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April 11, 1980 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1980-04-11

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Dulzin Fears Effects of Law

(Continued from Page 1)
was a humanitarian law.
"Nobody wants` to compel
Jews who do not so wish, to
come and settle in Israel,"
he said. But, he added, Is-
rael cannot approve allow-
ing the visa to Israel, which
Soviet Jews must get in
order to emigrate, to become
"a mere transit paper."
Dulzin said American
Jews "have a right" to see to
it that Soviet Jews who
want to come to the U.S get
direct entry visas. "The
U.S.A. will do what she has
to do as leader of the free
orld and as a shelter for
ersecuted people," Dulzin
stated. `Israel will not aid
Jews exchanging one dias-
pora with another . . . . An
Israeli citizen is no more a
homeless person. Every Jew
has a mother country. He
may not make use of it, but
by no means can he be re-
garded as a refugee."
On-Sunday, Joseph
Shapira, head of the
Jewish Agency's Youth

Sadat Visit
Denied by Israel

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Israeli government officials
professed "no -knowledge"
Tuesday of an imminent
visit by President Sadat to
were
Jerusalem.. They were
reacting to a report by
Israeli newsman in Wash-
ington, Arabic language TV
reporter Eli Laniado, which
said the Egyptian leader
planned to visit Jerusalem
again soon, and to speak
again to the Knesset. He
would confine his address
this time to the Palestinian
problem, the report said.
Other Israeli media head-
lined the report Tuesday.
Yediot Ahaoronot said
Egyptian sources traveling
with Sadat to Washington
had confirmed it.
A source close to
Menahem Begin reportedly
observed that the Israeli
premier had not yet been
invited to address the Egyp-
tian National Assembly —
21'z years after Sadat first
spoke to Israel's Knesset.
The source said Israel had
been given no inkling dur-
ing recent and ongoing con-
tacts with Egypt of the
Egyptian president's re-
ported desire to visit
Jerusalem again.

Science Program
for Gifted Youth
at Bar-Ilan

RAMAT-GAN — Gifted
Israeli youngsters are now
enefiting from a wide-
ranging scientific youth ac-
tivity program conducted by
Bar-Ilan University.
In its 10th year, the uni-
versity program is expand-
ing the scope of educational
opportunities in the natural
sciences for selected Israeli
high school pupils of all
backgrounds. It offers
enrichment studies un-
available in conventional
schooling to intellectually
gifted youngsters.
About 300 Israeli youth
with high IQs and top
scholastic records are par-
ticipating in the program.

b

Aliya department, pro-
posed that Israel fight the
dropout problem by
withholding visas from
Jews in those areas of the
Soviet Union where the
dropout rate is highest.
In an interview on Israel
Radio, Shapira noted that
the dropout rate among
Jews from Leningrad,
Odessa, Kiev and Kharkov
is almost 100 percent.
Shapira conceded that his
plan would have to be im-
plemented collectively since
it is never known in ad-
vance which individual
Jews will drop out. How-
ever, he said, Israel should
impose a ban on visas to
Jews in the cities he men-
tioned and should take a
firm stand against drop-
outs.
Soviet Jewry activists
from five countries
gathered in Israel last
month. The meeting was
sponsored by the Union of
Councils for Soviet Jews,
the Israel Public Council for
Soviet Jewry, with the Stu-
dent Struggle for Soviet
Jewry, The 35's (Women's
Campaign for Soviet Jewry,
England and Canada) and
the French Committee of
15.
A Sabbath afternoon
meeting was held in the
home of Prime Minister _
Begin. Robert Gordon,
president of the UCSJ,
urged the prime minister
to do everything in his

power to help Soviet
Jews and especially to
improve the Israeli gov-
ernment's handling of the
large Soviet Jewish
exodus.
An intense meeting was
held with families of pris-
oners and refusniks. There
was also a reception honor-.
ing former Prisoners of
Conscience Hillel Butman,
Israel Zalmanson, Boris
Penson and Leib Khnokh.
Special mention was made
of Yosef Mendelevich, the
only Jewish prisoner from
the Leningrad trial still in
the Soviet Union.
Other sessions included a
heated discussion with a
representative of the Israel
government's "Special
Office" dealing with Soviet
Jewry, a lecture by New
York Times correspondent
David Shipler, formerly
stationed in Moscow and
currently in Israel, and a
meeting with Lev
Ulanovsky and Dan
Roginsky, Soviet Jewish ac-
tivists involved in the
movement for Jewish cul-
ture in the Soviet Union.
At the end of the confer-
ence, many of the partici-
pants travelled to norther
Israel for two days to visit
with Soviet Jews who had
settled in a variety of com-
munities. One of the stops
on this trip was Arshach, a
tiny cooperative settlement
of Soviet Jewish scientists
near the Sea of Galilee.

-

Whatever is highest and
holiest is tinged with
melancholy. The eye of
genius has always a plain-

tive expression, and its
natural language is pathos.
A prophet is sadder than
other men.

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Friday, April 11, 1980

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Creative Jewelers Diamonds —
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Detroit Chapter

THE

AMERICAN SOCIETY for TECHNION

ISRAEL INSTITUT E OF TECHNOLOGY

ALTERNATE ENERGY
and Societal Needs

Wednesday

April 16, 1980

7..45 pin'.

SPEAKER .. .

Stanford R. Ovshinsky

President and founder, with his wife Iris, of Energy
Conversion Devices, Inc. that developed amorph-
ous materials for information storage, control, im-
aging, and solar and heat conversion to electricity.

chairman . . .

MI

NB 4011

=I

MI

Ramada Inn
28225 Telegraph Road
South of 12 Mile Road

Dr. Stanley .1(;Stynes

Dean of the College of Engineering, Wayne State University

Short documentary film on energy will be shown

Dominion= Life

DOMINION'S DETROIT CENTRE BRANCH DOUBLE WINNER

(I to r)—Ted Wakeling, CLU, Superintendent, Individual Sales, Richard Love,
(I to r)—Lee J. Adler, Vice-President, Individual Sales, Richard Love, CLU,
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CLU, Superintendent, Individual Sales.

The Dominion Life Assurance Company is proud to announce that Mr. Richard Love, CLU, Manager of the Detroit
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Mr. Love received his awards while attending the Annual General Meeting at Dominion's home office in Waterloo,
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Committee.

Dominion Life

THE DOMINION LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY

100 Renaissance Center, Suite 2912, Detroit

(313) 259-6120

5

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