16 Members of UJA Cabinet Tour Israel cabinet in a special two-week seminar in Israel, Paul Zuck- erman, UJA general chair- man, announced. Dr. Leon Jick, director of the Institute for Jewish Life, will lead the group in Israel. Dr. Yigael Yadin, renown- ed biblic al archeologist; Chaim Potok, author; Dr. Zeev Vilnay, Israel's noted scholar-guide; and Yitzchak Zuckerman, leader of the Group remedial reading Warsaw Ghetto uprising, classes by experienced will be among the lecturers, reading teacher. $5P0 per discussion leaders and guides hour. Classes are small allowing individual attention. for the group. Convenient earlier evening You are doing your best sessions. only when you are trying to Telephone: 557-0987 improve on what you're do- (after 5:00 PM.) ing. NEW YORK—On June 30, Bert Rabinowitz of Boston, UJA national campaign cabi- net chairman, will lead 16 members of the newly reor- ganized United Jewish Appeal Does your child need `reading help? vc NEW CADILLAC? BUY OR LEASE FROM ANDY BLAU in BIRMINGHAM at WILSON-CRISSMAN CADILLAC CALL BUS. MI 4-1930 RES. 642-6836 1350. N. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM SPRINKLER SYSTEMS • INSTALLED • SERVICED Installations with NO Sod Damage RA/A4Vimo, Professional Installers CALL US FOR A FREE INSTALLATION ESTIMATE 559-5595 ALLIANCE SPRINKLER CO. "THE SPRINKLER SPECIALISTS" WJCongress Puts Off Decision on Where to Hold 1975 Plenary LAUSANNE (JTA) — The governing council of the World Jewish Congress has decided to postpone its next plenary assembly until 1975 and to decide later this year where it will be held. The gathering, which had been set for the Netherlands last winter, was canceled for security reasons and a con- troversy over its new site developed with Zionists and their supporters insisting on Israel. Dr. Nahum Goldmann, president of the WJC, said he would "accept any decision by the governing council re- garding the venue and time of the assembly" and observ- ed that "too much has been made by some of the media about this issue." The decision to hold the plenary assembly some time in 1975, was made at a three- day meeting of the WJC's governing council here. The council's decision was to hold a meeting of an en- larged council in Jerusalem late this year which would appoint a small committee to decide the final date and location of the next plenary assembly. The committee would be free to make its own deci- sions, but the governing coun- cil has recommended that the plenary assembly be held in a North American city if at all possible. In a survey of the world Jewish situation and par- ticularly the Middle East, Dr. Goldmann asserted that chances for peace in the re- gion seemed gOod now but the danger remained that they would be lost through the_. fault of either or both sides. He said that world Jewry had the right to express opinions about Israel, bear- •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1706.1 JEANETTE • • • • SOUTHFIELD, MICH. Nowted - Noe' Sead•stela " The Sport Shirt Man" EN : Complete -Inventory p • i T t 30 _ SO% Off VC • Sport Shirts • • • Walking Suits • • • • • • • • • . • Slacks • Leather Jackets Nothing Held Back ALL SALES FINAL! PHONE: (313) 559-7898 SAT. HOURS: 17000 W. Ten Mile Road 10 A.M. MON.-FRI. Suite 115 to 4 P.M. 10 A.M. to 5 P•M. Southfield, Michigan 48075 S •••••••••••••••••••••••• ing in mind that the final de- cisions must rest with the Israelis and "we outside should give Israel all our support, however the deci- sions of the Israel govern- ment fall." Shimon Dery, representing the World Sephardi Union, spoke of worsening conditions of Syrian Jews and par- titularly of the closed trial of two Jewish youths falsely accused of the murder of four Jewish women: "No lawyer for the defendants was per- mitted, the press was ex- cluded from the courtroom and they were denied their very basic human rights," he said. At the suggestion of the WJC Israel executive, the council decided to create 22 Devaluation Rumors Persist TEL AVIV (ZINS) — The rumor mill predicts an im- minent devaluation of the Is- rael currency. It is widely believed that the new minister of finance, Yehoshua Rabinowitz, has al- ready decided in principle on the devaluation and that the official announcement is forthcoming. As a result of these rumors, the demand for dollars has risen and the black market rate has climbed to $1 = IL 5.20 (compared with the of- ficial rate of $1 = IL 4.20). Financial experts predict that the rate following deval- uation will be between IL 6 and IL 6.50 to the dollar. Meanwhile, Moshe Zanwar, governor of the Bank of Is- rael, warns that Israel's eco- nomic- situation is very dif- ficult with grave dangers ahead. The Hebrew daily Ha'aretz reports Zanwar was parti- cularly concerned that too great a dependence on Amer- ican aid and on investments from aboard is fraught with political risks. He said it is • • • U.S. Editors Rap • • Israel-PR Policy • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• high school scholarships in memory of the 22 victims of the Ma'alot massacre, to be offered to children in develop- ment towns. The council also decided to institute a special award in memory of Dr. Stephen Wise, to be made biennially to men and women of all faiths for humanitarian serv- ices to either the Jewish people or humanity as a whole. Dr. Arieh Tartakower sub- mitted his final report as director of the WJC cultural department. Dr. Nahum Gold- mann, WJC president, prais- ed Dr. Tartakower as .a founder of the WJC and said he would devote his time to writting a three-volume his- tory of the WJC. JERUSALEM (JTA) — A group of American journalists touring the Middle East sharply criticized Israel's in- formation. policy, which they compared unfavorably with that in the four Arab coun- tries they have just visited. The group of 91 includes six editors of Anglo-Jewish weeklies published in the They complained that the lack of organization made it difficult for them to get around the country, that they were unable to meet public figures and that no press of- ficer was assigned to show them around. They said that in contrast, they had received especially good treatment in Egypt, Lebanon, Syria and Jordan where they visited before coming to Israel. "Israel missed a golden opportunity to generate some good public relations," one of the news- men said. Golda Gets Checkup JERUSALE M JTA )—For- mer Premier Golda Meir was hospitalized for a day last week at Hadassah Hos- pital for what was described as a checkup at the hema- tology department. also short-sighted because economic crises may beset the free countries of the West on which Israel will be rely- ing. Zanwar insisted that the public face up to reality and accept a greater commitment to thrift. Soviets, Israel Closer to Talks The new director is Yitz- hak Harkavi, former Israeli ambassador to Uruguay and to Brazil and former head of the World Zionist Organiza- tion education and culture department. Dr. Goldmann also an- Dr. Maurice Perlzweig, 78, WJC representative at the United Nations. Dr. Perlz- weig will be a consultant on international affairs. A luncheon honored Marc Turkow, WJC representative in Latin America and secre- tary general of the Latin American Jewish Congress marking his '70th birthday. Delegates attending a meet- ing of the European execu- tive of the World Jewish Congress said in Montreux that the recent changes of government in West Ger- many, France and Portugal will not affect the condition of Jews in those countries. Representatives from 12 European Jewish communi- ties were joined by repre- sentatives of WIZO, the Eur- opean branch of the World Sephardi Federation and the World Union of Jewish Stu- dents. Dr. Goldmann told the gathering "We have not abandoned hope that Sovq.et Jews will be represented at future WJC gatherings." He said this may come about "when the Middle East sit- uation is a little more stabi- lized and it will be easier to make progress on the Soviet Jewish issue." Heinz Galinski, chairman of the Jewish community in West Berlin said, "There will be a continuation of the friendly relations between West Germany and Israel on the practical level without an emotional background." He reported, however, that German Jews were being subjected to a barrage of anti-Semitic propaganda ema- nating from the extreme right wing and the far left. TEL AVIV (ZINS)—A vis- iting Soviet delegation, here to participate in ceremonies commemorating the victory of the Allied forces over Hit- ler Germany, said that Mos- cow is ready to renew diplo- matic relations with Israel. Delegation head Anatoly Smirnoff asserted that the position of his government has been consistent ever since 1947, "when the Krem- lin recognized the historic right of the Jewish people, and also the historic rights of the Palestinian Arabs." Smirnoff said that "Israel must base its policies on realities. Diplomatic relations between our two countries will be renewed," he said, "when the obstacles which THE' DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, June 21 ) 1974-17 resulted in their rupture will have been removed." The indispensable condi- tion, he added, is contained in UN Resolution 242, which calls upon Israel to withdraw from all of the occupied Arab territories. Over 35 years of experience Phone Co. - Cuts and success There is a difference! Neo-Nazi Line HARTFORD (JTA) — A telephone service for a Bridgeport Nazi group offer- ing recorded anti-Semitic and anti-Black messages was ter- minated Monday according to an announcement by the New England Telephone •Co. The utility previously had taken the position that it could not terminate the ser- vice without being ordered to do so by the State Public Utilities Commission, which had received many com- plaints. In response to a complaint by Attorney General Robert Killian, the police depart- ment of Bridgeport, where the National Socialist White People's Party has its office, informed the utility that the department had determined that the Nazi Party was us- ing the telephone service- "in violation of the law" and that it be stopped. 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