THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 16 Friday, July 22, 1963 PICK THE GREETING OF YOUR CHOICE Best wishes for a happy, healthy New Year May the coming year be filled — NAME —$7 . 50 #1 \arm\ inns nau)`? with health and happiness for to all all our family our friends and relatives and friends —NAME— #2 $14 #3 — NAME — Deadline - Friday, August 22, 1983 All greetings arriving after the deadline will appear in the Sept. 9th issue. We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year #4 Mt) ;1014 , A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family NAME #6 Wishing all our family and friends a year of health and happiness $14 --- NAME — # 5 NAME '20.50 — May the coming year be one filled with health, happiness and prosperity for all our friends and family. $26.50 May the New Year Bring — NAME #7 $32.50 To All Our Friends and Family Health, Joy, Prosperity and Everything Good in Life #9 NAME To All Our Relatives and Friends, Our wish for a year filled with happiness, health and prosperity - ----- MI NM MN • mm = NI 1 Gentlemen: (Copyright 1983, JTA, Inc.) JERUSALEM (JTA) — States last year when Israel might reconsider its President Reagan sus- decision to buy 75 American pended the sales process be- F-16 jet fighter-bombers for cause of Israel's invasion of economic reasons, it was re- Lebanon. The sale was ported here Tuesday. reinstated after Israel and Defense Minister Moshe Lebanon signed their with- Arens is believed to want drawal agreement last May the advanced aircraft, but 17. But the delay escalated their total cost of $3 billion the cost of the planes. could be a deterrent at a time when the Finance Ministry and the Bank'of Is- NEW YORK — The rael are urging drastic American Jewish Commit- budget cuts. According to tee has urged the Reagan reports, Israel would buy Administration to restore to the planes, but fewer than its proposed 1984 budget 75 of them. funds to help alleviate the The F-16s were a cause of growing food crisis in friction with the United Ethiopia. Ethiopian Aid? Please insert my New Year Greeting # Name (Please print name to appear in greeting) Address Zip Code State City I Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, JTA F-16- Deal May Fall Through $51.50 Nam --------------- The Jewish News 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd., Suite 865 Southfield, Michigan 48075 `Between You . . . and Me' MEET YOUR LEADER: The Jewish Agency, the organization in Israel that directs immigration and absorp- tion, conducts social welfare programs, youth services, edu- cational projects and other humanitarian activities with funds it receives in hundreds of millions of dollars annually from the American Jewish community and communities in other countries, now has a new chairman of its Board of Governors — the supreme policy-making body between assemblies. He is Jerold C. Hoffberger. He firmly believes that people of a variety of ideas can sit and work at the same table. He believes in fostering Jewish unity. He is deeply interested in the welfare of Israel and actively involved in the United States in humanitarian efforts for Israel. He is one of the American Jewish personalities who enjoy an enviable record of lead- ership in the field of meeting the needs of American Jewry. He has been president of the Council of Jewish Federa- tions. He served as a national chairman of the United Jewish Appeal. He was chairman of the Israel Emergency Fund. He was among the first American delegates to the Assembly of the reconstituted and expanded Jewish Agency where he was elected a member of the board of governors. He is a member of the executive of the Joint Distribution Committee. He served on the board of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. He has completed his term of service as chairman of the United Israel Appeal — a post he has held since 1979. In Baltimore where he resides, he established an envi- able record in his activities for Jewish and general humanitarian causes. He served as head there of the Asso- ciated Jewish Charities and Welfare Fund; he is a member of the board of directors and of the executive of Sinai Hospi- tal; a trustee of the John Hopkins Hospital and of numerous other institutions. He was named "Man of the Year" in 1966 by the Advertising Club in Baltimore, and "Outstand- ing Man of Industry" in 1971 by the Baltimore Jaycees. HIS INTEREST IN ISRAEL: The importance of floffberger's election to the position of chairman of the Jewish Agency's Board of Governors — a post held for 12 years by the noted American Jewish leader, Detroiter Max Fisher, until his retirement — is the fact that the board is not only the policy-making body of the Agency but is also the organ that has to approve the multi-million dollar budget which the Executive of the Jewish Agency submits. Thus, Hoffberger, as chairman of the board, plays a decisive role in the conduct of the Jewish Agency. He has always been calling upon American Jewry to assume actively part of the burden of Israel's human de- velopments. His view is that just as Jews in the United States link Israel's survival to Judaism's survival, so they must link Israel's self-sufficiency to Jewish dignity. One of his favorite projects is "Project Renewal" now being conducted in Israel to restore 160 depressed areas and bring 300,000 people to dignity, with American corn- munities associating with specific neighborhoods. He chaired the international committee set up by the Jewish Agency to supervise that development and the committee had a major input in the basic design of the project. To him Project Renewal means a start in providing total physical and human support systems in everything that the under- privileged Israeli Jew needs to renew and revitalize his life — decent housing, neighborhood health centers, recreation centers, recreation complexes, day care facilities, schools, social workers. It is the first comprehensive program at- tempting to overcome poverty and social distress. THESE ARE SAMPLES OF THE ONLY GREETINGS BEING OFFERED THIS YEAR TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE JEWISH NEWS ROSH HASHANA ISSUE OF SEPT. 2. 1983. $20.50 Boris Smolar's Check enclosed (circle one) $7.50, $14, $20.50, $26.50, $32.50, $40, $51.50 or $ swa 1.1 OM 1.• OM • UM MI MN • MN all