20 Friday, March 11, 1977 THE DETROIT JEWISH INVITATIONS NEWS material to suit you A ONE MAN SHOW Seymour Schwartz Agency .356-8525 Complete Unique Selection H & L SALES CO. 557-1240 or eves 837-1555 Congregation Beth Shalom ANNUAL MEN'S CLUB AUCTION SATURDAY NIGHT MARCH 12 8:30 P.M. An Evening Full of Fun and Entertainment • A World Full of Once in a Life Time Bargains • Free Refreshments • Free Admission • Bring a Friend RUBE WEISS, TV and Radio Personality will be the Auctioneer 14601 WEST LINCOLN — OAK PARK, MICHIGAN * ************************** LI PASSOVER SEDERSt * * * AT BETH ABRAHAM-HILLEL SYNAGOGUE 4 45075 W. MAPLE RD. W. Bloomfield: FIRST & SECOND NIGHTS lt. * SAT. & SUN., APRIL 2 & 3 4 .* 1 : *SAT. at 8:30 p.m. 1 SUN. at 7:30 p.m.* —TRADITIONAL SEDER— * * * CONDUCTED BY OUR OWN * * CANTOR SHABTAI ACKERMAN * COMPLETE PASSOVER DINNER—EVERYTHING INCLUDED * * CATERED BY * * * * * KOZIN CATERING YOUR HOST: BILL KOZIN * * * * FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS *CALL KOZIN CATERING AT 626-0242 * * * I CARRY OUTS WILL BE AVAILABLE Jewish, Business Groups Agree on Need for New American Anti-Boycott Legislation Now Available HARRY THOMAS Weddings-Bar Mitzvas Showers-Etc. * OR * 851-6880 * ************************4 NEW YORK (JTA) — The Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith and the Business Roundtable, an organization of lead- ing. American business executives, have agreed "in principle" with the need for a national law to deal with the Arab boycott's effect on Ameri- can companies. A joint statement list- ing four principles for such a law was sent Fri- day by Burton M. Joseph, ADL's national chair- man, and Irving S. Sha- piro, the Roundtable's chairman, to President Carter_, the secretaries of state, treasury and com- nrrce, and to members of Congress dealing with anti-boycott legislation. The principles recom- mended are: no American may discriminate against another American on the basis of race, religion, sex, ethnic or national origin "in order to comply with, further or support a foreign boycott"; no one may provide information on an American's "race, religion, sex, ethnic or na- tional origin, or presence or absence on a blacklist for the use of a foreign country, its nationals, or residents in order to com- ply with, further or sup- port a foreign boycott." Also, no American "may refrain from doing busi- ness with or in a foreign country, or with its nation- als or residents pursuant to agreement with another foreign country, its na- tionals or residents in order to comply with, further or support a foreign boycott; and no American can refuse to do business with another American in compliance with an agreement with a foreign country or indi- vidual in order to comply with the boycott." The two groups also agreed that legislation should not bar Americans from complying• with foreign regulations in- cluding the listing of documents stating coun- try of origin of a product as long as this does not in- clude a statement "in . negative, blacklisting_ or similar exclusionary terms." Meanwhile, two private research firms say that companies can remove their names from the Arab boycott list by pay- ing between $25,000 $40,000, provided their Congregation Beth Achim Men's Club PRESENTS World of Jewish Entertainment Saturday, March 12, 1977 8:00 P.M. BERNIE DEANE (One Man Performance) in "The Rothschilds" - Donation: • Individual Tickets $2.00 Sold At The Door Beth Achim's Wasserman Hall 21100 W. 12 Mile Road - Southfield, Michigan For Tickets Call The Synagogue Office at 352-8670 or Co-Chairmen Allen "Manny" Sterns 353-3773 Stewart Silverman 547-2329 contacts with Israel are not too obvious. The reports, published by Business Interna- tional and the Council of Economic Priorities, - say more than 175 companies have disclosed question- able payments of more than $300 million over the last six years. Not all of these funds were related to the Arab boycott of Israel. In Toronto, William Davis, premier of Ontario, told an Arab delegation representing three - or- ganizations that he will not change his opposition to the Arab boycott of Israel. He made this state- ment in response to a joint brief submitted to him by the Canadian Arab Federation, the Arab-Palestine Associa- tion of Toronto and the Arab Community Center of Toronto. The brief termed Davis' view- "un- fair and even immoral." The Arab brief said the Canadian government had no need to adopt a policy on the Middle East, particularly one that was harmful to their cause. "It seems to us that in a multicultural, pluralistic society such as we enjoy ... the least the parties and legislators can do is to maintain a strict and hygienic neutrality," the brief said. Davis announced last month after returning from a trip to Israel that the province of Ontario would refuse to give gov- ernment business or fi- nancial support to com- panies Which comply with the boycott. * * * Michigan Boycott Law Is Proposed Seven Michigan Jewish organizations have been conducting meetings and are coordinating with State Sen. Daniel Cooper and State Rep. Joseph Forbes on a proposed "Open Commerce and Trade Act." Representatives of the Jewish Community Coun- cil, American Jewish Committee, American Jewish Congress, Anti- Defamation League of Bnai Brith, Jewish Labor Committee, Jewish War Veterans and National Council of Jewish Women have met to draft propos- als for legislation which would prohibit discrimi- nation in trade and com- merce dealings based on race, color, creed, relig- ion, sex, national origin, or foreign trade relation- ships. Such legislation, if enacted, would outlaw the discriminatory ef- fects of the Arab boycott in Michigan. Now Available HARRY THOMAS material to suit you A ONE MAN SHOW Seymour Schwartz Agency 356-8525 In an address to the United Jewish Appeal dinner held in his honor, Davis declared: "The po- sition of the govvnment of Ontario on the question of discriminatv boycotts is clear; it is commitment which re- flects our belief in a world devoid of economic blackmail and manipula- tion; it is a commitment of which I am proud." After meeting with the Arab delegation, Davis told reporters that the boycott has had "secon- dary and tertiary effects on citizens of this pro- vince." The brief presented by the six-member delega- tion said that the Jewish population in the pro- vince is about 125,000 while there are only 30,000 Arabs and "we cannot match our Jewish fellow citizens in num- bers, wealth, influence and performance." The brief also attacked the province's Attorney General Roy McMurtry who "has seen fit to be- come a card-carrying Zionist" and "encourages racism and hatred for us Arabs." Davis said the state- - ments about McMurtry were "totally w•ong." He added that the Attorney General "has done more and said more for the rights of all ethnic and re- li•ious minorities and. his views on racism have been publicly stated." Designer Studio SALE of Antiques and Accessories Beginning Friday March 11 SONA YAVRUIAN ASSOC. in the Claymore Bldg. 29260 Franklin Rd. Southfield 354-5777 STAR KOSHER CATERING under supervision of the Vaad Harabonim Accepting Passover Orders Now Please Call 626-0404 (bus.) 559-6929 or 548-7118, DIMENSIONS of ZIONISM A Series of Thur. Eve. Lectures at 8 P.M. Congregation Beth Shalom 14601 West Lincoln, Oak Park MARCH 17, 1977 THE JEWISH DIMENSIONS - OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN SITUATION DR. ANDRE UNGAR Lecturer in philosophy, Rutgers Uni- versity; lecturer in the history of re- ligion, Douglass College, Author, Direction and Purpose. sponsored by the Detroit Zionist Federation and The Theodore Herzl Institute CONSTITUENT ORGANIZATIONS American Mizrachi Women Americans for Progressive Israel Association of Americans and Canadians for Aliyah Hadassah CORPORATE MEMBERS Labor Zionist Alliance Congregation Beth Shalom Mizrachi — Hapoel Hamizrachi Congregation Beth Achim Pioneer Women Congregation B'nai Moshe United Zionists Revisionists Sephardic Community Zionist Organization of Detroit For Further Information: 968-2040