NEWS BODY. SE RELIABLE AND EXPERIENCED SINCE 1930 expert color match, foreign &. American insurance estimates accepted TOWING & RENTAL CARS AVAILABLE La Salle Body Shop Inc. 48018 28829 Orchard Lake Road, Farmington MAX FLEISCHER 553-7111 BETWEEN 12 & 13 Mile Rd. THE HANUKKAH SALE YOU CANT HOLD A CANDLE TO. Beautiful bracelets. Gorgeous rings. Personal and perfect gifts to set a heart on fire. On sale. 30 to 40% OFF ENTIRE STOCK BRUCE WEISS CUSTOM JEWELRY YOU HAVE IT MADE 26325 -TWELVE MILE ROAD, SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN IN THE MAYFAIR SHOPS AT NORTHWESI ERN HIGHWAY HOLIDAY HOURS MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00-9:00 SAT. 10:00-6:00 81 SUN. 11:00-6:00 (313) 353-1424 49 FRIDAY DECFMRER 4 1987 VISA LA Plans Statue To Honor Wallenberg TOM TUGEND Special to The Jewish News L os Angeles — The Los Angeles City Council has unanimously ap- proved plans to erect a statue in honor of Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat who save thousands of Hungarian Jews from deportation to Nazi death camps during World War II. The statue will be 18 feet tall and stand at the corner of Fairfax Ave. and Beverly Blvd., the crossroads marking the traditional Jewish section of Los Angeles. Italian artist Franco Asset- to has designed and sculpted the monument at his studio in Turin. It features two stainless steel wings, sym- bolizing an angel of mercy, surrounding a brass and gold silhouette of a man, repre- senting Wallenberg and the spirit of compassion in mankind. The base will be covered with thousands of pebbles, each representing a life that was saved. The statue is intentionally abstract because it would be inappropriate to erect a lifelike statue of Wallenberg without clear evidence that he is dead, according to Paul Brooks, who is leading the monument effort. Brooks, whose parents sur- vived in Nazi-occupied Budapest thanks to Wallen- berg, says that $50,000 have been raised toward the cost of the monument. He hopes that the remaining $100,000 will be collected in time for a dedication ceremony next spring. Wallenberg was sent to Hungary by the Swedish Foreign Ministry in July, 1944. While at this post, he is credited with saving some 20,000 Jews by providing refuge for them in houses pro- tected by the flags of neutral Sweden, Switzerland and Portugal. He is also given credit with saving the lives of about 70,000 additional people when he persuaded a German officer to ignore orders to destroy the Budapest ghetto. Wallenberg vanished after Red Army troops took Buda- pest and arrested him on Jan. 17, 1945. The Russians later reported that he died in prison in 1947, but there have been subsequent reports that he had been sighted in prison camps and mental hospitals. One volunteer in raising funds is Suzanne Zada, a sur- vivor of Auschwitz, who spoke on the significance of the monument for her. "He (Wallenberg) didn't save me from anything, but in retrospect, he saved my soul," she said. "Even though I didn't meet anyone who was decent, he has reminded me that there was at least one. It is important that we remind the new generation that there were some decent people, not just all the horrors." To help in the fund raising, programs depicting high- lights of Wallenberg's life and deeds will be shown over three cable television chan- nels during the next few months. Chabad To Keep Rebbe9 s Library New York (JTA) — The Ap- peals Court for the Second Circuit in Manhattan unanimously upheld a federal district court decision that awarded the library that belonged to the sixth Lubavit- cher rebbe, Rabbi Joseph Schneersohn, to the Lubavitch movement. The imbroglio pitted Barry Gourary, grandson of the sixth rebbe, against the organized Lubavitch, or Chabad, community. Gourary, a Montclair, N.J., businessman who is not a member of Chabad, had claimed part of the library had been left him by virtue of a will his grandmother, Nechama Dina Schneersohn — the sixth rebbe's widow — left at the time of her death in 1970. In it, she wrote • that the 500,000-book library was the property of herself, her two daughters, and her grandson. Chabad, however, claimed it was entitled to the library because it was communal property. Labor Parties Score Big Rio de Janeiro (JTA) — The Zionist Labor Movement and Mapan captured nearly 45 percent of the votes in Brazil's elections for the 31st Zionist Congress, and will send five of Brazil's ten delegates to the Congress in Jerusalem Dec. 6. Likud and Mizrachi will both have two delegates. The tenth delegate is being claim- ed by both the Reformists list and the Likud, and is to be decided by the Zionist Court in Jerusalem.