4U-'1E14 ' Uff

Two Divisions of the Al-
lied Jewish Campaign-Israel
Emergency Fund will hold
their Pace Setters meeting 8
p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Sol
Cicurel, Willowgreen Rd.,
Franklin.
Rabbi Henry Sobel of Sao
Paulo, Brazil, spiritual
leader of the 12,000 Jews
who live in that city, will
speak to members of the
Mercantile Division, headed
by chairmen David Frank
and Richard A. Kahn, and
the Services-Arts and Crafts
Division, chaired by Irving
Laker.
Mercentile
associate
chairmen are Sidney Freed-
land, Oscar Hertz, Irwin L.
Kahn, Jerome Lapides, Nor-
man H. Rosenfeld, and D.
Lawrence Sherman, and
Cicurel, Emery I. Klein and.
Robert E. Schwartz are pre-
campaign chairmen for the
Division which includes

Intenify

both wholesale and retail
merchants.
Services-Arts
and
Crafts leadership includes
co-chairmen James M.
August, Stanley D. Fran-
kel, Robert L. Siegel, and
Bernard Zemmol. Warren
Jay Coville, Alan E. Luck-
off, Carmi Slomovitz, and
Charles G. Stone are asso-
ciate chairmen, while
Sherwood Colburn, Sol R.
Colton, Richard L. Kux,
and Robert A. Steinberg
have the pre-Campaign
assignment.
Rabbi Sobel, an outspo-
ken advocate of political
freedom and human rights,
is a forceful opponent of
anti-Semitism and an out-
standing religious spokes-
man in his homeland.
For information about
Wednesday's meeting and
reservations, call Muni
Mark at the Campaign of-
fice, 965-3939.

—Tv-nen–nano' mieazar naa
finished his prayers, he
would say: "May it be Thy
will, Eternal, our God, that
love, brotherhood, peace,
and friendship dwell among
us."
—Talmud

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Yosef Almogi, third from left, chairman of the Jew-
ish Agency Executive, spoke to leaders of the Allied Jew-
ish Campaign-Israel Emergency Fund Feb. 11. Shown
with Almogi are, from left, Real Estate and Building
Trades Division chairman Milford Nemer, Industrial
and Automotive Division chairman Joseph D. Tauber
and, at right, Real Estate and Building Trades chair-
man Charles Snider.

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3 Co-Ops Offer Kosher Goods
to Elderly Jews in New York

BY BEN GALLOB

(Copyright 1976, JTA, Inc.)

Several hundred elderly
New York Jews shop regu-
larly at three food co-ops,
two in the Bronx and one in
Brooklyn, organized by a
federation youth group, at
which they pay from 20 to
30 percent less than retail
prices for kosher staple
grocery items, according to
a report from the Federa-
tion of Jewish Philanthro-
pies.
The food co-ops are part
of a larger effort by the fed-
eration to involve college
youth in programs of service
to needy Jews through the
federation's Jewish Associa-
tion for College Youth. In
addition to helping to oper-
ate the food co-ops, in which
some of the elderly Jews
join them, members of
JACY provide home visits,
shopping escorts, halla
bread delivery, arrange holi-
day parties and outings, and
distribute food packages.

GIVE YOUR INVITATION
A "NAME"

HAL
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_

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The West Bronx food co-
ops are located in the Bronx
YM-YWHA senior citizen
center and in the Hope of Is-
rael Synagogue senior citi-
zen center. JACY leases
space from the Y on an an-
nual basis for both the food
co-op and as a base of opera-
tions for other JACY activi-
ties in the West Bronx.
The food co-op in the Y
was opened in December,
1974. The other Bronx co-
op was started in Febru-
ary, 1974 and the co-op at
the Interboro Synagogue
in Brooklyn's East New
York section was started
last November, according
to Avi Lyon, JACY &rec-
tor.
Students and senior citi-
zens in the West Bronx join
in visits to wholesalers to
make purchases for the co-
ops. The quantity bought is
determined by the level of
inventory and via decisions
which emerge from regular
meetings between the stu-
dents and the elderly benefi-
ciaries, Lyons said. Food is
purchased at wholesale and
marked up one cent to five
cents per item.

Better is one handful in
contentment than many
handfuls through toil. (Ec-
clesiastes 4.)

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Shown during the Junior Division's first telephone
solicitation session are, from left, seated, division presi-
dent Richard Maddin, associate chairman Haven King
and telethon chairman Jane Zukin. Standing are asso-
ciate chairmen William Rubenfaer and Gail Kerwin.
Junior Division telephone solicitors will complete their
telethon next weekend. Meanwhile, the Metropolitan
Division chairmen, Rabbi James Gordon and Isadore
Shrodeck, reported their division's 70 telethon workers
acquired 1,268 pledges representing a 23 percent in-
crease in pledged funds over 1975. Phonogift, the Wom-
en's Division telethon, is set for March 7-14.

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UAHC Sets Ed ucation Drive

NEW YORK — The con-
gregational body of Reform
Judaism has initiated a two-
level education and action
campaign aimed at winning
congressional support for

`Arabs Were Killed
After Secret Talks'

JERUSALEM (ZINS) —
The former head of Israel's
Secret Service, Isser Harel,
revealed that in the 1950s
secret talks between repre-
sentatives of the Palestinian
refugees and Israeli officials
were held in Europe.
Following the talks, the
Arab spokesmen were way-
laid and murdered by mili-
tant elements who were
bent on perpetuating the
refugee problem for politi-
cal purposes.
The former Secret Service
chief stated that David Ben-
Gurion was prepared to
reach an agreement on the
problem of the refugees by
the payment of compensa-
tion, but he was not ready to
accept their return to Israel.

Harel said Ben-Gurion —
in his efforts to reach a
peace agreement with the
Arab states — was even pre-
pared to settle for Israel's
boundaries of 1948 includ-
ing a divided Jerusalem; but
the Arabs rejected that
proposition out of hand.

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the $2.3 billion Israel aid
package and creating an
understanding among Jew-
ish and Christian laymen of
the issues of Zionism, the
Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization, the Palestinians and
other questions relating to
the Middle East. •
The program was recently
launched with a 10-city
"teach-in" conducted by
Middle East experts and
scholars and organized by
the regional offices of the
Union of American Hebrew
Congregations, representing
715 Reform synagogues and
1.1 million members in
North America.
The UAHC program of-
fers study guides on Zion-
ism for congregational use,
a bibliography of materials
and films on these topics,
recommended speakers and
a "how to" guide for con-
ducting community, syn-
agogue, church and civic for-
ums.
At the same time UAHC
leaders asked congregations
to establish message centers
for congregants to commun-
icate with members of Con-
gress, publish a regular
"action" bulletin and to
reach out to the non-Jew in
the community seeking
their support.

No man commits trans-
gression unless his mind is
deranged.
—The Talmud

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