THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, Dec. 20, 1974-5 UJA Names Lautenberg, Zuckerman History is like sacred mu- Conceit is just as natural a thing to human minds as a sic, because truth is essen- tial to it.—Cervantes center is to a circle. FOR 1 t7DINGS, BAR MITZVAS! Groups of GOWNS ! Daily—Hospital—Sympathy FRUIT BASKETS o OFF $69 AFTER-5 GOWNS . . . $39 Rodnick Bros. We Have All Sizes-6 to • 44 1 BIk N 8 Mile warren $139 DESIGNER GOWNS . $69 SHANDELS 154 SOUTH WOODWARD NR. MAKE BIRMINGHAM, MICH. MI 2-4150 21032 Grosbeck M-97 PR 2-4350 Worlci W , de Delivery (Continued from Page 1) He set the pattern for the goals of the UJA are synony- mous with the goals of the coming year by saying, "The' Jewish people: to eliminate need, to provide for life and life-building, and to generate hope—in 'Israel and for Jews in distress wherever they may be. There is no cause which can be more noble and no work more satisfying. To AT THE CORNER OF NINE MILE AND VAN DYKE, THERE'S THIS HANDSOME TTLE SPOT CALLED EUROPE. ' Aids. ke& Clothiers for Men ( cJ ust one of our 8 European and Canadian men's clothing stores right here in-America. Open every night until 9:(X)/Sunday 12-5:00 Van I hike Clothiers for Men in Warren and LI ica. Next I k,or Sh ■ Ts in ‘Varren. l:t Ica. Pleasant 12idge. I iinningham. Mt. Clemens. and Eastland. this I pledge all my efforts and my energy." Lautenberg is a member of the international board of governors of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, and is current president of the American Friends of the He- brew University. He is a founder of the Lautenberg Center for Gen- erEl and Tumor Immunology at the Medical School of He- brew University. He serves as a member of the board of governors of the American Jewish Committee. - Outgoing ,UJA G e n er a I Chairman Paul Zuckerman of Detroit was elected UJA president. Max M. Fisher, chairman of the nominating committee, called Zuckerman "a great philanthropist and one of this generation's out- standing leaders — a man truly dedicated to the wel- fare of the people of Israel •and the quality of Jewish life throughout the world." Zuckerman was also re- cently named chairman of the international fundraising committee of the Jewish agency. "I had the privilege of serving the Jewish people as general chairman of the UJA during some of the most dra- matic years of our history," Zuckerman said in accepting his new post. "In the joy created by the release of Jews from the Soviet Union as well as in the sorrow and anger arising from the Yom Kippur War, a new unity was forged between the people of Israel and the Jews of the free world." Hebrew U. Hosting Japanese Professor JERUSALEM—A Japanese scientist_ teaching at the He- brew University's school of applied science and technol- ogy this year is the first visi- tor` in the new scientific ex- change program between Ja- pan. and Israel. He is Prof. I. Sunagawa of the Institute of Minerology and Petrology and Economic Geology of Tohoku- Univers- ity, Sendai, Japan, a special- ist in morphology of crystal growth. The argument, signed a few weeks before the Yom Kippur War, calls for an exchange of two senior professors from each side annually. If you live long enough, you will live to see everything. INFLATION BUSTER ON ALL GM CARS . I Delco p S hoes 7 9 95 Inspect wheel cyl. and brake lines, reface front rotars and rear drums. Excluding Compact Cars DRUM BRAKES $ 6 9 9 LUBE I and . I OIL I I , TUNE , I UP labor SPECIAL $ 1 TO FILTER 1 SHOCKS I 110111111 11•1 1=11111 111111 11111 1=1 ■ 1111111 111111 Replace points and condenser Replace PC valve - Replace with 42) plugs Clean and adjust choke Service emission controls . Set timing & inspect belts 95 plus tax $85°h plus REMEMBER—SERVICE 4 NIGHTS _ MONDAY THRU THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M. WHERE PEOPLE STILL COME FIRST , VIENNA. (JTA)—The Or- ganizations of Petroleum Ex- porting Countries (OPEC) might shift its headquarters from here to another Euro- pean city, Austrian political sources said. A two-day meeting of the OPEC's oil ministers had to be interrupted twice when anonymous phone callers threatened to blow up the building in downtown Vienna, police reported. - The ministers transferred their meeting to the Imperial Hotel when police closed the building housing the OPEC headquarters to search for suspected bombs. Students Say Soviets Keep Jewish Policy GLASSMAN OLDSMOBILE INC 28000 TELEGRAPH RD. • SOUTHFIELD • PHONE 354 3300 - SAY I ioniummolimmmosawa fen (Continued from Page 1) the Soviet Union that in fact there was "a tendency toward a decrease in the number of persons wishing to leave the USSR and seek permanent residence in other countries." The letter referred to "ar- tificially created complica- tions" around U.SvSoviet trade agreements and observ- ed that "there is only one basis on which Soviet-Amer- jean relations in general and commercial and economic relations in particular can be built successfully ... this is full equality of the sides and non-interference in each others internal affairs." Secretary Kissinger, in his final appearance before the Senate Finance Committee. earlier this month prior to its approval of the trade reform bill, stated that the under- standing with the Soviet Union on the emigration is- sue had to be taken on "faith." He told &the sena- tors that if he were to say specifically that an agree- ment had been reached, the Soviets would repudiate it. He made no mention of the Gromyko letter written near- ly two months earlier. Sen. Jackson said•Wednes- day that he considered the Tass statement a "face-sav- ing" device, and asked the Ford Administration for its interpretation. Oil Ministers . May Move Headquarters FOR DECEMBER and JANUARY ONLY imumusism......m..•Must Present Copy of This Ad at Time of Purchase - . DISC BRAKE RELINE SPECIAL I SPECIAL Reline All 4 Wheels with I Gromyko Nixes Quota Letter NEW YORK (JTA) — Glenn Richter, national co- ordinator of the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry, and Morey Schapira, coordi- nator for the New England SSSJ, reported that "there is not one iota of. change in the anti-Jewish policies of the USSR since the announced Jackson Amendment 'agree- ment'." The two just returned from a week of intensive discus- sions with activist leaders in Moscow and Leningrad. 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