Friday, October 23, 19131 15 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Dayan, Israeli Soldier-Statesman (Continued from Page 14) the Arab-Israeli arena was his contribution to the conclusion of the peace talks with Egypt. However, a subject for historical study con- tinues to be what role he had in the failure to reach an understanding with - Egyptian President Anwar Sadat shortly after he became president in 1970. In the spring of 1971, Dayan proposed an Israeli pullback from the western bank of the Suez Canal as part of an interim agree- ment with Egypt. The plan, which had Sadat's support, was defeated by Premier Golda Meir with the back- ing of other senior minis- ters. Asked years later why he did not fight for his pro- posal, Dayan replied: "What would you want me to do, resign over it?" He argued that even his resignation would not have changed the decision against the pullback. Eventually, the Dayan plan was im- plemented but only after the Yom Kippur War. Immediately after the Six-Day War, had one been asked which Israeli could Lens & Frame Weizmann President Dr. Michael Sela last month called upon the In- ternational Federation of Automatic Control to join him in protesting the Soviet authorities' re- fusal to permit Prof. Ale- xander Lerner,the famed cybernetics authority, to attend the International Conference on Cyberne- tics in Japan. Dr. Lerner previously has been de- nied an exit visa to im- migrate to Israel where Author Tells of Growing Up During Nazi Reign Wendelgard von Staden, the niece of Hitler's first foreign minister, offers a candid account of her ado- lescent years in Nazi Ger- many in "Darkness Over the Valley" (Ticknor and Fields). Raised on a farm in a vil- lage near Stuttgart, the young Mrs. von Staden (then Miss von Neurath) was smitten with Hitler's magnetism and doubted her mother's conviction that Nazism would lead to war. Only when the SS seized a lieautiful valley on her pa- rents' estate and proceeded to build a concentration camp did she fully begin to recognize the Nazi threat. Eventually, she and her mother discovered the truth about the use of the estate. They then devised a plan to help the inmates of the camp. Today, Mrs. von Staden is married to Berndt von Sta- den, former West German Ambassador to the United States. They live with their two children in Bonn, West Germany. Genius is of no country. —Charles Churchill Kryptok or D -25 In glass ± 4 sphere 3 cylinder Plastics, oversize, and tints slightly higher CHRISTIAN DIOR OLEG CASSINI PIERRE CARDIN FABERGE PUCCI MAURICE ST. MICHAEL $4.98 extra MANUFACTURERS OPTICAL CO. 10 Mile & Telegraph, Tel-Ex Plaza 357-3298 on atomic particles — Dr. Sakharov, via open post- cards and Prof. Lipkin via Voice of America broadcasts beamed to the Soviet Union. ANDFtEI SAKHAROV he has been appointed a member of the Weizmann faculty in absentia. The plight of these Rus- sian dissidents, whose numbers are growing and situations worsening in the Soviet Union, has been the subject of a one-man cam- paign by Dr. Sakharov who himself was been silenced by being deported to an obscure Volga River village, and kept incommunicado there. But through friends he has managed to keep a thin line of communications open to his colleagues in the Free World urging their help in seeking amnesty for prisoners of conscience in Russia and elsewhere. According to Weizmann Institute Professor of Physics Dr. Harry Lipkin, Dr. Sakharov still manages to stay on the frontiers of research in theoretical physics despite near total isolation in Gorki. Dr. Lip- kin and Dr. Sakharov have been able, despite fife Soviet embargo, to exchange in- formation on their research only$698extra $ 1998 Weizmann Night Cites Sakharov, Spotlights Soviet Oppression NEW YORK — A vacant chair will be on the dais of the national Weizmann dinner on Nov. 18 at the Sheraton Centre Hotel here. The chair, "held" in honor of Dr. Andrei Sakharov, Nobel Laureate, human rights activist and nuclear physicist who helped usher in Russia's Atomic age, will symbolize the lot of those dissident sci- entists who like he have fal- len into disfavor with Rus- sian authorities. As a consequence they have been either impris- oned, exiled or suffer banishment in their own country and automatic ex- communication from their scientific, academic and cul- tural communities. According to Gershon Kekst, chairman of the Weizmann dinner, the sig- nificance of the vacant chair at the dinner of the Ameri- can. Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Sci- ence carries out the spirit and intent of Dr. Sakharov's steadfast campaign. Bifocals 1 Single Vision lead Israel to peace with its Arab neighbors, the answer undoubtedly would have been Dayan. Dayan himself believed this. He said after the Six-Day War that he was waiting for a telephone call from Hussein — a tele- phone call which had never come, despite a number of secret meetings between the two leaders. Had Dayan missed his chance? Could he have filled in the history of Israeli the role that Sadat filled in the history of Egypt. This is an ' open question which will probably intrigue histo- rians for years to come. Mon. & Thurs. 11-7. Tues.. Wed. Fri. 1C-7: Sat 10-6 0 Enter the Mazel Toy Sweepstakes Win a$1,000 catered party from Maxwell House®Coffee! 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