36 Friday, January 5, 1914 Disco Parties by 1', 1‘ Dan Sandberg 353-6699 I THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Drive to Recognize Centrality U. of Pennsylvania Rejects of Israel Urged by WJC Head Offer of Grant From Arabs TEL AVIV (JTA) S.Z. Abramov, the new chair- man of the Israeli Executive of the World Jewish Con- gress, mounted a call for an intensified effort to revive the feeling of the centrality of Israel in the life of the Music by Sam Barnett Big or small, we custom the- music to your needs. 968-2563 ELECTROLYSIS WORKS , ...• WE FOUND THAT OUT 16 YEARS AGO. AND WE HAVE • . BEEN HELPING PEOPLE RID THEMSELVES OF UN- SIGHTLY HAIR EVER SINCE. HELEN ZINBERG R.E. :.: IF YOU HAVE EMBARRASSING HAIR ON THE FACE, UPPER LIP, ARMS, LEGS, OR THIGHS, IT CAN BE REMOVED PERMANENTLY. NOT BY GADGETS, NOT BY PROMISED MIRACLES, BUT BY MEDICALLY APPROVED ELECTROLYSIS. 16125 W. 12 MILE RD. OPEN MON. THROUGH FRI. INCLUSIVE BY APPOINTMENT — 557-8115 Jewish people, a feeling which he claimed has dangerously faded out in some Jewish communities. Addressing the congress as he took over the chair- manship from Yitzhak Ko- ren, Abramov said that not only has there been a con- stant erosion in recent years in the recognition of Israel's centrality but also what he termed an undermining of the spiritual infrastructure of Zionism and Israel. He said there are well- known Jewish intellec- tuals who claim that Zionism has not solved the Jewish problem and that the state of Israel has not solved the problem of anti-Semitism. In addi- tion, he noted that there is no rush on the part of Jews to make aliya. He said it is up to the Is- raeli Executive of the World Jewish Congress to reverse this attitude by building bridges to Diaspora Jewry and improving the image of Israel in the eyes of world Jewry. Efforts would also be made to make Israelis understand the life of Dias- pora Jewry and their prob- lems, and not to regard them solely as sources of funds, he said. If you interrupt your studies for one day, it will take you two to regain what you have lost. —The Talmud Sale Time PHILADELPHIA (JTA) — The University of Pennsylvania (UP) has re- jected the offer of a grant from the Libyan-financed Arab Development Insti- tute (ADI) because it failed to provide safeguards against discrimination, ideological advocacy and the free dissemination of re- search results. The offer, which included $180,000 in first year fund- ing, was for the develop- ment of a curriculum for Middle Eastern history and culture for American high schools and the study of Li- byan institutions. The university was com- mended by the Philadelphia chapter of the American Jewish Committee for un- dertaking to develop guidelines to deal with propaganda oriented grants from oil-rich Arab states. The ADI offer was turned down on the basis of interim guidelines drafted last June and now under study by a special university com- mittee for finalization. Specifically, according to the review committee's chairman, economics pro- fessor Irving Kravis, the Li- byan government refused to confirm ADI's verbal assur- ances that Jewish personnel participating in the projects would be admitted to Libya. The Libyan Embassy in Washington subsequently informed the committee that official Libyan policy is not to issue visas to Jews. The interim guidelines against which the pro- posals were measured called for specific assur- ances to protect the inde- pendence of UP faculty, UFO Sighting in Jerusalem Applegate Square 352-7112 Northwestern Hwy. at Inkster Daily 10-5, Thurs. til 8 JERUSALEM (JTA) — A number of early risers in Jerusalem could have sworn Wednesday morning that a number of uniden- tified flying objects paid a first visit to the Holy City. A sleepy Jerusalem duty officer in the Jerusalem dis- trict police received excited phone calls at 4 a.m. from citizens who saw "large and strange blue light" over the Mount of Olives, on the eatern hills of the city. At first, the police officers tended to dismiss the com- plaints as mere dreams, but when they themselves went outside, they joined millions all over the world who fol- lowed last weekend's UFO scare in New Zealand. They too saw objects flying over the hills, and could not tell what they were. Somebody who did not want to take any chance quickly notified the air force and the meteorolog- ical service station, but apparently no military action was taken. There was no immediate explanation for the phe- nomenon, but it was as- sumed that the source of light was merely a bright star. to avoid any jeopardy to the university commit- ment to the principles of academic freedom and non-discrimination, to protect research from parochial or ideological advocacy, to assure the bona fides of students as devoted primarily to academic purposes and meeting normal aca- demic standards, and certification by the deans of the schools involved endorsing both the aca- demic worthiness of the proposal and a judgment that school priorities jus- tify any costs, direct or indirect. Last spring, Swarthmore and Haverford Colleges abandoned a joint plan for Arab studies when it was disclosed that the $590,000 financing came from Adnan Khashoggi, a Saudi arms broker implicated in a cor- porate bribery attempt. CASUAL FAMILY PORTRAITS 30790 Southfield At 13 Mile Road 646-8484 r SANdy I TIIEUMAN phoroci nAphy Ndi " t 25900 Greenfield (at 101/2 mi. 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