THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, April 23, 1982 5 Broder to Be Honored Crucial Israeli-Egyptian Day Approaches o NEW YORK — Detroiter N. Brewster Broder is one of four Jewish communal leaders who will receive the Frank L. Weil and Florence G. Heller Awards from the Jewish Welfare Board at the JWB's biennial conven- tion May 12-16 in Chicago. Broder is being cited for his "distinguished contribu- tion to the welfare of Jewish personnel in the U.S. Armed Forces." Broder's in- volvement in JWB's serv- ices to the armed forces goes ck to 1952 when he served . volunteer at a Seder in seoul, Korea. He led the Jewish Corn- munity Center of Met- ropolitan Detroit in estab- lishing an Armed Forces Committee of which he was chairman. He served on the National USO Board as na- SAY IT WITH TREES Swiss Exhibit On Jews a Hit JEWISH • NATIONAL FUND 27308 SOUTHFIELD SFLD, MI. 48076 557-6644 Monday thru Thursday, 9 AM to 5 PM Friday 9 AM to 4 PM Or.'" GENEVA (JTA) — An exhibition, the theme of which is Judaism in a demo- cratic society — specifically Switzerland — was visited by more than 12,000 per- sons after it opened in Zurich last month under the auspices of the Swiss Jewish community and the Zurich municipality. It is the first exhibition of its kind in Switzerland since World War II. The purpose is to bring Jews and non-Jews together in an understanding of the reality of Judaism today and the sufferings of Jews in the past. A friend in power is a friend lost. KEREN KAYENIETH LEISRAEL ..... N. BREWSTER BRODER tional vice president for JWB from 1974 to 1979. In Detroit, Broder's re- cord of community serv- ice includes his years as president and board member of the JCC and the top leadership posts he held in the Jewish Welfare Federation, Al- lied Jewish Campaign, United Way and other communal agencies. He was a JWB board member and vice president of its Midwest Region. Others being cited by JWB include sculptor Chaim Gross; Minnie Nathanson, former president of the Hebrew Educational Society in Brooklyn, N.Y.; and Abe Vinik, former general direc- tor of the Jewish Commu- nity Centers of Chicago. St, 5.5.5 1 11.. 5 ! 522 Did You Know that the CARDIGAN was invented by the Seventh Earl of Cardigan. He just got tired of pullipg his sweater over his shoulders. (And to think golf or Robert Bruce were not around then). The Shirt Box carries cardigans in nine bright Spring shades. 2/$ 50 reg. retail $32.50 ea. Professor Shirt Box ONE FREE Monogram with purchase with ad by May 1 '"111(Makuh, NMEN'S FURNISHINGS & ACCESSORIES 19011 W. 10 Mile Rd., Southfield at Santa Barbara Betw. Sfld. & Evergreen $1111111T :5 x • . 5 (Continued from Page 1) The Begin-Hassan Ali talks lasted more than four hours, in two sessions, and were interspersed by addi- tional meetings involving Stoessel. Israel's most serious com- plaint against Egypt was that the Egyptians were aiding or acquiescing in the smuggling of arms from Sinai to Palestinian ter- rorists in the Gaza Strip and were, in fact, drawing closer to the Palestine Liberation Organization as part of their effort to mend ties with the Arab world. The Israelis also accused the Egyptians of deploying more troops than allowed under the peace treaty in the limited forces zone of Sinai which they control. Mubarak reportedly told Stoessel that Egypt would act to correct those matters over which Israel has ex- pressed concern. He also reportedly gave him oral assurances that Egypt in- tends to adhere fully to the Camp David accords after Israel pulls out of Sinai. Some within the Israeli camp insisted that Israel stand firm on the Taba bor- der dispute near Eilat. They suggest that Israel refuse to withdraw from the enclave unless Egypt accepted a proposal for an interim civi- lian status quo pending a final resolution of the dis- pute by arbitration. This would mean that the large Israeli resort hotel nearing completion at Taba Czech Reds Step Up Attacks Against Jews Germans Will Visit U.S. Jews to Study Culture LONDON (JTA) — The Czechoslovak Communist Party has stepped up its at- tacks on the Jewish religion after a period in which it kept a low profile on Jewish matters, the International Council of Jews from Czechoslovakia has claimed. An article in Tribuna, the party's ideological weekly, said that "the Jewish faith, especially Torah and Tal- mud, sanctified the exploi- tation of man by man," ac- cording to the council. The council, in its April newsletter, also quotes highlights of a demographic study of Czechoslovak Jewry carried out in Lon- don. It shows that in 1981, the approximately 5,000 members of Jewish congre- gations in Czechoslovakia resided in almost 200 localities: 101 in Bohemia, 52 in Moravia and 45 in Slovakia. NEW YORK (JTA) — Twenty young men and women from the Federal Republic of Germany will spend two weeks in the United States visiting Jewish homes and institu- tions, meeting with Jewish leaders and young people, and learning about Ameri- can Jewish communal, reli- gious, and cultural life, it was announced by the American Jewish Commit- tee. Most of the 20 are non- Jewish and were born after the end of World War II. The tour began last Sun- day and will end May 1. It is part of a two-year-old ex- change program, sponsored jointly by the AJCommittee and the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, a major West German research and edu- cational organization under which young leaders from each' nation visit each others' countries. Brandeis Film Center Funded WALTHAM, Mass. (JTA) — A grant of $13,120 has been received by the Na- tional Center for Jewish Film here from the Ameri- can Film Institute National Endowment for the Arts. The center was recently established in association with Brandeis University and the American Jewish Historical Society to iden- tify and preserve all films, fictional and documentary, relevant to the Jewish ex- perience. AJCommittee Award Dinner Thursday in S.F. NEW YORK — The Bank of America will receive the American Jewish Commit- tee's 1982 National Human Relations Award at a dinner to be held at the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco Thursday. Richard M. Fairbanks III, special adviser to Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig and newly assigned Middle East negotiator, will be the guest speaker. would open as planned under Israeli management. The Egyptians insisted that work on the hotel be sus pended pending the arbit- rator's decision which could take months, or even years, before it is rendered. Cairo has accepted part of the Israeli suggestion that Israeli forces withdraw to the Egyptian-Proposed line east of Taba and the Egyp- tians would advance to the Israeli-proposed line west of the region. The Multina- tional Force and Observers (MFO) would police the few hundred yards of disputed beach on which the hotel stands. - OcutY-L410 Sympavitf BASItEttI: 3 Titnee:Datifai i Dellvey , 1 $ 1795 4 '. McilsiERNEr 772-4350 FOR MOTHER ...ROSES AND DIAMONDS Distinctive quartz watches, each with the beauty of an embossed rose on its dial, graced by a diamond dewdrop. They make Mother's Day all that it should be. A. Goldtone case. mesh bracelet with silver dial. Dura-Crystal? $165.00 B. Goldtone case with taupe- colored dial and leather strap. Dura-Crystal. $150.00 BY BU LOVA: GEORGE OHRENSTEIN Jewelers Ltd. 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