$7310 18 Friday, February 13, 1981 10v4 , THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS RY! BEFORE E RUNS OUT NS MARCH 1 1981 SAVE UP TO HAMILTON PLACE DUES GO UP MARCH 1ST There's never been a better time to join Hamilton Place than NOW! Now before rates go up March 1st. Now while you can SAVE UP TO $ 425. • Hamilton Place, the com- plete Social and Fitness Club in Southfield. Relax in the indoor pOol, jog around the indoor track, exercise on Nautilus Equipment. Dine with your friends at Cafe Rouge, now under the • direction of the Hamilton Place and Golden Mushroom Chef Milos., Join now and have the best summer of your life. Hurry before time runs out. ,• .7: r e • - Golden Mushroom owner. Reid Ashton, and internationally acclaimed Chef Milos, will also be directing food services at Hamilton Place. Join Now and taste the difference. 30333 Southfield Rd. (Between 12 and 13 Mile Rds.) Call 646-8990 Between 9:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. HAMILTON PLACE Boris &rotor's `Between You and Me' Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, JTA (Copyright 1981, JTA, Inc.) LOSERS AND WINNERS: There are six Jewish members in the new U.S: Senate and 29 in the House of Representatives — one Senator less and five Congressmen more than in the 96th Congress. Most of them are not known nationally to Jews throughout the country. In fact, some of the members of the House are not even known to many Jews in the larger communities where they were elected. Unlike their parents and,grandparents, who voted for Jewish candidates to Congress because they considered al. important to have a larger Jewish representation ther ? , Jewish voters of the third generation lay no particular stress on whether the candidate is Jewish although the Jewish identity of the candidate is still important to many of them. They vote on the merits of the candidate — on his attitude to problems affecting not only Jews but general life in the country. Naturally, the attitude of the candidate toward Israel plays a role in the Jewish voting for any candidate, Jew or non-Jew. . Three popular Jewish Senators were not returned to the Senate in the elections last November, but two new ones have been elected. The three are Abraham Ribicoff, a Democrat who chose not to run for re-election in Con- .- neticut; Richard Stone, Florida Democrat who lost in Flori- da's Democratic primary; and Jacob Javits, a Republican who lost in New York's Republican primary but received more than 500,000 votes on the Liberal Line — not enough however to beat Republican candidate Alfonse D'Amato. The two newly-elected Jewish Senators are Arlen Specter, , a Philadelphia Republican, the first Jew ever to be elected to the Senate from Pennsylvania; and Warren Rudman, a IZepublican from New Hampshire who formerly served as ' State Attorney General. FOCUS ON METZENBAUM: With Ribicoff and Javits — who have played a pivotal role in assuring the strength of the U.S. commitment to strong support for Is- rael — no longer in the Seriate, Sen. Howard Metzen- baum (D-Ohio) seems to be destined to become the most popular Jewish Senator. He is one of a handful of Senators who have been asked to serve on four major committees in the 96th Congress. He replaced Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) as the ranking Democrat on the important antit- rust, monopoly and business rights subcommittee of the Judiciary Committee, and served on the Energy Commit- tee. He also became a leading voice on the Budget and Labor and Human Resources Committees. He is, naturally, strongly pro-Israel. There are also the three other Jewish Senate incum- bents: Carl Levin (D-Mich.), Edward Zorinsky (D-Neb.) and Rudy Boschwitz, (R-Minn.). However, Metzenbaum has a record of ranking the third among all members of the Se- nate in supporting liberal viewpoints. His record is 84 per- cent. Second to him among the ,Jewish Senators is Levin with 74 percent, while Javits was the third with 63 percent. The records of the other J Jewish Senators — as reported by the liberal Americans for Democratic Action — were Ribicoff 53 percent, Boschwitz and Zorinsky, each 21 per- cent. Since his election to the Senate in 1976 — when he defeated Senator Robert Taft, Jr. -- Metzenbaum estab- lished himself as one of the leading consumer advocates. He introduced an amendment to increase budget authority in • fiscal years 1980, 1981 and 1982 for nutritional programs for older Americans. His amendment was approved 68-21. Because of these efforts he received an award from the Consumers Federation of America and from the National Council of Senior Citizens. HIS JEWISH RECORD: Metzenbaum — a promi- nent Cleveland attorney, chairman of the Board of Interna- tional Telephone and Telegraph Consumer Services, and chairman of a chain of suburban newspapers — is a com- plete product of the organized Jewish community of Cleve- land. He has been intimately associated all his adult life with the Cleveland Jewish Federation and its agencies. To use his own words, he could not have achieved his political maturity without the nourishment of his Jewish commur - ' experience. He became interested in Jewish commun work as an active member of the Jewish Community Cen- ter and later served as chairman of the Community Rela- tions Committee. He is today one of the very top con- tributors to the federation and founder of the Metzenbaum Human Relations Fund within the federation. Nationally, he served on the board of the National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council. Jewish Troupe Offers 'Memoirs' "From ter at the 92nd St. Y. The NEW YORK the Memoirs of Pontius Pi- 90-minute, one-act piece late," a play by Eric Bently, deals with the events lead is the current production of ing up to the crucifixion and the American Jewish Thea- stars Albert Sinkys —