18 Friday, November 5, 1976 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS - I 1 - " -CAI 1 1 1 - i i NT TCP " i EVC - - 1 Jewish Spokesmen View Carter's Policies 1 GOURMET FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICES 1 Reaffirming Friendship Justice for Israel • • From QUICHE to VEAL SICILIAN° .. 1 4 IN HOME OR HALL i i DANIEL WARTEL — SUPREME CATERING 1 i 869-0720 838-2233 1 It.........-7 ......,---............--,– ..............., i ,.!....,:...., „...,,..."...., ' ••••••;7;0•••10'.i101,.-0";704T0•••••••••i00••40' • . 0 • • • • t • • • • • • • • • • • • SAYS: WE'VE GOT WHAT • • YOU WANT! • • • • • • • AA Muffler& Brakes • • • • • • • I 863-2388 1 • LIFETIME GUARANTEE ON MUFFLERS &' SHOCKS : • • As Long As You Own Your Car • • • 10520 W 7 Mile Rd. at Mendota • • e ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••, • Profile: Paul Silver Histadrut Wins a Union Friend "This is our goal. A world of peace, freedom and social justice for all people everywhere" — Walter Reuther Walter Reuther knew a good thing when he saw it. So, Histadrut became a cherished cause of his as the free trade union movement in Israel. He brought Paul Silver along. Silver was on the UAW chief's staff in 1941 when Reuther called him in one day and said - as Silver recalls it - Tack your bag. You're going to a convention of Histadrut in Atlantic City. Check in with David Dubinsky and Sidney Hillman.' " It was Silver's first Histadrut convention. He has been a Histadrut leader ever since. Until his retirement in 1970, Silver played an active role in the United Automobile Workers, of which he was a founder in 1935-36 and president of Local 351 for some 27 years. He continues to maintain his office at Region 1B headquarters, teaches in the labor studies program at Oakland University and is on the boards of several charitable organizations. So much for his "retire- ment." The 71-year-old Silver has just returned from New York, where he at- tended the convention of the National Committee for Labor Israel, of which he was re-elected to the PAUL SILVER board of directors. At that gathering, the launching of the 53rd annual Is- rael Hi s tadrut Campaign was proclaimed. A seasoned visitor to Israel (a daughter lives near Tel Aviv), Silver has viewed the many so- cial, educational and cultural programs under Histadrut auspices and built with the assistance of its American friends. One of these programs is the Afro-Asian Insti- tute, which, despite a freeze in diplomatic rela- tions, continues to bring young leaders of develop- ing African nations to Israel. "No matter what takes place in the United Nations," said Silver, "Israel has a lot of friends in the African-countries. At the Institute, you'll find a representation of young people who one day will be the leaders of Africa." As chairman of Histadrut Associates, a group of Jewish and Gentile public and labor Officials, Silver does not look upon the contributions of Histadrut friends in the U.S. as "charity." - "In fact, Israel Histadrut does us a favor by letting us participate," said Silver. "We're simply paying our dues." (Continued from Page 1) Begin said that con- Begin said on Israel trary to political esti- radio that Israel should mates in Jerusalem, 1977 soon recruit her "best must not be a year of men" in order to launch American pressures on an information drive Israel. It should be a year within the new Administ- of a great political offen- ration, to remind it of sive by "a great country, with a just cause." election promises. Moshe Dayan, on the He said the Democratic Platform promised that same program, said he the new Administration expects a year of confron- would indeed be friendly' tation with the American to Israel, adding that he Administration. He said did not accept the "cyni- the Administration cal approach" that plat- would aspire to reach set- tlement in the Mideast. forms were of no value. The initial attempt, Carter, Begin argued, claimed that politics can said Dayan, would be to be moral - "Keeping a reach a peace settlement promise is the ABC of in return for extensive Israeli withdrawals. He morals." said he did not foresee He reminded the new such a development be- American President of cause the Arabs are not his criticisms against ready for peace. Once this Ford - Kissinger for is clear, there will be "bringing Israel down to negotiations for some- her knees." thing less than that - • • and this is where Israel Observers said that un- will have to fight hard. like the Arabs - none of Asked for his reaction the Arab media expressed to Secretary of State satisfaction Wednesday at Henry Kissinger's end of Carter's success - Is- term, Dayan said, raelis do not yet know "Enough is enough." whether the return of the Premier Yitzhak Rabin Democrats to the White said Wednesday he was House means an easier confident Jimmy Carter political front, or a more would keep all the prom- difficult one. ises made by Ford as far In any case, it was as- as assistance to Israel sumed by Israeli analysts_ was concerned. He refer- that the Carter electic red to a phone call from gave Israel a little mo Carter in 1973 and said, "I time before the negotia- believe he understands tions over a settlement our problems." resume. Political sources On Ford, Rabin said, in Cairo were quoted "He was a true friend of Wednesday as saying Israel," and on Kissinger: that Carter needed some "We may remember with time to learn the situa- nostalgia the days of Kis- tion. This, no doubt, is singer." time gained by Israel, There seems to be a which has continuously consensus among Israeli practiced a policy of not political analysts that the rushing toward a settle- key to the Carter enigma ment, fearing that this lay in the identity of Car- would mean extensive Is- ter's Secretary of State. raeli concessions. Metzenbaum Beats Taft in Race for Ohio Post; Jews to Occupy 21 House Seats Next January WASHINGTON (JTA) - Cleveland business- man Howard Metzen- baum upset Republican incumbent Sen. Robert Taft Jr. of Cincinnati and Omaha Mayor Edward Zorinsky defeated Repub- lican Congressman John Y. McCollister in Neb- raska in U.S. Senate Races Tuesday. Zorinsky and Metzen- baum, both Democrats, raise the number of Jewish Senators to five, a record. The seats of in- cumbents Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.), • Abraham Ribicoff (D-Conn.) and Richard Stone (D-Fla.) were not at stake and they will be in the 95th Congress that convenes in January. Three other Jewish Senatorial candidates, however, were defeated, according to unofficial re- turns received in Washington. Five-term Congressman Sam Steiger, who won the Re- publican nomination in Arizona in a bitter prim- ary battle with anti- Semitic overtones, lost - to Dennis De Concinci, a Democrat who is pro- secutor in Pima County (Tucson) by 398,888 to 320,226. Richard P. Lorber, a Democrat, of Providence, R.I. lost in his first elec- tion try to former Republi- can Governor John Chafee in Rhode Island, 222,746 to 163,088. In Connecticut, Gloria Schaffer, the state's top Democratic vote getter and the only woman in the 33 Senate races Tuesday, lost to Republican Senator Lowell Weicker, who won his second term by a vote of 787,568 to 559,109 for Schaffer. Zorinsky, the first Democrat to win a Senate seat in Nebraska since 1934 and the first Jew in the state's history to rep- resent it in the U.S. Se- nate, replaces the vete- ran Republican Roman Hruska who retired. Originally a Republi- can, Zorinsky entered the primary as. a Democrat. With 1,882 of the 2,069 districts reported, Zorinsky led McCollister by 32,000 votes. McCollister's office here conceded defeat. Zorinsky, it said, piled up an insurmountable lead in Douglas County (Omaha). He was heavily supported by labor un- ions in a conservative state. Metzenbaum, who ran a relatively low-key cam- paign in his rematch of the 1970 campaign with Taft, won by about 89,000 votes or three per cent. With 99 percent of the vote counted, Metzenbaum led by 1,921,371 to Taft's 1,805,007. Six years ago Taft beat Metzenbaum by 70,000 votes. Meanwhile, Jewish candidates won at least 21 seats in the new House of Representatives - equal to the record number held by Jews in the last Congress. They may pick up another seat in Illinois where incum- bent Democrat Abner Mikva is in a tight race that is headed for a re- count. The only Jewish incumbent to lose a re- election bid is Iowa Democrat Edward Mez- vinsky who was seeking a third term. Two other representa- tives in the 94th Con= gress, Bella Abzug (D-NY) and Sam Steiger (R-Ariz.) retired from the House to run for the Se- nate and both lost in their Senatorial races. Seventeen incumbents were re-elected along with four newcomers to the 95th Congress. They are Marc‘Marks, a Repub- lican lawyer from Sharon, Pa., Democrat Anthony Beilenson, a California state senator, Democrat Theodore Weiss, who re- places Mrs. Abzug in New York City, and Dan Glickman, the Democra- tic president of the school board in Wichita, Kan. In one of the most startling upsets of the Congressional races, Glickman defeated Re- publican Garner Shriver, who has served 32 years in the House and was seeking his 17th term. Rep. Sidney Yates (D-I11.) won re-election easily, gaining his 14th term in his Chicago dis- trict to continue as dean of the Jewish delegation in the House of Representa- tives. Republican William Gradison, former mayor of Cincinnati, gained his second term easily, gathering 61 percent of the vote. Incumbents who won included Joshua Eilberg (D-Pa) who gained his sixth term by defeating his Republican opponent in a Philadelphia district by better than 2-1. Another winner was Wil- liam Lehman (D-Fla.) who defeated Republican businessman Arnold Spiegelman, also Jewish, by a 3-1 margin in the Miami area. In Atlanta, Ga., lawyer Elliot Levitas, a Democ- rat, won a second House term by getting 68 per- cent of the vote. In Maryland, Democra- tic Rep. Gladys Spellman won a second term, but lawyer Lanny Davis, also a Democrat, seeking a first term, lost in subur- ban Montgomery County which has a large Jewish population. Both Spellman and Davis cam- paigned in districts ad- joining Washington. In California, John Krebss, a lawyer from Fresno, won a second term. Among Jewish candi- dates who lost were Don Riedman, a Republican in Denver and Boston lawyer Arthur Mason, a Republi- can, was beaten by Rep. Robert Drinan. Other Jewish candi- dates meeting defeat were Democrat Dorothy Becker who bowed to Re- publican incumbent Wiliam Broomfield, and James Burdick, a Repub- lican, who lost to incum- bent Democrat William Brodhead in their house races in Michigan. In Florida, Charles Fried- man, a Hollywood dentist, lost to incumbent Rep. J. Herbert Burke, a Repub- lican. Carter's headquarters in Atlanta said that the Jewish vote for the former Georgia governor totalled 75 percent. This is midway between the 85 percent re- ceived by Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey in 1968 and the 65 percent given to Sen. George McGovern in 1972. The Jewish vote in Michigan was estimated to have "split fairly evenly be- tween Carter and Ford de- spite a heavy Democratic registration by Jews in that state. One of the reasons given was a sen- timental appreciation for Ford, who is from Michi- gan and was one of the pioneer supporters of Is- rael during his 25 years in the House. (In the heavily Jewisl suburbs of Oak Park and Southfield, Carter did well but did not tally as many votes as the successful Democratic candidate of U.S. Senator from Michi- gan, Donald Riegle. (Carter and Mondale tal- lied 10,113 votes in Oak Park against Ford and Dole's 5,691, while Riegle received 11,780 votes there. In Southfield, Ford-Dole had 19,627 votes to Carter-Mondale's 17.072, while Riegle tallied 20,561 votes. (The unsuccessful Jewish candidate for Oak- land County treasurer; David Gubow, recorded 11,278 votes in Oak Park and 17,511 in Southfield.) r-/