J—April 6, 1973—The Jewish News HOME OF LOW DISCOUNT PRICES FARME R JACKS Fire Seder is OR the evenin9 of April lofh. Choose Tr° m %resits, Mariischetoitz Goodman Mother's, Caramel and S peciat imports -crom Israel . Once, 89dtn the festive -Firm kiill soor be here Better wake a elleckl ist nut). At Farm ev Jacks Passover Food Department you' I I find eq"th from chicken soup, to macaroons, u.sitll matzoh, borsckt, honey, calce.rnixes, chocolate avid more_ between. Rll pre,p6tec1 undetr *Id Ra6bi n- suFervi 0 cou rse. i - There's A farmer Jack's Near You,: - • ,0540 Lasher 4 8 Mlle, Detroit •2290 West Maple at C061icl9e Tray •20 400 VV. 7 MI I e. Detroit 62.60U Cool idle at I Viz Mi le,Hunt iogron Woods 487.57 10 MI Teak Sout4ieta, Soutlifie 61, •7.1800 W. I 1 Mi le et- Lasher, Sou11erUe ld 021 ib0 Greenfield Oak Park •3o 600 510(Y%- *(elcl at t 3 mi lc, So u1lhfie ld •6565 Ortharci 1..ake at M3ple, Bloo tl - Next Ambassador Would Forge Links With U.S. Jewish Leaders degree magna cum laude, he was working as assistant to JERUSALEM (JTA) — the head of information at Israel Ambassador-designate the embassy. He returned to to the U.S. Simha Dinitz told Washington in 1968-9 as JTA this week that one of minister in charge of infor- his major aims in his new mation. job will be to maintain close One theme that ran through ties with the American the interview was the ne- Jewish community and its cessity of holding continuing leaders. consultations with American Relaxing in the prime min- Jewish leaders on the moti- ister's :office after a round vations of Israeli policy "We of briefings and final consul- take the time to explain this tations before his departure to American colleges, to the for Washington . Thursday, Rotary, to the Elks and we Israel's fifth ambassador to also have to take time to the U.S. also stressed in explain the motivations of the interview that he would Israel's policy to the Jews. like to play a strong role in They must not be taken for promoting Jewish education. granted. Because they're The Israeli government close to Israel, more time could not move directly into should be taken so that they the field of Jewish educa- can comprehend what Israel tion, but an ambassador is doing," said Dinitz. A could do much In the fight great deal had been done by against ignorance not only of previous ambassadors but Israel but also .of Jewish- this was one area where ness," he said. Envisioning there was not limit to pos- the promotion of Jewish sible efforts, he said. values and Jewish education In taking up his new in the United Statees, he duties, Dinitz will be accom- said he hoped to sit down panied by his American-born with the Jewish education _wife Vivian, who comes from leaders in the U.S. for con- Cincinnati. Her parents, Saul sultations on ways to im- and Henrietta Kinsburg, left prove and to expand activi- Cincinnati 10 years ago to settle in Israel. ties in this field. 'Mrs. Dinitz's sister and Dinitz noted the unique role of representing Israel in brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Washington, saying that Joseph Marks, made aliya there were three areas of two years ago and now live "great interest" in which the in Beersheba. ambassador must involve himself. Relations with of- ficial Washington—the ad- ministration and legislative; —relations with the Ameri- can Jewish community; and relations with the media, youth, the universities, and other non-official opinion molders in the U.S. By DAVID LANDAU and ROBERT SLATER Until he was appointed ambassador to Washington, replacing Itzhak Rabin, Din- itz, 42, served as Prime Minister Golda Meir's spe- cial political adviser, in ad- dition to rtmning the prime minister's bureau. For the new ambassador, Washington is not a new place at all. He began his political career in 1952 as a parttime night watchman at Israel's Washington Em- bassy while he was studying at Georgetown University. He took up work in the embassy's archives shortly thereafter. By the time he had completed his masters Tarmon, Uval Author'Hebrew Verb Tables' Rand McNally & Co. has issued a new publication— "Hebrew Verb Tables" — to enable students of Hebrew to use the. language accurately without having to learn all the rules of Hebrew verbs. Designed for beginning and intermediate students of He- brew, the book by two Is- raelis, Asher Tarmon and Ezri Uval, is limited to com- mon conjugations in an at- tempt to avoid involving the student with complicated rules and with the minute variations for frequently used verbs. Tables in the book, fully voweled, provided the con- plete conjugation of 78 model verbs which can be used to quickly conjugate 820 verbs having the same pattern. With its facility to elimi- nate frustrations in learning Hebrew, the book has had its first printing sold out in Israel and is -in its second printing there. Tarmon was formerly di- rector of the Hebrew de- partment of the Jewish Com- munity Center in Detroit, and is now a consultant for the National Jewish Welfare Board. He is the translator of a number of Israeli plays. Uval, director of the He- brew department at the Jew- ish Community Center in Pittsburgh, was formerly an instructor at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.. Shalom! From our family to you and yours. Quest Up in Israel for Lost Relatives JERUSALEM (JTA)—The Jewish Agency's department of missing persons has re- ported a 40 per cent increase in the number of requests to find missing relatives during the past year. In 1972 5,000 requests were filed with the department compared to 3,450 in 1971 and 3,000 in 1970. The rise in the number of requests is attributed to the large number of Soviet Jews who immigrated to Is- rael last year. The majority of the re- quests come from people who have lost relatives in the Holocaust, the department said. Of the 5,000 requests in 1972, 1,754 were not met. In the last 'three years ' some 4,000;relatives have been lo- cated, Mans isc ewitz Wine ompany, New York, N. Y.