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August 20, 1971 - Image 36

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1971-08-20

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
36—Friday, August 20, 1971

Evans to Address
Bnai Moshe Bond
Reception Sept. 2

Robert N. Evans, news corres-
pondent and expert on the Soviet
Union, will be the guest speaker
at the Bnai Moshe leadership re-
ception dinner, Sept. 2, at Bnai
Moshe, it was announced by Irv-
ing Lopatin, president of the con-
gregation. The reception will be
held in advance of the Bnai Moshe
Israel Bond dinner on Sept. 12.
For two years, Evans was the
CBS bureau chief in Moscow. He

Morse to Speak
at Bnai Moshe
Bond Dinner

Senator Wayne Morse will be
the guest speaker at the Bnai
Moshe Israel dinner on Sept. 12,
it was announced by Irving Lopa-
tin, president of Bnai -Moshe, Ben
Kahn is the dinner chairman, Abra-
ham Pasternak is dinner co-chair-
man and Sam Goldman is ticket
chairman.
Rabbi Moses Lehrman will give
the congregational tribute to Is-
rael. Cantor Louis Klein will ren-
der a musical salute to Israel's 23
years of statehood and President

. Y"

SENATOR WAYNE MORSE

ROBERT N. EVANS

arrived in 'Moscow in June 1967,
at the beginning of the Six-Day
War, and was permitted to film
the shutdown of the Israel embas-
sy. He was present to observe the
visits of the late Gamal Abdel
Nasser and King Hussein in Mos-
cow.
Last summer, Evans spent some
time in Israel, under auspices of
Israel's ministry for foreign af-
fairs, making a documentary TV
film dealing with the Suez Canal,
the Sinai Desert and the Golan
Heights. Evans served with the
U. S. Information Agency under
the late Edward R. Murrow.
Ben Kahn is the dinner chair-
man. Abe Pasternak is co-chair-
man, and Sam Goldman is ticket
chairman. Rabbi Moses Lehrman,
Cantor Louis Klein and President
Lopatin will be on the program.
Sixty-four sponsors are hosting
the leadership reception.

Jill Rosenfeld Engaged

to Evan Mead Stone

Lopatin will greet the guests on
behalf of the congregation.
Senator Morse, who served 24
years as U. S. Senator from Ore-
gon, was born in Wisconsin, re-
ceived his PhD and M.A., from
the University of Wisconsin, an
LL.B. from the University of Min-
nesota and a Doctor of Jurispru-
dence degree from Columbia Law
School. In 1929, Morse was ap-
pointed assistant professor of law
at the University of Oregon Law
School, and two years later, at the
age of 30, he was named dean of
the law school.
In 1941, Dean Morse was ap-
pointed chairman of the National
Railroad Emergency Board by
President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
and shortly thereafter was named
to the National War Labor Board.
Morse was elected to the U. S.
Senate in 1944 as a Republican,
was re-elected in 1950, joined the
Democratic Tarty and was re-
elected on the Democratic ticket
in 1956 and in 1962. He was a
ranking member of the Senate
committees on foreign relations.
He is a veteran in the fight for
civil rights and is one of Israel's
most loyal champions. He is an
outstanding supporter of Israel
Bonds.
Eric Rosenow and his Continen-
tals will provide the dinner music.
For reservations to the dinner,
call the Israel Bond Office, 557-
6770; or the synagogue, LI 8-9000.

I

MISS JILL ROSENFELD

Mr. and Mrs. Norman H. Rosen-
feld of Hamilton Rd. announce the
engagement of their daughter
Jill Robin to Evan Mead Stone,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel M.
Stone of Easton, Pa.
Miss Rosenfeld is a senior at
the University of Michigan. Her
fiance, a graduate of Lafayette
College, Pa., attends law school at
the U. of M.
The couple plans a June wed-
ding.

Men's Clubs

BETH ACHIM MEN'S CLUB
will hold its annual family picnic
noon-6 p.m. Sunday at the Town
and Country Day Camp on Hag-
gerty Rd. There will be games,
swimming, prizes, drinks and ice
cream. The public is welcome.
The following have been installed
as officers for 1971-1972: Jack Mit-
tleman, president; Sam Rosen and
Arthur Faber, vice presidents;
Arnold Fox, treasurer and Sey-
mour Rosen, Al Porvin and HarPid
Baker, secretaries.
* * *
AESCULAPIAN PHARMA-
CEUTICAL ASSOCIATION will
hold a weiner roast 6 p.m. Sept. 1
at the Southfield Civic Center pic-
nic area. For reservations, call Max
Millman, 356-8615.

Adler said, calling the resolution
"a real 'major step forward." He
said Jerome D. Cohen, a New York
lawyer who succeeded Albert
Schlossberg as JWV commander
"chicanery."
"led the fight" for the resolution.
Warren Adler, a spokesman
for JWV, the oldest active war Cohen also spearheaded—despite
veterans' organization in the strong White House pressure —
a .demonstration in New York last
U.S., advised the JTA that its
year against v i s it i n g French
change in policy was the result of
President Georges Pompidou for
a "tremendous fight" by antiwar
elements within the ranks, who Mirage jets she had paid for.
The JWV convention rejected
over a period of seven years
managed finally to have their the view that U.S. • support for
South Vietnam was equivalent to
"strong feelings" prevail.
"They did it out of conviction," U.S. support for Israel.

JWV Reverses Its Position; Wants
Nixon to Withdraw From Indochina

MINNEAPOLIS (JTA) — The
Jewish War Veterans reversed a
seven-year policy here and ap-
proved a resolution calling on
President Nixon to withdraw all
American troops from Indochina
by the end of the year.
The resolution, passed over-
whelmingly at the JWV convention
here, made, the JWV the country's
first veterans' organization to
change its stand to one favoring
prompt withdrawal.
"There is little to be gained from
extensive arguments over how,
why or who was responsible for
the decisions that resulted in our
country becoming mired in the
bottomless pit of Indochinese geo-
politics," the convention declared.
"Hindsight will contribute nothing
to the solution of the Vietnam
quagmire."
The large majority of the 2,000
delegates, representing more than
100,000 men and women JWV
member s, made the following
arguments for withdraw al by
year's end: the war is immoral
and useless and there can be no
winner; the United States should
never have gotten involved in the
first place; the war has put the
American economy "out of whack"
and caused domestic hardships;
U.S. involvement in Indochina has
led to a loss of confidence in
American leadership; South Viet-
nam is not a viable democracy;
and the Pentagon Papers have
proved that U.S. involvement was
the result of Washington

JWV

The Ladies' Department of Mich-
igan announces a joint meeting
with the men'• department 8:30
p.m. Thursday at headquarters,
21561 W. Eight Mile. President
Mrs. Rosalyn Liner will report on
the national convention held re-
cently in Minneapolis. Senior
vice president Toby Lantz will
outline fund-raising ideas for the
coming year. Refreshments and a
social hour will follow. For infor-
mation, call the JWV office,
255-4743.
* *
SILVERMAN-DETROIT POST
and AUXILIARY will visit patients
at Ann Arbor Veterans Hospital
Tuesday. A picnic lunch will be
served in the auditorium for '75
patients and staff. The T.B. ward
also will be served. Rose Sharkey
and Hannah Seinwel are the auxil-
iary's hospital chairmen. Morris
Seinwel and Morris Simon are hos-
pital chairmen for the post.

Former Egyptian Jews Ask Reparation

TEL AVIV (JTA)—A group of
2,100 former Egyptian Jews have
have put in claims for property
and reparations for the loss of
freedom and the need to resettle
elsewhere. The claims are di-
rected at the Egyptian authorities
and have been arranged by the
Organization of Egyptian Jews fol-
lowing the World Conference of
Egyptian Jews held recently in
Paris, it was reported to the Is-

,

Summer Has Brought
Arab Visitors to Israel

TEL AVIV ,(JTA)—The number
of nationals from Arab countries
coming to occupied areas and Is-
rael proper under Israel's summer
visits program has topped the
100,000 mark, officials reported.
Most of the Arabs visited not
only their relatives in the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip but even
went on to tour Israel. The offi-
cial• said that the summer pro-
gram had passed its peak and that
some 30,000 Arabs have already
returned to their homes in various
Arab countries.

FOR THE BEST IN
MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT

raeli section of the organization
at its meeting Aug. 12.
The meeting here has approved

the resolutions adopted by the
Paris convention which call for
reparations and compensation and
ask that all religious objects that
remained in synagogues be trans-
ferred to Israel's minister of re-
ligious affairs.

In Egypt, once a flourishing Jew-
ish community of 75,000 persons,
there are •today only a few hun-
dred.

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