tp “° et 0.! 22 Friday, My 30, 1976 . , THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 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 Mrs. Charlotte Jacobson Explains Errors in WZO Election Controversy NEW YORK (JTA) — Controversy within the World Zionist Organization over the decision by the Zionist General Council to forego elections to the next World Zionist Congress, WINDOW WRITE SAYS, We have the very best discounts in town. Levelors, (slim line, blinds) verticals, woven woods and custom shades. Custom decorating. Introducing The Wood Shutter Blind Call Eileen now for home appt: 968-0701 under certain conditions, has been misrepresented in press reports from Israel, according to Mrs. Charlotte Jacobson, chairman of the World Zionist Organization- American Section, who has just returned from the Jew- ish Agency Assembly and General Council meetings in Jerusalem. Pointing out that two sep- arate issues are involved, Mrs. Jacobson explained that the recent Jerusalem vote does not affect internal organizational elections to assure opportunities for new delegates to attend the Congress. "What is at issue," she said, "is the number of dele- gates each Zionist party is entitled to. This is generally decided by the proportion of votes cast in the elections. In the United States it is sub- ject to two limitations: the largest group is not to have more than 50 percent of the delegates to the Congress, and the smallest is not to have less than three dele- gates." Elections to the forth- coming Congress are to be OF ALL THE THINGS YOU CAN GET WITH $1,000, NE OF THE BEST IS 7-3/4%. 7.98% EFFECTIVE ANNUAL RATE. 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'Federal regulations require a substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal from certificate savings accounts. We're First. Put yourself in our place. FEDERAL rust Federal Savings of Detroit Main Office: 1001 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan 48226. Phone: 965-1400 THERE ARE 36 CONVENIENT NEIGHBORHOOD LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU OR PHONE 965-1400 waived in any country where 90 percent of the factions represented in the Zionist federations are agreed on the number as- signment of delegates per faction. Ironically enough, she continued, it is the Israelis "who talk about the same tired people arguing the same tired issues,' who are most aroused over the Gen- eral Council ruling: it is the Israelis who do not vote for delegates. They do not have Congress elections in Israel and have their delegations assigned by the party hier- archies. Let the Israelis fight for democratic proce- dures in Israel. Democratic election of delegates from the U.S. organizations is not at issue." Persistent Canadian Physician Seeks Out Last Jew in China TORONTO (JTA) — Can- ada% stormy petrel Morton Shulman, physician, cru- sading coroner, militant member of the legislature, television host and million- aire, has discovered "the last Jew in China." Among Dr. Shulman's numerous activities is con- tributing a column several times a week to the Toronto Sun, a morning tabloid- sized newspaper. In a recent column headed "The Last Jew in China," he recalls his visit to China in 1958 when there was still a tiny com- munity of 85 surviving Jews in Shanghai, most of them due to leave. The leader of this rem- nant of a community was a 60-year-old "stocky, muscu- lar and bright-eyed Rus- sian-born physician" named P. Yudalevich. Last month, Shulman was again in Shanghai and asked to be taken to the old Jewish community center. Though he was told "the Jews had all gone" as he expected they would, he decided to pay the visit if only to satisfy his curiosity. (In 1972 the late Premier Chou En-Lai had stated "the Jews have all gone".) He found the old commu- nity center was now a Soviets Beat Jew Who Met Israelis NEW YORK (JTA) — Sarafima Starobinitz, a So- viet Jew residing in noscow, has been harassed and hounded by the Soviet au- thorities for nine months since she spoke with visit- ing Israeli athletes, Al Ti- dom Association sources in Moscow reported. Miss Starobinitz, a stu- dent, attended an interna- tional sports event at the Lusniki Sports Palace in Moscow Sept. 19, 1975. After the competition, she spoke to members of the Is- raeli team who invited her to dine with them at the res- taurant of the Hotel Rosia. Shortly afterwards, she was taken to a police station where she was beaten and accused of being a street- walker preying on foreign- ers, Al Tidom reported. Since then Miss Starobin- itz has been hounded con- stantly by the Soviet police and subjected to numerous interrogations and other more serious harassment. The most recent move against her has been her expulsion from the institute which she attended, accord- ing to Al Tidom. Chinese public school. The garden was now largely oc- cupied by a warren of tiny rooms fully occupied by Chinese. On asking if any Jews were there he was told laughingly "All gone long ago." But when he asked about Dr. Yudalevich, an elderly Chinese pushed through to him calling out "That is my master." To his amazement the man said Dr. Yudalevich was still alive and in Shan- ghai and then he asked Shulman: "You Jewish doc- tor? You came here many years ago!" It was Lee Yue Shul whom Dr. Shulman recalled as Dr. Yudalevich's faithful servant. Dr. Shulman was told that about 12 elderly Jews had remained in Shanghai but they had died and Dr. Yudalevich was the only one now left. He also said that he (Lee) was now 67 years old and had worked for Dr. Yudalevich since he was 14. "I shall look after him till he dies." He found Dr. Yudalevich on the second floor of an old house with an elderly Chinese woman, his friend for the past 40 years. Yudal- evich, now 88, had become shrivelled by a stroke but his mind was still acute. He greeted the Canadian physi- cian with "I remember you." Shulman writes that they both "broke down and cried." Rabin Applauds Portugal Leader JERUSALEM (JTA) — In a message congratulating Portuguese Socialist Pre- mier Mario Soares on his as- sumption of office, Premier Yitzhak Rabin this week expressed the hope that re- lations between Israel and Portugal "will develop to our mutual satisfaction." There has been some opti- mism here as to the pros- pect of Soares' regime es- tablishing full diplomatic ties with Israel. At present only consular relations exist between the two countries — the situa- tion that pertained during the Salazar regime. Recently a top Portuguese Socialist Party official vis- ited here as guest of Israel's Socialist Party — and this heightened speculation that a possible upgrading of rela- tions was in the offing. Offi- cials say, however, that the issue was not specifically broached with the visitor.