THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 6 Friday, May 2, 1980 No Gratitude from Sinai Bedouins Al Hamishmar said the TEL AVIV (ZINS) — The Israeli newspaper Al Bedouins greeted Egypt Hamishmar has lamented with open arms and no one the lack of gratitude ex- mentioned the health and pressed by Sinai Bedouins social advances made dur- after the second stage of re- ing 12 years of Israeli ad- turning the Sinai to Egypt. ministration. The author of Holocaust returns with a fabulous Jewish family saga. With this powerful story of a remarkable Jewish family. Gerald Green returns to the Brooklyn scene he depicted so vividly in The Last Angry Man. Spanning the years 1910 to 1960. The Chains chronicles the rise of the Chain family from its immigrant founding father Jake Chain, a wagon driver who uses his cast-iron fists to protect striking gar- ment workers. to Jake's Ivy League grandson. Martin, who endows a magnificent medical center. Alongside the Chains in their time of trouble is Dr. Samuel Abel- man, that lovable cur- mudgeon from The Last Angry Man. Peopled with strong char- acters' you care deeply about and brilliantly recreating the turbulent decades since the turn of the century. The Chains %Yin • hold you enthralled from the very -first page. . "Bursting with vitality. vivid Characters...a passion- ate, violent story.-streetwise and rich in authentic detail, a lesson in social history. delivered from the barrel of a gun—and it grips at every point."—PubliSherS Weekly. A Literary Guild Alternate Selection. THE CHAINS A novel by Gerald Green $11.95 wherever books are sold SEAVIEW BOOKS Distributed by Harper & Row 3 U.S. Vetoes UN Resolution Calling for a Palestinian State UNITED NATIONS — The U.S. vetoed a Security Council resolution on Wed- nesday that called for estab- lishing an independent Palestinian state. The vote was 10-1, with Britain, France, Norway and Por- tugal abstaining. U.S. Ambassador Donald McHenry said the resolu- tion could not bring peace one step closer to reality." The Tunisian resolution also affirmed the right of the Palestinian refugees to choose between peaceful re- patriation and equitable compensation for their property and said that Is- rael should withdraw from all Arab territories occupied since June 1967, "including Jerusalem.' At the same time, the draft called for ar- rangements to guarantee the sovereignty, territorial integrity and political inde- pendence of all states in the area and the right to live in peace within secure and recognized boundaries. According to UN sources, the veto of the Tunisian resolution was a foregone conclusion, based on U.S. opposition to a Palestinian state. In case of a veto, the sources said, the Arabs plan to call for an' emergency MN 41111 ■ 11111=11111 ■■•■ 1/- -. "..... / -■■■■•- ‘T / es fl‘f " At" Right here ... in our new production studios ... jewelry from your design, reproductions, or our drawing table ... eliminating ALL middlemen, we save you a bundle! it DESIGNING THE WAX MODEL SETTING UP THE MOLD - 8A-7333 I; 31313 Northwestern Suite 109 Farmington Hills inc. FINISHING AND. POLISHING THE FINISHING AND SETTING ...d/P" .......-1 .../ ■ •••••1111 ■ 111 1 P" .40.". —■ ./....111M1111111 /""- * * * Haddad Blames UNIFIL in Blast New Journal Denies Holocaust NEW YORK (JTA) — An historical journal has been launched in California aimed at denying that the Holocaust took place, ac- cording to the Simon Wie- senthal Center for Holocaust Studies at Yeshiva University of-Los Angeles. Efraim Zuroff, director of the Wiesenthal Center, said that the "Journal of Histori- cal Review" is being pub- lished by the same institute that published the infamous book, "The Hoax of the Twentieth Century," by Ar- thur Butz, which seeks to prove thy .there were no mass murders in the gas chambers, 'only' a million Jews died during the _war and that no plan existed for the "Final Solution." Zuroff sent a letter to Stephen Horn, president of California State Univer- sity, Long Beach, asking that Dr. Reinhard Buchner be •dismissed or "censured by the academic authorities" for being listed on the editorial advisory board of the first issue of the journal. . Bush Supports Soviet Jewry ranti igS 1110 Og I quest of Ireland, sent a message to Israel via the Italian ambassador ex- pressing their concern over the Lebanese situa- tion. Observors said the sig- nificance of the gesture was that the nine countries unanimously agreed on the issue. session of the General Assembly to discuss Palestinian rights. Last week, the Security Council voted 12-0, with three abstentions, to de- plore acts of violence and in- tervention in Lebanon. However, only Israel was singled out for blame. The U.S., the Soviet Union and East Germany abstained. Israeli sources expressed surprise that the U.S. did not veto that resolution. Israel was also troubled by a Council of Europe reso- lution calling for an amendment to Security Council Resolution 242. The amendment would recog- nize the Palestinian "right to self-determination" and condemn Israel for its set- tlements policy. The nine European Economic Community nations, acting at the re- WASHINGTON — Re- publican Presidential. can- didate George Bush issued a statement this week in sup- port of last Sunday's Soviet Solidarity Day observances in support of Soviet Jewry. Bush called for continu- ing pressure on the Soviet Union and its satelites "to abandon their official anti- Jewish policies and prac- tices. . ." A difference in taste in jokes is a great strain on the affections. George Eliot TEL AVIV (JTA) — Maj. Saad Haddad, commander of the Christian militia in southern Lebanon, accused United Nations forces of active cooperation with Palestinian terrorists and claimed that the United Na- tion Interim Force in Leba- non (UNIFIL) has lost con- trol of the various national contingents that make it up. Haddad spoke to report- ers after his release from Rambam Hospital in Haifa where he was treated for in- juries sustained in a land mine explosion. Haddad said his jeep was in pursuit of eight terrorists when it struck the mine. According to Haddad, the terrorists infiltrated the Christian enclave through a salient held by Nigerian troops attached to UNIFIL and that they escaped back into the Nigerian controlled territory. In both cases, the terrorists, movements were unhampered by the Nige- rians, which proves, he con- tended, that they cooperate with each other. Haddad said that because UNIFIL has lost control of its various units which obey the instructions of their respective governments, he no longer recognizes the authority of the UNIFIL commander, Gen.- Em- manuel Erskine. 100,000 French Rally for Israel (Continued from Page 1) a party and its Middle East policy. One of the few French politicians who outspokenly supports Israel is now visit- ing Israel. Didier Bariani is the leader of the Radical Socialist Party and says he would be the first or ' he Champs Elysees to p 3t any invitation to PLO ciiief Yasir Arafat to visit France. Bariani told Israeli lead- ers they must stop "idiotic propaganda" about the ad- ministered territories and begin to emphasize their de- fensive necessity to Israel. 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