12 Friday, November 21, 1981 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS (Continued from Page 1) war) against Israel. Reagan said he "thought that this kind of hope ought to be pursued," Squadron said. In reply, Squadron said he told the President that he was - concerned - that the Saudis "are not serious" about helping the peace process. He pointed out that Saudi Arabia did not lose any territory in the 1967 Six - Day War and they had nothing to negotiate with Israel. He said they could sign a peace agreement with Israel, a step which he said Israel would welcome. Reagan said the Saudis are considered leaders in their region and can be "useful" in getting other countries to join the peace process, Squadron reported. Stein, who participated in the meeting between Reagan and the Presidents Conference, stressed that Reagan had declared he was commit- ted to following the Camp David process, not the Fand plan, as the path to peace in the Middle East. Squadron noted that both Meese and the President re- confirmed the statements Reagan made to the Presidents Conference on Sept. 15, 1980 when Reagan was a candidate for the presidency. Squadron said this included support for a united Jerusalem under Is- raeli sovereignty, opposi-. tion to a Palestinian state and refusal by the United States to deal with the Palestine Liberation Organization until it ended its terrorism and accepted United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 and Israel's right to exist. Several hours after Squadron reported on the President's statement on Jerusalem, the White Reagan Meets With Jewish Leaders to Allay Post-AWACS Fears When in Acapulco Kosher Restaurant Exclusively at the El. PRESIDE\TE HOTEL so- tna; the [weir in tie Ki)..her- ,o ,keti rw Fuht-n iS2 45-04 ref f,,,,riann, ”1,111 piz ■ th ATLAS INTERNATIONAL TOURS 2V( ct‘t 45th Street. 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Vatican-like solution that "American policy towards will continue to preserve Jerusalem is that it should the free access to the holy remain undivided with free sites that Israel has af- access to the holy sites," the forded since 1967." Stein said there was no statement said. "The future status of Jerusalem is to be contradiction between through Squadron's statement determined and the President's: He negotiations." The statement added: said Reagan had recon- "The President said that he firmed what he had told preferred for Jerusalem to the Presidents Confer- ence 14 months ago. remain undivided under Is- Meanwhile, at the State raeli sovereignty but the President also said that he Department, spokesman favored some type of a Dean Fischer said the Cloudy Future for El Al By HUGH ORGEL TEL AVIV (JTA) — The end of the El Al strike, fol- lowed by the resignations of chairman Avraham Shavit and his six-man board last week, appear to have added a new dimension to the air- line's troubles and clouded its future. While the workers claimed that their 12-day walkout — not sanctioned by Histadrut — achieved its purpose by forcing out the government-appointed management in which they no longer had confidence, others believe the departure of Shavit is a setback to the process of solving the air carrier's serious financial difficulties. Shavit, an industrialist who heads the Israel Man- ufacturers Association, is credited with having done much during his two years as El Al's chairman to re- duce its debts and set it on the road to financial solvency. Observers fear his de- parture may have halted and possibly reversed the recovery program he in- stituted. But a spokesman for the Boost for Jewish Education Seen in Latin America NEW YORK (JTA) — An Israeli educator who attended a 'five-day con- gress on Jewish education in Latin America held re- cently in Rio de Janeiro, said here that he found Latin American Jewry at the threshold of a Jewish renaissance based on Jewish education and the centrality of Israel to Jewish life. Dr. Eli Tavin, head of the World Zionist Organiza- tion's department of educa- tion in Jerusalem, said, in his report released by the WZO-American Section, that the gathering had at- tracted a record 224 educators from 11 coun- tries, including Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela. The five days of plenary sessions and workshops were devoted to pedagogical methods and means, to ensure a positive Jewish identity among 45,000 pupils in 130 schools and kindergartens and to forge intimate personal ties to and identification with Is- rael. El Al workers committees said Shavit's resignation marked "the end of feudalism" in the company. Transport Minister Haim Corfu, on the other hand, was reported to be urging Premier Menahem Begin to appeal to Shavit to with-. draw his resignation. Shavit has insisted so far that he would not. Arnold Sherman, an El Al spokes- man and one of the board members who resigned said the question was "who is running the airline — man- agement or workers com- mittees?" Normal service has yet to be restored and some mem- bers of management ex- pressed concern that the strike and apparent anar- chy within the company would frighten off many would-be passengers. The strike ended when workers agreed to proposals by Deputy Premier David Levy, the nature of which are still unclear. Labor circles charged that Levy's intervention in the dispute without consultations with man- agement undermined the role of Histadrut as a bargaining agent and disrupted the normal sys- tem of labor- management relations. Some observers said that was Levy's intention. As Likud's senior repre- sentative in Histadrut, he has long sought to reduce the power of the Labor Party-dominated trade union federation, they said. United States official posi- tion on Jerusalem is_tkrai "we believe_ Jerusalem should remain united" with access to all the holy places but that its final status should be deterInined by negotiations. The State Department also had a different nuance on Reagan's statement to the Jewish leaders that the renunciation of terrorism by the PLO is one of the con- ditions for the United States to deal with the PLO. Fischer said the United States would study whether to deal with the PLO once it accepts Israel's right to exist and UN Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338. He said that "clearly, terrorism is not consistent" with the recog- nition of Israel's right to exist and the two UN reso- lutions. On the issue of anti- Semitism, the Jewish lead- ers expressed their concern over the imputations during the AWACS debate of "dis- loyalty" by those who op- posed the sale. Squadron said that- Reagan declared that none of these ex- pressions came from him or from anyone in the Ad- ministration. However, Squadron said one of the President's aides said that one staff member had been "rebuked." saittIci.s and that the rea- son for the rebuke or what the rebuke entailed was not mentioned. He said Reagan denied that his press, conference statement in October tel- ling other countries not to interfere in U.S. foreign policy was aimed at Israel. The Jewish Republicans who met with Reagan were members of the Coalition for Reagan - Bush which supported the Republican ticket in the 1980 elections. They included Max Fisher of Detroit, George Klein of New York, Gordon Zacks of Columbus, Ohio, Albert Spiegel of Los Angeles, Laurence Tisch of New York, Sylvia Hassen- feld of Barrington, R.I., and Detroiters Martin Citrin and George Zeltzer. Paul Borman of Detroit was prevented from attend- ing the meeting by travel problems. FLOOR COVERING Vinyl Sheet Goods No Wax Tile kitchens, Balks, Basemelts Expert InStallation. 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