THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

S—Friday, Jan. 26, 1973

Family Tradition Nets Israel Child Center

RAMAT-GAN — The crea- Ann Weinberg Child Devel-
tion of the Dr. Harold and opment Institute at the Sheba
Medical Center in Ramat-
Gan continues a Weinberg
IF YOU TURN THE
family tradition of many gen-
orations.
..,
UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON'T
Construction of the diag-
FIND A FINER WINE THAN
nostic and treatment facility
for retarded and handicaped
children was financed partly
by the Joint Distribution
( 4 Committee and by local
Mile Wineries. Detroit, Mich. : sources, in addition to the
Weinberg gift.

A personal project
in Israel
can be established

NOW
by a

USSR Retains Emigration Education Tax
All Faiths Cite
He said Shumilin's state- sion that the facts of the
Late Dr.Heschel (Continued from Page 1) ment
was carefully examined situation do not correspond

NEW YORK (JTA) — A
capacity crowd of 1200 per-
sons, including many young
people, filled the Park Ave-
nue Synagogue here to hear
eulogies to the late Rabbi
Abraham Joshua Heschel de-
livered by Jewish and non-
Jewish professors, rabbis,
and Coretta Scott King who
spoke on behalf of the Martin
Luther King, Jr. Foundation.
The memorial meeting
marked the end of the 30-day
mourning period for Rabbi
Heschel who died Dec. 21 at
age 65.
Israeli Consul Michael Sha-
shar read a message from Is-
raeli President Zalman Sha-
zar who said the late rabbi
was a "guide and teacher to
many" and "serves as a
bridge between the past and
future."
Mrs. King, the wife of the
late Dr. King, called Rabbi
Heschel "one of the great
men of our times."

She mentioned that the
rabbi had marched at her
husband's side In Selma,
Ala. in 1965, a march which
eventually led to the Voting
Rights Act.

BEQUEST

to the

JEWISH
NATIONAL
FUND

For

,

ttttt oitanicate vont.-

detailed inform.

deati•Ily — direct or through your Attorney or with Mr.

k•plan, at The Jewifth National Fond. 221011 l.reenfield

Rd., Oak Park, Mich.

, 1112:17 — Phone 968-0820.

N

Sizes to Fit All the Men in Your Home
From 6 Slim

PANT & JEAN BONANZA :

I .

Levi

1/2

—

Mann

—

i v

Male

OFF

Vi%iiSurval
Snorkel

I Vales C t o $ 40! 0 s 0
Sage-Burgundy-Navy

Reduced

25%

SPECIAL GROUP

CORDS
I
Volpe. to $17.00
1"
, N ow '4.97

1

FUNKY GRUBB
TURTLE NECK

OR

Long Sleeve Knit Shirts

,r, 0

NOW! 25%-40utoF

Sizes
.10-20

F

SWEATERS -8t
SWEATER VEST

WINTER OUTERWEAR

%OFF

1/3-1/2 OFF

• Mighty Mac • Aspen
• Great Western

Sizes 8 to 20

7 Mile

KE 3

and Evergrees

310 — Detroit

Thurs. Fo td 9
Sotordoy til 7 30

MASTER CHARGE
BANKAMERICARD
PRINCETON CHARGE

_Ni. a

IpprIql
"AP

441101,

RINCETON

FoefevIs9
Men Eight
to Eighty

AVIS FORD 354-3000

1973 FORDS

The regulations just pub-
lished in Moscow indicate
that the school from which
an emigrant received a di-
ploma also has a bearing on
the size of the tax. The high-
est tax is demanded of grad-
uates of Moscow University,
the Soviet Union's most pres-
tigious institution of higher
learning.
Among specialized schools,
graduates of music conserva-
tories and other advanced
schools in the arts and let-
ters are required to pay a
higher tax than graduates of
teachers' colleges and law
schools.

in Moscow of the regulations
governing the education head
tax applied to Jewish and
other emigrants, will not de•
ter the sponsors of the Jack-
son Amendment.

"Where the Boys Are

—

DEAL

Rabbi Heschel was a mem-
ber of the board of trustees
of the Martin Luther King
Center for Social Change.
Mrs. King said Rabbi Heschel
"lived in the spirit of the Old
Testament prophets" and
"lives in the hearts and the
souls and the minds of those
he loved and those who loved
him."
William D. Davies, profes-
sor of Christian Origins at
Duke University in North
In Washington, Sen. Henry
Carolina, said Rabbi Heschel M. Jackson (D.Wash.) served
was "all the great things to notice
on the Soviet Union
the non-Jewish world as he
that the recent publication
was to the Jewish world."

PRINCETON
SHOP
',

Farah

The observers said that as in light of the known facts at all with the minister's
long as the law and its at- and •"We came to the conclu- statement."
tendant regulations remained
unpublished. Soviet authori-
WHY BUY A FORD FROM ANYONE
ties could have canceled it
ELSE BUT PHIL SCHOSTAK
without loss of face. Publica-
BEST DEAL—SERVICE & LOCATION
tion now seems to indicate
A NICE JEWISH BOY ..
that the Kremlin does not in-
tend to back down in face of
SEE OR CALL "PHIL" FOR YOUR
widespread criticism of the
"ransom tax" abroad.
% (OVER COST)
The lag in publishing the
OPEN MONDAY & THURSDAY TIE 9 P.M.
scale of payments until now
was seen as an indication
29200 TELEGRAPH ( AT 12 MILE)
that until recently Soviet au-
thorities were undecided as
to what that scale should be.
But late last month, Deputy
Interior Minister Boris
Shumilin announced through
400 BRAND NEW TO CHOOSE FROM
Novosti, the Soviet external
news agency, that the scale
would decrease proportion-
ately with the number of
years the holder of an aca-
demic degree has worked in
LTDS — GAL. 500's — TORINOS — PINTOS
his field. He also said that
T- BIRDS — MAVERICKS — MUSTANGS
pensioners and disabled vet-
erans would be exempted.
WAGONS — CONVERTIBLES — TRUCKS, ETC.

2:o dpO te r o t OdrcShord 1.2. R;sa.
851-3660 —West Bloomfield

Mon., Thurs., Fry. 9-9
Tues., Wed. Sot Si 6

Jackson declared that "So-
viet policy remains one of
great and capricious cruelty.
So long as emigration is pre-
vented by ransom taxes and
other measures, we will use
the votes we have to amend
the appropriate trade bill,"
he said.
The Jackson Amendment,
and an identical measure in-
troduced in the House by
Rep. Charles Vanik (D.Ohio)
were not acted on when Con-
gress adjourned last year.
The amendments are expect-
ed to be resubmitted early
in the current congressional
term.

It was understood that Sen.
Jackson and his associates
are waiting either for a for-
mal presentation of the new
U.S.-Soviet trade agreement
to the Senate for ratification
or for definite knowledge of
the agreement's provisions
before renewing action on

the amendment.

1973 LTD'S &
GAL. 500'S
2-DR. — 4-DR. HARDTOPS

& STATION WAGONS

I

250 TO CHOOSE FROM
WE ARE OVERSTOCKED

IN BIG FORDS

EVERY ONE WILL BE SOLD
REGARDLESS OF EQUIPMENT
FOR ONLY

1%

OVER ACTUAL COST

1973 TORINO'S-PINTO'S-MAVERICK'S

MUSTANG'S-CUSTOM'S-TRUCKS

3%
6%

OVER ACTUAL COST

1973 T-BIRDS

OVER ACTUAL COST

SAVES S

Michael Fidler, chairman
of the Board of Deputies of
British Jews, urged that full
publicity be given to the dis-
crepancies between the con-
dition of Soviet Jews and
Shumilin's recent statement
that most Jews who apply
for emigration visas get
them.

(OPEN MONDAYS & THURSDAYS
TILL 9 P.M.
OPEN SATURDAYS TILL 6 P.M.)

Fidler recently returned
from the Geneva meeting of
the "Brussels Praesidium,"
a group established to fol-
low through on the decisions
taken at the World Confer-
ence for Soviet Jewry fin
Brussels in winter 1971.

(OPEN THURS. NITE 'TIE 9:00 P.M.)

"AVIS WILL GLADLY HANDLE ALL FINANCING"

29200 TELEGRAPH

354-3000

AVIS FORD

