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February 21, 1969 - Image 24

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1969-02-21

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Allied Jewish Campaign Phonogift
Begins March 9 ; Volunteers Needed

The fifth Phonogift drive of
the Women's Division of the 1969
Allied Jewish Campaign - Israel
Emergency Fund will begin March
9 personally to contact nearly 10,-
000 Jewish women for their pledges
to the annual fund-raising drive
benefitting 15 Detroit agencies and
Jews in Israel and 30 other coun-
tries.
The telephone drive will con-
tinue through March 17.
A briefing for Phonogift workers
will be held 9:30 a.m. Wednesday,
March 5, at Congregation Shaarey
Zedek. The volunteers will be
brought up to date on the facts of
the Campaign and will be given
materials for use in their phoning
work.
The new film, "Never Again to
be Denied," a look at the cur-

easy as
cAlefDais

As Joe E. Ross found out, you
just spread out dough, spread
on sauce, sprinkle on cheese,
pop in oven for 20 minutes
and...00...00...you've made
a pizza that's just as good as
you've ever eaten. Real
Italian ta'am!

Newlywed Goldsteins
Are Residing in Spain

rent problems in Israel, will be campaign, will hold its briefing
shown. meeting the same day at 12:30
Mrs. Oscar U. Band is chairman p.m., at Shaarey Zedek. Mrs.
of the Phonogift. Executive vice- Julien Priver is chairman of the
chairman is Mrs. Sidney S. Hertz. motor corps.
More volunteers are needed to
Consultants are Mrs. Sidney J.
Karbel and Mrs. Philip Marcuse. make the calls to prospective
contributors.
There will be work
Executive vice-chairmen are Mes-
dames Morris Baker, Robert S. periods of three shifts daily, ex-
Dunsky, Leonard P. Fenkel, Arthur cept Saturdays, and two shifts on
I. Gould, Mitchell Mandelberg and Sunday. Women may volunteer
Seymour Wayne. Mrs. Ben Moss- by calling Mrs. Celia Baruch,
man and Morris Brandwine are director of the Women's Divi-
sion, WO 5-3939, extension 87, or
advisors.
The Phonogift motor corps, Mrs. Robert Dunsky, LI 4.0872.
Mrs. Max Stollman is chairman
whose responsibility it will be to
collect pledges made through this of the Women's Division.

Journalist Defends Sirhan's Attorney:
`He Has Duty to Drag In Anything'

By CHARLOTTE DUBIN
How far should a lawyer go to
defend his client? Many observers
feel that Emil Zola Berman has
gone too far.
For, in defending Sirhan Bishara
Sirhan, accused assassin of Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy, Berman insert-
ed an explosive political issue: the
Arab-Israeli conflict.
However, a noted journalist who
has attacked the practices of some
attorneys in a book, "The Trouble
With Lawyers," defends Berman.
Said Murray Teigh Bloom in an in-
terview with The Jewish News:
"According to our system of law,
in an adversary proceeding, the
defense attorney can drag in any-
thing to defend his client. It is the
purpose of a trial that each side
put up its best possible offense or
defense. The defense attorney can
—and perhaps must—conceal facts
that can harm his client."
Bloom, who has written hun-
dreds of articles for nationally
known magazines, knows Berman
—"Zuke"—whom be calls "very
bright, earns a quarter of a mil-
lion dollars a year." Berman vol-
unteered his services without
charge in the Sirhan case, but
Bloom added that "Zuke has
made millions in publicity."
Bloom knows well what attorneys
earn. His book; published by Simon
and Schuster, contends that certain
lawyers, protected by law, are vir-
tual partners of their clients: they
are able to claim large fees with
impunity.
The author spent three years re-
searching background to prove that
the American middle class is vic-
timized by some lawyers. Many
have reviewed his book, "but my
severest critics have been young,
inexperienced lawyers."
New York-educated, Bloom was
very critical of the role the Ameri-
can Civil Liberties Union has play-
ed in the New York schools issue.
"In the Ocean Hill controversy, for
example, the ACLU has consistently

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sided against the teachers. It has
taken a stand where civil liberties
are not involved. I assure you, it's
a political, not libertarian, issue. A
few people, the leaders of the New
York chapter, are running the
show."
Bloom added that the New York
chapter membership, dissatisfied
with the leadership, is petitioning
to remove them and ran a full-page
ad to that effect in the Sunday New
York Times.
As to the role of the American
Civil Liberties Union in defense
of civil rights, "It's needed under
the present system of law. Every
criminal, no matter how heinous
the crime, is entitled to a de-
fense." This includes, he said,
members of the American Nazi
Party.
Bloom, who admits to a "non-
religious-oriented education in Yid-
dish and Hebrew at a Brooklyn
folkshule," has been in Israel three
times to interview for articles. For
a chapter in his first of three books,
"Money of Their Own," he was
there in 1958.
The chapter dealt with the re-
markable story of 100 Sachsenhau-
sen concentration camp prisoners
who were ordered by the Nazis to
produce $600,000,000 in counterfeit
money. Bankers, engravers, even
hair dressers, were chosen for their
individual skills. Only one "profes-
sional counterfeiter" was among
them.
Yet, their product was success-
fully passed by the Nazis in neutral
countries.
The survivors — some of whom
are living in Israel—survived part-
ly because of the cunning of the
humane Nazi commandant, Major
Bernhard Krueger, who used every
means in his power to sabotage
their work and stall for time. In his
honor; they called their endeavor,
"Operation Bernhard."
Bloom and his wife are graduates
of the Columbia University Medill
School of Journalism, but the elder
of their two daughters "is idealis-
tic. She wants to be a lawyer."

The more perfection anything
has, the more active and the less
passive it is; and contrariwise, the
more active it is, the more perfect
it becomes. —Spinoza.

MRS. MICHAEL GOLDSTEIN
In a recent ceremony at -Temple
Israel, Beverly Ann Herm, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Mickey M. Hera
of Knollwood Cir., Birmingham, be-
came the bride of Michael Stephen
Goldstein, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice L. Goldstein of Cleveland
Heights.
After a honeymoon in Lisbon,
Madrid and Majorca, the couple is
living in Spain.
The bride's gown was fashioned
as an A-line skimmer, with high
neckline and long sleeves. Appli-
ques were of Alencon lace and seed
pearls, and the cathedral train was
of matching trim. Her chapel-
length veil of silk illusion was held
by a seed pearl crown.
Myrna Bobek was matron of
honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs.
Stanley Weiss, sister of the bride-
groom, Barbara Wees, Cheryl- Ro-
man, Jean Rubovits of Rock Island,
Ill. and Sandi Rubin of Cleveland
Heights.
Edward Goldstein was his broth-
er's best man. Ushers were Bruce
and Robert Hem, brothers of the
bride, Stanley Weiss, Warren
Brandwine and Harris Melsher of
University Heights, 0. Glenn Weiss
was ringbearer.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
24—Friday, February 21, 1969

Free Diabetes Tests
to Find Hidden Cases

A new pilot program to find un-
detected diabetics in this area is
being sponsored by the Michigan
Diabetes Association, a Torch
Drive service. Free blood-screen-
ing tests for diabetes are being
given 1-4 p.m. at the MDA office,
Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital.
Persons most likely to be diabe-
tic are over 40, overweight and
blood relatives of someone with
diabetes. A meal rich in starches
and sugar should be eaten two
hours prior to testing. Children
must be accompanied by a parent.
The test is free, and no appOint-
ment is necessary.
According to Dr. Henry D.
Kaine, chairman of the diabetes
detection committee of the Mich-
igan Diabetes Association, at least
half of the ,persons with diabetes
are unaware of their condition.

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