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The Detroit Friends of

CLOSE-UP

BAR-ILAN UNIVERSITY

Keepers Of The Books

Continued from Page 26

are pleased
to announce

that scholarship funding will be available

to qualified Michigan-area students study-

ing at Bar-Ilan University during academic

year 1987-88.

For additional information,
please call the
Detroit Bar-Ilan office

423-4550

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28

Friday, March 6, 1987

.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Sarah Bell assists Rabbi William Vine at the Midrasha.

collection of classic Hebrew
texts — and a tape library with
800 English-language lectures
given by well-known rabbis on
Jewish concepts. The tape li-
brary requires a $5 refundable
deposit for three tapes. Many
people use the 90-minute tapes
while driving to and from
work.
The Machon L'Torah library
opened in February with ap-

proximately 200 English books
and 200 tapes. The library has
both classic Jewish texts in
translation, as well as refer-
ence, biography and fiction.
"Every Jewish librarian is a
specialist who adores her job,"
says Eleanor Smith, librarian
at Congregation Beth Shalom
and Hillel Day School. "And
every Jewish library has some-
thing unique to offer." 111

Embattled Leon Dulzin
Will Shun Re-Election

Jerusalem (JTA) — Leon
Dulzin announced Feb. 24 that
he would not seek re-election
as chairman of the Jewish
Agency and World Zionist
Organization Executives at
the next World Zionist Con-
gress in December.

Dulzin made that commit-
ment after leaders of the
United Jewish Appeal and
Keren Hayesod, the principal
Diaspora fund-raising agen-
cies, issued a statement that
Dulzin had acted with "full in-
tegrity" in the recent scandal
that shook Bank Leumi, Is-
rael's largest bank, of which
Dulzin is the nominal head.
The exoneration of Dulzin
from any blame in the bank
scandal followed several days
of tension and acrimony at ses-
sions of the Jewish Agency
Board of Governors in
Jerusalem, which pitted
Zionist members of the board
against the non-Zionist mem-
bers. Many of the latter de-
manded Dulzin quit on
grounds that his connection

with Bank Leumi damaged
their fund-raising efforts and
adversely affected the Jewish
Agency's image.
Dulzin was vigorously de-
a- fended by the Zionist half of the
board, notably Herut and Miz-
rachi memberS. Other Zionist
parties also made clear that
they would not acquiesce in the
non-Zionists' bid to oust him.
Bank Leumi is largely owned
by the Otzar Hityashvut
Hayehudim (Jewish Colonial
Trust), a body appointed by the
WZO. Dulzin, as WZO chair-
man, is the ex-officio governor
of the bank, though he stressed
repeatedly that he had no hand
in the day-to-day operations of
that institution.
Last month the entire Bank
Leumi board of directors res-
igned, and was promptly re-
placed, after disclosure that
Ernst Japhet, the bank's
former chairman and chief
executive officer, was granted
$5 million severance pay and a
$30,000 a month pension when
he was forced to quit last
spring.

