70 Friday, April 21, 1978 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Allied Campaign Leaders Anticipate Victory Urgent Participation Call Issued to 5,000 More Donors Allied Jewish Campaign leaders declared at the workers' report meeting Sunday morning, at the Jewish Center, that they anticipate a victorious con- clusion at the final rally of the 1978 drive to be held at Cong. Beth Abraham Hillel Moses on Wednesday eve- ning. A special toast to Israel in the 30th anniversary year of its independence will highlight the closing celeb- ration. Presiding over the meeting will be Campaign General Chairmen Phillip Stollman and Philip T. Warren. The toast on behalf of Is- rael will be delivered by Zvi Rafiah, counselor for the Is- raeli Embassy in Washing- ton. The toast on behalf of the Jewish community will come from Max M. Fisher, honorary chairman of the executive committee of the Jewish Welfare Federation and chairman of the board of the Jewish Agincy. The gathering begins with a champagne reception at 8 p.m. Leaders of each of the Campaign's nine di- visions will give final re- ports on the amounts raised by their workers. Division workers on all levels participated in two days of telethon solicitation this week in a last concerted effort to contact all con- tributors. Warren and Stollman joined in appeals at Sun- day's meeting for an all-out effort to reach more than 5,000 yet to be solicited to attain the increased gifts necessary to meet the emergencies in the present Israel situation. Reports at the Sunday meeting showed a total as of then of $15,240,000 from 17,371 donors. Encouraging factors in the drive, which were applauded by the chairmen, were the increased enrollments in the Women's, Metropolitan and Junior divisions. The latter, with a total of $180,340 "rom 1,933 donors included Shown with guest speaker Shlomo Gazit, center, are 1978 Allied Jewish Campaign general chairmen Philip Warren, left, and Phillip Stollman. more than 500 new givers imong the youth in the 3reater Detroit area. Warren emphasized the seeds demanding increases ;AD assure continuity in ef- forts in Behalf of Israel as well as the local and na- tional causes aided by the campaign. While a $1 mil- lion increase is expected in the final total, he expressed hope that additional funds will be made available to provide for the obligations that must be met this year. A strong appeal for in- creased communal support was made by Dr. Conrad Four Refuseniks Get Exit Visas NEW YORK (JTA) — Four prominent longtime refuseniks have been given exit visas to emigrate to Is- rael in what was seen here as a move by the Soviet gov- ernment in preparation for Secretary of State Cyrus Vance's trip to Moscow, the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry and the Union of Councils for Soviet Jews re- ported. They identified the four as: Joseph Ahs, a 33-year- old Moscow surgeon; Joseph . Blich, 40, a mathematician, and Arkady Rabinov, 31, a radio engineer, both of Leningrad; and Moshe Shipper, 59, a mechanical engineer from Kharkov. The four have been seeking visas from three to six years. Meanwhile, "Solidarity Sunday," an annual rally on behalf of Soviet Jews, will be held May 21 at Battery Park, it was announced by Bronx Borough President Robert Abrams, chairman of the Greater New York Conference on Soviet Jewry. In a related develeip- ment, the dropout rate among Soviet Jewish emigres reaching Vienna is still running high, ac- cording to a report pre- sented to the expanded World Zionist Organiza- tion Executive meeting in Jerusalem. In Washington, Israel's Ambassador to the United • States, Simha Dinitz, de- clared that the struggle for the rights of Soviet Jews and Israel's struggle for continued independence and security in the Middle East are one and the same. He denounced the Soviet percent of Communist op- position. He said that the assurance of a united Jerusalem, opposition to the Palestinians injecting themselves as a destructive element, the right of Jews to settle anywhere on the West Bank, remains the view of all Israelis. Gazit, wearing a suit he purchased in Cairo during the peace negotiations, said Israelis believe that the peace-making process is the greatest thing that has happened in 30 years. He said the process of negotiation has just begun and neither side should be- lieve that their official posi- tions are their last posi- tions. He added that the negoti- ation's will characterize "Arab-Israel relations for the next 5,000 years and we should be in no hurry to ac- cept any deal." Gazit said that no peace agreement can establish a threat to Israel on the West Bank. He said Israel cannot trust the Arabs, the UN or the U.S. to guarantee Is- rael's security interests. He said there will be no real peace until the problem of the Palestinians is set- tled, but that settlement cannot be at the expense of Israel. "Whoever accepts the re- turn of the Palestinians to Israel accepts the destruc- tion of Israel," he said. "We are united in our sin- Giles who gave an outline of communal duties at a time when there are many con- frontations affecting Is- rael's battle for self- protection. Stollman, in an address in which he expressed concern over the indifference that still is in evidence in some ranks, pleaded for identifi- cations that will re-affirm Jewish loyalties to tradi- tions. Drawing upon sources that emphasize the reli- gious duties inherent in Jewish tradition, in a refer- ence he made to the na- tional interest being shown in the Holocaust, Stollman pointed out that two of the 613 (Taryag) Mitzvot, Jewish religious obliga- tions, commence with the word Zahor, Remember. One is the Zahor et HaShabat, remember the Sabbath, as the major as- pect of Jewish solidarity for survival; and the other is Zahor et Hamalek, Re- member Hamalek, never to forget the enemy as means of self-defense and protection against dangers from those seeking Jewry's destruction. In his impassioned ad- dress, Stollman called upon the more affluent who have been niggardly to be more compassionate. "You live in expensive homes, in luxury. Why do you deny help for the great causes and for those who need your encouragement?" he de- clared. The major address at Sunday's meeting was by General Shlomo Gazit, di- rector of intelligence for the Israeli military forces, who gave an outline of strivings for peace. He expressed con- fidence that peace is possi- NEW YORK — The his- ble. While describing the tory of the founding of the Sadat visit to Jerusalem as land now called Israel is the second in importance in captured in a new, limited- the rebirth of Israel to that editien series of collector's of the partition decision by plates created by sculptor the UN in 1948, he indi- Laszlo Ispanky. The plates cated that Sadat's speech in are issued-by Goebel of West the Knesset on Nov. 20, Germany. 1977 actually demanded Is- The first Ispanky plate is rael's complete submission "The Twelve Tribes of Is- which would speed the na- rael" handcrafted in porce- tion's doom. But he retained lain, measures 12 inches in hope that time may lead to diameter and is individu- an understanding. ally numbered. Only 10,000 Commenting on the of each plate in the series demonstrations for peace in will be produced. A colorful protests against the policies representation of Jacob oc- of Menahenr-Zegin, he de- cupies the center or the first clared that on the main plate, which has around its points there is unanimity in circumference the names Israel, except for the one and Hebraic symbols for cere desire for peace in the Middle East. We must make decisions, however hard, to make peace with our neighbors. All of us are pre- pared to make heavy sac- rifices for peace." Following Gazit's speech, Warren commended the ef- forts of the many hundreds of volunteer workers and the division emphasized anew the need for contact- ing every potential giver as an assurance that the drive will meet with the fullest success. The themes of commit- ment and Jewish responsi- bility will emerge in a number of Passover ser- mons to be delivered this weekend in connection with the Allied Jewish Cam- paign. Orthodox, Conservative and Reform congregations in the metropolitan Detroit area will be asked by their rabbis to take note of the special urgency of this year's Campaign. Besides those rabbis who will mention the Campaign in their sermons, several are sending out special mailings to their congreg- ants and others have writ- ten about the 1978 appeal in their synagogue and temple newsletters. Brochures describing Jewish Welfare Federation agencies and activities, and Campaign appeal cards are being distributed at other locations. Collectors' Plates Produced by Hungarian Ispanky Stepping into freedom, just-arrived leading Novosibirsk refuseniks Yuri Berkovsky (center), Ale- xander Holzman (right) and their families walk across the Bar-Dan University campus in Ramat Gan, in a photo obtained by the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry. They flank Dr. Ira Hammerman, fourth from right, an American oleh who was instrumental in ob- taining their release. Union and its "unholy coali- tion of terrorism and sub- version" in the Middle East and Africa not only as a menace to Israel but to "the stability of every Western vestige of influence in that area." Dinitz made his remarks in an address at the closing session of the national lead- ership conference of the Na- tional Conference on Soviet Jewry (NCSJ). In an earlier address to the NCSJ conference, Sen. Robert Dole (R-Kan.) suggested that the U.S. Administration and Con- gress could affect policy changes in the Soviet Union in the direction of human rights by various means, in- cluding linking federal funding for foreign travel by American scientists to the adherence to human rights by the host countries. "The application of this suggestion need net be directed only toward the scientific community," he said. It also was learned that agents of the Soviet KGB raided a Riga apartment in which matza was being made, halted the baking, smashed the matzot already produced, ransacked the apartment and arrested the participants. , The Al Tidom Association reported that four of the Jews were arrested, held for 24 hours and released. Sim Abramowitz, in whose apartment the baking took place, was arrested and still is in jail. each of the 12 tribes. Every plate in the series is deco- rated with an acid-etched gold rim and the legend, "From an original work of art by I .a.tilo Ispanky." Ispanky settled in the U.S. after fleeing his native Hungary in the wake of the 1956 revolution. He works in Pennington, N.J., for Goebel of North America and this new series of collectors plates are on display in gift shops and galleries. Jews, when they are good, are better, and when they are bad, are worse than Gentiles. — Heinrich Heine