"I will give you and your
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, April 26, 1974-19 descendants after you the
land in which you are now
Classifieds Get Quick Results only an immigrant, the whole
of the land of Canaan, as a
possession for all time, and
I will be their God."
BINGO
—Gen. 17:8.
CONGREGATION B'NAI DAVID
U-NI President, Rep. Esch Ask Moscow Rector to Help Rubin Exit
The head of Moscow State
University has been asked by
a congressman from Ann
Arbor and the president of
the University of Michigan
to help Vitali A. Rubin, an
expert on Chinese studies, to
EVERY THURS. 7A5
24350 SOUTHFIELD RD.
Thomas Jefferson aided in emigrate to Israel.
SOUTHFIELD, MICH.
establishing the National Ga-
Rep. Marvin L. Esch, a
zette in 1791.
Republican, and U. of M.
President Robben W. Flem-
ing appealed on Rubin's be-
half to Rector Viktorovich
Mobile Service At
Khokhlov of Moscow State
University. The Michigan
Home or Office
men said Rubin should be
ECOLOGY TUNEUPS
SUPER TUNING
allowed to travel freely and
they added that specialists
in Chinese studies at U. of
M. would like Rubin to visit
the campus if he is allowed
to travel. Esch sent a copy
of the letter to Soviet Am-
ECOLOGY THRU ENGINE EFFICIENCY
bassador Anatoly Dobrynin,
along with a personal appeal
Robert T. Darr, Jr., (313) 477-4871
for issuance of an exit visa
to Rubin.
(FEINnEEPE ck z )
Members of the faculty at
the University of Michigan,
all specialists in the field of
Chinese studies, wrote Dobry-
nin Feb. 22 to ask that Rubin
be permitted to teach in the
United States.
In early March, more than
500 residents of the Ann
Arbor area, including faculty
and students at the Univer-
sity of Michigan, signed a
petition urging that Rubin
be allowed to emigrate. Other
members of Congress have
made public statements of
sympathy for Rubin or
worked through official chan-
nels to seek support for
Rubin's request for an exit
permit.
New efforts by the State
Department and Columbia
University to obtain an exit
permit for Rubin were dis-
closed last Friday.
At the suggestion of the
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State Department, the uni-
versity cabled Rubin in Mos-
cow, renewing its invitation
to him to teach classical
Chinese culture for a year,
said W. Theodore de Bary,
executive vice president and
provost of Columbia. "I know
there was an effort on their
(State Department's) part,"
he said.
Meanwhile, it was reported
by the National Conference
on Soviet Jewry that David
Azbel, Soviet Jewish scien-
tist who had joined Rubin in
a marathon hunger strike
several weeks ago, has re-
ceived permission to emi-
grate to Israel.
The National Conference
on Soviet Jewry also. reported
that Galina Panov has told
friends she is pregnant and
has expressed the hope that
Soviet authorities will allow
her and her husband, Valery,
to leave the Soviet Union for
Israel before she gives birth.
In Tel Aviv, Valery Kukui,
a 36-year-old Soviet Jewish
engineer declared "Today I
found a new motherland and
an almost new family" as
he arrived in Israel after
three years in Soviet prisons
on charges of Zionist activity.
Kukui was met at Ben-
Gurion Airport by his wife
and daughter, who have been
in Israel for almost two
years.
One of the aliya activists
in the town of Sverdlovsk,
Kukui was sentenced to three -
years imprisonment in 1971
and was kept with criminals
who made his life miserable
because of his Jewishness.
Kukui arrived with a large
group of Russian immigrants.
On Friday, Yankl Khantsis,
who was sentenced in 1971
to 18 months' general regime,
arrived in Israel.
In Silver Spring, Md., Cong.
Bnai Israel has named a
roadway at the Paul Himmel-
farb Jewish School as the
Hillel Butman Drive, in
honor of the Soviet prisoner
of conscience. The congrega-
tion "adopted" Butman and
his family more than two
years ago.
Diefenbaker Honored; Favors
Jerusalem Canadian Embassy
JERUSALEM (JTA) —
John G. Diefenbaker, former
Canadian premier, said here,
April 17, that he favors mov-
ing the Canadian embassy in
Israel from Tel Aviv to
Jerusalem.
The 76-year-old former
official who arrived for a 10-
day visit as the guest of the
Jewish National Fund, told
a press conference that he
had begun to press for such
a move since the Yom
Kippur War.
He also told reporters that
there is a real danger for a
confrontation between the
United States and the Soviet
Union and expressed concern
that such event would "con-
s t i t u t e an international
t h r ea t." Diefenbaker ob-
served that the Russians are
talking peace while they are
doing everything that may
cause a war. "The decision
to provide Syria with long-
range missiles is not con-
sistent with talk about peace
efforts," he said.
The former premier said
the would do his utmost to
convince the Canadian gov-
ernment to offer Israel a
convenient loan so that she
can purchase an atomic re-
actor in Canada. This re-
actor, he noted, may help
solve Israel's energy prob-
lems, and at the same, time
be used as a means to de-
salinate sea water."
The central event of his
visit is the dedication of the
Kissinger on Medal
JOHN G. DIEFENBAKER
Diefenbaker Parkway in the ,
Jerusalem corridor. The
parkway is part of the pro-
ject financed by Canadian
Jewry which will include
more than 1,000,000 trees,
camping and picnic sites and
forest roads. He said he was
deeply touched having a
parkway named after him.
He is being escorted in his
tour by 50 Canadian JNF
leaders and contributors,
most of them from Toronto.
WZO Has New Plan
for Youth Aliya
JERUSALEM (JTA)—The
World Zionist Organization
Executive decided on a new
plan, designed to encourage
the immigration of youth
groups and their integration
in agricultural settlements.
The plan called "The Jew-
ish Pioneer," was presented
by Morddchai Bar-on, head
of the youth and hehalutz de-
partment.
Participants in the project
will be required to serve for
a minimum period of two
years within a voluntary
frame work. The program
will be mainly based on the
pioneer youth movement, but
it is planned to be extended
to community organizations,
students organizations and
non-pioneering movements
NEW YORK—U. S. Secre-
tary of State Henry A. Kis-
singer is being honored on
a new art medallion to be
published by the Interna-
tional Numismatic Agency.
Joseph Di Lorenzo, medal-
list and member of the Na-
tional Sculpture Society, was
selected to design the medal_
lion, which portrays Kissin-
ger on the obverse and a
dove of peace encircling the
world on the reverse.
For information, write
the International Numismatic
Agency, 96 Prince St., New
York 10012.
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