The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, November 14, 1979-Page 3 Israeli UN Ambassador calls Have you considered sweaters? Try' em- You'll like 'em-at 650 Jordan a I By JUDY RAKOWSKY The well-known allegation that the "homeless Palestinian people" are at the core of the Middle East conflict is "one of the most cruel hoaxes of the seventies and the second half of this century," Yehuda Blum, Israeli Am- bassador to the United Nations (UN), told a law school audience yesterday. Blum told the group of about 85, most of whom are lawyers or law students, that three quarters of the land designated for a Palestinian-Arab state in the original UN Palestinian Mandate of 1947 holds the majority of the Palestinian people already. That parcel is the kingdom of Jordan, "the only thing non-Palestinian. . . is the king," Blum said. Blum, who was a senior research scholar in the University law school in 1969, said that half the membership of Jordan's cabinet and Parliament, and most of its popultion, is Palestinian. This, he said, is evidence of the fulfillment of the objective of a Palestinian homeland. If the king.were Palestinian. PLO head Yasssir Arafat, "it would become obvious to the outside world that Jordan is a Palestinian state," Blum said. "This is not the biased Israeli view," Blum added. Jordan's King Hussein imparted these views in an interview with West Germans a few years ago, Blum said, "and he pointed out that there is no such thing as a separate Palestinian identity." Blum said after the Six Day War in 1967 the Arab League realized military avenues were no longer practical and decided to employ political and diplomatic resources. So it "invented the Palestinian identity" in order to homeland juxtapose it to Israeli and other Arab nations' interests, the former Inter- national Law professor added. WHEN THE UN Security, Council passed Resolution 242, in November 1967, laying down the "guidelines for peace in the Middle East. .. there was no indication to the existence of homeless Palestinian people," Blum pointed out. In the fall of 1969, "inalienable rights to self- determination" for Palestinians were first mentioned before the General Assembly, Blum said. "Self-determination has not been im- See JORDAN, Page 10 Mendelssohn Theatre Thursday - Saturday Nov 15. 16. 17 at 8pm. Sunday. Nov. 18 at 3pm. Al tickets $5.00 at the F? R Ilicket Office in the Michigan League only. Call 3t13/764-0450 A i isin English LBohemc The University of Michigan School of Music Opera Theatre Patrick eakmac. ~y> ~ GustavMeier ISRAELI AMBASSADOR to the UnitedNationsYehuda Blum spoke to a law school audience yesterday afternoon and labelled "a cruel hoax" the ,aim that homeless Palestinians are at the core of the Middle East conflict. sraeli ambassador attacked in Portugal Discover the music of ECM... Keith Jarrett Pat Metheny LISBON, Portugal (AP) - Two tel'rorists wounded Israel's am- bagsador to Portugal and killed his b6lyguard yesterday in a grenade and niachine gun ambush. Three other per- s6hs were injured.. 'Portuguese national radio said it re'.eived a telephone call from a previously unheard of group, the Inter- n'tional Militant Workers, claiming responsibility for the attack. The radio said the caller claimed the group fought against "capitalism and imrperialism as represented by Zionists" and that other, unspecified at- tavks would follow. THE TWO unmasked men attacked Ambassador Ephriam Eldar's car as it drove up to the Israeli chancellery shortly before 10 a.m. A grenade fragment hit the am- bassador's bodyguard in the head, killing him instantly. Police said the 55- year-old Eldar was saved by staying in the car. But a bullet broke a bone in his right forearm, another wounded him in the thigh, and he suffered shrapnel wounds along the right side of his body. Shrapnel hit a female passerby in the face, endangering her sight, and bullets wounded the ambassador's driver and a Portuguese guard at the embassy door, police said. Eldar underwent surgery in Lisbon's Santa Maria Hospital, where doctors described his condition as satisfactory. "Jarrett's solo art remains a unique entity in music, and The Kdln Concert is its most moving, most telling exposition." -down beat "He doesn't sound like any other guitarist, and at the rate he's developing, other guitarists are going to have a tough time sounding like him." -Rolling Stone $9.99 2 LP $5.99 - V FILMS Ann Arbor Film Cooperative-The Kids Are Alright, 6:30, 8:20, 10:15 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Cinema Guild-The Stranger, 7,9:05 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. Alice Lloyd Pilot Program-Black World, A Conversation with David Ben-Gurion, 7:30 p.m., Alice Lloyd Hall. German Language Film Series-The Great Ecstasy of the Sculptor Steiner, La Soufriere, 8 p.m., Max Kade German House, 603 Oxford. SPEAKERS American Association of University Professors, University Annuitants -Association-Prof. Wilbur Cohen, "Re-examining Social Security," 4:10 p.m., Faculty Lounge, 214 W. Engineering. Center for Western European Studies-Dirk Pals, consul of the German Federal Republic, "Contemporary German Political Problems," noon, ' Michigan League conference rooms. International Year of the Child-Marian Wright Edelman, director of Children's Defense Fund, 3:30 p.m., Aud. 3, MLB. Impressions of South Lebanon-Dr. James Zogby, chairman of the 'alestine Human Rights Campaign, "America and the Middle East," 7:30 .p.m., Multipurpose Room, UGLI. Committee to End the Blockade, Venceremos Brigade, Association for 'Critical Social Studies-Ed Boorstein, "Revolutionary Cuba," 7:30 p.m., Anderson Room, Michigan Union. Center for Chinese Studies-Prof. Harriet C. Mills, "China's New Literature: How New Is New?," 7:30 p.m., 150 Hutchins Hall. College of Engineering-Karen Erstfield, "Fatty Acids in Recent and Pleistocene Age Spruce Trees," 3:30 p.m., 136 Engineering 1A Building. Cof- fee at 3 p.m. MEETINGS Dharma Study Group-Buddhist meditation and study center, 7:30 p.m., sitting, 215 E. Kingsley. Open to the public. Folk Dance Club-Intermediate and advanced dance, 8 p.m., Union. Women in Communications, Inc.-7 p.m., Kuenzel Room, Union. Stilyagi Air Corps-Science fiction club, 8 p.m., ground floor, Union. English Composition Board-"Proofreading the Punctuation," 7 p.m., 2402 Mason Hall. University Lowbrow Astronomers-Discussion of building a back yard observatory, 7:30 p.m., Room 807, Physics and Astronomy Building. Organizational meeting for those interested in helping the boat' people-7 p.m., Hillel, 1429 Hill. PERFORMANCES Theater and Drama Department-Slewomir Mrozek's "Tango," 8 p.m., Trueblood Theater, Frieze Building. MISCELLANEOUS Women in Action-Self-defense workshop, 7:30 p.m., Conf. Rooms 1, 2, 3, Union. Public Interest Research Group in Michigan-"All About Wetlands," 7:30 p.m., Pendleton Room, Union. Poetry Reading-Turner writing group, in-touch writing group from Northville State Hospital, 4 p.m., Pendleton Room, Union. Washtenaw Community college-Mary Jacobs, Consumer Action Cen- ter, session covering workings of small claims courts, 7 p.fn., Room 304, Yp- silanti Center, 210 West Cross. Call 482-2230 for registration information. University Activities Center-CPR mini-course; 7 p.m., Union. Tickets on sale at Union Ticket Central. Hillel-Dean Ginsburg of the Touro Law School, New York City, will in- terview prospective students, 7-9 p.m., 1429 Hill. Call 663-3336 for an appoin- tment. LSA-SG-Election pollworkers meet at 5 p.m., Michigan Student (EC-2-- 106'4) Also available: My Song (ECM-1-1115), Solo Concerts (Bremen/Lausanne) (ECM-3-1035), Eyes Of The Heart (ECM-T-1150), Arbour Zena (ECM-1-1070), Facing You (ECM-1-1017), The Survivors' Suite (ECM-1-1085), Sun Bear Concerts (ECM-X-1100). (ECM-1-1155) Also available: New Chautauqua (ECM-1-1131), Pat Metheny Group (ECM-1-1114), Watercolors (ECM-1-1097), Bright Size Life (ECM-1-1073). :7.54: Gary Burton "Burton and Corea have made another extraordinary album of piano/vibraharp duets. For some reason, this pair has a special chemistry..." -San Francisco Chronicle Ralph Towner "... His solos are full of a choked intensity that's his and his alone." -Melody Maker $5.99 $5.99 Also available: Crystal Silence (ECM-1-1024), Times Souare (ECM-1-1111), Matchbook (ECM-1-1056), Dreams So Real (ECM-1-1072), Passengers (ECM-1-1092). (ECM-1-1153) Also available: Batik (ECM-1-1121), Solstice (ECM-1-1060), Diary (ECM-1-1032), Trios/Solos (ECM-1-1025), Sargasso Sea (ECM-1-1080). The complete ECM catalogue is now available, featuring: 0 Egberto Gismonti Solo (ECM-1-1136) Richard Beirach Elm (ECM-1-1142) John Surman Upon Reflection (ECM-1-1148) Paul Motiap Le Voyage (ECM-1-1138) Cherry/Redman/Haden/Blackwell Old And New Dreams (ECM-1-1154) George Adams Sound Suggestions (ECM-1-1142) Mick Goodrick In Pas(s)ing (ECM-1-1139) John Abercrombie Quartet Arcade (ECM-1-1133) Jan Garbarek Photo With... (ECM-1-1135) Steve Reich Music for 18 Musicians (ECM-1-1129) Jack DeJohnette New Directions (ECM-1-1128) Terje Rypdal Miroslav Vitous/Jack Dejohnette (ECM-1-1125) Double Image Dawn (ECM-1-1146) Art Ensemble of Chicago Nice Guys (ECM-1-1126) Chick Corea Return to Forever (ECM-1-1022) On ECM Records and Tapes. Manufactured and distributed by Warner Bros. Records Inc. 1 Listen to WCBN-FM 88.3 for details on how you can win a 10 record set of ECM classics