THE DETROIT

16—Friday, Dec. 29, 1972

maw

NEWS

Army Service Nixed,

Reserve Soldier Jailed

TEL AVIV (JTA)—A left-
wing organization member,
Joseph Kottel, who is a vet-

eran in a paratroopers re-
serve unit, was sentenced to
35-days imprisonment for re-
fusing to report for serVice
in his unit.
Kottel reportedly is a mem-
ber of the SIAll, the Israeli
New Left, one of the small
radical left•wing groups
which favor a more liberal
position by the government
in regard to the Middle East
problem.
This was one of the very
rare cases of a reserve sol-
dier refusing to report for
active s e r v ice which ac-
cording to law, cannot ex-
ceed 30 days.

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DURHAM, N. C. (JTA)—A
major fund-raising effort has
been launched to provide fi-
nancial support for a new
c o m prehensive cooperative
program in Judaic studies at
Duke University and the Uni-
versity of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill.
Plans for the program
wire announced in a state•
ment issued jointly by Duke
President Terry Sanford and

Na Mel!
'It
Pre-Cam !wig,'
Chairmen

QUALITY • SERVICE • PRICE

NORTHLAND FORD

LEADS THE 'NAY

SO DOES

GEORGE RUSKIN

NORTHLAND FORD

Daniel M. Honigrean (left)
and Irving Seligman have
been appointed pre-campaign
chairmen for the 1973 Allied
Jew i s h Campaign • Israel
Emergency Fund by Samuel
Frankel and Paul M. Handle-
man, general chairmen. Pre-
campaign is the advance
large gift section of the fund-
raising drive. Honigman was
industrial and automotive di-
vision chairman of the cam-
paign for two years and a
pre-campaign chairman for
the 1972 AJC•IEF. He was
chairman of the mechanical
trades section in 1%9. Honig-
man was president of Feder-
ation's junior division in
1960. Seligman will -be lead-
ing this advance campaign
section for the second coo-
1 secutive year. He was chair-
man of the real estate and
• building trades division for
the 1971 AJC-IEF.

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LTNC-CH Chancellor N. Fere-
bee Taylor.

According to the announce-
ment, development of the
program wil he financed by
an endowment fund being es-
tablished through the efforts
of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Evans
of Durham who have commit-
ted themselves to raising in-
itially $500,000 through alum-
ni of the two universities and
other sources in North Caro-
lina and elsewhere on the
Southeast.
It is hoped, the statement
continued, that the fund even-
ftally will reach at least
51,000,000. The fund will
be administered by Duke.
"Efforts are already under
way to build this fund, and
the two institutions have cre.
ated a Joint Planning Coun-
cil for the Program in Judaic
Studies to guide the develop-
ment of the cooperative enter-
prise," the Sanford-Taylor
announcement said.

archeological dig in the Holy
Land and an intensive learn-
ing experience ,in the lam
guage, history and culture of
the country; and sponsoring
a "modest program" of pub-
lishing scholarly monographs
in Judaic studies.

The statement said that
when the fund reaches an ap-
propriate level, a professor.

ship in Judaic Studies will be

established within Duke's re-

ligion department.

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The program the univers-
ity chiefs said, is designed to
afford students and faculty at
the two institutions and resi-
dents of the area - significant
opportunities for study, re-
march and participation in
cultural activities."

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FELDBRO QUALITY MEATS

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income from the fund ini-
tially will support the devel-
opment of a broader and
more comprehensive acad-
emic program in Judaic
studies at the two univer-
sities.
The program contemplates
bringing in visiting profes-
sors, perhaps including dis-
tinguished scholars from Is-
rael, to spend a semester or
a full academic year offering
classes on both campuses and
participating in the work of
the Judaic studies program;
developing cooperative ex-
change programs with one
or more universities in Is-
rael; sponsoring and conduct-
ing special programs built
around participation in an

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$1 Million Fund-Raising Effort Launched

tr!

.

c at Kaye's -
It Pays In Scar

TEL AVIV — You never
know who you're going to
meet on the telephone.

Mrs. Seule Speer, super-
visor of the Tel Aviv over-
seas exchange, was called
over by an operator and told:
• "It's Beirut on the line."

There ensued what is be-
lieved to be the first civilian
telephone conversation in 25
years between Lebanon and
Israel. "If you knew whom
you were talking to," Mrs.
Speer said, "you'd probably
get the shock of your life."
The Lebanese operator re-
plied: "Not at all. It's a
pleasure."

The latter had been trying
to get a number in Rome,
she explained, and somehow
wound up with a line to Is-
rael.
Mrs. Speer said she and
the Lebanese operator spoke
for "quite a while" and "we
could have gone on talking
for half a day, but apperent-
ly she decided to hang up and
said it looked like there had
been a foulup on the line. I
guess she was a bit scared
then."
The two women spoke first
In French, then in Arabic.
"She wished me all 'he best
and good luck and called me
dear all the time and said,
'I hope' one day we'll see
you'," Mrs. Speer said.

' We of the United States are
constitutionally and conscien-
tiously democrats. — Thomas
Jefferson.

Fred Grossman

acrd

Dr. Sonenshein

ileN hill

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