6 Friday, April 15, 1977 GRAEIVIE FLOWERS BILL CAPLAN 12711 W. 7 MILE RD. 341-3366 FREE ESTIMATES AT YOUR HOME FOR ALL PARTIES THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Forbidden Account Forces Rabin to Resign (Continued from page 1) Treasury officials .dis- closed that there was a major behind-the-scene clash between Barak and the Treasury over how to handle the Rabin case. The Finance Ministry was prepared to ask for le- niency for Mrs. Rabin and SPITZER'S of Harvard Row ORIGINAL RUMMIKUB In Wooden Case from Israel Available Again $ 95 At Special Prices SPITZER'S Hebrew Book & Gift Center 11 Mile & Lahser, Southfield Harvard Row 356-6080 Open All Day Sunday let her off with a IL 150.000 fine ($15,000). but Barak in- sisted she stand trial. He said if she were not prose- cuted he would hve to drop dozens of currency violation cases currently before the courts. He also threatened to resign. Barak said the size of the illegal accounts and Mrs. Rabin's "many" with- drawals from them since 1973, which she has acknowl- edged, gave no grounds for leniency. Legal sources disclosed that Barak had personally consulted lower level Treas- ury officials who handle cur- rency cases and found an unanimous view among them that there were in- sufficient grounds for le- niency in the Rabin case. Rabin postponed his resig-' nation until after the con- clusion of the European Cup championship basket- ball game which was tele- vised from Belgrade. Yugo- slavia. Israel's Tel Aviv Maccabi team defeated Varese of Italy, 78-77, setting off wild celebrations which ob- scured Rabin's announce- ment. In his resignation speech I Don't Want to Sell You A Car, I Want To Help You Buy One. You work hard for your money. So do I. But I don't think that a low price alone is enough to get you to spend your money at Jerry Glassman Olds, or any other car dealership. I believe people want to buy their car from a dealership they can put their trust in. A dealership that'll work as hard for their money as they did. Making sure things are right — before, during and after the sale. When you visit Glassman Olds, we'll help you pick out a car that's right for the kind of driving you do. Then we'll quote you a fair price. A price as low as any in town. Maybe lower. And, after the sale, you'll find our smiles are just as wide, our handshakes just as friendly when you come in for a free warranty check. That's the way !run things at Jerry Glassman. Oldsmobile. Come in and see for yourself. Glassman Oldsmobile 12 Mile and Telegraph Southfield Phone (313) 354-3300 down for the good of the Labor Party and added that "I bear jointly with my wife formal and moral re- sponsibility... - Rabin said: "The ac- counts were opened during my service as envoy in Washington. The money in them all came from that pe- riod. We never concealed the existence of the ac- count—in fact my wife drove to the bank in an offi- cial car 'of the State Depart- ment's security service. There were no deposits since we left Washington (in 1973). When the affair was first published (in mid- March ) $10,000 were re- turned home." In March, 1973 when the Rabins left Washington, there had been $18,000 in the account, the Premier said. The sum of $2,000 was then (publicly) mentioned in this connection. That was the sum actually in. the ac- count. The remaining $8,000 was en route to Israel. There was thus some un- clarity, both regarding whether there was more than one account, and as to the discrepancy in the fig- ures. Finance Ministry sources explained. confirming Rabin's own unclear state- ments. there was $2,000 in the account last month&and another $8,000 in travellers checks and cash in the fam- ily's possession. The remaining $8,000 had been withdrawn and spent by Mrs. Rabin over the years since -1973 during her visits to the United States, the sources explained. Rabin, in his announce- ment, stated: "The Treas- ury appointed a committee, which included representa- tives of the police&and they recommended an adminis- trative fine. To my great regret the Attorney General has not accepted this recom- mendation, at least as far as concerns my wife, and in his opinion she must face prosecution." Rabin declared: "It is a sad ending. I regret that something which is in my view of secondary impor- tance has led to the deci- sion I have taken. But I saw no alternative... Yigael Yadin Files Libel Suit Against Political Opponent paid the necessary taxes. The Ministry of Educa- tion and Culture,- which is in charge of antiquities, secutive week ran stories said there was no breach of that Prof. Yigael Yadin, law. Yadin showed the press head of the Democratic Movement for Change, has photocopies of the check smuggled foreign currency and of a receipt from the out of the country. They Discount Bank in Jerusa- charged that Yadin was in- lem showing that the check volved in a foreign cur- had been duly deposited ac- rency and antiques export cording to law. The photocopies also scandal in 1972. -showed that the check was Yadin. who filed a libel not made out to Yadin at suit against the two journal- all, but only to the Hebrew ists last week, filed another University Institute of Ar- one this week. chaeology. At the press conference Immediately after the Avneri insisted that the original story was pub- Yadin said that the charge had no connection antiques in question were with the political rivalry be- exported by a Jerusalem an- tween his Sheli list and tique dealer. after he had Yadin's movement. JERUSALEM (JTA)Uri Avneri, editor of Haolam Hazeh, and reporter Yigal Laviv. for the second con- Funds for Elderly Housing Available NEW YORK—More than 40 percent of federation ap- plications submitted in 1976 for Section 202 Housing for the Elderly funds were suc- cessful and communities will be receiving nearly $50 million in loans and rent subsidies, according to Mark Talisman, director of the Council of Jewish Feder- ations' Washington Action Office. In his year-end report to the CJF Board of Directors. Talisman indicates $750 mil- lion will be available for Section 202 loans in fiscal 1977. The Washington office will notify all interested fed- erations of the application deadline when it is an- nounced. Special mention is also made in the report of the Washington office's role in obtaining grants through the Comprehensive Employ ment and Training Adminis- tration (CETA) for Soviet Jewish refugee manpower training. In order to help feder- ations better understand the varied federal aid pro- grams for which they may be eligible, the Washington office of CJF is preparing a federation-oriented version of the Catalogue of Federal Domestic. Assistance which with 'summarize approx- imately 200 Federal pro- grams. : - "I believe that in the three fields that I have worked as Chief of Staff, as Ambassador to the U.S. and as Premier&I did yeo- man work and I succeeded in the main task. As Com- mander-in-Chief I prepared the army on the eve of the Six-Day War. As Premier I led the country out of the post-Yom Kippur straits into a situation facilita' diplomatic maneuveriri, situation unparalleled since the State'siinception." His heart was heavy, Rabin said, because he was being forced to end his task prematurely. "But I saw no possibility of entering into a conflict with the official whose function it is to super- vise the enforcement of the law, "he said. In his view, the state of Israel had lost the Premier who had had a better chance than anyone to ad- vance the cause of peace and prevent war. At the same time, he hoped his public career had not been ended. "I believe in the state of ISrael ...I shall find my place in it." Hebrew . Poetry Found at Schocken NEW YORK—Unknown works by the great masters of medieval Hebrew poetry are being discovered in a 17th Century manuscript at the Schocken Institute of The Jewish Theological Seminary of America. Until recently in the hands of a family that origi- nated in Constantinople, the volume, -Tikun Shabatot - (Readings for the Sabbath), reveals works of unknown oriental •poets as well as new" poems by Yehuda Halevi, Rabbi Avraham Ibn Ezra and other bards from Hebrew poetry's golden age in Spain and Provence. The readings, 180 piyutim (liturgical poems) and kinot (dirges) relating to Jerusalem and the Temple, were edited for publication in 17th Century Egypt, but no printed edition has ever been discovered. Rabbi Yitzhak, son of Eliezer Habib, prepared the manuscript with Rabbi Moshe Yehuda Abbas, a major Hebrew poet of that era who included his own works as well as those of his celebrated family, the Abbasi'im, in the collection. - Yeshiva Named for Entebbe Hero JERUSALEM (ZINS)—A yeshiva bearing the name of Yonatan Netanyahu. the hero who was killed in the Entebbe rescue operation at Uganda, will be set up in the Old City of Jerusalem. A Jewish philanthropist has pledged $1 million toward the- building of the yeshiva. t4 JEWISH nano= HMO c""'" • 22100 Greenfield Rd. Oak Park, Mich. 48237 • 968-0820 Z OFFICE HOURS MON - THURS 9 TO r 5 FRI 9 TO 4 SUNDAYS 10 am -1 pm