. ..7*PtttitEtn 8 Friday, December 23, 1977 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS U.S. Congressman Protests Commerce Dept.'s Lax Regulations of Anti-Arab Boycott Law WASHINGTON (JTA)— Proposed regulations deal- ing with the anti-Arab boy- cott law "seriously under- mine" Congressional intent in passing the law, Rep. Joshua Eilberg (D-Pa.) charged last week. In a strongly worded pro- test to the Commerce De- partment, Eilberg said the proposed regulations "might allow widespread evasion of the purpose of Do you run around for coffee? Now you can stop running. In fact, your whole office can stop running around! Our Office Coffee Service supplies great coffee all day long—for only pennies a cup. Delicious Maxwell House' or Yuban' Coffee for clients, visitors, your whole office. All you- buy are kits including coffee, filters, sugar and creamer. We provide the equipment and maintenance at no extra charge. Call now. Have a good cup of coffee tomorrow! -1 . . Coffee rviC ce Cuss toem • 914 W. 9 Mile Rd. • 399-8444 tllai the law." The regulations are scheduled to go into effect Jan. 18. Eilberg called on Secre- tary of Commerce Juanita M. Kreps to review the guidelines before they take effect. "As things stand now, the Department,, in writing regulations for • Congression- ally authorized exceptions to the rules, has turned the exceptions into the rules," Eilberg wrote to Ms. Kreps. He cited three sections of the proposed regulations, 'which. he said,. are "contrary to the clearly stated intent of Congress when it enacted the anti-boycott legislation." Eilberg said that Congress sought to prohibit a U.S. citizen from aiding a foreign buyer who makes a purchase based on boycott- related considerations. "But the proposed regu- lations," he said, "appar- ently would allow a U.S. citizen to lend invaluable assistance in the form of management, procurement, and other pre-award serv- ices before - a foreign buyer makes his purchase." In addition, Eiberg siad, Congress exempted from the anti-boycott law any U.S. citizen on foreign soil who imports good "for his own use." Eilberg said the regu- lations proposed by the Commerce Department de- fine goods "for his own use" as goods for manufacturing other products, and goods for resale to other persons. JEWISH NATIONAL FUND' EXTENDS A MAZOL TOV TO Eilberg also attacked the proposed regulations for in- cluding a "risk of loss" clause, declaring that, un- der this provision, "a sell- er's liability for his goods would not end when he de- livers his merchandise to a carrier chosen by the pur- chaser, as is the case in normal commercial trans- actions. "Instead," the Congress- man siad, "the seller's lia- bility would continue until his goods reached and passed through customs in a foreign port of entry. Insist- ence on such a clause owuld have the chilling effect of preventing blacklisted com- panies from fairly com- peting for business in the Arab world," he said. Eilberg asked the Secre- tary of Commerce for a "prompt response in- dicating the action you in- tend to take in this matter." Attorney Plans to Sue Idi Amin Over Human Rights Violations NEW YORK—Chicago at- torney Luis Kutner is plan- ning to file suit in U.S. District Court against Uganda dictator Idi Amin. Kutner will charge Amin with civil crimes in behalf of Ugandan citizens who have fled to the U.S. He will employ an untested U.S. statute that he helped draft that removes the immunity of sovereign powers from prosecution. Kutner says he would also like to see a Nuremberg- style, UN tribunal force Amin to testify. "There are rooms full of books on human rights," Kutner said. "There are conferences after confer- ences on human rights. All of that is narcissistic. The only thing to stop a tyrant like Amin is to take prag- matic legal action against him." - Kutner hopes to serve a summons on Amin through the Uganda embassy in Washington or its UN mis- sion in New York. He says the U.S. could take sanc- tions against Amin if he is convicted by a U.S. court, and added that the UN has the power to execute Amin if he is convicted by a UN tribunal. Labor Law Chair at Hebrew U. NEW YORK—Israeli le- gal scholars, judges and lawyers assembled at the Hebrew University's Facul- ty of Law on Mount Scopus in Jerusalem this month for the inauguration of the Elias Lieberman Chair in Labor Law, it was an- nounced by Charles A. Still- man, chairman of the New York Lawyers Division of the American Friends of the Hebrew University. A Russian-born Jew who immigrated to the United States in the early years of this century, Mr. Lieber- man became an attorney for the ILGWU (International Ladies Garment Workers Union) and championed the rights of the worker throughout his long career. NEW YORK (JTA)—A four-member delegation" of the ultra-nationalist Gush Emunim movement in Is- rael arrived here last week to launch a campaign "to inform and convince the American people of the rightful ownership of the Jewish people to the whole of the land of Israel." The four Gush leaders, Hanan Porath, Zvi slonim, Mitchell Heifetz and Jacob Dovev, issued a statement at a press confernce at the Roosevelt Hotel welcoming the "dialogue which recent- ly developed between Israel and Egypt," but reiterated at the same time the Gush's adamant rejection of and territorial concessions to ob- tain peace. The statement also called for a large-scale settlement plan "to retian the integrity of the land of isreal." Free Ear Piercing* $ 695 on the occasion of their 70th Wedding Anniversary Medi - System • • safe • painless • quick Your Something Special Shoppe Oak Park Shopping Center 22128 Coolidge Hwy. Oak Park, Mich. 48237 545-1399 The Stollman Family joins with an appreciative community in greeting and honoring JACOB and IDA NOSANCHUK on the occasion of their 70th Wedding Anniversary We take pride in counting them as our dear friends and associates in the most important Jewish causes in support of Israel and our people's dearest spiritual and cultrual aspi- rations. May they be granted good health, so they may continue with joy their dedica- ted labors for Klal Yisrael. We are grateful to this wonderful couple for having endowed a room in the Stollman Dormitory and a classroom at Bar-Ilan University. Max Stollman Frieda Stollman Phillip Stollman JACOB and IDA NOSANCHUK on the occasion of their 70th Wedding Anniversary AND EXPRESSES ITS GRATITUDE TO THEM FOR THEIR GRACIOUS AND GENEROUS CONTRIBUTIONS TO JNF'S LAND RECLAMATION WORK IN ISRAEL BY PLANTING THE IDA AND JACOB NOSANCHUK FOREST IN THE ARI HAKADOSH FOREST NEAR SAFAD, TO COMMEMORATE THIS MOMENTOUS OCCASION. The rich record of service to the Greater Detroit Jewish Community's educational and spiritual needs; their generous gifts for all causes functioning in support of Israel; their dedication to synagogue and the houses of learning are among the great gifts which have earned our respect and admiration for Mr. and Mrs. Jacob B. Nosanchuk. MAY THEY BE BLESSED WITH HEALTH AND HAPPINESS, SO THAT THEY MAY CONTINUE THEIR BENEFACTIONS TO THE COMMUNITY IN GENERAL AND TO ISRAEL IN PARTICULAR FOR MANY YEARS TO COME. May they be blessed with many years of good health to mark the continuity of their immense 'services for our people. Mark E. Schlussel, President Mrs. Louis Levine, President Women of JNF Rissa Winkelman, President Young Women of JNF Percy Kaplan, Executive Director ■ Daily "with purchase of starter earrings" Detroit Friends of Bar-Ilan University Mizrachi Hapoel HaMizrachi Organization of Detroit takes pride in greeting Mr. & Mrs. Jacob Nosanchuk 1131.1111Millffill "Clearly, Congress did not mean this broad a difinition of 'for his own use,' " Eil- berg told Ms. Kreps. Gush Emunim Group Visits U.S. r'Z'. • N " ANCHU's