THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 54 December 5, 1975 Genscher's Visit to Israel Boosts Economic Cooperation JERUSALEM (JTA) — West German Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher ended his visit to Israel with a declaration at Ben-Gurion Airport that he believed Israel has shown its "readiness to continue along a constructive road to peace." Germany's interest, he added, was "a lasting and strong peace in this area." Genscher's visit, as the guest of Israeli Foreign Minister Yigal Allon, was termed successful by Israeli officials, particularly in the field of future economic cooperation between Israel and West Germany. But dif- ferences, especially over Is- rael's future boundaries and the Palestine question over- shadowed the political as- pects of the visit. . Genscher was, in fact, taken to task for the recent "unofficial" contacts be- tween West German offi- cials and PLO representa- tives. The German leader took pains to stress that those contacts were not on any official level and that they were utilized to make it clear to the PLO that it could not hope for Bonn's support in a peacemaking Moynihan Airs Zionism Stand • role unless it changed the basic tenets of its present policy which refuses to recognize Israel's right to exist. In the economic sphere, the main problem was the serious imbalance in trade between Israel and West Germany. The latter coun- try sells $700 million worth of exports to Israel annually but imports only $135 mil- lion worth of goods from that country. The economic aides of both ministers held lengthy talks during which the Germans proposed that Israeli firms should be en- couraged to exhibit their wares in Germany; more trade missions from West Germany to Israel; and a mutual sharing of indus- trial know-how between the two countries. Profs Discuss M.E. Situation WASHINGTON "Current Tensions and Strategies for Peace in the Middle East" will be aired at a scholarly inquiry of the re- gional conference of The American Professors for Peace in the Middle East on Sunday at The American University. The conference's two ses- sions will highlight the reli- Editor's Note: The fol- gious background and cur- lowing is an excerpt from rent situation in Lebanon the address by U.S. Chief and the Sinai agreement. Delegate to the United The purpose of the profes- Nations, Daniel Patrick sors' organization is to ex- Moynihan, to the UN Gen- plore avenues directed to- eral Assembly, Nov. 10, in wards a "just and lasting repudiation of the anti- peace between Israel Zionist resolution. and its Arab neighbor." As a strictly political movement, Zionism was es- tablished only in 1897, al- Golda to Take Part though there is a clearly le- gitimate sense in which its NEW YORK —Former origins are indeed ancient. Prime Minister Golda Meir For example many will take part as a special branches of Christianity guest in an international have always held that from dinner of tribute to Sam the standpoint of the bibli- Rothberg, a leading founder cal prophets, Israel would and general chairman of the be reborn one day. But the worldwide Israel Bond Or- modern Zionist movement ganization, on the occasion arose in Europe in the con- of the celebration of its 25th text of a general upsurge of anniversary. national consciousness and The dinner, which will be aspiration that overtook held Dec. 21 in New York most other people of Central will honor Rothberg for "30 and Eastern Europe after years of service to the Jew- 1848, and that in time ish people and the state of spread to all of Africa and Israel." Asia. It was, to those persons of In times when the com- the Jewish religion, a Jew- munity is in distress, let no ish form of what today is called a national liberation man go to his home for rec- reation. movement. The Talmud Probably a majority of those persons who became active Zionists and sought to emigrate to Palestine were born within the confines of czarist Russia, and it was NEW YORK — The 50th only natural for Soviet For- eign Minister Andrei Gro- anniversary of the United myko to deplore, as he did in Israel Appeal, the major 1948, in the 299th meeting beneficiary of the nation- of the Security Council, the wide United Jewish Appeal act by Israel's neighbors of will be marked by a lunch- "sending their troops into eon Dec. 12 at the New York Palestine and carrying out Hilton. The event will honor the military operations aimed" — in Mr. Gromyko's words surviving members of the — "at the supression of the original leadership as well national liberation move- as the present officers. The keynote speaker will ment in Palestine." L.A. Jewish Center Begins Program for Young Mothers ment, yoga and folk dance. For the second hour, the A young Jewish mother participants join in intellec- who complained to a Jewish tual and cultural programs community center official which they help develop, that she suffered from "the including book reviews, peanut butter blues" child development discus- sparked a program in Los' sions, Jewish holiday work- Angeles which provides ba- shops, craft activities and b-y--sitters so that the moth- rap sessions on growth and ers can participate in cul- identity. Baby-sitters in the pro- tural and intellectual gram, who receive training, programs. The development of the are supervised by volunteers Young Mothers Morning from the center's women's Program at the Westside service league. Jewish Center of Los An- Dr. Sela Installed geles was described by Jane Post, the center's adult so- as Sixth President cial-education coordinator, in the current issue of at Weizmann Inst. "Program Aids," a quar- REHOVOT —.Prof. Mi- terly publication of the Na- chael Sela, a world-famous tional Jewish Welfare immunologist, was inaugu- Board. rated as the sixth president Ms. Post said the young of the Weizmann Institute woman who sought her out of Science last week, at a two years ago had quit the ceremony which launched a professional world to be- week of activities including come a wife, mother and the opening of the Arnold housekeeper and that she Meyer Institute of Biologi- had indicated she felt cal Sciences and the Morlan By BEN GALLOB (Copyright 1975, JTA, Inc.) keenly the need and the difficulty of maintaining her personal identity, find- ing happiness in a new life role and in developing new inter-personal relation- ships outside of her family. Out of that discussion, Ms. Post reported, came the realization among center officials that many Jewish young women had such problems and would 'proba- bly respond to a program designed to meet those needs. On the premise that the young mothers needed out- lets for physical as well as intellectual expression, the daily program provides for an hour for body-ego move- in Rothberg Tribute Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin will serve as honorary chairman of the interna- tional sponsoring commit- tee and Arthur J. Goldberg, former Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, will be chairman of the din- ner. DR. MICHAEL SELA Fiterman Plant Growth Center on campus. Prof. Sela replaces Prof. Israel Dostrovsky, who held the post for three years. The inauguration cere- mony, held in the Institute's Wix Auditorium with the president of Israel, Prof. Ephraim Katzir present, took place at the annual meeting of the Institute's board of governors. oil revenues will not reach the astronomical levels pre- viously forecast. The oil-producing coun- tries showed a surprising ability to spend money at home, importing huge vol- umes of military equipment and other goods and services from the industrial nations. United Israel Appeal Marks 50 Years ,,4;4 6 its tk% 4 *AV:°1' m a s. k%Sa- be Dr. Israel Goldstein, one of the early leaders in the United Palestine Appeal. Now a resident of Jerusa- lem, Dr. Goldstein is known in the United States as one of its most prominent rab- bis and communal leaders. Max M. Fisher of De- troit is a present officer and among the surviving members of the original leadership. Joseph Weisman Sarah (Sarell) Karbal, a member of women's reli- gious organizations, died Nov. 26 at age 70. Born in Russia, Mrs. Kar- bal lived 66 years in Detroit. She was a member of Cong. Beth Achim and its sister- hood, a volunteer for and member of the Jewish Home for the Aged, a mem- ber of Mt. Scopus Group of Hadassah and its Golda Meir Study group, and a member of National Council of Jewish Women and Women of Jewish National Fund. She resided at 20520 Charlton Sq., Southfield. She leaves three daugh- ters, Mrs. Morton (Arlene) Mehler, Mrs. Monte (Eleanor) Korn and Mrs. Leonard (Beverly) Mitz; three brothers, Louis Cor- man of Miami, Abe Corman and Julius Corman; two sis- ters, Mrs. David (Bessie) Greenberg and Mrs. Wil- liam (Anna) Krochmal of Miami; and-15 grandchil- dren. Joseph B. Weisman, foun- der and co-owner of Weis- man Tire Co., died Nov. 27 at age 64. Born in Russia, Mr. Weis- man lived 55 _years in De- troit. Founded more than 40 years ago, _Mr. Weisman's company is still in business. He was a 30-year member of Detroit Lodge of Bnai Brith, a member of the Ideal Detroit Loan Corp., a mem- ber of the National Associa- tion of Independent Tire Dealers and a member of the Tire Dealers Association of Metropolitan Detroit. He leaves his wife, Anne; two sons, Dr. Gilbert of San Francisco and Dr. Jay of t- lanta; a daughter, Mr seph (Helene) Ryan o Clair; two brothers, Samuel and Jack of Los Angeles; three sisters, Mrs. Jack (Sarah) Bryman of Los An- geles, and Mrs. Louis (Re- becca) Sarver and Mrs. Jack (Edith ) Taback; both of Tamarac, Fla.; and three gratidchildren. Harry Margoshes, Jewish Day Editor Nathaniel Sandler, NEW YORK — Harry Psychiatrist, 63 Margoshes, who was labor editor for many years of The Jewish Day, a Yiddish- language newspaper that ceased publication four years ago, died Monday at age 83. Mr. Margoshes was the son of Joseph Margoshes, a founder and editor of the Jewish Morning Journal. He was the brother of Samuel Margoshes, who for many years was editor and later columnist for The Jewish Day. Mr. Margoshes worked for the Jewish Day for 35 years until its demise. Demand for Oil Growing Slowly LOS ANGELES — The demand for oil has dropped in response to the huge price increases of 1973 and the re- cession of 1974. According to the Los An- geles Times, demand may grow much more slowly in the future than it did in the explosive decade of the 1960s. This would mean that Sarah Karbal, 70 United Israel Appeal be- gan in November, 1925 as the United Palestine Ap- peal, at the historic Balti- more Conference, launching the first coordinated Ameri- can appeal to support the creation of a Jewish home- land in Palestine; immigra- tion and absorption are still a primary responsibility of UIA. t Heinrich Grueber, Helped Save Jews BONN — Heinrich Grue- ber, a Lutheran pastor in Berlin who saved thousands of Jews from the Nazi death camps before World War II, died recently at age 84. Pastor Grueber saved the Jews by arranging for their escape to Holland. In 1940 he was arrested and spent three years in the Sachsen- hausen and Dachau concen- tration camps. He was freed in 1943 after he suffered a heart attack — and after an SS man knocked out all his teeth. He later became dean of Ber- lin's Marien Church. U.S. Practicing Oilfield Maneuvers NEW YORK — United States military operations against the Mideast oilfields may have been written off as impractical — most re- cently in a 1975 study by the Library of Congress — but the Pentagon doesn't seem to have abandoned the idea completely. According to Newsweek, when West Germany asked the U.S. to participate in simulated seizures of oil- fields during maneuvers this fall, the Pentagon sent the U.S. Special Forces to take part. ttiat i ‘,` 4 )114 I Dr. Nathaniel Sandler, a psychiatrist for almost 40 years, died Nov. 30 at age 63. Born in Boston, Dr. San- dler lived most of his- life in Detroit. He was graduated from Wayne University in 1936 and interned at what is now Wayne County General Hospital. He served as a psychiatrist with the rank of major in the U.S. Army Medical Corps in World War II. He was a member of the Wayne County Medical As- sociation, a life member of the Michigan Psychiatric Association, Maimonides Medical Society, Zager- Stone Lodge of Bnai Brith and Cong. Beth Achim. He resided at 22251 Ivanhoe, Southfield. He leaves his wife, Jean; a son, Dr. Michael; a daugh- ter, Mrs. Stephen (Dorothy) Klatisner; three brothers, Joseph, Albert and Benja- min; two sisters, Mrs. Syd- ney (Ida) Maxman and Mrs. Nathan (Sarah) Seide of Los Angeles; and two grand- sons. I Max Glassman Max Glassman, a tailor and founder and owner of Max the Tailor on Michigan Ave. for 47 years, died Nov. 30 at age 84. Born in Russia, Mr. Glassman lived most of his life in Detroit. He was the tailor for the Detroit Tigers baseball team for more than 25 years. He resided 1 211 Northgate, Blvd., Oak He leaves his wife, Je a son, Samuel; and a daugh- ter Mrs. Max (Annie) Teitel- baum of Miami; three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. There is a difference be- tween him who does no mis- deeds because of his own conscience and him who is kept from wrong-doing be- cause of the presence of oth= ers. — The Talmud '4 4 PI 4