18 Friday, July 1, 1977 DRIVE A CAR or SEND YOUR CAR TO ANY STATE I.C.C. License MC125985 . , DRIVEAWAY SERVICE 4713 Horger at Michigan Ave. P.O. BOX 1264 Dearborn, Mich. 48126 Tel. 584-5000 41 ■ 111., THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Labor May Challange Dulzin JNF Chairman Moshe Rivlin Ends YORK (JTA) — At this year, was to raise for WZO, Jewish Agency Posts the NEW conclusion of a two- money for the new projects JERUSALEM (JTA)- The Labor Party is ponder- ing whether to nominate a candidate to oppose Leon Dulzin for the dual post of chairman of the World Zion- ist Organization and Jewish We Make Our Own Glasses HEADQUARTERS FOR 't LATEST DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED FRAME FASHIONS • t • PRESCRIPTIONS FOR GLASSES • ACCURATELY FILLED • DESIGNER FRAMES • Immediate Repair • Reasonably Priced ROSEN OPTICAL SERVICE 13720 W. 9 MILE nr. COOLIDGE LI 7-5068 OAK PARK, MICH. Mon.-Fri. 9:30-6 Sat. 'til 5 Closed Wednesday " 0 0 ULLA R.9 0 ILLO Q.A9 Q.1.9 (LAS Lt..9 449-9 (LC Q_9 (LW 0-51-6 rO MPLETE SUPPLIES] AT EXTRA SAVINGS SY NEWMAN OF SY DRAFT . OFFICE,ART AND DRAFTING SUPPLIES WISHES TO THANK ALL OUR PATRONS FOR THEIR WEST SIDE CONCERN AND GET WELL WISHES 968-2620 AFTER HIS RECENT ACCIDENT. EAST SIDE 731-6200 25000 SIEEKRELO tHe01.11 CENTER OAK PAT( 8116 Z3 MOLE RO. MUD' PLAZA SWIIT TWP. AGENT OF THE MONTH It is a pleasure to announce that Melvin Weisz C.L.U. Seymour M. Rosenwasser, C.L.U. General Agent MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL LIPS MISURANCE COMPANY Springffeld, Massachusetts, Organi.ed 1854 week working tour of the United States and Canada, Moshe Rivlin, the Jewish National Fund's new world chairman, and that he is en- couraged and satisfied with the responses he encoun- tered to the new projects and plans of the JNF. Rivlin said that the pur- pose of his visit, his first to the United States and Can- ada since he was elected to the new post in January of JERUSALEM—A concern tional approach to the sub- for the problems that affect ject matter was necessary. "The Holocaust was • a the world'F . Jewish commu- good course on a very emo•-• nities today is the reason Rebekah Dorman, 20, a psy- tional topic. I approached it chology major at Brandeis with facts and in a historic and scientific manner. In University, decided to study at the Hebrew University of this way I began to under- Jerusalem's School for stand the so-called Overseas Students. 'Holocaust mentality' that The daughter of Dr. and is said to pervade much of Mrs. Jack Dorman of Jewish and Israeli life and Bloomfield Hills. Mich., politics," she says. Miss Dorman has always Miss Dorman is one of been interested in under- some 800 students this year standing the development at the Hebrew University's of modern Jewish commu- School for Overseas Stu- nities and how they have at- dents established on the tempted to deal with vari- Mount Scopus campus in ous social stresses and 1971. crises which affect them. After 'graduating with a She said she feels that the BA degree in psychology. courses she has had at the next year from Brandeis, Hebrew University have Miss Dorman hopes to put provided her with a rational into practice what she has and scientific approach in learned from both Brandeis understanding the problems and the Hebrew University. which affect communities. She will either become a so- Miss Dorman cites one of cial work volunteer in Is- these courses—the rael or work with Jewish Holocaust—where such a ra- communities in Europe. Interest in Elderly Housing SAVANNAH, Ga. (JTA) — The Savannah Jewish Council has reported that 153 Jews in 105 households declared in a survey of po- tential interest in a proj- ected apartment house for senior adults that they would be either interested 478-5140 From Pioneer Women Aid Israeli Poor NEW YORK—Thousands of Israeli women are receiv- ing help in stretching their limited household budgets through a self-help project introduced by Pioneer Women/Na'amat. The program offers sew- ing instruction, combined with the opportunity to ac- quire sewing machines for their homes, enabling the CARS IMPORTED FRESH DAILY FROM DETROIT. Call us for our low-profit price on the car you want to buy. DETROIT AUTO BROKERS, INC. 26400 W.12 Mile Rd. at Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, Mi. 48034 Telephone (313) 358-2100 of the JNF and explain its work. The JNF, Rivlin said, is embarking on a series of new projects and they were presented to and enthusiasti- cally received by JNF lead- ers and activists in Canada and the U.S. In his meetings and talks in Canada and the United States, Rivlin said he dis- cussed the idea of creating - The Forest of the Jewish Detroiter Studies, at Hebrew U. Sewing Machines., Sewing Courses has received the ma-of-the-month award as the most outstanding Representative of our Detroit- Rosenwasser Agency. The award is in recognition of his excellent service to his policyholders and our Agency. 25882 Orchard Lake Rd.—Suite 214 —Farmington Hills 48018 Agency Executives when the 29th World Zionist Con- gress convenes here next February. Dulzin, of Likud, who is Treasurer of the Jewish Agency, is virtually certain to seek the office that has eluded him in the past. The incumbent, Labor veteran Yosef Almogi, has an- nounced he will not stand for re-election though he will finish out his term. Top Labor Party officials are privately sifting through a list of possible candidates to find one who is well-known to Diaspora Jews as well as in Israel and who commands the re- spect and prestige neces- sary to overcome Dulzin's advantage of being a mem- ber of Israel's governing party. It is acknowledged by Labor that unless the Likud-led • government makes a serious misstep that would discredit it, Con- gress delegates from abroad would be loathe to vote against Dulzin lest it be interpreted as a vote of no-confidence in the govern- ment. Labor Party sources are stressing, therefore, that a decision to contest the WZO-Jewish Agency chair- manship will be made only if the party is convinced that it has a chance to win. Some of Labor's most pow- erful figures are said to be- under consideration. These include former For- eign Minister Yigal Allon and Yitzhak Navon, chair- man of the Zionist General Council, who is highly re- garded in Israel and abroad. Also mentioned is former Foreign Minister Abba Eban and former Pre- mier Golda Meir. Eban's candidacy would be considered only if his current difficulties with the Treasury over his Ameri- can bank accounts are re- solved in his favor. in moving into such a hous- ing unit or had a possible in- terest in such a move. According to the ' Sav- annah Jewish News, official publication of the council, completed questionnaires were received from 224 households out of the 573 to which questionnaires were sent. The council said this was a return of 39 percent which is considered high for such surveys. The 573 households have an esti- mated total of 877 Jews 60 and older, including 319 "unattached" Jews living alone. - Sam Jospin, chairman of the Jewish Council's senior adult housing committee, said plans were being made to submit an application to the federal Housing and Urban Development depart- ment for funds to build an apartment housing unit. U.S. Visit MOSHE RIVLIN Child near the city of Beer- sheba in the south of Israel. "The idea is that next year, which is the 30th anni- versary of the state of Is- rael, Jewish children from all over the world will par- ticipate in planting a new forest," Rivlin said. According to the plan, Is- raeli school children will write letters to Jewish chil- dren across the world ask- ing them to take part in this special project. Special trees, Rivlin said, will be planted in this forest, in the memory of the Jewish chil- dren who perished in the Holocaust. GM Denies Arab Report The General Motors Corp. has denied a Cairo news- paper report that it will help build Jeep-type ve- hicles for Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. A GM spokesman said the company had no knowl- edge of the reports and had not conducted any negotia- tions on the matter. GM was taken off the Arab boycott list last week, but the company said it would not change its deal- ings with Israel. Barclays Bank, Ltd. in London issued a similar statement after the Arab League Boycott Office claimed the bank was liqui- dating its Israeli operations in order to remove its name from the boycott list. A Barclays spokesman said the bank has had a 50.9 percent interest in the Is- rael Discount Bank since 1971 and that it continues to have this interest. Meanwhile, General Motors Acceptance Corp. has reportedly been loaned $200 million at 7.37 percent interest by Saudi Arabia and a French-based in- vestment bank half-owned by Arab interests has in- creased to 15 percent its in- vestment in a big U.S. bro- kerage, Reynolds Securities International. Last week, some 300 Arab and Middle East trading companies held a trade fair in New York promoting di- rect Arab purchasing. The promoter, Roger Shashoua, said he was a nat- uralized American citizen born in Cairo of the Jewish and d denied that the fair was a means to get around the new U.S. anti- boycott laws, which are aimed mainly at exporters. Shashoua said he ex- pected the fair to generate $30 million in business in the short-run. women to t realize sub- stantial savings on clothing and household iterts which they can make themselves. More than 130 courses are conducted by 93 qualified Pioneer Women/Na'amat sewing instructors, mainly in deprived urban neighbor- hoods and in settlements throughout Israel. Approximately 1,500 women are currently en- rolled in the program. M.E. Arms Supply Home sewing presented a major hurdle because the WASHINGTON—Western cost of sewing machines in air reconnaisance suggests Israel, most of them im- that the Soviet Union is sup- ported, was the equivalent plying arms to Syria, of three months salary of Egypt, Libya, Iraq, So- the low-income families in- malia and South Yemen at volved. a rate comparable to 1973, • Pioneer Women/Na'amat according to Aviation Week arranged with Mardix, an and Space Technology Israeli company, to supply magazine. a small but highly efficeint The arms include T-62 locally-made machine to tanks, MiG 21 and 23 jet participants in the program fighter planes, Tupolev-22 for II 2,000 ($200) on an bombers armed with long- easy payment plan. range missiles. anti-aircraft , missile batteries -, heavy ar- Mardix instructors teach tillery and large quantities Many who say they don't the new owners how to re- pair their own machines, of light weapons and ammu- believe in God ask his nition. mercy. when necessary.