Cohen, Drachler Named Federation Associate Directors SAMUEL COHEN Archbishop Raya Affirms Justice of Jewish Rights in Jerusalem Samuel Cohen and Sol Drachler have been appointed associate directors of Detroit's Jewish Welfare Fed- eration. The announcement was made by Federation executive vice president William Avrunin following con- firmation by the organization's executive committee last week. Cohen and Drachler have been assistant directors of the Federation staff for the past decade. Cohen's primary responsibilities have been in the areas of budgeting, social planning and agency administration. Drachler has been director of Federation's annual fund appeal, the Allied Jewish Campaign-Israel Emergency Fund. During these years, the Detroit Jewish community has made major strides in the implementing of new facilities for agency services and in fund-raising. Under Drachler's direction, the first Israel Emergency Fund was formed immediately following the Six-Day War. Since then, Detroit's solicitation efforts have 'increased until the 1974 AJC-IEF, in an emergency campaign, raised a total of $23,910,000 to aid the humanitarian agencies which are the Campaign's beneficiaries. (Continued on Page 5) HE JEWISH NEWS Commentary Page 2 ED - I" 1=2 C) I ""r A Weekly Review MIC HIGAN of Jewish Events SOL DRACIILER Pioneers in Zionist and World Jewish Congress: Roles of Wise, Herz!, Nordau Josef Fraenkel's Story, Page 48 Michigan's Only English Jewish Newspaper VOL. LXVI, No. 21 atfiew 17515 W.,Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 424 8833 - This Issue 30c January 31 . , 1975 Sadat More Positive With Peace Gesture; Gets French Arms Deal Percy Israel Policy Hit by Chicago Jews CHICAGO (JTA)—Jewish leaders here responded angrily Wednesday to remarks attributed to Sen. Charles H. Percy (R-111.) which they characterized as a "shocking change of policy" toward Israel. The senator, just returned from a tour of Israel and Arab countries, was quoted as saying that Israel was intransigent, that PLO chieftain Yasir Arafat was "relatively speaking, a moderate" and that Israel could not count on American support if it launched a pre-emptive war in the Middle East. Percy's remarks, at a breakfast meeting with journalists in Washington Sunday, drew an angry response from Maynard I. Wishner, chairman of the public affairs committee of the Jewish United Fund which represents 36 Jewish organizations in the greater Chicago area. Wishner said Jewish communal leaders were "shocked and dismayed" by Percy's views and "are requesting an urgent meeting with the senator for clarification of the statements." Sen. Percy, whose pro-Israel voting record in the Senate and public statements on many occasions earned him the reputation of being a staunch friend of Israel, was quoted as saying that Xsrael leaders were "unrealistic" if they thought they could avoid contact with the PLO. "We cannot support Israel right or wrong," he told the group. If Israel was responsible for a new war in the Middle East "it is not clear that United States support would be with them," he said. He (Continued on Page 6) PARIS (JTA)—Egyptian President Anwar Sadat this week completed a three day official visit to France during which he concluded a major arms deal, negotiated for increased Franco-Egyptian eco- nomic and technical cooperation and, above all, managed to partially break loose from the pressure ex- erted on him by the world's two super-powers, Russia and the United States. At his press conference, prior to his departure Sadat also said that a turning point in Middle Eastern relations has now been reached and "this is the first time in 26 years that peace is possible." He added that neither Egypt nor Syria have the slightest intention to renew their war with Israel. "I can frankly speak for Syria as we have unified command with the Syrian Army," the Egyptian said He added that guarantees should and could be given to facilitate the peace pro- cess. He said that he would welcome French troops on the Israeli-Egyptian border but on condition that "such forces be stationed on both sides of the frontier: in both the Sinai and in Israel proper." The Egyptian president stressed, however, that the situation remains explosive. Replying to a question, he said that Egypt will do all it can to reach a peaceful solution through political means but said that "my patience is not unlimited." He said "that to defuse the explosive situation" Israel should start by under- taking a partial withdrawal on all three fronts: the Sinai, the West Bank and the Golan. It was a bleak three days for Israel as the Egyptian president not only man- aged to erase the biterness created in France by the oil crisis and the recent terrorist attacks, but left Paris assured by President Giscard d'Estaing, "You will always find France at your side with all the technical and economic means it possesses." During ANWAR SADAT his two meetings with Giscard, the Egyptian president obtained France's agreement to supply him with the warplanes and other weapons which the Soviet Union stopped delivering 14 months ago, at the end of the Yom Kippur War. The Egyptian shopping list was practically endless. According to reliable sources, Egypt has ordered or is negotiating for 48 to 120 warplanes. Some of the planes will be the new highly sophisti- cated Mirage F-1. Egypt has also ordered, according to these reports, a small number of training planes jointly manufactured by France and West Germany. The Mirage F-1 is currently being considered by Belgium, Holland, Denmark and Norway, anal is considered by military experts superior to the U.S. Phantom-4 used by the Israeli Air Force. Egypt also ordered helicopters, a wide range of missiles, ground to ground anti-tank rockets and Soviet Jews Blame Credits for U.S. Trade Pact Rejection MOSCOW—A group of Soviet Jews has contended in a statement that Congressional ceilings on credit and not the emigration provisions in the recently enacted trade agreement with the United States caused the Russian government to break the agreement earlier this month. The statement, signed by more than 100 Jews from nine cities, appeared to be part of an effort by would-be emigrants to disassociate themselves from the death of the 1972 trade agreement. "No matter what the reasons were," the statement said, "the failure to achieve a trade agreement between the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R. has nothing to do with the emigration of Jews from the U.S.S.R." Soviet officials have insisted that the trade agreement was not accepted both because of the emigration conditions and becatise of credit limitation. The Jewish statement was signed by persons in Moscow, Lenin- grad, Odessa, Vinnitsa, Kishinev, Tbilisi, Riga, Tallinn and Vilna. It bore the names of many known activists, though some others were apparently missing. In Washington, Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D-Wash.) strongly reaffirmed justification for the trade law linking U.S. trade benefits (Continued on Page .5) (Continued on Page 28) Israel Cautious Over New Oil Find TEL AVIV (JTA) — Oil geolo- gists drilling in the Ramallah re- gion of the West Bank say they are about to tap a reservoir of oil estimated to contain seven billion barrels, 100 times Israel's annual oil requirements. The news touched off a slight rise in oil shares on the Tel Aviv stock exchange, but investors with past experience of oil finds that failed to materialize are acting with caution. The director of the oil explora- tion and investment department of the Treasury said that plans are ready to develop the Ramallah site if positive results are achieved. He added, however, that it would take more than a year to raise the necessary money to. start working the site. Soviet Immigrants in Detroit Part of National HIAS Effort Seventy-four Soviet Jews came to the Detroit area through the HIAS Resettlement Service arrangement during the last six months of 1974. Once here, they are helped by several Jewish Welfare Federa- tion agencies to adjust to life in their new land. Resettlement Service provides them with housing and the basic necessities for living which they may not have been permitted to bring with them. Sinai Hospital's Shiffman Clinic gives them medi- cal care and the Jewish Vocational Service and Community Workshop helps them to find employment. They are invited to be members of the Jewish Community Center and to participate in the ulpan-type Eng- lish comprehension program there. Nationally, increased emigration of Soviet Jews to the U.S. and Canada was the major concern of United HIAS Service in 1974. Their annual report said 20,634 Jews left the Soviet Union in 1974 and 3,490 requested and received HIAS assistance to come to the United States, an increase of more than 2,000 over 1973. An additional 500 HIAS-assisted Soviet migrants emigrated to countries other than the United States, including Canada and Australia, New Zealand, Latin America and Western Europe. While the total number of Jews allowed to leave the Soviet Union (Continued on Page 9) MARCH 27, 1992 117