62 Friday, May 4, 1919 40—BUSINESS CARDS THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Market Rate Expected on U.S. Loans to Egypt, Israel . CALLIGRAPHY - Envelopes ad- dressed. Maryanne. 399-4030. ALTERATIONS. Ladies & Men's. Experienced. Reasonable. 569-8206. Experienced legal secretary de- sires typing at home — knowl- edge in all areas. Divorce, ban- krupcy, drivers restorations, etc. Please call 355-2506. Pick up and delivery provided. ARE YOU MOVING? We would like to sell your furniture & contents. Call Ruth Weiss, 544-3744 or Helen Keeler, 549-8754. European experience. Interior, Exterior Painting & Decorating. Quality work. Free estimates. From 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 356-5816. From 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. 661-2328. SEW-PRO Sewing Machine Repair Specialists Day's — EVENINGS — SUNDAYS FREE SERVICE CALLS - 398-1492 545-3381 ARON SPINNER PLUMBING Repairs - Remodeling Residential Commercial 557-6318 557-6182 863-1925 IF NO ANSWER 573-0924 CARPENTRY • Rec. Rooms • Basement Floors Tiled • Suspended ceilings installed • Stucco • Misc. Repairs. • Custom Formica Work References Very Reasonable CALL RON 661-4576 eves. WASHINGTON (JTA) — Indications in Congress were that the Carter Ad- ministration's proviso for "market" rates of interest will prevail for the coming fiscal year on the loans earmarked for Israel and Egypt arising from their peace treaty. The Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee last week voted out the $4.8 billion special economic assistance measure by a vote of 10-1 and sent it to the Senate floor with recommendations for reconsideration next year of the interest rate and calling on European nations and Japan to support the two Middle East countries. Sen. Jesse Helms (R — NC) alone opposed the bill on final passage. Sens. Frank Church (D — Idaho), the committee chairman, Jacob Javits (R — N.Y.) and Richard Stone (D — Fla.) introduced the previso that will cause the 40—BUSINESS CARDS PROFESSIONAL TAILORING Ladies & Mens Excellent work. 8:30 to 5 Mon. thru Fri. CLAWSON TAILORS 32 S. Main (14 Mile & Main) 435-9763 , MICHAEL BLACK For the finest in custom wallpaper hanging 352-1923 OSBORNE LOCAL MOVING Residential & Office Licensed & Insured. A NICE JEWISH BOY LIKE ME - Call 421-7774 PAINTING Interior - Exterior HANDY MAN 237-0092 Wet, damp, leaky basements made dry. Guaranteed 18 years. Experienced -- lowest price. FRANK'S WATERPROOFING 559-7398 PAINTING Interior, exterior, wall papering. Free estimates. References. Work guaranteed. Call anytime, Bill Paschal Painting service 535-2609 or 535-0178 . No job too small, no price too big. , "RODGERS DOES IT RIGHT" ALUMINUM GUTTERS BY L.J. RODGERS Home Improvements QUALITY WORK GUARANTEED 399-1233 HOME REPAIRS Experienced No job too small Reasonable 353-3336 of 357-0241 45—LOST & FOUND Gold brooch lost at Shaarey Zedek Wednes- day evening, April 25th. The brooch is a family heir- loom and has great senti- mental value to me. Please call 424-8808 REWARD 51—MISCELLANEOUS LARGE hand made afghans. All colors. Reasonable. LI 7-0791. 53 — ENTERTAINMENT SINGING guitarist/violinist. Small parties. 398-2462. BAND Excellent Music For All Social Occasions 731-6081 Administration to report the relocation costs. next year on the impact of Israel will get another the interest rate on the $2.2 billion in credit for pur- Egyptian and Israeli chase of military equip- economies. This measure ment. Egypt will receive was opposed by Helms and $1.5 billion in military cre- by Sen. Richard Lugar (R — dits and $300 million in new Ind.) who defended the Ad- \ economic assistance. These ministration's position are loans subject to the against a review. interest rates. Under the bill as it now Sen. Church defended the stands, Egypt and Israel cost of the peace treaty, not- will pay the U.S. govern- ing the U.S. expenses re- ment the cost of borrow- sulting from a state of war ing the money plus a serv- in the Middle East: $5 bil- ice charge which will lion in U.S. military equip- bring the total interest ment to Israel since the cost to between nine and 1973 Yom Kippur War, 10 percent. higher oil prices of $300 bil- The Senate measure pro- lion since 1973, $13 billion vides a grant of $800 million in U.S. economic assistance to Israel to relocate two air to promote regional stabil- bases that are being aban- ity, $800 million in refugee doned in the Sinai. The Ad- aid and $300 million for UN ministration considers this peacekeeping forces. sum will meet 80 percent of Church said the peace Martyr Information Asked Gisi Fleischmann, born in 1897, was a leader of the Women's International Zionist Organization in Slovakia before World War II. At the outbreak of the war she sent her two young children to what was then called Palestine, but re- mained in Bratislava in an attempt to help the commu- nity. he was instrumental in saving thousands of lives, including those of refugees from Poland; she managed to convey word of the at- rocities being committed- by the Nazis to many leaders of the free world, probably in- cluding Pope Pius XII. In addition, she negotiated with Dieter Wisliceny and other top-ranking Nazi leaders in connection with the Europa Plan, an effort conceived by Rabbi Michael Weissmandel to ransom Europe's remaining Jews. On or about Oct. 18, 1944, Mrs. Fleischmann became one of the last victims of the Auschwitz gas chambers. For a projected biog- raphy, information is currently being sought from those who knew or had contact with Mrs. Fleischmann. Material relating to her youth, her relationships with her family, and other per- sonal details will be of particular value in paint- ing a three-dimensional portrait of this heroic woman; however, even those whose acquain- tance with her was limited to a brief encounter may be able to make a worthwhile con- tribution by offering their information and in- sights. All information should be sent to Joan Campion, 508 Fifth Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. 18018. Joan Campion (Editor's note: The martyrdom and heroism of a victim of Nazism is the subject of research, preparatory to an histor- ical record of tribute by Joan Campion, a non- Jewish activist in the ranks of Christians dedi- cated to preserving the record of Jewish resis- tance to Nazism, whose special articles have ap- peared in The Detroit Jewish News.) Gentile Appreciation Asked at U.S. Holocaust Observance WASHINGTON (JTA) — The more than 2,000 per- sons who filled the National Cathedral of the Episcopal Church Sunday for the con- clusion of the eight "Days of Remembrance of the Vic- tims of the Holocaust" heard a strong appeal for Christians to understand the Holocaust and prevent its recurrence. "The time has come for something more than a generalized non-sectarian good feeling," Sen. John C. Danforth (R-Mo.), an Epis- copal minister, told the in- terfaith congregation which included First Lady Rosalynn Carter and Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumenthal, who is himself a refugee from Nazi Germany. "The time has come for an examination of the Holocaust in the light of what each of us professes as believing persons." The service marked the end of a week of observances throughout the country which started with a memo- rial service in New York's Temple Emanu-El April 22 and featured a ceremony marking International Holocaust Day at the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol April 24 which was ad- dressed by President Car- ter. Pioneer Women Board to Meet NEW YORK — The na- tional board of Pioneer Women will meet Sunday through Wednesday in New York. Detroiter Frieda Leemon, national president, will give a report on the organization's bi- ennial convention in Jerusalem in November. treaty aid to Egypt and Is- rael is a small price to pay in comparison to those figures. * * * House Hits PLO WASHINGTON (JTA) — The House of Representa- tives has struck a double blow at the Palestine Liber- ation Organization. It amended previous legisla- tion to bar "any alien who is a member, officer, official representative( or spokes- man" of the PLO from ob- taining a visa to enter the United States and it re- duced the U.S. contribution to the United Nations in the U.S. share of the costs of two PLO propaganda units. These steps were taken e the House approved the authorization money bill for the State Department for the coming fiscal year. The bill was sent to the Senate for enactment. No debate was held on the amendment by Rep, Lester Wolff (D — N.Y.) that cut the U.S. contri- bution of the costs of the UN Special Unit on 33 tinian Rights an.... - Lhe Committee on the Exev2-, cise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People. The visa proviso was ;n reaction to the recent U.S. speaking tour of a PLO offi 2 cial. Dutch Frown on Holocaust' AMSTERDAM (JTA) — The screening of the first part of the NBC-TV film "Holocaust" in Holland last week drew a generally negative reaction. Many viewers complained be- cause their favorite pro- grams had been pre- empted. Others suggested that the film would increase rather than diminish anti- Semitism and a few said they were emotionally dis- turbed and would rather not have seen it. The Dutch broadcasting Rabbi Friedman, Hasidic Leader JERUSALEM (JTA) — The Hasidic Rebbe of Sadagora, Rabbi Mordechai Shalom Yosef Friedman, died April 26 at age 83. The eldest surviving member of the illustrious Hasidic house of Rizhyn, and a member since 1929 of Agudat Israel's Council of Sages, Rabbi Friedman headed a small community from his modern-style north Tel Aviv synagogue. His organization included yeshivot, synagogues and other religious institutions in Jerusalem and Bnei Brak. Rabbi Friedman was born in 1897 in Sadagora. His father was Rabbi Aharon of Sadagora, a lineal descen- dant of the famous founder of the Hasidic house of Rizhyn, Rabbi Israel. It was Aharon whom Theodor Herzl envisaged in his "Altneuland" as the "bishop" of a new Jewish state, and in his diaries Herzl gives an account of contacts he had with the rabbi. The younger Rabbi Friedman, who suc- ceeded his father at age 16, also was sympathetic to the Zionist ideal de- spite his membership and activism in the non- Zionist Agudat Israel organization. During the 1930s he persistently ad- vised his followers to flee Europe and was respon- sible for inspiring var- ious groups of Hasidim to settle in Palestine. He himself visited Pales- tine several times and fi- nally settled in Tel Aviv six months before World. War II broke out. organization Tros reported about 500 telephone calls, fewer than had been ex- , petted. The screening lasted from 11 p.m.-12:30 a.m. It was followed by a radio broadcast of a panel discus- sion by experts including Avraham Soetendorp of the Liberal Jewish Congrega- tion, Johann Van Der- Leeuw of The Netherlands State Institute for War Documentation, a psychiat : rist and a social worker. Many callers com- plained that too much at-- tention was being given_ to the persecution of Jews during the war which ended 34 years ago. Others criticized the emphasis on Jewish vic- tims although Gypsies ; homosexuals and other minorities suffered the same fate because of who they were. A number of viewers thought it was unfair to concentrate on German at- rocities in light of the at rocities committed by Americans in Vietnam au the Dutch in the East In- dies. Maurice Orbach, - Led British Jews` LONDON (JTA) —' Maurice Orbach, who had been a Labor member o Parliament since 1946 and a prominent leader of Anglo-Jewry, died April 24 at age 76. He was active in the World Jewish Con5\ and in 1954 was sent mis- sion to Cairo to s ,---,.‘ the of Jews sentenced to death for their part in the so-called Lavon affair. Mr, Orbach later claimed that President Gamal Abdel Nasser agreed to spare their lives, but broke his promise- in order to balance their deaths with his execution of Moslem Brotherhood mem- bers. In Britain, Mr. Orbach established the Trade Advisory Council, a committee of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, aimed at countering ' anti-Semitism in business life during World War II. He remained its secre- tary until his death. - A stalwart Zionist, he was a founder of the Labor Friends of Israel.