• • • 12—Friday, May 3, 1974 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Samuel Bonchek, 84, Veteran Leader of Labor Zionists, Dead NEW YORK (JTA)—Sam- uel Boncheck, a founder and veteran leader of the Labor Zionist movement of America, died Monday at age 84. He was an assistant and intimate friend of some of the founders of the state of I s r a e 1, including Premier Golda Meir and the late David Ben-Gurion. At his death, Mr. Boncheck was honorary president of the • CITY OF HOPE Mr. and Mrs. Group Annual Nite of Games Tues., May 14th, 7 p.m. Temple Israel — Detroit Fun — Prizes — Refreshments Door Prize — Color T.V. z I HARRY THOMAS FINE CLOTHES H ow to Buy Really Exclusive Clothes Inexpensively - • • SUITS S Expensive National Makers — I Year Round and Tropical Weights NEW YORK (JTA)—Intra- disciplinary courses in Jew- !OUR PRICE ish studies will be offered Worsted Suits and Knits starting next fall by the hu- Regularly Sold $135 manities division of the Med- gar Evers College of the City OUR of New York in Brooklyn. Courses scheduled initially I PRICE include government and his- SPORTS COATS : tory of Israel, the Holocaust and Soviet Jewry, according Regularly Sold $135 to Dr. Joseph Badi, the col- OUR PRICE lege's consultant on ethnic- S 50 Q 59050 Jewish studies. Dr. Badi said the courses were being established at the SLACKS request of rabbinical students and lay leaders; residents of The Finest From central Brooklyn and students • of local rabbinical colleges. $ By JOSEPH POLAKOFF Labor Zionist Alliance which he had served as national president from 1963 to 1971. During 70 years of Labor Zionist activities, Polish-born Mr. Bonchek was among the founders and leaders of num- erous agencies, including the National Committee for . Labor Israel, labor depart- ment of the Jewish National Fund, Government of Israel Bonds, the National Com- mittee for the Jewish Folk Schools and the American Jewish Congress. At age 14 he was already active in the nascent Polish Jewish Labor Movement, helping in strikes and as a gun-runner for the self-de- fense committee of the Jew- ish workers. Facing arrest and exile after one such exploit he fled to the U.S., arriving in Cleve- land in 1906 atage 16. In 1971, he helped bring about the unification with the Farband of the members and branches of the LZOA- Poale Zion and American Habonim Association. WASHINGTON (JTA) Judaism Courses at Evers College Regularly Sold $240 145 $89.50 •• • $19.50 • • Also A Nice Selection of • Casual Suits HARRY THOMAS • • 24750 Telegraph at io mile: Fine Clothes for Over 38 Years Daily to 6 P.M. Thurs. to 8 P.M.. OPEN SUNDAY : • 11 to 4 • •••••••••••••••••• 4 1 WANT TO all YOUR HOME? PitATCHNIAXIIR CALL 559-8333 AETNA REALTY CO. 24469 Greenfield Rd. Southfield , — Rep. Thomas "Tip" O'Neill (D., Mass.) leader of the Democratic majority in the House of Representatives, Wednesday urged the Nixon administration to grant an additional $500,000,000 to Is- rael from the $2,200,000,000 in emergency aid already voted for the Jewish state. He also said the U.S. should "at least" have ab- stained, rather than voted for, the UN Security Council resolution condemning Israel for its raid into Lebanon while not mentioning the Arab terrorist massacre at Kiryat Shemona. President Nixon last week announced that he was mak- ing•a grant of $1,000,000,000 from the $2,200,000,000 fund in his "initial determination" and that the remaining $1- 200,000,000 would be credit at three per cent interest. Congress has allowed Nixon to make a gift of up to $1,- 500,000,000. June 30 is the last day for the President to de- cide on the amounts. O'Neill made his recom- mendations at the fifth an- nual luncheon for House members given by the Amer- ican Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) which some 200 Congressmen at- tended. It was AIPAC's 15th annual policy conference. Rep. John J. Rhodes (R. Ariz.), the House minority leader, said that Soviet- American detente is in Is- rael's best long-range inte- rest, pointing out that in the quest for detente the Soviet Union has allowed increasing numbers of Jews to leave for Israel. Speaker Carl Albert (D., Okla.) in welcoming the AIPAC delegates to the Capi- tol said that Congress has responded to Israel in "the way it should have respond- ed." Praising Israel he said that the "small but mighty republic" exemplified hero- ism in the Yom Kippur War that will live for many gen- erations. AIPAC adopted a seven- point program. that it said is required for "a genuine peace" in the Middle East. Pointing out that Israel had •• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Willt • • • • • • • • • ••••• • • • • • •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • z • • • • CD m • • • • • 0 m • • • • —1 • • 2 mt. • • • • 2 • • • • • go • -1 • • • • • • • • -a a • • • 2 • • • • • 0 • • • • Ut • ft • • • • • • 6* 3 3 r- S; • • • • • • ANNOUNCEMENT! CAPITOL RUGS IS NOW OPEN NORTHWESTERN AT 1 2 MILE RD. . DO YOU WANT TO TALK TO YOUR PHARMACIST ABOUT YOUR PRESCRIPTION LIKE YOU USED TO DO? WELL, NOW YOUR CAN. COME SEE US AT CAPITOL DRUGS. • • • • • • • • LARGE GIFT SELECTION FOR )MOTHER'S D,41: • • 0- • • • • • • • 000000000000 • • 00000 • • • • • • •• • •• •••• ••••••• • o••• ••• ••• •••••••• • • • • 355-3775 Brevity is the soul of wit. --William Shakespeeare • Nixon Urged to Add $500 Million to Emergency Aid Voted for Israel JO E PO MERANCE • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • -ci -C C C O a. QI -a 64 ; Z ..0 • • • • • • • o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 3 • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • always offered peace pro- posals to its Arab neighbors since its founding in 1948 but they always have been spurned, AIPAC declared that a settlement must be "sincerely accepted" by di- rect negotiations between the parties and not by an im- posed peace dictated by "outside powers." It ruled out participation of the Palestine Liberation Organization in the Geneva Conference and said the Arabs must not be permitted to use "oil blackmail to force coercion of Israel." The seven points call for secure recognized defensi- ble borders, freedom of navi- gation in the Suez Canal, the Straits of Tiran and the Red Sea, an end to economic war- fare, boycott and blockades; effective controls to end hi- jacking and terrorism, settle- ment and integration of dis- placed Arab refugees in Arab lands where there is room and opportunity for them, non - aggression pacts and diplomatic and trade rela- tions leading to cooperation between Israel and the Arab states in economic develop- ment and scientific and cul- tural pursuits. Regarding. the Palestin- ians, AIPAC, which frequent- ly expresses Israeli official views, said that "it would be disruptive to permit the PLO, which seeks Israel's dissolution, to interject it- self into peace negotiations and to veto any moves for a genuine settlement." The resolution of the prob- lems of the Palestinian Arabs, it said "must be within the framework of a final peace to be negotiated between Israel and her Arab neighbors—not by creation of yet another Arab state which could become a new base for hostility and terrorism. While commending Presi- dent Nixon, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, Sec- retary of Defense James Schlesinger and Congress for supporting Israel "in her hour of peril," AIPAC sug- gested caution in references to the administration's new foreign aid program that pro- vides major assistance to Egypt and Jordan. "We welcome improved relations between the U.S. and the Arab states and we support measures which raise the living standards of the Arab people and meas- ures to promote peace in the area," AIPAC said. But "we deplore proposals that strengthen the military capa- bility of countries which waged a savage war against Israel within the last year and which for many years incited hatred against Is- rael's people," according to I. L. Kenen, chairman. AIPAC also expressed deep concern that the $50,- 000,000 proposed as a grant to Israel for economic aid in the bill for the fiscal year beginning July 1 "does not respond adequately to Is- rael's urgent requirements." Addressing itself to Arab propaganda, AIPAC warned that a massive campaign seeks to undermine Ameri- can support for Israel "by twisting responsibility for the conflict and by' fraudu- lent m•srepresentation of past UN resolutions. , 1; 1 11 .4 RESORT , SOUTH HAVEN, MICHIGAN 8 11 V ACRES OF FUN! 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