Central Room, Modernized Kitchen Approved for 10 Mile Center _ .2 The Jewish Welfare Federation Board of Governors has approved the expenditure of about $90,000 for renova- tion and expansion of facilities at the 10 Mile Branch of the Jewish Community Center. Expansion plans include enclosing the atrium in the middle of the building to provide a large room capable of seating 300 persons. At present, the 10 Mile Center's largest room can seat only 130. An End to Wars and to Holocausts and Jerusalem's Status in an Era of Peace The kitchen will also be modernized and enlarged. It is in constant daily use for the morning Koffee Klatch and the mid-day light lunch; the facility is also used by 11 senior adult groups to prepare luncheons, birthday parties and holiday celebrations. A large increase in the Center's senior adult mem- bership in recent years, from 685 to more than 1,200, makes expansion necessary, said Center President Joel D. Tauber. Up to 500 persons attend a program at the 10 Mile Branch every day. A new 100-unit building is being constructed by Jewish Federation Apartments, next door to the 10 Mile Branch, and when it is completed the Center's membership is expected to increase again. THE JEWISH NEWS A Weekly Review Editorials, Page 4 The Brandeis Letters: Social Aspects, Zionist Involvements Documented of Jewish Events Review on Page 64 May 4, 1979 VOL. LXXV, No. 9 17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 424-8833 $12.00 Per Year: This Issue 30c Israeli and U.S. Celebrations Hail Release of Seven POCs TEL AVIV (JTA) — "Silva Zalmanson will testify whenever she saw me I assured her that her husband, Eduard Kuznetsov, will return," Premier Menahem Begin asserted Monday. "I told her he will return and here he is." Begin made this statement as he welcomed Prisoners of Conscience Kuz- netsov and Mark Dymshits at Ben-Gurion Airport after they arrived from New York where they had been taken from a Siberian prison along with three other Soviet dissidents in exchange for two Russians jailed in the U.S. on spy charges. Silva Zalmanson also accompanied -- _ her husband from New York. Also there to greet the two new arrivals were five other Soviet Jews, who, like them, had been imprisoned in the 1970 Lenin- grad hijacking trial and who had arrived in Israel Sunday. One of them was Vulf Zalmanson, Sil- va's brother. The welcome Monday was almost a carbon copy of Sunday's joyous greet- ing ceremony. Begin again spoke in Hebrew, Russian Lnd English as he called Kuznetsov and Dymshits heroes of the spirit. He again thanked President Carter for what he has done in behalf of Soviet Jewry (Continued on Page 26) NEW YORK (JTA) — The 100,000 persons who jammed Dag Ham- marskjold Plaza across from the United Nations for the eighth annual "Solidar- ity Sunday for Soviet JeWry," Sunday joyously welcomed two Soviet Jews who were released from a Siberian prison camp only two days before and cheered as Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D-Wash.) and New York's two .U.S. Senators declared that the Jackson-Vanik Amendment must not be repealed until the Soviet Union agrees to free emigration for all Jews and others who want to leave. Eduard Kuznetsov and Mark . Dymshits., who arrived in New York Friday along with three other Soviet dissidents, thanked American Jews for their efforts on behalf of Soviet Jewry and urged continued support for 14 other Jews in Soviet prisons as well as all Jews who wish to emigrate from the USSR. The two Jews, along with Alek- sandr Ginzburg, a 42-year-old Soviet human rights activist; Georgi Vins, a Soviet Baptist leader; and Valentin Moroz, a leader of the Ukrainian nationalist movement, were ex- changed for two Soviet former employes of the UN who had been SILVA ZALM ANSON EDUARD KUZETSOV MARK DYMSHITS (Continued on Page 28) '79 Allied Campaign Attains High Rate of Generosity history of Greater Detroit Jewry's philanthropic activities. At the conlcuding meeting of the drive conducted under the co-chairmanship of David Handleman and Irving Selig- man, there was assurance that approximately $17 million in regular , gifts will be increased by an additional $5 million in pledges for a 1978 1979 five-year period towards Project Renewal to provide for housing, educa- PLEDGES PLEDGES tional and social needs of 300,000 Oriental Jews in Israel whose needs demand immediate succor. 1,160 954 Story of the concluding Campaign meeting, held April 26 at Cong. Shaarey Zedek, appears on Page 5. With approximately 2,000 more potential contributors to be solicited, the 1979 Allied Jewish Campaign has reached one of the highest marks in generosity in the DIVISION & CHAIRMEN 1978 TOTAL MERCANTILE It win L. Kahn and D. Lawrence Sherman $ 1,298,218 1979 AMOUNT (REGULAR) PROJECT RENEWAL $ $ 1,174,865 151,145 PROFESSIONAL SERVICE Robert Naftaly 2,276,894 2,067,184 495,428 2,816 2,215 INDUSTRIAL AND AUTOMOTIVE Earl Grant and Philip S. Minkin 4,316,548 4,123,758 1,369,835 644 545 REAL ESTATE Lester S. Burton and Bernard H. Stollman 2,916,719 2,925,860 1,759,295 957 863 FOOD AND SERVICES Sol R. Colton and Bob Rosenthal 1,502,196 1,468,030 ' 418,545 803 608 PROFESSIONAL HEALTH Dr. Conrad L. Giles 2,119,124 1,911,411 148,370 . 2,814 2,323 139,915 143,652 675 2,567 2,490 152,386 184,570 1,635 2,128 2,500 2,116,411 2,044,992 319,955 8,542 7,600 $ 16,840,411 $ 16,175,622 $ 4,665,883 22,631 20,146 ear t. METROPOLITAN Jer,ome B. Greenbaum 1UNIOR Jonathan M. Jaffa WOMEN'S Shelby Tauber TOTAL Shown are, from left, standing, I. William Sherr, Marvin H. Goldman and David S. Mondry, Campaign co-chairmen; Philip T. Warren, chairman of the 1978 Campaign; Paul Zuckerman, UJA honorary chairman; Irving R. Seligman, Campaign chair- man; and Jay M. Kogan, co-chairman. Seated are Phillip Stollman, chairman of the 19'78 Campaign; George M. Zeltzer, president of the Jewish Welfare Federation; and Ephraim Ev- ron, Israel's ambassador to the United States, who was guest speaker.