1111111.1.1111111111 % DETROIT 'JEWISH NEWS Bnai Brith Activities BNAI BRITH WOM- EN'S COUNCIL OF MET- ROPOLITAN DETROIT will hold a delegates meet- ing 8 p.m. Wednesday, at the Zionist Cultural Center. Mrs. Robert Ellis is Council president. A coffee hour will follow. * • * * CENTENNIAL CHAP- TER will hold its general meeting 12:30 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Paul Bruseloff, 22218 Ivanhoe, Southfield. Representatives from a travel agency will talk on vacation destina- 'ons for the informed Jew- , traveler. International offees and pastries will be served. Guests are welcome at no charge. For informa- tion or reservations, call Mrs. Murray Yolles, 353,- 0591, or Mrs. Ted Coden, 358-3983. * * * MASADA CHAPTER will have an art exhibit and auction 9 p.m. Saturday at the Gallery Art Center. Champagne preview will precede at 8. Refreshments 0 * 1 Married Couples to Sponsor Dance. The Married Couples Club of Adat Shalom Synagogue will sponsor a dance 8:30 p.m. Jan. 31 at the syn- agogue. June and Chuck Kopta will teach a variety of dances. The theme of the evening will be "You Name It — We'll Dance It." Refreshments will be served, and there is a charge. For reservations, call the Goldstones, 353-7466, or the Goldsteins, 356-2653. Hebrew Club Plans Meeting * * * PISGAH CHAPTER will hold an open meeting 12:30 p.m. Monday at the North- gate Apts. clubhouse. Pro- gram will feature Arthur Schott, member of both the national commission and the Michigan Regional Board of the Anti-Defama- tion League. Guests are wel- come at no charge, and re- freshments will be served. For information, call Mrs. Anna Nosanchuk, program chairman, 545-0886. * * * PISGAH BOWLING LEAGUE beat the Bnai Brith Toledo Bowling League in a recent tourna- ment, with Pisgah's top team rolling a 2372. The team, consisting of Rod Burke, Alan Stone, Dan Lazar, and Marvin Dictor bowled games of 757, 811 and 804. * * have joined in the United Nations to legitimatize re- strictions on a free press. Joel Blocker, a veteran journalist who served 23 months with UNESCO, told the Bnai Brith board of gov- ernors that the right of the media to be independent and "its mandate to probe and freedom to evaluate and criticize rationally" are being challenged by the an- ti-Western majority at the UN "with a passion and de- termination that would be folly to underestimate." Citing his own experi- ences at UNESCO, Blocker charged that "more and more, the talk is of 'regu lating' or 'limiting' the free flow of information rather than encouraging it." The Bnai Brith gover- nors, in a resolution, con- demned the attempted bombings of the UN build- ing and Iraqi mission headquarters in New York for which several Jewish extremists groups claimed responsibility. The board also adopted a $23.7 million budget — a 5.3 percent increase over the past year — to finance Bnai Brith's wide range of pro- grams and projects in 1976. The governors reported that more and more Bnai Brith members are volun- teering their services to community aid programs than ever before. Although statistics are unavailable, the board of governors reported a "substantial upswing" in the number of both volun- teers and of locally con- ceived Bnai Brith "help projects," many of them nonsectarian in purpose. Field representatives of Bnai Brith's volunteer serv- ices department also find that a drop in television viewing has contributed to increasing volunteerism. ERIC ROSENOW Moadon Ivri, the Hebrew Cultural Club, will meet 3:30 p.m. Sunday at the Jewish Community Center's 10 Mile branch. Dr. Jay Stern, superin- tendent of the United He- brew Schools, will speak on "Ways of Studying Mid- rashic Literature." The lecture will be in Hebrew, and the public is invited. will be served, and there is a nominal charge. For infor- mation, call Adrianne Lev- ine, 681-8694, or Bernice Kesner, 626-8694. BB Governors Told Zionism Vote Made World Dangerous WASHINGTON — The United Nations resolution equating Zionism with rac- ism has left the world "a nastier, more dangerous place," Ambassador Daniel P. Moynihan told Bnai Brith last week. The General Assembly action, Moynihan said, was a product of "the corruption of language" at the United Nations and has opened the way for nations to express hostility toward Jews under cover of international law. "The Soviet Union is now in position to claim that in- ternational law requires that Zionists be treated as criminals — leaving it to the ingenuity of Soviet tribun- als as to who would be so designated," he said. Moynihan addressed the midwinter meeting of Bnai Brith's board of gover- nors, at which he was presented the Bnai Brith President's Medal, the or- ganization's highest award. In another session, the former information director of UNESCO, who resigned in protest over the politici- zation of that agency, warned that the Third World and Communist blocs Michigan Delegation in Israel for Israel Bond Conference January 23, 1976 41 and His Continentals featuring the finest Music and Entertainmenf * * * Bond Leaders in Washington NEW YORK — U.S. Sen- ator Frank Church of Idaho and Simha Dinitz, Israel's ambassador to the U.S., will address the Founding Na- tional Conference of New Leadership of Israel Bonds in Washington, D.C. this weekend. More than 200 young Jewish representa- tives from communities throughout the United States and Canada will par- ticipate as delegates. Ze'ev Sher, economic min- ister of Israel to North America; Morris Amitay, executive director of the American Israel Public Af- fairs Committee; and Mi- chael Arnon, president of Is- rael Bonds, will also speak to the delegates. One of the goals of the conference will be the devel- opment of a strong perma- nent organizational struc- ture and the establishment of a national cabinet for the New Leadership Division. Last week Dinitz told 150 attorneys representing American labor unions that the United Nations has become "a platform of venom and hostility against Israel," and he lauded American labor's protests against the UN actions against Israel. That meeting honored Gil Shaal, the new labor attache at the Israeli Embassy in Washington, and many of the lawyers present com- mitted themselves to visit Israel in the near future. The meeting was sponsored by the Israel Bond organiza- tion. - 398-3664 sale! 11D- ,,,v, .z. ..00 Parents of Jewish Retarded to Meet The Michigan delegation to last week's Prime Min- ister's Israel Bond Conference in Jerusalem is shown with Israel Minister of Tourism Moshe Kol, third from left. Shown, from left, are: Mr. and Mrs. Max Nosan- chuk, Kol, Mr. and Mrs. William Cohodas of Ishpeming, Daniel Laven, Dr. and Mrs. Maxwell Hoffman of South- field, and their son Ira of London, England. Not shown are Nathan P. Rossen and Mr. and Mrs. Felix Rosen- zweig. The conference made plans for increasing partici- pation by world Jewry in Israel's economic develop- ment. / # WRAP1 The Association for the Jewish Retarded will hold its next general meeting 8 p.m. Thursday in Room 13 of the 10 Mile Jewish Com- munity Center. On the agenda is the showing of a short film enti- tled "Lisa", and progress reports. Refreshments will be served, and friends and rela- tives are invited. GIFTS & HOUSEHOLD ACCESSORIES 50% OFF ON ENTIRE STOCK $10 MINIMUM PURCHASE Mon.–Sat. 11am-4pm Eves. by Appointment 1799 Coolidge • Berkley 547-5557 An elephant cannot pass through the eye of a needle. (Berachoth 55.) OTT77"1774111 atie quest fist Invitations & Stationery for all occasions At a Savings L Andrea Lewiston 626-9520 Teri Moss 354-0315 Ruth Seligson of BB Seeking OK For 13 Apartments WASHINGTON (JTA) — Applications to build an additional 13 non-profit low-rent apartment com- plexes for the elderly have been submitted by Bnai Brith's senior citizens hous- ing committee to the De- partment of Housing and Urban Development. There are now five such projects, totalling 984 rental units, each fully-occupied and each with a waiting list. The additional Bnai Brith units are proposed for Cleveland, Philadelphia, Houston, Miami Beach, Peo- ria, Ill., Canton, 0., Palm Springs, Calif., Springfield, Mass., Charleston, S.C., Sil- ver Springs, Md., West Or- ange, N.J., and Allentown and Delaware County, Pa. Every day God lauds three people: The bachelor who lives in a large city and does not sin; the poor man who returns a lost article to its owner; the rich man who distributes charity in pri- vate. (Pesachim 113.) • / PRESENTS / / // THE BEAUTIFUL BRIDES\ OF SPRING & SUMMER AT A SHOWING 1 • SUNDAY, FEB. 1, 1976 12:30 and 3:00 p.m. • drop in for tickets or phone 644 4140 - at .1)4Pffe,/ -fai/e in-re 1/,er Aim s_d 249 PIERCE STREET, # BIRMINGHAM