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July 06, 1973 - Image 29

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1973-07-06

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Sapir

Costly to Israel

JERUSALEM ( J T A ) —
Finance Minister Pinhas Sa-
pir told the Knesset Finance
Committee that recent price
increases in the United
States would cost the Israel
government $250,000,000 more
this year than last in pur-
chase of such basic food-
stuff as wheat and animal
fodder. He made the state-
ment in a report on his visit
to the United States last
month.
He also said he had learn-
ed that nowhere in the U.S.
or Europe did the concept
of retroactive wage agree-
ments exist. (A m e r i c an
sources pointed out that it

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was a common practice in
labor agreements in the U.S.
to apply provisions of new
agreements, approved after
expiration of prior pacts, ret-
roactively to the date of the
expiration of the prior con-
tracts.)
Sapir said it was "quite
common" for wage agree-
ments in Israel to be signed
12 to 18 months after they
were supposed to become ef-
fective, forcing employers to
pay "massive" retroactive
wage bills. He said he would
propose to the Cabinet soon
legislation to end that prac-
tice in Israel.
Sapir used the term "ji-
had"—Arabic for a holy war
—to describe criticism voiced
by the Bank of Israel and
the Israeli press against the
government's 90-day price
freeze.
Speaking at a ministerial
economic committee meet-
ing, he said the criticisms
surpassed "even" that of
the political opposition. He
indicated particular annoy-
ance over the fact that the
criticisms were voiced , while
he was out of Israel on a
visit to the U.S.

Foreign transactions con-
tinued as usual because the
effect of the revaluation of
the U.S. dollar, to which the
Israeli pound is linked, is
imposssible to predict.
Many former German citi-
zens who live in Israel and
receive monthly reparations
from Germany will now re-
ceive more Israeli pounds
for their Deutschmarks. Since
travel fares in Germany have
become cheaper, more Ger-
man tourists are expected
this summer in Israel.

17,000 ,Olim Due
From Western Lands

.1c\N tiON
.
%
`1' es s'4 4 04- c‘'

Photontr a P

He denied Bank of Israel
reports that the government
had poured into the economy
some three-quarters of a bil-
lion pounds in recent months.
He conceded that the gov-
ernment did "take a loan"
from the Bank of Israel of
that size but declared that
most of the money was spent
in foreign currency trans-
actions and not in the local
market.
Israel has reacted "calm-
ly" to the Deutschmark's re-
valuation and Bank of Is-
rael experts described its ef-
fect on the local economy as
"marginal."

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
World Zionist Organization
Chairman Louis Pincus said
here that 17,000 immigrants
gary.
7YRefer
from the West were expect-
Plume 398-6894
ed in Israel this year rough-
ly the same as last year.
Pincus was addressing the
budgetary committee of the
llllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll WZO.

Pincus noted that immigra-
tion from Aregentina and
Uruguay was expected to
KOSHER MEATS & POULTRY, INC.
rise by 50 per cent during
this year 'but did not release
Originators of the Harvard Roast
the actual figure.
He said the study had
We have everything
shown that the immigration
of families from the U.S. had
for your
not dropped substantially;
the real decline concerned
single people.
Fresh & Frozen
WZO Treasurer Leon Dul-
Member Detroit
zin reported the Jewish
LE_
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'I'iotli Announced

RETIRIT,4E)/t/Aft NEXO,
Rogoff Elected
Friday, Lily 6, f413-29
Head of Jewish
History Society Susan Strickstein

Dr. Abraham S. Rogoff was
elected president of the Jew-
ish Historical Society of
Michigan at its 14th annual
meting. Other officers elect-
ed for 1974 are:
Dr. Henry Green, vice-
president; Walter L. Field,
treasurer; and Mrs. S. Rob-
ert Easton, Mrs. Irving I.
Edgar and Mrs. Bernard
Panush, secretaries.

MISS SUSAN GOLDSTICK

Dr. and Mrs. Mark Gold-
stick of Alta Vista Ave., South-
field, announce the engage-
ment of their daughter Susan
Lynn to Kenneth Kron, son
of Mrs. Joseph Kron of High-
moor Ave., Bloomfield Hills,
and the late Mr. Joseph Kron.
Miss Goldstick and her
fiance attend the University
of Michigan.
A spring wedding is plan-
ned.

The board of directors In-
cludes: Walter L. Field, Dr. Leon
FL- am, Morris Friedman, Mrs.
Morris Friedman, Dr. Henry
Green, Neil Grossman, Irwin T.
Holtzman, Rabbi David Jesse!,
Irving I. Katz, Dr. Shmarya Klein-
man, Benjamin W. Laikin, Louis
LaMed, Reuben Levine, Prof.
Marenoff, Mrs. Sadie Pad-
over, Mrs. Bernard Panush, Ber-
nard Panush, Jay Rosenshine,
Abraham Satovsky, Irwin, Shaw,
Leonard N. Simons, Mrs. Davera
Stocker, Dr. Israel Wiener and
Mrs. Harry Weinstock.

Local Couple
Dedicates JNF
Grove in Israel

Kosher Meals
for Inmates
Is Proposed

NEW YORK (JTA)—Le-
gislation is expected to be
introduced into Congress this
session which will enable
Jewish inmates in federal
prison to have at least one
hot kosher meal daily on re-
quest, the National Jewish
Commission on Law and
Public Affairs (COLPA), re-
ported.
Tentative legislation for
that purpose, drafted to pro-
vide one special meal daily
to meet the religious dietary
requirements of inmates of
all faiths, was prepared by
Nathan Lewin of Washing-
ton, a COLPA vice president,
in consultation with Rabbi
Henry Siegman, executive
vice president of the Syno-
gogue Council of America,
and Rabbi Herzel Kranz of
Silver Spring, Md.
Lewin said the proposed
legislation was developed to
meet the needs of "the grow-
ing number of Jews who un-
fortunately find themselves
in federal prisons and are un-
able to obtain kosher food
and are therefore required
to subsist largely on fruits
and vegetables."
A COLPA source said it
was estimated that the law
would benefit some 200 in-
mates of federal prisons but
that these included Moslems
as well as Jews. The source
said no figures were avail-
able on the number of Jew-
ish inmates.
The source also said that
Jewish federations had regu-
larly offered to provide such
kosher meals, covering the
cost but that, at present such
contributions are banned.
That ban would be lifted
by the proposed law and the
federal government would
cover the extra costs of
kosher meals.
These would be provided
through appropriate Jewish
agencies, presumably in the
form of pre-packaged frozen
meals, now widely available
to patients in hospitals and
to observant Jewish travelers
on ships and planes.

Don't believe all you hear
when money does the talking.

to Tired Arr. Gene

MISS SUSAN STRICKSTEIN

Mr. and Mrs- Irving Strick-
stein of Burton Ave., Oak
Park, announce the engage-
ment of their daughter Susan
Joyce to Martin Gene, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gene
of Willowick Dr., Southfield.
Miss Strickstein and her
fiance attend Wayne State
University.
A July 1974 wedding is
planned.

ZEV FURST has been ap-
pointed director of the Mid-
dle Eastern affairs depart-
ment of the Anti-Defamation
League of Bnai Brith, it was
announced today by Benja-
min R. Epstein, national
ADL director.

Aiding in the continuing
efforts of the Jewish Na-
tional Fund, the Philip
Langwalds of Southfield re-
cently dedicated a grove in
Modin in the name of Philip
and Gladys Langwald, their
children Shelby and Annette
and three grandchildren.
Langwald, a life member of
Zionist organizations and
former secretary of Detroit's
board of' health, has served
under six Detroit mayors.
He and Mrs. Langwald, in
Israel for the dedication
ceremonies, were accom-
tpraonitieerds.by a number of De-

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