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May 08, 1970 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1970-05-08

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

Writer, Social Critic Cleveland Amory
to Address Jewish National Fund Event
I

Cleveland Amory, columnist and
television commentator, will he
guest speaker at the Jewish Na-
tional Fund dinner honnoring Phil-
ip Slomovitz June 17 at Cong. Shaa-
rey Zede.k.
Amory, who recently authored a
Reader's Digest article. "Israel in
Siege." reprinted in the Jev..ish
News. has written three widely
circulated ,books on society, has ap-
peared frequently on such= pro-
grams as the Dick Cavett and
Mery Griffin talk shows and also
has hosted his own television pro-
gram out of Philadelphia.
In addition to frequent special
articles, he is chief critic for ry
Guide, writes the weekly column
"Trade Winds" for the Saturday
Review and produces a semi-
monthly column on animal wel-
fare for Holiday magazine.
Amory's first book, "The Pro-
per Bostonians," was published in
1947. This book, like all of Amo-

CLEVEL AND AMORY

ry's, is still in print, both in hard-
cover and paperback. His other
books are "The Last Resorts" and
"Who. Killed Society?" Amory also
has edited both the Vanity Fair
Anthology, an anthology of that
ma•gaiine, as well as Cele'o- ity
Register—a biographical co:npen-
dium of "quotable notables."
Sc•ne years back he publicly
condemned bullfighting • and short-
ly thereafter delivered one of his
• most famous "spots" on the Today
Show--in which he announced the
formation of "The Hunt the Hunt-
ers Hunt Club."
"A"ter you have bagged your
hunter." Amory cautioned. "do not
drape him on your automo'dle or
mount him when you get home.
Merely the cap or the jacket will
suffice."
In 1870. both his feature film on
bullfighting, "The Truth About the

~

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efc,„

SEE
OR CALL

Moment Of," on Sixty Minutes, as slaughter of the baby seals in Can-
well as his appearance on the Dick ada, received, for their respective
C'avett Show to describe the programs, record mail.

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Supreme Court Justice Moshe Landau
to Come Here for Technion Society

Israel Supreme Court Justice
Moshe Landau, chairman of the
board of governors of Technion,
Institute of Technology, will be
guest speaker at a dinner-meeting.
sponsored by the Detroit Chapter,
American Society for Technion,
and attorneys section of the Jewish
Welfare Federation May 31 at
Cong. Bnai Moshe. Cocktails are at
6:30 p.m. and dinner at 7:30.
Justice Landau will discuss both
the current situation in the Middle
East and Israeli law from , the
standpoint of a Supreme Court jus-
tice, it was announced by Albert NI.
Colman general chairman of the
dinner committee. Honorary chair-
men are Judge S. Jerome Bronson
and Judge Charles L. Levin.
Born in Danzig, Justice Landau
received his law degree from the
University of I.ondon in 1933 and
the same year returned to Pales-
tine to practice law. In 1940. he
was appointed magistrate in Haifa
by the British government of Pales- •
tine. During the years following, he
was named judge of the District
Court in Haifa. In 1953 he was
elevated to the Israel Supreme
Court • becoming at age 41 the
youngest member of the Court. In
his 17 years on the high court, Jus-
tice Landau has participated in
many of the court's milestone de-
cisions. He was presiding justice

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

12—Fridoy, May 8, 1970

SPITZER'S

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II

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JUSTICE MOSHE LANDAU

on the three-member tribunal in
the Eichmann trial in 1961.
Justice Landau's long, association
with the Technion developed dur-
ing his years of residency in Haifa.
In 1956, he was elected chairman
of the board of governors and is
currently serving his third consecu-
tive term. Justice Landau is visit-
ing the U.S. in behalf of the Ameri-
can Technion Society.
Sam Rich is president of the De-
troit Chapter. For reservations,
call the Technion office, 358-3070.

Paperback _

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UN's Angie Brooks Rudolph to Speak
for Franklin Lecture Series at WSU

Angie Elizabeth Brooks Rudolph •
president of the United Nations
General Assembly, assistant sec-
retary of state and vice president
of Liberia, will he fourth speaker
in the 20th an-
nual L e o NI.
Franklin Memo-
rial Lecture Se-
ries at' W a y n e
State University.
M r s. Rudolph
who recently re-
turned f ro rn a
trip to Israel,
will discuss "The
United N a t inns
Ind Power Con- Mrs. Rudolph
filets: Prospects for Peace in the
'70s." 8 p.m. Monday in the Com-
munity Arts Auditorium on the
NVSU campus.
Theme for this series is "The
World in Revolution.•• Hubert
Locke, director of the WSU Office

Thailand's Jetvislt Library

: of Religious Affairs, is the 1970
, Franklin Lecturer. The series is
named for the late rabbi o!• Tem-
! ple Beth El, who pioneered in im-
proving relations among, persons
of diverse creeds and races.
Each year a member of the WSU
faculty who has made a special
contribution to human relations is
named Franklin Lecturer. Locke.
a faculty associate in the *Center
for Urban Studies and adjunct pro-
fessor of urban education • is the
• author of "The Detroit Riot of
1967" and "The American Trag-
edy and Liberal Dilemma."
Mrs. Rudolph, former presi-
dent of the International Fede-
ration of Women lawyers, was
educated at Shaw University,
Raleigh, N.C. The seconil wonvoi
to hold the presidency of the
General Assembly, Mrs. Rudolph
was overwhelmingly elected when
the assembly opened in the fall
of 1969.
She came to the UN in 1953 as
Liberia's delegate to the General
Assembly trusteeship committee
and was president of the• Trustee-
ship Council in 1966. She was mar-
ried on April 28 to Isaac Rudolph.
a . eivil servant in the Li •ierian
Ministry. of Education.
Locke will give the final lecture
8 p.m. May 18 in the Community
Arts Auditorium on ''Can the Fu-
ture Be Humanized?"

T-
141,9 attoecstous

MAKE A BIG GIFT

))

LA Council Underwrites
Program for Colleges

Takhli Air Base personnel now have a Jewish library in which
"novels, histories, books on theology, newspapers and periodicals are
available, thanks to the National Jewish Welfare Board and the U.S.
Air Force." reports Chaplain 3Iartin Levin, Jewish chaplain in Thai-
land. Browsing at the library's opening (from left) are: Sgt. Clifford
Singer, Flushing; Sgt. Charles Goldstein, Washington, D.C.; Sgt.
Mitchell Gitz, Philadelphia; Sgt. Steven Farb, Glenside, Pa.; Sgt.
Howard Lityack (hidden from view), Brooklyn; and Staff Sgt. Martin
Katz, Worcester, Mass.

l

er 144.4714eL

)))

LOS ANGELES (JTA) — The
Jewish Federation-Council board
of directors approved a special
allocation of S61,700 for new pro-
'trams to involve Jewish youth •
on campuses and in the communi-
ty. it was announced by Brain
Goldsmith, JFC president.
A pilot program, planned by
JFC's committee on college-age {(,
youth and faculty, will pr o v id e
Jewish youth a greater identity
with their background and with ,
the community.
The program was adopted after
consultation with students and 1
faculty.

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