The first lady, surrounded by Secret Service agents, takes time to greet delegates and guests at NCJW's 40th national convention. A Call For Humanity Children, motherhood, grandmotherhood, sex and Jewish living: Notes from a day at National Council of Jewish Women's 40th national convention. JULIE EDGAR STAFF WRITER irst lady Hillary Clinton left a great impression in Detroit last Saturday at the annual conven- tion of the National CO-uheil of Jewish Women. She spoke con- fidently and lucidly — without once consulting the single-spaced notes on her podium, an observer noted — and she rubbed elbows with a crowd of hun- dreds. Poise and fine memory aside, Mrs. Clin- ton also managed to avoid stumping for the Democratic Party or plugging her book, It Takes a Village, although she made reference in her speech to the vil- lage as a force that connects and protects us. That she talked specifically about NCJVV's programs, most geared to the ed- ucation and welfare of women and chil- dren, thrilled the crowd. "In our country, there are two stark views," the first lady said. "One wants us Dr. Miriam Mar'i from Israel, Joanie Nunn of Virginia and Renee Kaminsky of Illinois focus their- attention on Hillary Clinton's speech. to basically make it on our own" by with- drawing medical, social and educational programs. `This view holds us as a crowd, not a village. "You remind me we are part of a vil- lage. We know none of us can work with- out the other," she intoned. And; naturally, she noted the terror- ist bombings in Israel, saying that chil- dren who witness such horrors are perhaps the heaviest casualties of at- tack. She recently met with Palestinian and Israeli youths who "understood the need to sit down." "These young people are showing great faith in themselves to stand up for peace," she said. The speech energized the 800 or so lun- cheon guests who made their way up to the dais to meet the first lady and stood talking among themselves. Dignified in a crisp royal-blue suit with first lady-ish brass buttons, Mrs. Clinton spent a half-hour shaking hands, cooing over an infant and hugging well-wishers, one of whom walked away wiping tears from her eyes. Terran Leemis later explained that Hillary had made her mother, Florence Hermelin, one of the happiest women alive in the last year of her life. Ms. Her- melin died last November, a year after HUMANITY page 8