****(**- A - *!.(' *******-)1 .'(****),^.(******4' ********A- ************* A Healthy, Happy and Prosperous NEW YEAR To All Our Clients Sr Their Families Survivors Center Open In Poland With Warmest Wishes FROM MAXINE WEINBERG And All The Staff At v.10 travel, varliik ma . Renee Bean Lenore Block Sharon Block Jodi Denenberg Eve Ezmerlian Steven Fish Paula Forman Linda Gershenson Judy Goldfaden Judy Goldman Hannah Hall Linda Karson Suzanne Kirschner Lynn Levine Yona Nivy Stephanie Rudolph Linda Anway Peggy Sanders * * * * * ROCHELLE LIEBERMAN E T B And The Staff Of ELLIS TRAVEL BUREAU, INC. CORPORATE & PERSONAL TRAVEL GATEWAY TRAVEL wish all our friends and clients a happy and healthy New Year! Julie Morganroth • Nancy Fink • Lynne Starman • Wendy Danzig • Nancy (Max) MacLeod • Mark Rubinstein • Marlene Kraft • Christy Ehlers • Ina Pitt • Sandie Weiss • Jean Sucher • Bede Epstein • Sue Erlich • Monique Schreibman • Connie Wolberg • Beth Feldman • Sonny Cohn • Mille Chad • Loren Stone • Cydney Kuppe • Laura Richards • Lois Kozlow • Joe Lamarra • Nicole Arslanian • Trish McDonald • Mary Taber • Henrietta Weinberg • Vivian Paesano • Vickie Buckley Gateway. Travel 29100 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, Mich. 48034 810-353-8600 CRUISE DISCOUNTS GOLF, TENNIS, SKI & TOUR PACKAGES 149 Pierce Street, Birmingham, MI 48009 Telephone 810-647-9660 1-800-860-9660 HAPPY NEW YEAR! from Summit Travel & Cruise Shoppe (810) 932-1188 COATS UNIEVIITED Oak Park Lincoln Center 26150 Greenfield Road Oak Park. MI 48237 (313) 968-2060 West Bloomfield Orchard Mall 6337 Orchard Lake Road West Bloomfield, MI 48322 (313) 855-9955 Troy Trn v rrsrn rnnne__Q -7 LF [Rio-R D ,L Warsaw (JTA) — The first cen- ter for Holocaust survivors has opened in Poland. The center, known as "Our Home," opened here with a cer- emony that included the tradi- tional affixing of a mezuzah on the entrance. The center "was created in or- der to meet the special needs of Jewish survivors who still reside in Poland," said Rabbi Michael Schudrich, who represents the New York-based Ronald S. Laud- er Foundation in Poland. "For 45 years, there was no significant opportunity for the children of survivors to learn about their Jewish heritage and to have their special emo- tional and psychological needs met. "Our Home was established in order — belatedly — to meet these needs," Rabbi Schudrich added. He estimated that there are 15,000 to 20,000 survivors and children of survivors in Poland who are interested in their Jew- ishness. The Israeli and American am- bassadors to Poland joined offi- cials from the Polish Foreign Ministry and Ministry of Culture at the opening ceremony, which also drew leaders and members of the local Polish Jewish com- munity. Restitution Pact Is Breakthrough Budapest (JTA) — Calling the agreement a breakthrough, Jew- ish leaders have expressed their satisfaction with Hungary's of- ficial commitment to set up pro- cedures for the restitution of Jew- ish property seized during World War II. The pact, signed by the Hun- garian government, the World Jewish Restitution Organization and local Jewish organizations, calls for the Hungarian Finance Ministry to establish two sub- committees. One subcommittee will settle the legal and technical aspects of compensation. The other will deal with relevant documentation for claims. Elan Steinberg, executive di- rector of the World Jewish Con- gress, said of the pact: "I hope it will serve as a model." Last month, during a visit to New York, Hungarian Prime Minister Gyula presented some proposals concerning the resti- tution issue to WJC officials. At that time, Mr. Steinberg said all/communal property be- longing to the Catholic, Luther-