24 DoiornbUr S, 1975 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Marcus Otterbourg was the first Jew to be appointed American Ambassador to any foreign country. He was appointed Minister to Mex- ico by President Lincoln in 1867. —World Over CARS TO BE DRIVEN To any state. Also drivers furnished- to drive your car anywhere. legally insured and I.C.C. licensed DRIVEAWAY SERVICE 9970 Grand River Detroit, Mich. 48204 WE 1-0620-21.-22 Margolis Household Furniture .Furniture & Bedding Wishes All Their Friends & Customers A HAPPY HANUKA 342-5351 13703 W. McNichols Mon-Fri 9:30 to 5:30--- ARNOLD MARGOLIS_ HAPPY HANUKA FROM BORENSTEIN'S YOUR HANUKA STORE AND A WHOLE LOT MORE!! Gifts For The Whole Family' • • • • • • • • • Books & Bookends Records (Hebrew Yiddish) Cassete Tapes-8 TraCks Israeli Wall Decor Figurines Candle Sticks Kiddish Cups DeCorative Bibles and-Stands Kosher Israeli Wines and Champagne N. N. N. 'N. N. N. N. N. N. N. N. N. N. N. N. . NAME JEWELRY Pendants & Rings in Hebrew or English Sterling—Gold over Sterling-14K Gold Chais & Stars • Mezuzahs • Rings • Israeli Jewelry Complete line of 14K gold & sterling silver jewelry. c•Cur4 b,- We Carry Israeli Newspapers BORENSTEIN'S Your Jewish Book Store OAK PARK — 25242 GREENFIELD 398-9095 OPEN THURS. EVES. North of 10 Mile, in Greenfield Center AMPLE FREE PARKING OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY & SAT. EVE. 7 p.m.-9 p. m. Boris Srnolar's 'Between You ... and Me' Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, JTA (Copyright 1975, JTA, Inc.) JDC IN ACTION: Jack D. Weiler, chairman of the Joint Distribution Committee, is a man of action and achievement. Several hundred Jewish community leaders from all parts of the country attending the JDC annual meeting in New York this week will learn of a number of his innovations in the 61-year-old Jewish relief organization. Immediately after his becoming the top leader of the JDC — at the first meeting of the JDC's 40-man executive com- mittee — he announced that the executive committee, and not he as chairman, will be the maker of decisions in the organization. _ - He appointed a team of experts in Jewish communal work to make an independent study, in depth, of the gover- nance of the JDC, its philosophy, its operations, its needs and its priorities. Weiler also finalized the JDC agreement for the estab- lishment of the Brookdale Institute of Gerontology and Ad- ult Human Development in .Israel. STRENGTHENING LINKS: JDC in Israel is moving its quarters from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Weiler favors the internationalization of JDC by having executive committee members from Canada, England, South Africa and other countries which contribute funds to JDC for its worldwide relief and rehabilitation operations. He also plans to build the JDC governing bodies of a geographically-balanced ba- sis with more members from cities outside of New York. He intends to visit all the countries where the JDC op- erates and gain personal impressions of the Jewish needs in each \country. This year he visited Romania, and Latin American countries — and, of course, Israel. CHANGING THE GUARD: The JDC annual meeting this week will witness the retirement of Samuel L. Haber — one of the ablest executives, more than 30 years in JDC service. He will retire from his post of executive-vice-chair- man with the title hortorary executive vice-chairman and with functions to perform. Haber will devote himself "to put JDC on the map." He will travel widely for JDC and UJA. I met Sam Haber for the first time in Munich after the liberation of Germany, when he was in charge of aiding the Jews liberated from the Nazi camps. Haber later performed a huge task for "Jews in Mor- occo. His record was also very high with Polish Jews repa- triated from the Soviet Union after the war. Serving later in the JDC overseas headquarters in Ge- neva, Haber played a leading role in supervising JDC's worldwide operations in various countries. In 1960 and again in 1962, during visits to India, he set up aid programs. He will now be succeeded by Ralph Goldman, who has been with the JDC since 1969 as associate director-general in Israel. Rosenberg Filet Release Due; Search Fee Waived for Sons WASHINGTON — The "public interest and historic sons of convicted spies, significance" of the espion- Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, age case. The CIA disclosed will soon have an easier that it waived its $14,155.30 time in their quest to vindi- fee on 953 pages of Rosen- cate their parents since the berg documents. Jugtice Department and the The Rosenbergs' two sons, . CIA waived' nearly $35,000 in search fees for release of Robert and Michael, won a federal court order releas- their files. ing the files under the Free- The Justice Department dom of Information Act. said it was waiving $20,458 But they had been unable to in search fees because of the pay the large fees for searching through the files and copying them. • SO IT ISN'T YOUR CHRISTMAS. BUY SOME NEW EUROPEAN CLOTHES ANYWAY. O feasatike 101111% . 1 \ 1111 8 European and Canadian mens clothing stores right here in America. Oixsu every night until ):(X)/Slinday 1245:00 Warren, Utica, Pleasant Ridge, Eastland, • Parkway Plaza and Northland. Both the FBI and the CIA said the Rosenberg sons or anyonb else seek- ing copies of the docu- ments would have to pay a 10-cents-a-page copying charge. But Deputy Attor- ney General Harold R. Tyler Jr. said he ordered the search fee waived after receiving several requests. The Rosenbergs were electrocuted in 1953 after being convicted of passing atomic secrets. to the Rus- sians. Their sons, who use the name Meeropol after their adoptive parents, had threatened court action to get the charge removed. `Arab Population to Hit 200 Million' PARIS (ZINS) — By the year 2000 there' wild be a minimum of 200 million Arabs in the Middle East, according to ar article by Boris Garnia in the weekly L'Express. Despite the .fabulous wealth generated by peti-o dollars, the outlook for these millions of Arabs -25 years hence is not favorable. According to the author, they will continue to be im- proverislied and in a con- stant state of war. The author bases his predictions on the fact that most Arab countries have too much desert and too lit- tle arable land. Moreover, there is little effort to ex- pand the areas which can be cultivated, and too much reliance on the wealth con- tained in the oil reserves which will be exhausted 25 years hence: The author, who is not Jewish, argues that neither wars nor liquidations will 'solve the problem of the Arabs unless they begin soon to develop their own countries on a peaceful basis. Otherwise, they face a frightful future. European Style DOWN COMFORTERS Made To Order Also Custom Made DOWN & FEATHER Bed Pillows CUSTOM MADE WOOL & DACRON COMFORTERS SPECIAL GROUP OF PATCH QUILT TOPS AT REDUCED PRICES TRAURIG1 Quilt & Pillow Shop • FACTORY SHOWROOM Teach erring man to spurn the rage of gain. —Oliver Goldsmith 15144 W. 7 Mile 342-9448 Est. 1919 Shown 'by Appt. 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