THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS cifE 75. CEL1 L T < a LE 60t/2 Mr. and Mrs. Irving (Dora) Adler of Southfield will celebrate their 60th wedding anniversary at a special kidush following Sabbath services Saturday at Cong. Beth Abraham Hillel Moses. 'k•X‘'sr THE ADLERS The Adlers, natives of Galicia, came to the U.S. in 1913. They met and married in New York City in 1916 and came to Detroit. They brought many families to this country, including Mrs. Adler's mother and her seven children. The Adlers joined Cong. Beth Abraham in 192Q and Adler has served on the board and was president during construction and the move to the present synagogue. He also was president of the Galician Society and the Detroit Federation of Polish Jews of America. Mrs. Adler continues her activity in the synagogue sisterhood and has served as a trustee, treasurer and vice president. U.S. Cuts Funds for UN PLO Unit WASHINGTON (JTA) — The House Foreign Affairs Committee passed an amendment by Rep. Lester L. Wolff (D-N.Y.) which re- duces the U.S. contribution to the United Nations for the American share of costs of the two Palestine Libera- tion Organization prop- aganda units there. The Wolff Amendment cuts the U.S. contribution by 25 percent of the costs of the Special Unit on Palesti- nian Rights and the Com- mittee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People. Rabbi Taking Side of Kids in Divorce 2 Killed, 1 Hurt in WB Violence TEL AVIV (JTA) — Two West Bank residents were killed and a third was wounded when Israeli bor- der police opened fire on demonstrators in Halhoul, a village near Hebron, last week. The military government ordered an immediate in- vestigation of the incident, described as the worst in the wave of violence that has swept the West Bank re- cently in protest against an Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty. Gen. Moshe Levi, com- mander of the central front, rushed to Halhoul where a curfew was imposed. Disor- ders also occurred in East Jerusalem, Hebron, Bethlehem, Beth Shour and Jericho. In several in- Nazi Propaganda Charge Dismissed VIENNA (JTA) — An Austrian journalist, who had priased Adolf Hitler as "the only man who showed us how to avoid a world war," was acquitted of the charge of spreading Nazi propaganda. By a vote of 7-1 the jury of a district court at Feldkirch in western Austria acquit- ted Walte'r Ochsenberg who was tried under an Austrian law which prohibits Nazi propaganda. The 37-year-old defen- dant claimed that the statements published under a pen name in the magazine "Sieg" (Victory), were not his own, but a quotation of remarks made by a friend who died several years ago. Nevertheless, Ochsenberg said, he felt that the state- ment was correct. Israeli, Arab Women to Meet JERUSALEM — More than 80 Arab women from throughout Israel will take part in a dialogue with Ofira Navon, wife of Israel's president Yitzhak Navon, under the aegis of Pioneer Women. Invited to take part. in these discussions, which will be held in the home of the president on April 28, are Arab women who are leaders in their own corn- munities. The purpose of the meet- ing is to provide a forum for the more educated Israeli Arab women who are seek- ing solutions to communal problems, and to explore ways in which the govern- ment or Pioneer Women can help. NEW YORK (JTA) — A Pennsylvania Reform rabbi has expressed the view that rabbis, while indicating they respect the right of 41111 parents to divorce, have an "imperative" duty to take the side of the children "and affirm their (the children's) absolute right to parent- ing." Rabbi Seymour Prys- LA Aids Seniors towsky of Lafayette Hill LOS ANGELES (JTA) — noted that as the trauma of The San Fernando Valley separation and divorce af- Storefront of the Los fects a growing number of Angeles Jewish Family Jewish families, many rab- Service has trained five case bis, seeking to be helpful to aides to help senior citizens both husband and wife, "prefer not to take sides as with Social Security, Medicaid and other gov- they listen to the couple." ernment programs. He stated his position in an The workers are avail- issue of "Sh'ma." He declared that this able tq the 300 senior citi- zens who use the Valley stance often conveyed to the Storefront's 65-cent hot couple that the rabbi is neutral toward the break- lunch program. The cost of the meals includes trans- up of the marriage. portation. stances border police used fear gas bombs to disperse demonstrators. Meanwhile, a dispute has arisen over the use of weapons by Gush Emunim settlers from Ofra to disperse Arabs who set up a roadblock outside the nearby Arab town of Ramallah. The army declared that the use of arms by civilian settlers was illegal and demanded that the Gush give up their weapons. The Gush refused. Agriculture Minister Ariel Sharon, who heads the ministerial settlement committee, visited Ofra ac- companied by Deputy De- fense Minister Mordechai Zipori to discuss the situa- tion. The army insists that the Gush refrain from firing on demonstrators in Arab towns. Friday, March 23, 1919 Hotel Kashrut Issue Settled JERUSALEM — The ci- ty's hotels and the Jerusalem rabbinate have reached agreement on kas- hrut after months of negoti- ations. The dispute began when Jerusalem Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi Bezalel Zolti ruled that kashrut certification must be linked to the degree of Sabbath observance. The new regulations cover the handling of money on the Sabbath, the hiring of kashrut supervisers and restrictions on serving foreign wines and liquor. Two major hotels, the Hilton and the Ram, are reluctant to sign the agreement but say they will abide by its restric- tions for a six-month trial period. The Hilton had published its own 57-page booklet on kashrut, which is being dis- tributed to all hotels in the Hilton chain. JUAN Now you can fly Delta to San Juan, Puerto Rico—the fastest way going— for as low as $145 each way, Day Economy. And you save again with our thrifty San Juan Dream Vacations'? Fly to San Juan with the Delta profession- als. We've got the only thru-jet—a one-stop every morning at 10:30am that arrives at 4:51 pm. Or take our 5:30pm flight-time for a 1:41am arrival. Returning, it's one stop straight thru at 10:00am; arrive back in Detroit at 3:17pm. Delta is offering this San Juan service with a low Day Economy Class Fare of only $145. And senior citizens and the military get a special break on fares. Ask for details. For more big savings, combine your low Delta fare with a thrifty Delta Dream Vacation. For example: Puerto Rico Shopper's Special. 8 days, 7 nights $130 to $707.50 plus air fare. Enjoy all of fabulous San Juan. And you get a day's freeport shopping on St.Thomas or St.Croix, too—round- trip air fare and trans- fers included. Choose from 22 hotels (rate de- pends on hotel of your choice). You also get all 11 features of the Le-Lo-Lai Festival and airport/hotel transfers. Add round-trip air fare to San Juan. 5% room tax not includ- ed. Good thru mid-April. IT8DL1TC63 Puerto Rico Plus Miami. 8 days, 7 nights $168.50 to $293.50 plus air fare. Two exciting resorts. Four nights in San Juan include clubhouse admission at El Commandante Race Track, discount on round trip to St.Thomas. Three nights in Miami include round-trip transfers from airport or a cruise of Millionaires. Row. Also admission to Planet Ocean mar- ine exposition and a jai alai game. Plus discounts for many stores, restaurants, sightseeing in both cities. Add applic- able taxes. Good at selected hotels thru April 19, 1979. IT8DL1GOZC For details on fares, Dream Vacations and flight reservations, see your friendly Travel Agent. Or call Delta at 355-3200. You can charge your tickets on American Express and all other major general- purpose credit cards. frr") TI e airline run by profess onaN Fares slightly hither during certain holiday periods. Fares and tour rates subject to change without notice. Tour rates are per person, double occupancy. Vacation accommodations subject to availability. DELTA IS READY WHEN YOU ARE