A YOUNG GIRL'S IMMUNE SYSTEM WAS REACTIVATED WITH A DROP OF HER OWN BLOOD THAT HAD BEEN STORED SINCE BIRTH,, JCCouncil New Citizens Seeks Nominees Sworn In THANKS TO YO U The Jewish community Council is accepting suggestions from community members for poten- tial nominees to the Council board of directors. The election will be held at the Council's an- nual meeting in May. Those wishing to suggest a candidate should call the Coun- cil at (810) 642-5393 to request a candidate information form. Po- tential candidates must be mem- bers in good standing of a Council member organization as of the May election. DASSAH TODAY, TO TOMORROW. A YOUNG GIRL OW LOOK F13 The department of Michigan Jewish War Veterans and Ladies Auxiliary will host 100 new citi- zens at a new citizen swearing- in ceremony to be held 9 a.m. Feb. 7 at the Jewish War Veterans Memorial Home, 16990 W. 12 mile Rd., Southfield. Federal Court Judge Bernard Friedman will administer the oath of citizenship. Crystal Gayle OCC Symphony At Macomb Center Invites Musicians Country star Crystal Gale will sing at 3 and 7 p.m., Sunday, Feb. 19 at Macomb Center for the Per- forming Arts. Guest start is Tom Wopat. Call the Macomb Center box office, (810) 286-2222, for more information. WE'VE ALWAYS BEEN AT THE FOREFRONT OF HEALING, RESEARCH, TEACHING AND YOUTH RESCUE IN ISRAEL. WITH YOUR BEQUEST, HADASSAH-HEBREW UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER IN JERUSALEM WILL ALWAYS BE THERE TO HELP. PLEASE WRITE TODAY FOR OUR FREE BROCHURE, "LEGACY FOR TOMORROW". OR CALL Oakland Community College has openings in its symphony band. Positions are available for bas- soon, Bb clarinet, bass clarinet, French horn, baritone, tuba, trombone and percussion. Call (810) 360-6218 for information. 1-800-880-WILL. HADASSAH. WHEN THERE'S A WILL THERE'S A WAY. Dole Seeks End To Arms Embargo HADASSAH WILLS & BEQUESTS DEPARTMENT, 50 WEST 58TH STREET NEW YORK, NY 10019 DETROIT MEN 'S ORT Starrin eater or on LO ormation, call 810) 855- 4 3 Washington (JTA) — As a shaky cease-fire takes hold in Bosnia, Jewish groups are praising an ef- fort in Congress to lift the arms embargo on the Muslim nation by this spring. Majority Leader Robert Dole, R-Kan., introduced legislation on the first day of the new Congress calling for an end to the arms em- bargo if the Bosnian government asks for weapons or by May 1, whichever comes first. Mr. Dole then put the bill on the back burner saying he will not seek an immediate vote. Despite many Jewish activists' general concerns over the new Republican Congress, most praised Mr. Dole's bill, one of the first pieces of legislation unveiled by the new leadership. Jewish groups have been pressing for stronger U.S. action in Bosnia ever since the war broke out in the former Yugoslav republic. In particular, Jewish or- ganizations repeatedly called on the United States and the United Nations to lift the arms embargo. Most Jewish groups continue to support lifting the arms em- bargo, but for some, the cease-fire has changed the playing field. Former President Jimmy Carter last month negotiated the latest of a series of attempts to bring an end to the bloody car- nage in Bosnia. The three-week old cease-fire has held with few exceptions, ac- tivists said. The American Jewish Con- gress took the strongest stand among Jewish groups. It went a step further even than Mr. Dole in support of the lifting of the arms embargo regardless of the cease-fire. Arguing that the Bosnian Muslims cannot defend them- selves against the Serbs, Mark Pelavin, AJCongress's Washing- ton representative said, "It's time to get serious about lifting the embargo." B'nai B'rith, meanwhile, holds little hope that the cease-fire will hold., but the group is supporting Dole's measure. "The Serbs are factoring the cease-fire into their military de- signs," said George Spectre, as- sociate director for international, governmental and Israel affairs for B'nai B'rith. 'The cease-fire is a moot point because during the winter they generally don't fight anyway." Others are taking a more cau- tious approach. "We are yielding to the cease- fire," said Rabbi David Saper- stein, director of the Religious Action Center for Reform Ju- daism. Lifting the embargo now "could jeopardize the cease-fire." —/