26 Friday, April 18, 1980 CONG. BETH SHALOM presents RUTHI NAVON June 1st THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Terrorist Trial TEL AVIV (JTA) — Four Arabs went on trial Sunday for terrorist acts in. Natanya and Jerusalem in which six people were killed. DANCE! into the 80's PARTIES BY inr Rock & Roll Disco 50's, 60's, 70's Best Music We Haven't Stopped Dancing — Why Should You! Call Dan Sandberg 353-6699 WSU President Optimistic About Lasting Mideast Peace President Jimmy Carter. Monday's meeting was sponsored by the Jewish National Fund Council of Metropolitan Detroit, and Carmi M. Slomovitz, president of the JNF Coun- cil, presided. In his opening state- ments, Slomovitz cited the "feeling of relief when we heard the words 'no more wars' uttered. "But," said Slomovitz, "the treaty means a tre- mendous increase in the Addressing a communal celebration of the first an- niversary of the signing of the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty Monday evening in the Zionist Cultural Center, Dr. Thomas N. Bonner, president of Wayne State University, expressed op- timism about prospectg for a lasting peace between the two countries. Dr. Bonner was witness to the signing of the peace treaty in Washington last year at the invitation of already heavy work-load carried by JNF. We must, in the short span of three years, build 20 settle- ments in the Negev for those persons being transferred from the Sinai. In fact," he said, "now, at the end of this first year of the peace treaty, eight of those set- tlements are being com- pleted." In any case, land must be prepared, roads built, recreation areas es- tablished and comforta- FOR SELECTION IN FLORENTINE, TAPERED, ENGRA VED, PLAIN, AND DIAMOND WEDDING BANDS WITH ble surroundings created for the new settlers. Slomovitz revealed that "the Keren Kayemet has adopted a budget of $100 million and has asked America to raise $8.5 mil- lion of it. Detroit is commit- ted to raising $420,000 for this year. One of the problems in the Galilee, according to Slomovitz, is the minority of only 32 percent - Jews. "Therefore, we must pre- pare the area to be inha- bited by more of our peopl - At present, the JNF is in ti.. process of building 30 look- out posts which eventually will become settlements. Thirty-five existing settle- ments are now being ex- panded and modernized, and we are building 16 new settlements. Fifty miles of new roads are currently being built, and 7,500 acres of land are being reclaimed. All in all, the JNF is in- volved in more than 500 different locations through- out Israel." Dr. Bonner, who is an author and historian noted that "the visitor (to Israel) for the first time gets the sense and the feel of history, a nation that stands at the convergence of history, reli- gion, world politics and so- cial change. There is noth- ing like it in the world," Bonner declared. Dr. Bonner has visited Israel twice, and has es- tablished exchange agreements for Wayne State University with Is- rael's Hebrew University and Egypt's American University, among others. Asked about the quality of higher education in IA- rael, Dr. Bonner stated that the "scientific labs and medicine are first class and deserve world reputation; that the two national uni- versities — the Technion in Haifa and the Hebrew Uni- versity in Jerusalem — are rooted in the European uni- versity tradition with em- phasis on scholarship and research. In comparison, just as the University of Michigan is ahead, so are the Israeli universities ahead in scholarship." As for Israel in general, WSU's president said that "several thousand years of history have made this the most remarkable archeolog- ical site in the world." Scoliosis Club Meets Thursday STYLING TO SUIT EVERY TASTE... VISA 26400 West- Twelve Mile Road 357 5578 in Southfield's Racquetime Mall • Mon., Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat., 10-6 Northeast corner 12 Mile & Northwestern Hwy. Thur., 10-9 - Scoliosis Club of South- eastern Michigan will meet 7:30 p.m. Thursday in th administrative services building of Beaumont Hos- pital. Dr. Alvin Michaels, psychiatrist, will speak on "Dealing With Scoliosis from Bewilderment to Ac- ceptance." The youth group will meet concurrently. The public is invited. The richest tribute a child can lay at his parents feet are the little troubles he brings to them to share. —Burton Hillis