6 itay THE tilif 1970 There are few, if any, jobs in which ability alone is suf- ficient. Needed also are loy- alty, sincerity, enthusiasm; and cooperation. S&O POOL DOCTORS OPENINGS & CLOSINGS Weekly Cleaning & M Repairs Aellerind "Peel Wu WIC See Our CIMIMIZED Ilyirdisrapy YMIMPOOL at 17260 Lee SlId., Mi. & T. %his 557-2657 557-8555 Church Spiei? JERUSALEM (ZINS) — The Israeli press is charging that a number of Russian Orthodox clerics in Jerusalem are high- ranking members of the Soviet Secret Service. The press charges that the Church gathers infor- mation for the Soviet Union, as well as the Pales- tine Liberation Organiza- tion. The papers speculate that Israel has made it known to the USSR that the clerics' activities are being watched, and that eventu- ally they will be recalled. DISCOUNT TENNIS PRICES BALLS $1.99 c• • Men 's or Women's • STS HOR Men 's or Women's • TOPS • SKIRTS From From From $3.98 $5.00 WOO ALL MAKES SHOES tt- a ALL MAKES TENNIS DISCOUNTED RACQUETS DISCOUNTED nwk, LOVE & SPORTS Evergreen Plaza, 12 Mlle & Evergreen & Satz HMI Tags., & Fri. III po Sadly 11-3 557-4418 Begin Rejects 'Interim' Proposal JERUSALEM (JTA) — Premier Menahem Begin rejected a proposal made last week by President Anwar Sadat of Egypt for "an interim settlement" that would call for Israel to return the West Bank to Jordan and the Gaza Strip to Egypt as a temporary measure pending a final de- cision on the future of those territories. rael's peace plan with one of their own for mutual dis- cussion. "The conditions of peace cannot be dictated to Israel but must be the sub- ject of discussions with Is- rael," he said. Sources said Egypt has still not responded to Be- gin's latest letter to Sadat, over a month ago, calling for resumption of peace talks. Meanwhile, Addressing a European delegation of the Israel Bond Organization, Begin called on Sadat to restore the "good spirit of the Jerusalem and Ismailia talks." He said it was time the Egyptians matched Is- Reform Haggada Printed _ UNRWA Retreat SOUTH LEBANON (ZINS) — The United Na- tions Relief and Works Agency has drawn a storm of protest from Palestinians and Lebanese after it an- nounced that it was with- drawing its headquarters from Beirut. A UNRWA spokesman said it will continue to serve the Palestinians in Leba- non, but was withdrawing its offices because of attacks on its representatives and the fighting in Lebanon. 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 I run things at Jerry Glassman Oldsmobile. Come in and see for yourself. Glassman Oldsmobile 12 Mile and Telegraph Phone (313) 354-3300 "A Passover Haggada," the newest to be published by Penguin Books for the Central Conference of American Rabbis, contains many interpretive features. It is a revised edition that was made available on the eve of the last Passover. It contains, as in its predeces- sors, the traditional text, thus making the volume usable by other than Re- form Jews. Then there are the defini- tive articles by the editor, Rabbi Herbert Bronstein and his associates. In the preface, the editor points out inter alia: "Over the generations, the clarity of the Seder's classic form was blurred and even marred through changes or interpreta- tions of the text of the Haggada as the genera- tions responded to the demands of immediate historic circumstances. One example will suffice: At some point, the origi- nal opening thematic statement of the Hag- gada, 'A fugitive Ara- mean was my father,' was transformed into a polemic against a con- temporaneous Syrian the Cairo news media warned over the weekend that the Middle East was moving back to the pre-1973 situation. The state-controlled Cairo radio said Sadat's pledge in Jerusalem that the 1973 war would be the last could not be fulfilled unless Israel withdrew from all the Arab territories it occupied in 1967. foe, and the text was translated, 'An Aramean sought to destroy my father.' Our own historic perspective, and our free- dom to break with strict adherence to the text handed down to us from late medieval times, enable us to engage in a work of restora- tion. Indeed, one purpose (though not the only one) of this Haggada is to allow the genius of the original to speak to us again; to permit the discovery of patterns and designs in the texture of the liturgy itself without undue didactic pointing. "So this Haggada is not a revision of the previous Union Haggada. It is an at- tempt at renovating an orig- inal, a return to the creative beginning so as to bring forth what is utterly new from what was present in the old." An historical resume of the Passover, prepara- tions for the Seder and many annotations sup- plement the text. The songs appended, with music, serve the partici- pants in the Seder in giving impetus and enjoyment to the festival's observance. French UNIFIL Casualties Causing Problems at Home By EDWIN EYTAN PARIS (JTA) — France is shocked, surprised and pained at the losses it has suffered in Lebanon: offi- cially, two dead and nine wounded, including the commander of the French paratrooper unit serving with the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL). The public, which has been shown terrifying scenes from Lebanon on television, wonders aloud: "Do we need to suffer dead and wounded?" The press is critical, with one paper, Le Monde, going so far as to compare France's involve- ment in Lebanon with America's involvement in the Vietnam War. The French Adminis- tration and even the gov- ernment itself had al- ways been deeply di- vided over the very prin- ciple of a French armed involvement in Lebanon. The Quai d'Orsay and most other French minis- tries — with the excep- tion of the Ministry of De- fense — had energetically opposed all plans to send French troops on "peacekeeping" missions to Lebanon. These officials pointed out that such an involve- ment would endanger France's friendly relations with both Israel and the Arab world. They also warned that a relatively small French contingent would by necessity become even larger as more men and equipment would be needed. This would rapidly be- come, they said, a financial burden and eventually weaken French participa- tion in European defense measures, thus creating friction with its NATO partners. `Mock' Bullfight to Be Staged TEL AVIV (JTA) — Is- rael's Council for the Supervision of Films, Plays and Performances has ruled that a mock bullfight can go on as long as there is no ac- tual bullfight. The Council, which is Is- rael's censorship board, ap- proved by a slim majority a "Spanish fiesta" being staged by local impresario Aharon Berman, later this month. Berman promised that while there will be bulls, matadors and toreadors, there will be no swords or spears used and the bulls will not be harmed. The Council ruled that the word "bullfight" must be removed from all of the fiesta's advertise- ments and that an inspec- tor from the Council will be at all performances and will stop it im- mediately if any actual bullfighting takes place. There had been wide- spread demands in Israel and abroad for cancellation of the event. Walk-a-Thon Nets $4 Million NEW YORK (JTA) — More than two million people, ranging in age from six weeks to 103 years, raised $4 million while ex- pressing their solidarity with the people of Israel in the second annual national United Jewish Appeal walk-a-thon, held in 213 participating communities in the U.S. and Canada. As many as four genera- tions of American Jewish families marched and sang in every conceivable kind of weather to achieve the re- cord result: from Bur- lington, where 47 people walked in bone-chilling 28-degree weather; to De- nver, where more than $20,000 was raised by 550 participants who walked despite the worst snowstorm in the city in 28 years (and where every event but the walk-a-thou was cancelled); to Los Angeles where 25,000 wal- kers were later joined by more than 10,000 people during Israel 30th anniver- sary festivities in Rancho Park. Dropsie Honors 3 PHILADELPHIA — Dropsie University will award honorary degrees June 1 at commencement exercises to Dr. Steven Mul- ler, president of Johns Hop- kins University; Frank J. Rubenstein, Baltimore philanthropist; and Dr. Theodor H. Gaster, profes- sor of comparative religions and Near Eastern studies at Dropsie. . • •-•A:77512111111Er JEWISH nnuonm. Funo 22100 Greenfield Rd. , Oak Park. Mich. 48237 968-0820 Z.. 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