X20 eiday,Vri15,1984 tfiCOETOlf JEWISH NtWs • Embassy move would be nixed by Reagan Washington (JTA) — Secretary of State George Shultz stressed that President Reagan would not move the U.S. Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem even if Congress passed a law requiring it. "The President is very much opposed to it and will not move that embassy," he said in an appearance on the NBC;TV "Meet the Press" program. But Shultz would not pre- dict whether Reagan would veto such a bill. Instead, he stressed that if the bill was adopted by Congress, no matter what the President did it would still "be very bad for the United States." He said that "it would be a gigantic aggravation to im- portant religions, particu- larly Moslem, the Islamic i-eligion, and it would thereby damage the inter- ests of the U.S. It would damage our ability to be ef- fective in the peace proc- ess." However, Shultz added that he has the "impres- sion" that "people in the Congress are more and more having second thoughts about this and are looking around for some way in which they might de- fuse this issue." The embassy issue was also discussed on the CBS-TV "Face the Nation" program on which the topic was the "Jewish lobby," two days before the primaries in New York state, where former Vice President Wal- ter Mondale and Sen. Gary Hart (D-Colo.) have made their support for the em- THE KNITTING NOOK • Expert Knitting Lessons, Yarns, Etc. • Custom Patterns & Designs • Hand Made Sweaters & Finishings WEST BLOOMFIELD PLAZA 6666 Orchard Lake Rd. 851-8188 MAVIS Ronald Reagan bassy move a major cam- paign theme in their quest for the Democratic Presidential nomination. On the CBS program, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, another Democratic Presidential JINGLES THE MAGIC CLOWN Available for Children's Parties 544-4196 aspirant who opposes his two rivals on the embassy move, said that to "shift the embassy at this point would be a dangerous and divisive move." Sen. Alan Cranston (D- Calif.) also appearing on "Face the Nation," said it was "ridiculous that the embassy issue has become a major one, although he noted that he supports the (Sen. Daniel) Moynihan embassy bill or a reported compromise that would make the Congressional ac- tion non-mandatory on the President. Former Democratic Sen. James Abourezk of South Dakota, national chairman of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Com- mittee, said that politicians are "pandering" to the views of Jews on the Jerusalem issue because they "are assuming that Jewish voters are totally stupid. I think that is a wrong assumption." But Abourezk accused Jewish organizations of completely following Israeli policy. In Jerusalem, the prime minister's office denied local press reports that the government was urging Is- rael's supporters in the United States to freeze the move in Congress to relo- cate the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Meanwhile, a high- ranking official of the World Jewish Congress has shar- ply criticized the Senate tes- timony of the U.S. Catholic Conference which opposed legislation aimed at moving the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem. Kalman Sultanik, WJC vice president, said that the testimony given by Rev. J. Bryan Hehir, on behalf of the Catholic bishops of the United States, reflected "a basic insensitivity to Jewish concerns as well as to American political inter- ests. He pointed out that Bishop Hehir testified that the views he was presenting "are guided by the position of the Holy See." George Shultz In his testimony before the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee, Bishop Hehir, who was accom- panied by Msgr. John G. No- lan, president of the "ponti- fical mission for Palestine," said that the U.S. Catholic Conference opposes the Moynihan bill on the trans- fer of the embassy, stating "we find the proposal to move the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem an unwise e• prescription for policy." Rev. Hehir testified that the Catholic bishops' views were based on the position set forth by the Vatican as formulated both by Pope John Paul II and his pre- decessor, Pope Paul VI. Bishop Heir asked that the position of the Vatican be submitted for the Con- gressional record and pro- ceeded to read out a 1980 Vatican document on the subject. Although the document speaks of the need to safeguard religious freedom for all Jerusalem, the Vatican wishes this to be achieved "through an appropriate juridicial safeguard that does not de- rive from the will of only one of the parties interested." Sultanik pointed out, however, that Sister Rose Thering, speaking on behalf of the National Coalition of American Nuns, gave tes- timony in support of the Moynihan bill. In Washington, the Washington Post wrote in an editorial that President Reagan's decision to veto a bill coming along in Con- gress to compell the transfer of the American Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, is "unassailable." "Any step touching Jerusalem stirs immense political and religious sen- sitivities that the United States would be derelict to ignore," the editorial stated adding: "The whole matter is best left to negotiations among the parties to the Israeli-Palestinians dis- pute." Genetic engineering for citrus BY JAMES CHESKY Israel Govt. Press Service Beit Dagan, Israel — Israeli researchers are using genetic engineering to fight the number one enemy of citrus farming. The Tristeza virus, which has killed more than 50 mil- lion trees the world over in the past half-century, is it- self being used by scientists in Israel to help citrus trees develop immunity to the dread virus. Although the Israeli re- search does not promise to spell an end to the Tristeza virus tomorrow, the genetic manipulation of the disease is considered a major re- search breakthrough. Scientists at the Volcani Institute for Agricultural Research and the Weiz- mann Institute of Science recently announced that they have succeeded in in- serting the Tristeza virus into a bacteria. Con- sequently, the bacteria is being used to develop better methods to detect the citrus decline and equally impor- tant, to cultivate new, mil- der forms of the virus, used to help trees develop im- munity. The name Tristeza means sadness. One of the resear- chers at the Volcani Insti- tute, Dr. Moshe Bar-Joseph, says that the name reflects both the state of the trees and the economic plight of the farmer. "A seemingly healthy tree can lose all of its leaves in just two weeks and cease to bear fruit. And since the virus is spread rapidly by flying aphids, the chances are that the trees around the affected one will also be infected. This will hit the farmer hard eco- nomically." Also known as "Quick Decline," the disease nearly destroyed the Brazilian cit- rus industry in the 1930s. The Brazilian farmers dis- covered that through cross protection, or infectiong a grove with a mild strain, they could give the trees relative immunity. How- ever, the collection and use of mild strains has been an inefficient process till now. In countries such as Israel and parts of the United States, eradication pro- grams are underway. Wide ranging spot checks are conducted, using im- munological detection methods to locate infected trees. They and the trees around them are uprooted and destroyed. Last year, more than 2,500 Israeli citrus trees were destroyed and this year, even more are ex- pected to be eradicated. "The reason so many trees have to be destroyed," says Bar-Joseph, "is that current detection methods cannot differentiate be- tween the mild and severe strains. So all infected trees have to go." Bar-Joseph hopes that through studying the virus in laboratory conditions, his research team will be able to isolate the various types of Tristeza and determine the severity of the infection. That would allow the farmer to leave the milder, non-dangerous strains to continue bearing fruit for years. In the distant future, the scientists also hope to develop a tree which is re- sistant to Tristeza. "The main value of the Is- raeli research," says Bar- Joseph, "is that it will en- able us to keep a healthier citrus grove. Without it, some areas of the world where more severe strains appear, will just be unable to grow a good, commercial citrus crop." The research team is un- willing to speculate on the amount of money or trees their breakthrough might be worth to farmers. How- ever, Dr. Bar-Joseph says that Tristeza has caused up to $1 billion worth of dam- age over the past 40 years. Oldest alum sought New York — Yeshiva University, preparing for its centennial in 1986, has begun a search for its oldest living alumnus.