fed- eration. Abdul Kheir was a member of the group of Alexandria Jews who were granted permission to come and visit their relatives in the state of Israel. His wife is Jewish and hadn't seen her parents in 25 years, so that it was a reunion be- tween the couple and her parents and it also gave the Egyptian basketball official the opportunity to watch the European Cup Game be- tween Israel and the Yugos- lavians. At our first meeting I pro- posed several ideas which would gradually build up to an ultimate game, possibly to be held in Madison Square Garden, during the spring or fall of 1981. After a second lengthy luncheon session, the following was resolved so far as the possi- bility of a relationship be- tween Israel and Ezvat: Knowing full well that Israel is much stronger than Egypt right now in basketball, the local Fed- eration people felt that it would be unfair for them to get involved _im- mediately in a game be- tween the two national teams. It was the consen- sus of opinion that the game should be a culmi- nation of several prior ideas which would build up confidence in the Egyptian basketball pub- lic in the proposed affilia- tion, and give the Egyp- tian Federation time to produce a team which might be able to give the Israelis a contest. The mediators agreed to the following: The Egyptian Federation agreed to send six coaches to the Dial Bas- ketball Clinic which will be held at Kutsher's Country Club in Monticello, N.Y. on June 22-26. At the same time, the Israel Basketball Federation will send six coaches and it was agreed that the respective coaches from the two countries would mingle and share the same quarters and discuss basketball matters for the course of the clinic. After the conclusion of the clinic, the Egyptian coaches then would be placed in instructive posi- tions in the Kutsher's Sports Academy where they would work with college and high school coaches in teaching the youngsters attending the camp. This will go on for a period of two weeks, after which the group will return to Egypt. A top-flight college coach will be sent to Egypt for the period June 15-Sept. 1 in order to instruct the Na- tional Team, the Junior Na- tional Team, and the Girl's National Team. A top-flight girl's coach will go to Egypt for a three-month period start- ing in September to help prepare the Egyptian Girl's National Team for the African Cham- pionships which will be held in December. A junior tournament should be held during the Christmas vacation period in Alexandria where four teams, one Egyptian, one Israeli, and two American junior teams would partici- pate. After the conclusion of the tournament the four teams then would move to Tel Aviv where a similar tournament would be held. A U.S. college team will come to Egypt, possibly in the spring of 1981, in order to participate in a four-team tournament which would involve either Israel's na- tional team or a top flight Israeli club team like Mac- cabi Tel Aviv or Hapo1" Aviv, and the two Egyptian club teams. ne schedule then called for all four teams to move on to Is- rael for a repetition of this tournament. The carrying out of this ambitious program will de- pend, of course on the nor- malization of conditions in general between Egypt and Israel. If all goes smoothly, the program will culminate in a game between the Egyptian and Israeli Na- tional teams which would, in all probability, be played in the United States before an international television audience. Moshe Dayan Joined Likud in Order to Influence Begin TEL AVIV (ZINS) — For two years Moshe Dayan re- fused to divulge his reasons for joining the Begin gov- ernment and consistently avoided discussing the sub- ject. Now, after he resigned, he revealed the secret. According to an article in Yediot Ahronot, Dayan rationalized that his deci- sion to join the Likud Cabinet stemmed from his conviction that he could ac- complish something that others thought impossible, namely to change Menahem Begin and to influence him to take steps which Begin previously would never have dreamed taking. Dayan believed that there would be a great dif- ference between Begin as opposition leader and Begin as the prime minister. Dayan was also convinced that Begin would be able to venture doing what no other prime minister had been able to do, to make far reaching concessions for the price of peace. Dayan pro- ved to have been vindicated during the peace negotia- tions between Israel and Egypt. Dayan also believed that the new Begin" would be ready for further corn- promises regarding Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip. When he became con- vinced that in that area Begin remained unyielding, the former Foreign Minister decided to draw the conclus- ion that led to his resigna- tion. Yadlin Charges Labor Party With Siphoning Israel Funds TEL AVIV (ZINS) — Asher Yadlin, the former head of the Histadrut's huge Kupat Holim sick fund, a nominee for the post of gov- ernor of the Bank of Israel, and a leading Labor Party figure, has just finished serving 41 months in prison out of a five-year term for bribery. Yadlin has come out with a variety of charges against farmer Labor Party col- leagues. The charges ap- peared in Yediot Ahronot, in the first serialized ex- cerpts of his book "Tes- timony." He claimed that state funds "were the main source of income for Labor. The methods of transferring the funds were round-about and the state paid three pounds for every pound which reached the party." In an- other incident, Yadlin wrote, the Treasury paid a Histadrut company a higher-than-necessary interest rate on money owed, and the difference went to the Labor Party. A full chapter is devoted to the late Golda M- entitled The Lady Hayarkon Street." He re- ports attempts by two de- ceased finance ministers — Pinhas Sapir and Yehc a Rabinowitz — to con him to sell choice Kupat Holim property on Shdeirot David Hamelech, because Golda wanted to establish a music conservatory on that site to be run by her cellist son, Menahem. New Chairman NEW YORK — Nathan S. Ancell has been named chairman of the board of the Institute for Jewish Policy Planning and Research of the Synagogue CounCil of America.