The Jewish Herald-Voice (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 23, 1971 Page: 2 of 14
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BETH YESHURUN HOLDS
COLLEGE HOMECOMING
SERVICES DEC. 24-25
Nine university students will
participate in Beth Yeshurun’s
college homecoming Sabbath
services this weekend, Dec.
24-25. The vacation holiday will
be climaxed by a brunch on
Sunday, Jan. 2, at the home of
Rabbi and Mrs. Jack Segal to
which all college students are
invited.
Speakers this Friday evening
will be Steve Cotlar, son of Dr.
and Mrs. Nathan Cotlar, who
will discuss “Medical Ethics”,
and Steve Caplan, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Irwin Caplan, who speaks
about ‘Judaism on the
Campus.” Cotlar attends LSU’s
Medical School and Caplan the
University of Texas.
Also participating in the
Sabbath evening services will be
Stan Ehrenkranz, Arizona State
University, Lisa Aron and
Valarie Kotin, University of
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Texas, Randy Lewis, Tulane,
and Bill Streusand, Washington
University.
Saturday morning at 10:15
a.m., Martha Katz, UT, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Katz,
considers “Youth and the
Community”, followed by
Tulane’s David Joachim, son of
Dr. and Mrs. Harold Joachim,
who will analyze “Judaism’s
Imprint on my Life.”
At Rabbi Segal’s brunch a
former drug addict will speak to
the students on the subject
“There is Only One Way to
‘Kick the HABIT’.” Those
students wishing to attend the
brunch should come to the Segal
home, 4039 Falkirk, at 11 a.m.
Pictured are Rabbi William S.
Malev and Rabbi Segal talking
over plans for the homecoming
services with David Joachim,
guest speaker Saturday morning.
5 GERMANS HONORED FOR
SAVING JEWISH LIVES
BONN, Dec. 16 (JTA) - Five
Germans who saved Jewish lives
during the Nazi regime at great
risk to themselves, were awarded
medals and citations here last
night by the Yad Vashem, the
Israeli memorial foundation for
Nazi victims. The presentations
were made by Israeli
Ambassador Eliashiv Ben-Horin.
He noted that eight other
Germans — six women and two
men — were to receive medals
but were too ill to attend the
ceremonies. He said special
ceremonies would be held for
them at a later date.
EBAN, JARRING MEET TO
DISCUSS PEACE MISSION
UNITED NATIONS, Dec. 16
(JTA) — The United Nations’
Middle East emissary, Dr.
Gunnar V. Jarring, called on
Israeli Foreign Minister Abba
Eban this morning “to discuss
the resumption of his (Dr.
Jarring’s) mission under Security
Council Resolution 242,”
according to an Israeli
statement. The meeting, which
lasted an hour at the Plaza
Hotel, was scheduled at the
Swedish envoy’s request.
Yesterday he met for an hour
with Egyptian Foreign Minister
Mahmoud Riad.
As all three men are due to
leave New York by week’s end,
it appeared that the two sides
had not sufficiently resolved
their incompatible stands on
territorial withdrawal to warrant
reactivation of the Jarring
Mission. It seemed, therefore,
that the next developments
would be a renewed attempt by
the United States to effect an
interim agreement.
Eban, who was accompanied
this morning by Ambassador
Yosef Tekoah, contended,
according to an Israeli statement
issued after the meeting, “as he
had already made clear in the
General Assembly,” that Israel
was ready for a resumption of
the Jarring mission on the basis
of Resolution 242.
Citing the report of the
recent African peace mission,
which found a willingness for
peace by both sides, Eban stated
to Dr. Jarring that there was" a
sufficient basis for detailed and
concrete negotiations on all
points at issue between Israel
and Egypt.” Riad, however,
reiterated the Egyptian view
yesterday that negotiations
cannot begin until Israel agrees
beforehand to withdraw.
Observers here viewed the
meetings as more in the way of
sounding out the concerned
parties in the aftermath of
Monday’s vote in the General
Assembly than a formal
p e a c e - seek ing mission
resumption.
It appeared to some that
Israel and Egy pt were willing to
give the US at least one more
chance to mediate an interim
agreement. Washington’s desire
to concentrate on this specific
issue was given Monday by
Ambassador Christopher H.
Phillips when he stated, during
his explanation of why the US
abstained from voting, that the
US policy had not changed in
any way.
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Security Council
Continued from Page 1
Assembly vote that the draft
resolution under consideration
was a deliberate attempt to put
the onus for the deadlock
squarely on Israel’s shoulders
instead of emphasizing the need
for mutual extrication. By
warning Israel to withdraw or
else, which she could not do
without forsaking her
long-asserted policy against
“preconditions.” Eban said, the
Assembly was giving the Arabs —
especially Egy pt — the green
light to launch a military attack
as the only means of recapturing
their territories. The Arabs
would probably quote, as
authorization for such a move,
Article 51 of the United Nations
Charter, granting member states
“the inherent right” to
‘‘individual or collective
self-defense if an armed attack
occurs” against one or more of
them and the Security Council
has not yet acted.
The Assembly resolution,
cosponsored by 22 African and
Asian nations and incorporating
amendments of six Europeans
nations, emphasized Israel’s
responsibility for the Mideast
deadlock and called for a
settlement based on the Feb. 8
aide-memoire to Israel and
Egypt from Dr. Jarring. It also
recommended reactivation of
the Jarring mission under the
terms of his memo.
The six states joining Israel in
lonely opposition were Costa
Rica, the Dominican Republic,
El Salvador, Haiti, Nicaragua and
Uruguay — all Latin American
Nations. The abstentions
included Algeria, Brazil, Canada,
China (which complained that
the draft insufficiently
condemned Israeli “aggression”
and made no mention of
Palestinian “liberation”),
Denmark, Libya, Morocco,
Senegal, Sweden, the US and
Zaire (formerly Congo-
Kinshasa). The absentees
included Albania, Iraq and
South Africa.
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White, D. H. The Jewish Herald-Voice (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 23, 1971, newspaper, December 23, 1971; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1680715/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .