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appy Kew Year 5741
I/Sliana Tova Tikatey vu wJewish Flcridian Hume 9- Number 19 TWO SECTIONS OF GREATER FORT LAUDERDALE Fort Lauderdale, Florida Friday, September 12, 1980 f '#0 Shochet Price $1.00 oiii Federal ion and Hoard of Kahbis K <#* iW~ Days of Awe By MILTON KEINER, President Jewish Federation of Greater Fort Lauderdale Shalom! In ushering in the New Year 5741, the Jewish Federation of Greater Fort Lauderdale extends its best wishes to the Jewish community for a year filled with good health and spiritual contentment. I am sure that all of you will join our fervent prayer that our beloved Israel, embattled and isolated as never before, will survive and prosper. If this is to be, American Jewry must demonstrate to the world las it has so many times before) its unwavering resolve, and its total dedication. To this, all of us must pledge Continued on Page 9-A Call of the Shofar By Rabbi Phillip Labowitz, President . North Broward Board of Rabbis Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur are the days when each of us, in our own way, examines the course of our lives. We look back on what we've done, whom we've affected, what has been changed due to our efforts. Collectively, we as a community of Jews in North Broward also look back. The Broward County Board of Rabbis examines the course of a year and determines what could or should be done differently in the year ahead for our synagogues, for our community, and for Israel. New approaches to old problems are sought, as are new directions for an increasingly complex Continued on Page 9-A Ion Keiner Rabbi Phillip Labowitz Syria, Libya Uniting Forces Against Israel From JTA Sources From Damascus, Syria, came reports that Syrian dent Hafez Assad prepares to join in a merger a try at Arab unity with Libya's Col. Moammar }dafy against Israel. , strong is Khaddafy's hatred of Israel that he J, if Syria turned him down, that he himself would the Palestinian guerrillas in Lebanon to fight against E iThe proposal for the mager of Syria and Libya was le by Khaddafy in a speech on the 11th anniversary of Libyan leader's overthrow of the Libyan monarchy. | Diplomats in Lebanon were puzzled by the Syrian ptance since this is the third time both countries have I to merge another Arab nation. . Khaddafy, whose terrorists have been responsible for [ killings of anti-Khaddafy Libyans in other countries, is ted as saying: "I am a revolutionary and I am going to be a com- ndo myself if Libya does not follow the line of Arab ly ... I am going to inform the Palestinian movement o-" K? ^ ^ TURKEY that I am registered as a commando with them." . Although the Libyan leader has never sent troops to fight Israel, his joining syna poses an awesome threat to the beleagured democracy, a small dot on a map sur rounded completely by the Arab League. A combined Syrian-Libyan forte, selected from a nation of 12,000,000 vs. Israel's some 3,500,000, would have 242,000 men under arms, 4,600 tanks and 590 aircraft vs. Israel's totally mobilized defense force of 378,000, with 3,050 tanks and 576 combat aircraft, including the U.S.- made F-15, currently the most sophisticated warplane. Yasser Arafat, the PLO chieftain, immediately sent congratulatory messages to Assad and Khaddafy. He praised their plans as a "sincere response to the national duty of fighting the Zionist enemy." Although several other attempts at Arab unity have ended in failure, Israel is not taking this proposed merger lightly. The inflammatory speech in Libya included such reckless charges that if Syria were to fall in a fight against Israel, "then the Arab borders would be open to the Israelis to march on Iraq and even reach Medina." Medina is located in the holiest city in Islam after Mecca. Then comes Al Aksa and the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem as other holy sites for Islam believers. arter: Autonomy Talks 'Back on Track' _i j__ lolnmir tr-nnit inn hold: agreement with the nation, giving as its reason: "because of international law." From JTA Sources )n Wednesday, Sept. 3, when |s issue of The Jewish Floridian i being readied for the presses, esident Jimmy Carter told vs reporters that U.S. Middle st Special Ambassador Sol nowitz had achieved a break- 3ugh on the stalled economy Iks between Israel and Egypt. rter said: "The talks are back | track." ILinowitz earlier that day had Pt with President Anwar Sadat Egypt to report on the three lys of meetings he had had with fime Minister Menachem Begin and Israel aides. Sadat and Begin agreed to meet with Carter in Washington after the Presidential election Nov. 4. Linowitz carried to Sadat two documents jointly drafted by Linowitz and Israeli negotiators which might give Sadat reason to send his negotiators back to the peace talk tables from which he had recalled them, stalling the peace efforts. Sadat called the halt after Israel's Parliament adopted a law declaring Jerusalem, unified ever since the Six Dav War, now 'in the Bar Mitzvali year of its unification, as the eternal capital of the state. (The Knesset's action, followed by the United Nations Security Council's resolution censuring Israel and urging nations to withdraw their embassies from Jerusalem. Linowitz said Begin was considering an indefinite post- ponement of his plan to move his offices to East Jerusalem; and to strengthen Moslem control of sacred mosques in the city. The Mosque of Omar, also known as the Dome of the Hock, where Islamic tradition holds that Prophet Mohammed ascended to heaven on his horse, is one of the holy shrines. The Al Aksa mosque, adjacent to it, is the third holiest shrine, after Mecca and Medina. Colombia became the 10th nation ordering its embassy to move from Jerusalem. Only Bolivia, Guatemala and the Dominican Republic have em- bassies in Jerusalem. Turkey is ordering the closing of its legation, an office less than an embassy, and Switzerland has declined to sign a routine legal In Jerusalem, Prime Minister Begin told a delegation of United Jewish Appeal community leaders from the U.S. and Canada, who had been invited to the Prime Minister's Mission to Israel, that "there is no force in the world that can change this fact: that Jerusalem is our capital, one city, and so it will be forever." And Saudi Arabia hardened its warning that the U.S. and other Western nations risk sharp cut- backs in Arab oil shipments unless more pressure is brought on Israel to give up its claim to East Jerusalem. World Gathering Elects Brodzki Brothers ^^ _._... i __:_u ui,......,. c.n.itmrs Pmf Flip \\ ifsi'l rhnirmnn of the ludwih .Jaoub |Ludwik and Jacob Brodzki, survivors of the ocaust. and both past presidents of the Jewish * ,-, ._ J___ii.. ; niUif inn tn World Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors headquartered in New York City. The World Gathering will be held in Israel under the patronage of Israel Prime Minister Menachem Begin next June in Jerusalem. The four-day event of major historical significance has the endorsement and support of the United Jewish Appeal and the Jewish Agency in Israel. In addition to serving on the Executive Com- mittee Ludwjk Brodzki has been named chairman of the World Gathering's North Broward County Committee. He believes that a number of Holocaust survivors now living in Broward County will join he thousands of survivors expected to make the V Srinage of Remembrance." These thousands, he said will be joined by many of the tens of thousands of survivors living in Israel. The Brodzkis will be in distinguished company when they attend sessions of the Executive Lom- niocausi. ana Dotn pasi presiuems ui !'---- when they attcnu ses&iun* ~-~------- - deration of Greater Fort Lauderdale in addition to sma, it is neaaed by Mme. Simone Veil ot iving been awarded manv other honors, have been ^^ presidenl of the European Parliament, and feted members of the Executive Committee ot the Prof. Elie Wiesel, chairman of the President's Holocaust Memorial Committee. The World Gathering Executive Committee also includes representatives from Israel, Australia, Belgium, Canada, France, Great Britain, Norway, South Africa. The executive director is Prof. Samuel R. Mozes. The World Gathering will emphasize the significance and legacy of the Holocaust and commemorate the 36th anniversary of liberation from the Nazi concentration camps. It will serve notice to the entire world that the Holocaust must never be forgotten, never be repeated: and affirm the continuity and survival of the Jewish people as a whole and the State of Israel as their focal point. In view of the advancing age of many of the survivors and the awareness that this may be the only opportunity for such an international con- Continued on Page 10-A Page2-A The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Friday, September 12.19g0 r > Treasury of Judaica Airing Sept. 14 hearted and contemporary show Rozhinkes mit Mandlin (Raisins with Almonds), the two- hour montage-documentary which won three national broad- cast awards, will be broadcast over Miami's WLRN 91.3 FM, at noon, Sunday, Sept. 14. It has been hailed as a rewarding experience of Judaica, complete with music, memories, heritage, humor, history com- bined in a contemplative, light- The cast includes Isaac Bashevis Singer, Theodore Bikel, Zero Mostel, Mel Brooks, Carl Reiner, Cantor Moshe Kous- sevitsky, Richard Tucker, and the first part closes with L'Chaim (To Life) performed by the Israeli cast of "Fiddler on the Roof." The second part includes Joel Grey, Nathan Milstein and the Philharmonic Orchestra, the nar- rator reading excerpts of "Bintel Young Leadership Program Begins Sept. 17 Brief letters, Sophie Tucker's "My Yiddishe Momme" in English and Yiddish, Jan Peerce, Elie Wiesel, and closes with a quotation from the Bal Shem Tov: "God's gift is a world that is new to us every morning, and a man should believe that he is reborn every day." The program is being broad* cast this month over more than 100 radio stations throughout the U.S. and Canada. Edward M. Cramer, president of Broadcast Music Inc., called the show: "the most exciting and moving program on Jewish themes I have ever heard." Judaica High School Workshop The Jewish Federation of Leslie S. Gottlieb, executive v+1 # * Greater Fort Lauderdale's Young director of the Jewish Federation rULtUlUlQ MeetlflQ Held in Orlando The Central Agency for Jewish Education held an all day workshop for teachers of the Judaica High School, Sunday, Sept. 7 at the CAJE offices. The workshop featured new methods and strategies for the course offerings presented by CAJE. as well as a review of the syllabi which are used for each of the course curricula. In attendance at the seminar were teachers from Dade and Broward counties, as well as a contingent of teachers from the Orlando area. CAJE has recently begun servicing the Orlando area in terms of its Judaica High School program. The Judaica High School program of CAJE has for many years been one of the outstanding after school religious high school programs for Jewish teenagers in the country. Directing the Judaica High School are Rabbi Shimon Azulay and Sandy Andron, sponsored in North Broward by the Jewish Federation of Greater Fort Lauderdale, its education com- mittee and several synagogues. Leadership Division will begin its 1980-1981 program on Wednes- day evening, Sept. 17, at the home of Dottie and David Gross of Coral Springs. In announcing the initial meeting of the first year group, "A Workshop on Jewish Identity," Johl Rotman, chair- man for Young Leadership, com- mented, "We are extremely excited about this year's program. September's meeting will be led by Dr. Howard Kay, a member of the National Young Leadership Cabinet and a resident of Palm Beach." Rotman explained that in the months to follow, "The group will be guided through a series of programs including 'Modern Jewish History,' 'The Holocaust,' Israel,' 'Soviet Jewry,' and will focus on the Jewish Federation's role in serving Jewish life in our com- munity." of Greater Fort Lauderdale, ex- pressed "a feeling of enthusiasm toward our Young Leadership program. A group of some of the finest young people representing Coral Springs, Plantation, Jacaranda, the northeast and Lauderdale have been selected to represent their communities," Gottlieb commented, "and hope- fully the future leadership for our Federation, Jewish Community Center, synagogues, Hebrew Day School, Jewish Family Service and many other community organizations will be developed through this important program." The steering committee whose members include Jayne Rotman, Ellen Fischer, Jane Shagrin, Carolyn Russell and Mitch Pasin have joined with Johl Rotman in planning for this facet of the Jewish Federation of Greater Fort Lauderdale's 1980-1981 Young Leadership program. 'M > \ Groundbreaking for 'Family Center' at Nova A. groundbreaking ceremony for a new $2.5 million "Famjly Center" building will be held Sunday, Sept. 14, at 2 p.m. at Nova University's main campus. The building, due for com- pletion in February 1981. will house the Nova University Family Center directed by Dr. Marilyn Segal. The Center will comprise six units: Psychological Services Unit for assessment and eval- uation of young children ages three months through six years; Parent-Child Unit where parents will participate with their children in a variety of educational, cultural and recrea- tional activities; Family Circle- Parent Education Unit where parents participate in programs and courses designed to enhance parenting knowledge and skills; Professional Development Unit for the provision of in-service and special purpose training programs for child-care pro- fessionals; Resource and Product Development Unit for the de- velopment and dissemination of products and resources related to children and families; and Educational Services Unit for educational assessment, eval- uation, remediation, and tutorial services. Some of these units are already in operation: the rest are scheduled to begin Sept. 22. Until the new building is ready, the Family Center will be housed in the trailers and in the Mailman Building. The groundbreaking is part of an "Open House" to be held from 1-4 p.m.. Sept. 14. The public is invited to visit the Family Center, view the toys and learning materials developed by Dr. Segal and her staff, meet the faculty and staff, discuss the range of services to be offered by the Family Center, and partake of refreshments. May the beauty and inspiration of the High Holy Days bring you happiness throughout the year. Since NK) CORAL GABLES, MIAMI BEACH HALLANDALE/HOLLYWOOD LAUDERHILL Ethel Waldman, campaign chairman of the Women's Division, attended a planning meeting for the regional annual CJF / UJA Conference. The con- ference will be held Dec 11,12,13 and 14 in Orlando at the Hyatt House. Mrs. Waldman en- thusiastically reported that the plans for Women's Division are instructive and sophisticated and should greatly aid the 1981 campaign. Happy New Year from Riverside Memorial Chapels Alfred Golden, Exec. V.P. Mark Davis Arthur Grossberg, V.P. The Diminishing Pledge Paid 1 year late Value is $750 Paid 2 years late Value is $500 . Paid 3 years late Value is $250 \ - To keep Jewish Agency programs going in Israel, the United Israel Appeal (UIA) awaiting funds from United Jewish Appeal (UJA) and Keren Hayesod borrows a substantial amount of money each year, which it pays when pledges are collected. UIA loans are costly; inflation adds it burden. This all adds up to a loss in value on uncollected pledges of no less than 25 per cent each year. For thousands of men, women and children in Israel who depend on the redemption of our pledqes this is a promise unkept. Cash is needed now. More than ever. WE'RE GLAD YOU PLEDGED. SEND YOUR CHECK TODAY. YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU PAID. J^5!iSM,;SSfP0" of Great8r Fort Lauderdale 2999 NW33rd Avenue, Fort Lauderdale 33311 CASH COMMITTEE CO-CHAIRMEN 0LA,,VSD,"EK DAV.OJACKOWIT* j Friday. September 12,1980 The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Page3-A 1 ***' In the Jewish month of Tishri, approximately 3800 years ago, an event took place that had a profound affect on the conscience of humanity. It established the principle that Man alone is responsible for preserving the gift of freedom granted to him by God at the Creation. The experience of the patriarch Abraham, the father of the Jewish people, launched a new era of human understanding. For Abraham's will- ingness to sacrifice his most cherished possession, his son Isaac, on behalf of his faith and ideals, gave man a new direction and purpose for life. The Biblical story of Abraham's triumph, therefore, is not merely an account of the test of the strength of one man's convictions and prepared- ness to act on behalf of what he believed. It is a test all humanity must be ready to face. For freedom to live, develop and worship as one chooses is a gift not easily acquired, and once obtained,of ten requires sacrifice to maintain. If humanity is unprepared to meet its obligations to preserve freedom.it may ultimately lose it. Rosh Hashana, the solemn Jewish New Yew, reaffirms the principle established nearly 4000 years ago, that Man's destiny to be free lies in his own hands. As the Shofar is sounded on Rosh Hashana, it summons humanity to unite in the cause of freedom and jus- tice. It bids mankind to heed the pleas of all who suffer from oppression and slavery. It rekindles the spirit of hope and peace for humanity. It evokes the day in which Man met his soul. It's what makes us Jews. MIAMI BEACH: 1920 Alton Road <19th St I 531-1161 NORMANDY ISLE: 1260 Normandy Drive 531-1151 MIAMI: 1717 S.W.37th Ave.( Douf las Rd.t 448-2221 NORTH MIAMI BEACH: 16480N.E.19thAv. 947-8691 HOLLYWOOD: 2230 Hollywood Blvd. 920-1010 SUNRISE: 1171 N.W.61t Ave.tSuntet Strip) 684-6060 WEST PALM BEACH: 4714 Okeechobee Blvd. 683-8676 Five rhapcli wrving the Now York Metropolitan r. RIVERSIDE I Chapel. lac./Faneral Dirertora Page 4-A The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Friday, September 12,198Q Meaning of Rosh Hashanah Rosh Hashanah is traditionally a time when Jews make a Chesbon Nefesh, an accounting of the soul. Supreme symbol of Rosh Hashanah is the shofar, when as many as a hundred sounds issue forth from that ancient instrument. Indeed, the sounding of the shofar marks the climax of the pleaful Rosh Hashanah service. It gives meaning to the greatest moment of our terror, the high point of the Days of Awe. As the shofar sings out, momentous events take place: the primeval light reappears, the dead arise, the Shechinah becomes visible. On Rosh Hashanah, we come to the moment of judgment, when mankind hopes to be inscribed in the Book of Life. Our prayers ask: Who shall live? Who shall die? And our curiosity is such that we demand of the Heavens: How many shall succumb (during the year ahead)? And then,#there is a recounting of the ways in which mankind may succumb: by sword, by fire, by pestilence. But Rosh Hashanah is more than this supreme moment of terror. It leads to the Ten Days of. Penitence and the crowning moment beyond it: Yom Kippur. when the spirit of forgiveness for the wrongs to which we have confessed pervades our hopes for ourselves and for all of mankind. GravelThe Predictable The statements by U.S. Sen. Mike Gravel following his defeat at the hands of Clark Gruening for Gravels seat in the United States Senate show us the temper of the times. Even in far-away Alaska, they are frankly anti-Semitic. Gravel blames his defeat on undue "Jewish influence" against him because of his unsympathetic statements about Israel and his positive feelings toward Araby. Whichever way you slice it, the whole thing smells of oil. And why not in Alaska, which has more than its own fair share of the stuff? As things become increasingly difficult on the energy market, the smell will become more odoriferous so far as Israel is con- cerned. For any Jew, either in public or private life, the result is an anti-Semitic atmosphere. Gruening is in no sense of the word Jewish. He is the grandson of Alaska's first Governor before statehood, Ernest Gruening, who was also one of Alaska's two first senators. Ernest Gruening long ago claimed his religion as Ethical Culture, although he never disavowed his Jewish roots. Still, Clark Gruening has had to bear the barb of Gravel's insinuations. They are, as we say, nothing that could not have been predicted. The Point Fails Us The Union of American Hebrew Congregations is being urged to take the "sexist language" out of the Bible and prayer if women are Lo win religious equality. This is the view of the UAHC's own Annette Daum, who serves as the Reform organization's interreligious affairs coordinator. Her solution? A new vocabulary that would include for "Lord" this brace of substitutes: "God, Blessed One, Divine, Redeemer, Ruler, Protector, Heavenly One, Maker." Presumably, these are less sexist. How, we wonder? Ditto for "Master," which Daum would prefer to see as "Ruler." Are these unisex rather than sexist? If we have to ask so many questions, somewhere along the way it is clear that the point has failed us even if not Daum's purpose. Jewish Floridian ( A Message for Rosh Hashana 5741 ByHERSCHELW BLUMBERG National Chairman, UJA Each year at Rosh Hashana we pause to examine the direction of our lives and the value of our deeds, to weigh promises kept and those still unfulfilled. It is a time to reflect on our respon- sibilities to one another, and to the heritage of hope and faith that unites us. Rosh Hashana is an expression of the essential themes of Jewish life. It is a celebration of the cycle of rebirth and renewal and a solemn affirmation of the oneness of our people under our covenant with God. These themes shine through the words of God to Ezekiel in one of the darkest hours ot exile: "I will give you one heart, and I will put a new spirit within you." This year we are challenged to reawaken that "new spirit' and to renew our commitment to the "one heart" that beats around the globe. Our challenge is sharpened by a worla en- vironment which threatens to dishearten and dispirit us. In the Soviet Union, in Syria and Argentina, in Ethiopia and Iran, thousands of our people are living under conditions of present or threatened oppression. In Europe, Western governments are pursuing anti-Israel policies that could undermine the Middle East peace process and multiply the burdens of the people of Israel as they continue to strive for a secure, peaceful future, a life of quality and a just and equitable society. Living and flourishing in our free, dynamic society, we American Jews have the strength and the means to meet this challenge forcefully and ef- fectively in the year ahead, through the lifeline of hope, compassion and brotherhood forged 41 years ago by the United Jewish Appeal. During the period of the High Holy Days, we should feel gratitude for the bounty of our lives and we may take pride in our good works. We also must reaffirm our heritage by renewing our commitments to our people in Israel and throughout the world Journey From Personal to Political OF ORRATBR PORT LAUDBRDALI Bualneaa Office American Saving! 2800 Building E. Hallandale Beach Boulevard. Room 70TG Hallandale. Florida 33008Telephone: 464-0188 FREDK SHOCHKT fiad SaooHaf IUZAWNE SHOCMBT! Editor and Publisher vrpwonww E*ecutree Editor' I'roducUon Editor, Greater Fort Lauderdale Edition Max Le vine, Jewlih FederaUon of Greater Fort Lauderdale 2009 NW 33rd Ave.. Fort Lauderdale 33311-Telephone 484-8200 Tfce Jaws* FlerkUaa Daaa Ma*t Of Tl Merchandise Ads Second Ctoaa Paatoge Peasdkti WMMWJ Bl Weekly FORM JSTt ratoras to THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN P.O. Ron 012*73, Miami, Fl. JJiOl Jewish Floridian has absorbed the Jewish Unity and the Jewish Weakly liber of the Jewish Teieeraphic Aoency. Sevan Arts Feature Syndicate. Worldwide News Service, National Editorial Association. American As The Enfiish-Jewish Newspapers, and Mm Florida Proas Association. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: (Local Area) One Year-t].st Out of Town Uoon Request. Friday, September 12,1980 , Volume 9 elation of 2 TISHRI 5741 Number 19 in the presidential sweep- stakes of 1976, abortion was an issue but did not blow up into the gigantic factor we behold in the 1980 campaign. One reliable poll four years ago indicated 81 percent of those questioned about abortion held that the subject was none of the government's business. Ronald Reagan, trying to replace President Gerald Ford, embraced Pro-Life support with zest, while Betty Ford gave her husband something of a bone in the throat by standing firm with the freedom-of-choice folks. "I am glad to see that abortion has been taken out of the backwoods and put in the hospitals where it belongs." she remarked. THIS TIME around, political platform builders are taking their cue from a sharply-split Supreme Court. Emboldened by that body's ruling that no woman has a constitutional right to have the federal government pay for an abortion, the GOP, mindful that Reagan had the National Right- To-Life Committee endorsement in his pocket, decided to support a proposed constitutional amendment to reverse the Supreme Court's 1973 decision legalizing abortion. It is estimated that one in every three of the one million or so legal abortions performed annually is currently paid for by Medicaid. That ratio will cer- tainly shrink. It is true that nine states and the. District of Columbia make non-federal government funds available for abortions for those who have traditionally looked in that direction for such payments. Justice Stevens, dissenting when the Surpeme Court upheld the Hyde Amendment, said that for the federal government to cut off funds for abortions unless a pregnant woman's life is in danger or she is the victim of rape or incest, amount to a breach of the government's duty to treat citizens impartially. And in Massachusetts, three women have filed suit in the state Supreme Court, contending that the cessation of Medicaid funding for abortions amounts to un- constitutional discrimination. IT IS reasonable to assume that both Catholics and Protestants in ever-increasing numbers agree with both the Supreme Court ruling and the Republican platform plank on abortion. America's trend to the right buttresses that supposition. What then of the Jewish community? The Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America has consistently stood, under guidance of halacha, in op- yilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliiiilllllllllllllllii Robert Segal Jillllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini.....iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniir I'uailllfli any puuui. pvnu^v permitting or encouraging abortion. Hut the National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council, in drafting its 1980-81 Joint Program Plan, after noting Orthodox Jewry's dissent and Hadassah's difficulty in reaching a consensus, has adopted the following significant guideline for the 108 local Jewih organizations looking to the NJCRAC for counsel: "We recommend careful monitoring of local, state, and federal legislative activities to insure that they do not deny women's freedom of choice in any way, including funding for abortion: joining with other groups in communicating to opinion moiders and lawmakers on every level of government our opposition to anti-choice measures." AS THESE program drafter-- see the issue, "abortion in the early weeks of pregnancy is a rnatter for decision by individual women in accordance with their personal situations and their religious, moral and ethical views and should not be regulated by law." They conclude also thai any legislation limiting severely the use of Medicaid funds tor abortion is grossly ,jsF discriminatory against poor women. Readers Write In my humble opinion, China is just as dangerous to the peace and transquility of Israel as Russia, Libya, Iraq and the rest of the Arab nations. Concerted Jewry (action) could exact a complete disavowal by China of all remarks prejudicial to the interests of Israel and perhaps compel her to "sing another tune." Albert Ocean Margate (I want to tell you of an in- cident in Piestany, Czechoslovakia, which had a heavy Jewish population, but overrun by the Nazis, and later, in 1968, taken over by the Russians, only a handful of Jews remain in a government- sponsored anti-religious at- mosphere. Now only one little shul, one story weather-beaten structure). I left my hotel to attend Sabbath service. It was cloudy, rainy, raw. The gate at the shul was closed. The shammos, one- legged, elderly man, hobbling on crutches. We went in,, sat, talked, waited. Would there by a minyan? About a half hour later, two men came, then two more. Finally a minyan, ending service with 17 men, and two or three women in the separated section. Typical Orthodox Ashkenazic service. Sat next to a Sephardic Jew, a Londoner. He, his father and grandfather served in India with British military. Services conducted by retired New York executive. Beautiful kiddush chanted by shammos. Then Sabbath greetings, handshakes. The Sabbath glowed in their eyes and the spirit of kinship was there. Conclusion: "Am Yisroel Chai Judaism lives on." ** Nathan P. Baker Lauderdale Lakes (My first visit to Israeli: Praying at the. Western Wall. young and old. big and small with t'ftllin and prayer shawl, on one side women, on the other men; praying over and over again: Yukor, tears, heartache felt throughout the years. Joy in our liberation, thanks to God for his deliverance of our great nation. For years we traveled in poverty and fear. Genocide was the scheme. It was Hitler's dream. His plan we had to spoil. Now with God's help we are on Israel's soil. It is a sight to behold, Israel the new, and Israel the old. People from all over the world are here ... our little democracy has made history. Let's show the world how we feel. More than ever before, contribute to the United Jewish Appeal. It is incumbent on you and me to save our great democracy. We are a people rejected, yet respected. Betty Kimmel Lauderdale Lakes I am greatly impressed by that beautiful article by Jerry Mink (Aug. 29 issue, The Jewish Floridian). It's candid, it's honest and bears a lesson. I'm sure he won't mind if I show it around. Samuel Hoffman Sunrise Original letters addressed to The Jewish Floridian Greater Fort Lauderdale Edition, 2999 NW 33rd Ave., Fort Lauderdale 33313, will be considered on their merits for publication and edited, f necessary, as apace permits. *' Friday, September 12, I960 The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Page 5- A k* Portable Ark for Nursing Home Services > '-mM wim inn flen Scribner proudly displays the portable Aron Kodesh (Holy Ark) tie hand-crafted. The Ark, complete with two small Torahs, was carried to various nursing homes during the past few days, for High Holy Days services in miniature, conducted by Rabbi Albert Schwartz, director of the Chaplaincy Commission of the Jewish Federation of Greater Fort Lauderdale. He is pic- tured with Sally Radin Heft), general chairman of W EC ARE (With Energy, Compassion and Responsible Effort) of the Jewish Community Center, and Ruth Horowitz, chairman of WECARE nursing home volunteers, who assisted the rabbi at the services. Inset at left is Sol Gruber of Lauderhill, who has sung with "Best of Broadway" and other groups, who chanted the liturgy. 3 Attend BBYO Convention Hillary Jackowitz, Craig Rappel and Valerie Ross, Plantation, were among the 13 Florida B'nai B'rith Youth delegates to the organization's annual international convention last month at Camp B'nai B'rith Perlman in Starlight, Pa. Anita Perlman, president of the Jewish Community Center of Greater Fort Lauderdale, for whose family the camp in the Pocono Mountains was named, was one of the speakers at the Board of Rabbis Meet Sept. 30 The North Breward Board of Rabbis will meet Tuesday. Sept. 30, at Temple Emanu-El. At its meeting, Aug. 29, at Temple Kol Ami. the rabbis, who are members of the board, met with a representative of Florida's U.S. Sen. Richard (Dick) Stone. They discussed the Senator's position on Israel and other areas of concern. The cooperative nature of North Broward's synagogues and temples working in concert with the Jewish Federation of G reater Fort Lauderdale and other Jewish communal organizations was discussed at length. The board noted just as it is im- portant for Jews to contribute to the United Jewish Appeal-Israel Emergency Fund, so too it is at least equally important that all Jews affiliate with the synagogue of their choice. Activity in either does not preclude support of the other. The board expressed a wish to all for a moat happy and healthy New Year. Shana Tova Tikateyvu. caWMNAMI!! CARICATURIST BARMITZVAHS ANDAFFAIRS Mitchell Gordon 893 0024, Miami concluding session when U.S. Secretary of Transportation.Neil Goldschmidt received the Sam Beber distinguished alumni award. Gold Coast Council, with which Broward vouth are af- filiated, received an award for its BBG Sisterhood Weekend. The Florida Region's BBYO board of directors announced a membership total of 1,363 members, the second largest region in the U.S. Steinberg JWV Nat'l. Irvin Steinberg of North Miami Beach was elected National Commander of the Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A. at the close of the JWVa 86th Annual Convention in New Orleans. Steinberg, a native of Phila- delphia, served in the U.S. Army during World War II. His decorations include the Purple Heart and Bronze Star. Steinberg is employed in Florida's Department of Agri- culture. He is a member of both the American Legion and Beth Torah Congregation in North Miami Reach. Delegates demonstrated for the hostages held in Iran. Willard Zweig of Tamarac. director of media for the Department of Florida JWV, a delegate and member of the Resolutions Committee to the National Convention, said: "It was our purpose to project solidarity as Americans to the hostages and the world and we certainly have done that." in a demonstration at New Orleans City Hall, including reading a JWV resolution on behalf of the hostages. ' Ultraconservative evangelical groups, not the KKK or neo- Nazis, pose the gravest threat to the American Jewish community, warned Jerome L. Levinrad, national executive director of the Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A. is Elected Commander Commander Steinberg In addressing the JWV's 85th annual national convention here. Levinrad called for the American Jewish community to be on the alert to the ultraconservative trend of some of these evangelical groups. Citing the importance of Israel to America's strategic position in the Middle East, Harris B. Stone, retiring national commander of JWV called for the United States to reevaluate its role in the OPECcontrolled United Nations. Speaking at the JWV's 85th annual national convention, Stone said a strong Israel is essential to America's interests in the Mediterranean Sea and Indian Ocean, especially in light of the growing Soviet menace to both areas. [Hebrew Teacher Needed! [Experienced HeDrew teacher is (needed for Hebrew School (4 Ihours a week). Please call 1172-1988 Page6-A \ The Jewish Ftoridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Friday, Septembers, 1980 MONDAY. Sept. 15 Temple Emanu-EI -Games 7": 15 p.m. Temple Bete Isreel Sisterhood Alione General meeting at temple - 7100 W Oakland Park Blvd.. Sunrise 7:30 p.m. Hebrew Congregation of Lauderhill Sisterhood General meeting at Hebrew Congregation o< Lauder- hill, 2048 NW 49th Ave. noon ORT Ocean Mile Chapter Board meeting 10 a.m. at No. Beach Medical Center, 2835 N. Ocean Blvd. B'nai B'rith Inverrary Chapter #1578- Board meeting lua.m. Temple Kol Ami Sisterhood Plan- tation Board meeting at temple 8 p.m. B'nai B'rith Chapter #345 General meeting at Roarke Recreation Center Hadassah Aviva Oakland Park Estates Chapter General meeting - noon TUESDAY, Sept. 16 Hebrew Congregation of Lauderhill - General meeting 9.30 a.m. at Hebrew Congregation of Lauder- hill. 2048 NW 49th Ave. Deborah Hospital Chapter of Sun- Jewish Congress Assails School Prayer Amendment WASHINGTON The American Jewish Congress assailed an amendment to the 1981 Department of Education appropriation bill, which passed the House of Representatives Aug. 27, barring the Department of Education from spending any funds for the purpose of "preventing the implementation of programs of voluntary prayer or meditation" in the public schools. Prof. Abraham S. Goldstein, chairman of the American Jewish Congress Commission on Law and Social Action, called the bill "the latest in a series of un- successful Congressional at- tempts to overturn the decisions of the Supreme Court prohibiting religious exercises in the public schools." He added: "Although we know of no program of the Department of Education which 'would be subject to the language of this amendment, it is disheartening that members of Congress, who have taken oaths to support the Constitution, have voted to subvert that very Constitution." AJ Congress also criticized a proposal by the Department of Health and Human Services to keep the race, sex, national original and religious preference of Medicare and Medicaid patients in nursing homes on a "Master Patient Register." In testimony before a regional hearing held by the Department at 26 Federation Plaza, N.Y.C., Florence Galkin of the American Jewish Congress' Commission on Urban Affairs declared: "The Constitution's mandate of separation of curch and state stands for the proposition that government inquiries about religious preference, where permissable at all, must be narrowly limited to the minimum necessary to satisfy government interest. "While there is a legitimate need to inquire into a patient's religion, if any, so as to facilitate the provision of religious ser- vices, we see no reason why that information must be maintained permanently in a central file." The American Jewish Congress spokesman also urged that requirements for the availability of religious preference diets be expanded to include the accommodation of other religious observances. She suggested specifically that in the departmental regulation requiring compliance with state and local laws, Orthodox Jewish objections to autopsies be taken into account. The Jewish Floridlan of Greater Fort Lauderdale is mailed every two weeks, through an arrangement with the Jewish Federation of G eater Fort Lauderdale, to persons who contribute at least $25 or more to Federation's annual United Jewish Appeal Cam- paign. Besides aiding Jews In needs around the world, the con- tribution covers a year's subscription to The Jewish Floridlan. Greater Fort Lauderdale Edition of ""Jewish Florid ian li povidtd puDllc tonic* to !h Jowisn communltwt in North Broward Count, by ln Jewish Federation of 2999 N.W. 33rd Ave. Ft. Lauderdale 33311 Greater Fort Lauderdale Phone 305/484-8200 MlttonKelne. "W^^" LmII S. Gottlieb President Executive Director' VIctorGruman Executive Vice President Richard Romanoff I Joel LevHt Vice President\lSecretary Joel Relnstein I John Strong i Vice President I Treasurer Saul Weinberger Gladys Daren Wee President, | Women's Division President iFoufdltoritloolumnt or THE JEWISH FLOfUDHH PubHi/m ind n*th* ttn cotumi not in* tOvrtltina JmwMi Htwntton of OrnMr Fort Uudanfe* Uttopktton or Hh News Hems for The Jewish Floridlan of Greater Fort Lauderdale should be sent to the Jewish Federation office, 2900 NW 33rd A, Fort Laudoraale, Fla.mi1.___________________________ rise General meeting -11:30 a m. Mini luncheon and film on Deborah Heart & Lung Hospital Hadassah Rayus Tamarac Chapter Board meeting at Temple Beth Torah 9101 NW 57th St. WEDNESDAY. Sept. 17 Temple Beth Israel Games 7:30 p.m. UJA Young Leadership I "Work- shop on Jewish Identity" 7:45 p.m. Hadassah Inverrary Qilah Chapter -General meeting National Council of Jewish Women - No. Broward Section General meeting 12:30 p.m. at Lauder- dale Lakes City Hall. 4300 NW 36th St. Hadassah Bermuda Club Herzl - Membership meeting 1 p.m. - Residents only at Bermuda Club Recreation Hall Sunrise Jewish Center Sisterhood General meeting 11:30 a.m. at temple Hadassah Oriole Scopus Chapter - Monthly meeting noon at Mar- gate Jewish Center Refreshments -All welcome Natanya Pioneer Women General meeting 12:30 p.m. at 1303 State Rd. 7, Margate Mizrachl Women Masada Chapter - Board meeting. -10 a.m. Temple Ohel B'nai Raphael Sisterhood General meeting - noon ORT Woodlands North General meeting Deborah Hospital Lakes Chapter - General meeting noon Lauder- dale Lakes City Hall Refresh- ments Guests welcome THURSDAY. Sept. 18 Temple Beth Israel Games -1230 p.m. Jewish Family Service Executive meeting Jewish Federation of Greater Fort Lauderdale 6 p.m. - Board meeting immediately fol- lowing at 7:30 p.m. Temple Sholom Pompano Men's Club Board meeting 8 p.m. American Red Mogen David for Israel Col. David Marcus Chapter of Fort Lauderdale Sunrise Chapter meeting Whiting Hall B'nai B'rith Holiday Springs Lodge K3086 General meeting 8 p.m. at Clubhouse. 3131 Holiday Springs Blvd. ORT No. Broward Region - Regional Board meeting 10 a.m. Temple Kol Ami Brotherhood - Plantation General meeting 8 p.m at temple B'nai B'rith Inverrary Lodge #3002 - General meeting 8 p.m. at Temple Beth Israel Hadassah liana Hawaiian Gar- dens Chapter General meeting Sons of Israel Fort Lauderdale Lodge N219 Board meeting 7:30 p.m. Temple Emanu-EI Board of Trustees meeting 7:45 p.m. SATURDAY. Sept. 20 ORT Ocean Mile Chapter Break the Fast Dinner at Jarvis Hall p.m. -' Break UJA Young Leadership the Fast" MONDAY. Sept. 22 Temple Emanu-EI Games 7 15 p.m. Hadassah Bat Ami Tamarac Chapter Board meeting 9 30 a.m. at Tamarac Jewish Cente' 9101 NW 57th St., Tamarac Hadassah Tamar Chapter - Lauderdale Lakes Board meeting 10 a.m. at Lauderdale Lakes City Hall National Council of Jewish Women - Plantation Opening Breai-.fas' 9:30 a.m Broward .County Medica.' Organization Auxiliary 10:30 a./n TUESDAY, Sept 23 Temple Sholom Sisterhood Pompano General meeting p.m Hadassah Bermuda Club Herzl Executive Board meeting 1C a at Bermuda Club Recreation ha.' Hadassah Pine Island Ridge Chapter Board meeting -1 p m ai Clubhouse Hadassah Rayus Tamarac Chapter General meeting noon at Temple Beth Torah. 9101 NW 57th St., Tamarac Jewish Federation of Greater Fort Lauderdale Board meeting 7 p.m. Pioneer Women Negev Deerlield Chapter General meeting 12 30 p.m. at Temple Beth Israel - Refreshments and film WEDNESDAY, Sept. 24 ORT Ramblewood East Chapter - Board meeting 12:30 p.m at Ramblewood East Condo National Council of Jewish Women - Plantation C.P.R. Course begins <, This year as in all years EMPIRE stands for Kashruth, Quality a Preference. Tt&g*' < ?. a*** &&, ' y<3^ * KOSHER 'iOONDCft FlltTS "FOR MORE THAN FORTY YEARS, THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN KOSHER POULTRY. Empire POULTRY AS WE ENTER THE NEW YEAR, S741 ...HEALTH AND HAPPINESS TO YOU AND YOURS FROM EMPIRE... THE HOUSE OF TRADITION AND HERITAGE MT.IYI ACCEPTED & PREFERRED WORLD-WIDE Friday, September 12,1980 The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Pge7A V ' Orientation at Beth Am School -. H .. according to Publicity Director SfWUlL the Jft *""? David Klempner, took giant member* led groups of parent .^ mMn^ the 6umm and children on a tour of temple (children) the 6omm (builders) of facilities. The education com- the Judaism of tomorrow. mi t tee, aided by volunteers, + Sam Singer, executive director of Temple Beth Am; Cantor Mario Boto- shanshy; Temple President Harry Hirsch; Rabbi Dr. Solomon Geld; Berte Resnikoff, co-chairman of education committee; Abraham J. Gittelson, director of education, Jewish Federation of Greater Fort Lauderdale. Pictured above are several of the participants in the Aug. 31 Orientation Day for parents and students for Temple Beth Am's Hebrew School in its new synagogue. Congregation President Hirsch thanked the School Committee leaders of Mrs. Resnikoff, Anne Johnes, Helen Stoopack and Singer, as well as the Com- mittee's consultants, Rabbi Geld, Cantor Botoshansky and Git- telson. Rabbi Geld recalled his own youth and striving for learning in Poland, urging a continued striving for children to acquire and cherish their Judaic heritage. , In spite of the best teachers, classrooms and facilities, nothing will be accomplished, he said. Floridian's Ad Rep without the participation of the parents. Their interest in their children is the catalyst. Out of the mouths of children will "we derive our strength." Gittelson said the generous space in the new synagogue for classrooms was gratifying. He urged post-Bar and Bat Mitzvah children to continue their education in the Judaic High School, sponsored by the Jewish Federation of Greater Fort Lauderdale and several congre- gations, including Temple Beth Am. He urged adults to register for Rabbi Geld's adult education courses. 'i oo Jerry Mink, advertising rep- resentative in Broward County for The Jewish Floridian, can be reached at his home in Sunrise, 742-8294, or at his newly-established *firm, I.D. Security Card Sys- tems, 741-4324. The former resident of West Orange, NJ., is also a photographer. He and his wife, the former Susan Kaul of Livingston, N.J., have two daughters, Debbie, 7, and Jaime, 4. $& Soviet Jewish Emigration Down During July, 1,206 Soviet Jews arrived in Vienna, with 23.8 percent going to Israel. Com- pared with the same period in JW9, when 4,068 Jews arrived in Vienna, this figure represents a decrease of over 70 percent. J5 tne first ven months of J980, 16,292 Jews arrived in 1979na' COmp*red to 28l88 to The number of Jews leaving tne Soviet Union has been steadily decreasing. The drop, ^^ *nich began approximately -seven months ago, is most evident when a comparison is "*< between the July 1980 35* ^ MOB to the December 1979 figure of 4,146, the last month when the rate of emi- gration remained high. JfWISH rimon/XL RAID The Jewish Notional Fund! Extends Best Wishes To the Entire Jewish Community and to the State of Israel For o Very Happy, Healthy, Peaceful and Prosperous NEw Year 5741 DR ALV1N K. COLIN JACOB BRODZKI LUDWIK BRODZKI fo000ppooooopoooooooc*^n,<*niw>rmoooooooo Strengthen Israel Through JNF Foundation REMEMBER THE JNF IN YOUR WILL LET YOUR WILL REFLECT YOUR LIFE AND IDEALS Protect your loved ones Reduce Your Taxable Income See Your Attorney... Do It Now Adopt the JNF in your Will Have A Share in the JNF Upbuilding of Israel Trees Planted 140,000,000 Land Reclaimed (Dunams) 640,000 Roads built by JNF (kilometers) 3,800 JNF Land Holdings (Dunams) 2,700,000 Area Afforested (Dunams) 650,000 Rural Settlements on JNF Land 849 Population on JNF Land 1,160,000 Help Redeem and Reclaim the The Land of Israel Through the JNF Foundation THE FUTURE BEGINS TODAY There is No Time Like The Present To Build For the Future Jewish National Fund 420 Lincoln Road, Suite 353 Miami Beach, Florida 33139 53*6464 iOOOOaOHSDOODDOGa IS IT KOSHER FOR THESE COOKIES AND CRACKERS TO TASTE THIS GOOD? YOU BETSUNSHINE BAKES WITH 100% VEGETABLE SHORTENING. NOT LARD! K Certified Kosher Page8-A The Jewish FloridJon of Greater Fort Lauderdale Friday, September 12,1980 Scores of activities six days a week at Jewish Community Center ^f ^r periman SUNDAY TIME ACTIVITY 9 00 am Bag Tannis 9 IS A*ro*c Fitness 1000 Intermed Tennis 1000 VoUeyfeal 10 00 Mn Basketball 1000 Jessssh LandKapr . 11 00 Beg Tenrws 1 30 pm Tale n Tell I 30 Gam* O Rama Story O Skelfh Cooking Monsters Dibble Dabble Pjpe. Mathe Art is al Around Sugar n Spare Puppetry Game O Rama Space Cadets Slrlchery "Club 45" Waifr Polo Biddy Basketball Photography Tsveen Co ad Sodhal Water Polo Iwrw Boy > Basketball Swimmer's Instruction Teen Girl > Basketball Teen Boy > Basketball Buying and Sekang Furnishings Jesush Art History WECARE Prepares for Hanukah It may be 95 degrees in the Israel, Fort Lauderdale Chapter, shade, and the calendar on your has already begun the campaign desk reminds you it's the month through the efforts of his Lodge. the I 30 130 I 30 1 30 130 130 130 IX IX 130 IX 230 2 30 3X 400 400 4 00 5 00 600 7 IS 800 800 AGE GROUP Adull Teen Adult Teer. Adull/Teen Adult Teen Over 34 Years Adult Tvveen/Teen Kgn 1st Gr Kgn 1st Gr Kgn Isl Gr Kgn Isl Gt Kgn IslGr Kgn Isl G. Gr 2*3 G. 2*3 Gr 2*3 Gi 2*3 Gr 2*3 Gr 2*3 Gr. 4 S Gr 612 Gr 3 5 Gr 4 5 Gr i>H Gr 2 5, Gr 69 WEDNESDAY TIME 915 am 9X I0W 1000 II X ACTIVITY Aerobic Fitness Fun with Antiques Toddler Workshop Low ol Opera Swimming 12 X pm Learn lo Swim 69 912 Adult Adult TIME 900 am 9 IS 1O00 IO00 IO00 1000 MX 1230 pm 3X 3 30 400 400 400 400 00 400 400 4X 700 700 700 700 700 700 730 800 800 800 800 TIME 900 am 900 MOO 11X MONDAY ACTIVITY Tennis Lessons Aerobsr Fitness Todder Workshop Yoga Art Potpourri Swimming Insltuclion Learn to Swim Swimming Instruction Begmrang Swim Junior Soccer Junior Basketball Tennis Lessons Dance Fever Sticks and Stones Culinary Delights Hammer Nails Begmnmg Swim 55 Plus Singk-s Origami Teen Gym Dancer size The I i* kei Room Broadway Dance Beg Sign Language Broadway Dance Twesm Gym Night Macrame Photography AGE GROUP Adull/Teen Adult Teen Ages 21 Adult Teen Adull Sr Adult Ages .'4 Adult Ages 24 Ages 5 Up Gr 142 Gr 1A.2 Gr 3 lo 5 Ages V-. S Gr Kgn Isl Gr 2*3 Gt 4*5 Ages 5* Up Gr 68 Gr 612 Adult Teen Gr 68 (Boys) Gr 4 8 All Ages Adult Teen Gr 68 Adult Adult Teen TUESDAY ACTIVITY Aerobic Dance Todder Workshop Conv Spanish Swimnaslics 12 00 pm Game Room 12X 100 100 1 45 230 2X 330 400 400 400 400 400 400 400 4 30 4 Learn to Swim Creative Movement Museum Ckjb Creative Movement Dance Band Beginning Swim Swim Instruction Floor Hockey Sound Rhythym Scrap Crah Rocketry Kinder Sports Tumbkng Dance Fever Adv Beg Swim Swim Insfruclun AGE GROUP Adult/Teen Ages 2 4 Aduk Adult Adult Adult Ages 2', 4 Aduh Ages 4', 6 Adult Ages 5 Up Ages 24 Gr 48 Gr Kgn ! Gr 2*3 Gr 4*5 Kgn Gr 13 Gr 3 5 Ages 24 2X 330 130 400 400 400 400 400 400 400 4 30 4 30 5 15 700 700 700 700 130 130 800 800 800 TIME 9 Mam 1000 1000 1000 MX I 00 pm 200 2X 330 330 400 400 400 400 400 400 130 Ux 500 500 600 6 30 700 700 700 130 7 30 800 800 TIME 1000 am 1000 4.00 pm 400 400 400 400 Folk Fun Dancing Swimming Beginners Swim Let s Pretend Sand Craft Harmonica Lessons Galoping Gourmets Pre School Tumbling Tennis Lessons Soccer Intermed Swan Beginners Swim Tumbkng Dancer we Theatre Workshop Basket ball ACE GROUP AdullTeen Adult Ages 24 Aduh Ages 2 4 Adult Sr Adult Ages 24 Ages 5 & Up Gr Kgn I Gr 2*3 Gr 3 5 Gr 4*5 Ages 3 5 of September, .but to dedicated volunteers of the Jewish Community Center WE- CARE Program, it is not too soon to plan for Hanukah dis- tribution to the needy. * Lou Gold, community service chairperson of Free Sons of JCC TRIBUTE CARDS Designed for all Occasions. Packaged for Your Convenience. Twelve for $25. Keep Them on Hand. What Nicer Way to Remember. Stop at the Center Office: Jewish Community Center 6501 W. Sunrise Blvd. 792-6700 Perfumes and small gift items have been donated. He assured WECARE that this is just Ihe beginning of many more lovely gifts and monies his Lodge will be collecting. teers will be distributed to nursing home residents.' Various organizations have donated assorted gift items which are put into gift packages and dis- tributed to shut-ins. Fpod parcels are also an important part of the Hanuka program. All food items, sundries and monies col- lected help to feed the less for- tunate during the holidays. Handmade booties and lap robes made by WECARE vOlun- I i Gr 3 5 Ages 5 Up Gr 3 5 Adull/Teen Teen Adull Rap Session on Aging Parents Adult Studio Panting Aduh Intermed Sign Language All Agra Interior Design a^j, Great Jewish Books Aduh Poetry Encounter Adult/Teen THURSDAY king ACTIVITY Literal ute Thursday Lecture GJo Natural Food C. Swimrvastics Lee Drawing Musk Lessons Social Dance Begmners Swim Swim Instruction Ballet Dough An Glue Factory Origami Flag Football Creative Movement Swim Instruction Adv Beginners Swim Creative Movement Balel Shape Up Varsity Basketball Modern Dance Game Room Creative Living Charm n Poise Basic Judaism Film Club Theatre AGE GROUP Aduh Sr Adult Aduh Aduk Adult/Teen Adult All Ages St Adull Ages 5* Up Ages 2 4 Gr Kgn 2 Gr Kgn I Gr 2*3 Gr 4*5 Gr 24 *9?S 4 Ages 2 4 Agrs4S 6 Gr 3 5 Aduh Teer, Teens Adult/Teen Aduh St Adult Teen JCCAD Adult/Teens Aduh FRIDAY ACTIVITY Stained Glass Parapsychology Gum-ORama Green Thumb. Inc. Hoop Weaving Adv Beginning Swam Intermed Swim AGE GROUP St Adult Aduh Gr Kgn ft 1 Gr 2ft 3 Gr 4ft 5 SATURDAY EVENING Open lor Special Program, only. Losing Your Eyesight? JCC will offer a special program for people visually impaired on Tuesday. Oct. 14, at 10 a.m. Speaker Carl Weiss will help the participant and spouse identify feelings ot anxiety relativ ? to this ongoing disability. Learn also the ad- justment techniques for a richer and better life. About the Instructor: Carl Weiss has been a psychiatric social worker for more than 30 years. He recently retired to Florida, where he was in- strumental in initiating "The Institute of Retired Pro- fessionals" for Nova University. Weiss has been without sight since he was 17 years old. Puppet Craft Youngsters ages 6 and up will be taught to make puppets using gloves or paper plates on Thursday, Sept. 18, from 3:30 to 4:30 at the Fort Lauderdale Branch of the Broward County Library. Children are asked to bring a pair of old gloves. Fifth Anniversary Celebration November 1 & 2, 1980 November 1, 1980 Saturday Night 8 P.M. until? Join us under a colorful tent to celebrate this gala event. There will be entertainment and a live band (or your dancing pleasure. Feast on a sumptuous dessert buffet and Viennese Table. This members-only event is & $8.00 per person November 2, 1980 Hobby Show and Family Fun Day 1 P.M. To help us celebrate we invite your whole family! Hot Dogs and drinks will :*: :: be available for those who wish to purchase lunch and there will be games S? g and fun for all! The JCC's very first HOBBY SHOW offers an opportunity :* for Center Members to display their skills and creativity. Call 792-6700 for S entry forms *mmmmmmmmmmm,..................................mmmmm: ji I 'Pinky Herman Revusical' FLASH! The Jewish Community Center of Greater Fort Lauderdale WECARE Volunteer Service Program presents the "Pinky Herman Revusical." featuring well known stars of stage, screen and TV, at the Parker Playhouse. Sunday. Nov. 9 at 1:30 p.m. The producer and author of the show. Pinky Herman, has published some 110 songs. One song, 'Manhattan Merry Go Round." was the featured theme song of the program of the same name that was heard every Sunday night for 19 consecutive years (1931-1949) over the NBC Network. He has been a member of ASCAP since 1949 and been TV editor for Motion Picture Daily since 1951. Herman has also been a member of the Lambs Club since 1952, where he was executive producer of the monthly "Lambashings." Working closely with Herman are Buddv Neustein. WECARK volunteer, and Mike Weingarten. liaison, Free Sons of Israel, Fort Lauderdale Chapter, and Rick Kelly, manager of the Parker Playhouse. Ticket information can be obtained by calling the JCC. The Jewish Community Center of Greater Fort Lauderdale, 6501 W. Sunrise Blvd., currently has 3,075 men, women and children enjoying JCC memberships. Volunteers Needed V. 1 Men and Women are needed to help at Le Browse, the shop selling new and gently used merchandise for the benefit of JCC. Le Browse is located in the Shops of Oriole at 4328 N. State Road No. 7 (441) in Lauderdale Lakes. If you can make a definite commitment for a four-hour shift on a regular basis, call WECARE at 792-6700. This is your year to fall in love with FALLS < * No other Kosher poultry comes to you resher. or more delicious than Falls And no other product turns poultry dishes into tastier more attractive dinners Chickens Turkeys Ducks Whole or in cut-up parts Available Iresh or frozen at liner kosher butchers and at selected supermarkets Even a line of delicious readyto-eat heat n serve" barbecue and fried products A whole line of poultry products thai you know you can depend upon. Could you think of a better reason to fall m love with Falls tor the new year? Happy 5741 YOU CAN FALL IN LOVE WITH FALLS National Food Distributors (305)325-0178 You'll fall In love with Falls V Friday. September 12,1980 The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Page9-A The Last Jews of a Romanian Shtetl The beauty and squalor of present-day Jewish life in a Romanian shetetl is depicted in "The Last Jews of Radauti," a photographic study by Laurence Salzmann and Dan Rottenberg in the July issue of GEO magazine. Pictured left, while the hearse waits, an elderly Radauti Jew enters the cemetery to attend his brother's funeral. Inside, ancient gravestones are covered with images of animals, birds and fruits. Salzmann, a Phila- delphia photographer, who spent two years in the village in (he Carpathian mountains near the Soviet border, delineated the remnants of the Jewish shtetl life still sur- viving there. Out of a prewar population of 800,000 Jews, and a postwar scattering of 400.000, fewer than 40,000 Jews remain in Romania. The government permits emigration to Israel where Romanians are now the largest nationality bloc about 10 percent of the population. However, the elderly, like Gabbai Moses Lehrer holding the Torah at services in the Vizhnitzer shut, often chose to stay behind. More than half of Radauti's 200 Jews are over 60. When they die, according to GEO ..writer Rottenberg, the once flourishing Jewish community may disappear. The Chief Rabbi of Romania Moses Rosen, disagrees. "Don't recite kaddish for the Jews of Radauti," he says. "We aren't dead vet." noting that Romania's Jews have 120 functioning synagogues. 11 kosher restaurants, 24 Talmud Torah schools, 15 ritual bathhouses, 10 old-age homes and their own twice-monthly newspaper, printed by the state in both Romanian and Hebrew. Rottenberg wrote that Rabbi Rosen, who is a member of Parliament, is a direct descendant of Rashi. the revered 1 lth Century French scholar, and a distant cousin of Karl Marx. The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JI)CI. which receives funding from the annual UJA campaign of the Jewish Federation of Greater Fort Lauderdale, provides some three million dollars in annual aid to the Jewish communities in Romania. Days of Awe Continued from Page 1 ' ""our very lives and our fortunes. If this is to be, all of our local institutions must be supported and strengthened, for it is through them that our Jewish identity is maintained."First and foremost, our Temples and Synagogues are the strongholds of our "Yiddishkeit," to say nothing of Family Service, the Ar^Community Center, the Hebrew Day School, the Judaica High School and our Chaplaincy Service. Let us pray that 5741, ushered in with the blowing of the Shofar, will make of our synagogues, reservoirs of strength and sensitivity, and that all of us be inscribed in the Book of Life for a year of peace and happiness. I.'shana Tova Tikateyvu Call of the Shofar Continued from Page 1 future. We hearken to the words of IMaimonides as Rosh Hashana comes with the blast of the shofar to mark the New Year. j^jf Maimonides wrote: "It is the call mSY^' lne ram's hom which urges us to awake from our slumbers, those who have fallen asleep in life, and reflect on your deeds. Remember your Creator. Be not of those who miss reality in pursuit of shadows, and waste their years seeking after vain things, which neither profit nor save. Look well to your aouls and improve your character. Forsake each of you his evil ways and thoughts." We greet the year 5741 with an urgent request for a commitment to revive and strengthen the Sabbath. k As we enter our respective r synagogues, may the inspiration of the Holy Days bring light to us and love to those whose lives we touch. May the New Year bring you the fulfillment of your every worthy prayer. "All we have of freedomall we use or know This our fathers bought tor us, long and long ago. -fUKlyardKipling T^gT^-Tew Yo-K 3M.S. F,ed O.nes was espeoaily co^ss-oned by Brown W.IHamson ,o. ,. permanent coHedon o. Hn. art WOT*. The freedom to choose our livelihood was provided to us long ago And it was typified by the struggle of immigrants to America in the early 1800s People like Adam Gimbel. a humble Jewish peddler from Germany, who later founded the country's first department store. And individuals who became industrial giants, like Andrew Carnegie from Scotland, who built one of the largest steel producing businesses in the United States America had given both of them the freedom The freedom to choose A free individual does not live without choice A free society does not prosper without it Consider, if you will, the personal choices we make every day without intervention from others Now consider how many we take for granted. The right to choose is the basis of all freedom- political, social, artistic, economic, religiousfor all people But this right must be protected from those who would chip away at it ..either delib- erately for personal gain, or innocently for the betterment" of humanity. It must be protected from those who would make their choice, your choice. These personal freedoms are our legacy as well as our responsibility to protect and to pass on to those who follow Freedom It's a matter of choice The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Friday, September 12,1960 Assault against the Jewish People Nigerians Seek Sinai's Funeral Director s Prof. Irwin Cotler of McGill University, recently elected president of the Canadian Jewish Congress, has urged Israel and the world Jewry to combat the growing international effort to "delegitimize the Jewish people" and turn them into a "pariah of humanity." He warned that the "international assault has become so pervasive that Jews have unfortunately become inured to it." Prof. Cotler noted that non- Western countries and the PLO have taken advantage of many UN forums to portray Israel as the enemy of humanity. At the World Health Organization meetings, Israel is called a danger to health; at the Inter- national Labor Organization, it is called an enemy of labor unionism; at the Copenhagen Women's Conference, it is casti- gated for oppressing women. The new assault has gone beyond anti-Semitism, Prof. Cotler continued. "It is anti- Jewishness that not only denies the rights of Jews as equal citizens in a free society, but also denies the right of the Jewish people to be an equal member of the family of nations. Cotler stressed that the "Zionism - equals racism resolutions con- stituted a contemporary blood libel" against the Jewish people. HOLOCAUST INFORMATION WANTED The Belgian Embassy in Washington, D.C., is seeking witnesses now living in the U.S. who might have information about three men going on trial in Kiel, Germany, for atrocities committed against Jews during World War II. Names and addressess of witnesses should be forwarded to the Committee Beige de Foutien a la Partie Civile, Ave. de La Toison d'Or 16, Boite 3, 1060 Brussels, Belgium, or to Elliot Welles, Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, 823 United Nations Plaza, New York, NY 10017. Yom Kippur Services SYNAGOGUE FRI. SEPT. 19 EREV YOM KIPPUR KOL NIDRE SAT. SEPT. 20 YOM KIPPUR Ohe) B'nai Raphael 4361 OaMnd Pk BM Banquet Hall OaMnd Ptza BOTH 6:30 p.m. BOTH AM. Saomzkor Noon Temple Emanu-El at Parker Playhouse Span. 10 a.m. Youth Group 2:15 p.m. Concl. Serv. 3 p.m. Traditional ServtoM Temple Emanu-El 3245 W. OaMnd Pk Btvd 7 pm. 9 am/Ylzkor 1130 Afternoon 3:30 pjn. Nellah5p.m. Bern Israel Temple 7100 W. Oaklnd Pk Btvd i at Inverrary CC HoMday Inn Ptntatn Sunrise Lakes Phase 3 Clubhouse 6:15 p.m. All Services 8:30 a.m. All Auxiliary Services: 9 a.m. Sunrise Jewish Center at Sunrise Lakes Phase 2 Main Rsc Hall 8120 Sunrise Lka BM 6 pm. 9 am. ftSOpm of LaudsrhM at Camel* Had 2062 NW 49th Ave 830 ajnJYUkor 11:30 Community Ytzkor 3:15 at Temple Temple Beth Torah Tatnarac Jewish Center 0101 NW 57th St 830 pm. Bun. Temple Kol Ami 8200 Peters Rd risntanon 630 pm 4fc45pm. 9 am ft 11i*5 am. Chsdren'a 2:30 pjn. Aft, Ylzkor, NeHah 4:15 pm. Remat Shalom at Piper High School 8000 NW 44th St Sunrlee 8 pm. 10 am. Creative Avode T 4pm ' Beth HH Congregation 7640 Margate BN& pm. 830 am. Ybkor 11:30 Neiahepm Temple Beth Am MeVyato Jewish Center 7206 Royal Palm Btvd ens pa am Ytatar Approx.11 am. Temple Beth On at Coral Springe HS Sept. 12 at Temple 2151 mversMe Dr7 6 pm. IttaOpjn. 9 am, 111 am Yhkor, Approx 430 pm Kster Tarveh Synagogue at Theatre of Nova U. Sample Rd ft Unh. Dr. Corel Sprtnot 7 pm 10 am. .e Temple Snotom 132 SE 11 Ass Pompeno Beech 7 pm 9 am. Ybkor.Noon Temple Beth lereel Century VMege E DssrfWd Beech 7:15 pm Sam synagogue oi invsrrary at Broward Bridge Club 4400 Invsrrary BM. 7 pm 9 am. Ybkor.Noon Temple Beth B 333 SW 4th Ave. Boca Raton Last name Inrttsie L-Z6pm A-K 830 pm. 10 am/1:30 pm. 5pm, Bfbtetown Aud. S01NW4thAva Young Israel of HoCywood-FL Laud. At Emerald HMe 7pm 830am | Ylzkor, 11 am! Neaah,7pml Ties With Israel Christian pilgrims from Ni- geria have reported that there are demands within their country to resume diplomatic ties with Israel. The Rev. Paul O. Osapegun, leading a group of pilgrims on a vist to Israel, said that many of his countrymen recognize the contribution of Israelis to Nigeria. Despite the break in relations after the Yom Kippur War, a few thousand Israeli building and technology experts are working in Nigeria and con- tributing to its development. "Israelis are more involved in Nigeria's technological programs than citizens of any other foreign country," said Chief Michael Asaju, national president of the Nigeria Union of Journalists. "We have no quarrel with Israel," he added. "We're just carrying out the decisions of the Organization of African Unity to which Nigeria belongs." Business Pioneers To Be Honored Pioneers who built Broward County businesses will be honored at the Sept. 27 and 28 "Pioneer Days" celebration at Port Everglades. Admission, entertainment and parking will be free. The 60 influential residents, who arrived by horseless car- riage, truck, train, automobile and boat established many local businesses, will be there along with a barbershop quartet, choirs, an old-time piano player and sing-along, and choral groups. A mobile crime unit and a dog obedience club will demon- strate activities. As different as deep-dish apple pie is from quiche lorraine is Broward s newest funeral director from the stereotype of an undertaker. Judith H. White, bright and pert, smartly dressed, gave up a teaching career to become a funeral director. She enrolled in the McAllister Institute of Mor- tuary Science in New York, and in 1975, with diploma in hand, she went to work for the Hacken- sack, N.J., firm of Gutterman, Musicant and Kreitzman funeral directors. Now, the former resident of Englishtown, N.J., graduate of Trenton (N.J.) State College with a bachelor of science degree in elementary education, is with the Broward County operation of the firm which has enlarged its name by adding "Arnold and Grundwag Sinai Memorial Judith White Chapel" to its name at its 5900 W. Oakland Park Blvd. location. During her five years with the firm, Miss White was a member of the Bergen County (N.J.) Funeral Directors Association and the New Jersey State Funeral Directors Association. World Gathering Continued from Page 1 vocation, participants are invited to bring their sons and daughters, their spouses, and even grand- children to assure that the continuity of Jewish heritage and history will be reinforced. Ludwik Brodzki reported that a North Broward World Gathering Committee is in the process of being formed. He urged survivors who wish to have more information about the June 1981 World Gathering to get in touch with him through the Jewish Federation office, 484-8200. Plans for preliminary registration are being formulated. These will be announced in The Jewish Floridian. Travel wttti National council of Jewish women Some interesting and exciting tours to Israel. Europe, Greek Islands, Egypt, Spain, Guatemala and Central America available through December. For brochure, call Felicia B. Sussman, 7330662. or Lily Lester, 484-3492. * RARE JEWISH FACTS from J&B RARE SCOTCH Q: Who was the first American scientist to win a Nobel Prize? A: Albert Abraham Michelson. Born in Prussia in 1852, Michelson came to America as a youngster with his parents. After graduating from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1873, and serving several years as an of- ficer, he changed careers and began teaching and experimenting. His work in helping to measure the speed of light won him the Nobel Prize in 1907the first American scientist to be so honored! A NOT SO RARE FACT... A big part of Jewish warmth and affection is to 'open the house' when mishpocha, guests or friends drop in. Out comes the fine food and, invariably, J&B Rare Scotch. And why not?J&B is a clean, light scotch with the superb taste that fits right in with the tradition of serving the best. And because of its great taste, J&B commands a high level of elegance... at home or at your most important simchas. AncUhafsafact! RARE SCOTCH jay, September 12,1980 The Jewish Floridianof Greater Fort Lauderdale Page H'A New Immigrants Arrive from Minsk \nr, and Mark Nayfeld with Mikhail, and (fathered \nd them and all they [gilt from Minsk are Israel pikoff. Leon Messing. Held. Rhia Eisman, Serins. Rabbi vartz to observe Rosh lhana and Yom Kippur Hoes in the freedom of the ted States. Galina and Mark rfeld joyously responded to pings of the welcoming littee when they arrived i. 29 at the Fort Lauderdale- fvwood Airport. tie Nayfelds. and their bright- ) year-old-son. Mikhail, are newest immigrants to be ttled in North Broward by I Jewish Federation of Greater Lauderdale and the Jewish aily Service of Broward jnty. a beneficiary of leration's UJA contributions. \\ were aided in leaving Minsk }ntly through the efforts of Joint Distribution Committee and the Hebrew ligrant Aid Society (HIASl, beneficiaries of Federation- funds. T4t Tuflki- 4 NEW YEAR Mark, 27. is the holder of diplomas in vocational training as a driver, and as a gas and arc welder, work he had been doing on boats, catamarans and launches. His wife, 25, college graduate who taught kin- dergarten and singing, was a choral group director, and piano player. Their son "Misha" easily made friends with the welcoming group. Ellen Held, Jewish Family Service's re-settlement worker, is having the family settled in a Sunrise apartment. She was accompanied at the airport by Leon Messing and Israel Resnikoff. co-chairmen of Federation's Immigrant Resettlement Committee; in- terpreters Rhia Eisman and Herman Sandow, committee member Harry Survis, and Rabbi Albert B. Schwartz, director of Federation's Chaplaincy Commission. Happy New Year Rogus Home Care Center 355-385 W. Oakland Park Blvd. Ft. Lauderdale 561-1802 Nova Distinguished Speakers Series There's still time to join the Nova University Executive Council Forum and get tickets for the 1980-81 Distinguished Speakers Series. This year's Forum will feature Mahnke's Prosthetic- Orthotics, inc. 15NE45St. Suite 108-110 Holiday Greetings to the Jewish Community Irving R. Levine, NBC news cor- respondent, on Sept. 24; Sam Ervin, head of the U.S. Senate hearings on Watergate, on Nov. 12; Floyd Kalber, WNBC-TV News anchorman, on Jan. 14; and Stewart Udall, Secretary of the Interior under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, on March 11. Forum breakfast meetings are on Wednesday mornings at 7:30. at Stouffer's Anacapri Inn, 1901 N. Federal Highway, Fort Lauderdale. McDonald Distributors 990 nw 36th street Fort Lauderdale, Florida 563-1255 New Year Greetings /NEW YEARS United Drugs : n ocean Blvd. Ft. lauderdale 566-3784 Hollywood Hills Nursing Home N. 35th Avenue Hollywood. Florida 33021 Health & Life Throughout the New Year 625-2589 Westinghouse Security Systems Cancellation Unlimited Loehmann's Plaza 187 South Pompaoo Parkway 9720400 Happy New Year To All NW 62 St. 491-4112 Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33309 "Serving the Security Needs of the Community" Pitney Bowes, inc. 4201 n. Andrews Avenue Lauderdale, Florida 563-5693 New Year Greetings Dorothy Welch Inc. I Las Olas Blvd.' Ft. Lauderdale 527-9145 Stuart Branch Phone 287-3585 Best Wishes for a Peaceful and Happy New Year Bennett Auto Supply 3869 N. Dixie Highway Fort Lauderdale 33308 565-4636 Coral Ridge interiors 5401 N. Federal Highway Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33308 491-5331 Happy New Year M & M Auto Air Conditioning Sales and Service Extend To The Entire Jewish Community A Very Happy New Year , 1419 8. Federal Hwy. 921-5922 warren uniform co. 1200 south Dixie Highway pompano Beach 942-2600 We Wish All Our Friends & Customers A Happy New Year SAM & BEA AMIRA SERVICES 4850 NE 6th Terrace Oakland Park 33334 661-0666 ' Mr. and Mrs. Sam Amira Extend Bast Wishes for HAPPY NEW YEAR Jemaco Distributors Inc. 6*6 K::0 to you 2800 SW 2nd Avenue Fort Lauderdale 33515 525-3624 . Pagal2-A The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Louder dale Friday, September 12,1960 \ PIONEER WOMEN Dorothy Hamad* will be in- stalled as president of Pioneer Women's Debra Club at 12:30 p.m., Sept. 23, at Lauderdale Lakes City Hall. Others to be in- stalled are Ruth Rosenkrantz, vice president; Bea Richelson, corresponding secretary; Fern Schottenfeld, recording sec- retary; Mary Kohn, treasurer and financial secretary. KOL AMI SISTERHOOD A skit, written by Rabbi Sheldon J. Harr, will be per- formed for the Sisterhood of his congregation, Temple Kol Ami, by the Sisterhood's dramatic company of players, at the 7:30 p.m., Monday, Sept. 15, meeting at Kol Ami. The skit is titled: "The Saga of Tilly Temptetoes, or how a misguided young Jewish woman found true salvation in Sisterhood. Preceding the playlet there will be a discussion on the "Com- mission of the Status of Women" led by Judy Wolfman from the Committee of Women's Rights, Department of Human Resources, and Nancy Goldberg. TEMPLE SHOLOM POMPANO BEACH The Sisterhood of Temple Sholom announce the meeting of the club will be held on Sep- tember 23rd, Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. The meeting will be highlighted by a book review given by Max Denner. The book to be reviewed is Sunset Gang written by Warren Adler. Mr. Denner is a prominent dramatic personality and his reviews are in great demand. Members and their guests are invited. Refreshments will be served. HILLEL ADVISORY BOARD B'nai B'rith Hillel Advisory Board. Broward-Palm Beach Counties, headed by Phil Solomon of Tamarac, meets 9:30 a.m., Tuesday, Sept. 23, in Dennv's Restaurant. 4100 State Rd. 7 (441) in Shops of Orioles Shopping Center. Lauderdale Lakes. NATIONAL COUNCIL OP JEWISH WOMEN A slide show depicting an overview of the 86 years of National Council of Jewish Women will be shown to the North Broward Section at its 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 17, meeting at its new meeting location: Lauderdale Lakes City Hall, 4300 NW 36th St. The North Broward Section's Pre- sidium consists of Ethel Shevin, Sylvia Baslow, Min Shapiro, Edith Schlanger. HADASSAH Members and friends of the Masada Margate Chapter of Hadassah are invited to attend the meeting on Tuesday, Sept. 23, at noon. This will be the last meeting to be held at the original building of the Margate Jewish Center. A presentation entitled "Let the Future Begin" will be performed by several members, under the direction of Ruth Flax- man, vice president-program- ming, assisted by Pearl Eiseman. Bat Ami Tamarac Chapter of Hadassah meets Monday, Sept. 15 at noon in the Italian-Amer- ican Chibroom, 7310 W. McNab Road (north of University Drive). Refreshments will be served prior to the meeting. Mrs. Josephine Newman, Florida Mid-Coast Region area adviser, will present the National Hadassah charter to Mrs. Florence Krantz, Bat Ami- Tamarac Chapter president. Mrs. Newman will also be the guest speaker. The Rayus-Tamarac Chapter of Hadassah, at meeting, Tues- day, Sept. 23 at 12:30 p.m. at the Tamarac Jewish Center Temple Beth Torah 9191 NW 57th St., Tamarac, will hear an interview by Estelle Rosenthal, program chairperson, and three delegates to the 66th National Hadassah Convention in Los Angeles. President Pearl Auer- bach. Vice President Anna Silman and Jewish Affairs, Chair- person Min Tillus Belitsky. When you re ready for dunltin instead of munckin Swiss Knight Fondue has made "dunkin" very glamorous because there's nothing so elegantly informal, beautifully entertaining or as teasingly delicious as when serving Swiss Knight Fondue The special blend of Emmenthaler and natural Swiss Gruyere gives this treat a special ta am that makes it "just right" to enjoy no matter what else you're serving. Made bubbling hot and served with bread cubes and fruit, Swiss Knight Fondue is as easy to prepare as it is to eat' SWISS KNIGHT fondue fl0DUCT Of SWITZERLAND NET^BQHTHOI >J& There will also be a parade of the new officers and chairpersons lad by Dorothy Batier. Refresh menta will be served. Boca Raton Aviva Chapter of Hadassah meets Sept. 24 at 12:30 p.m. at B'nai Torah Con- gregation, 1401 NW 4th Ave., Boca Raton. A skit will be per- formed by members. Refresh- ments served. On Oct. 16, a buffet lunch honoring "new members" will be held at noon. WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT Margate Chapter of Women's American ORT is seeking 35 new members to join by Oct. 10. Plans are being completed for a lunch- eon in November and a tea or coffee klatch later in the season. SUNRISE JEWISH CENTER SISTERHOOD On Tuesday, Oct. 7, the Sunrise Jewish Center Sisterhood will present "An Afternoon with Ann Ackerman." Horowtu and Mrs. Washington will be reviewed at 12:30 p.m. at the Sunrise Jewish Center. For tickets, contact: Shirley Rubin or Pearl Altner. BETH ISRAEL MEN'S CLUB Ben Bergman, president of Temple Beth Israel's Men's Club, will be installed at a breakfast meeting, 10 a.m., Sunday, Sept. 10, when regional members of the National United Synagogue Men's Clubs will be guests. Maurice Berkowitz, vice president of B'nai B'rith Florida Region, will be the guest speaker and installing officer. The Men's Club is sponsoring "The Sorrelle Sisters Show," international singing entertainers in concert, at the temple, 7100 W. Oakland Park Blvd., at 8 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 19. Tickets are on sale at the temple for the two- hour production rediscovering the land and songs of ancestral heritage with music, lighting, sound and visual effects. FREE SONS OF ISRAEL The Free Sons of Israel. Fort Lauderdale Chapter, will be re- joicing in the Sukkot at its meeting on Thursday. Sept. 25, at Whiting Hall in Sunrise. The fourth Thursday in the month is the usual meeting date for the lodge, formed six years ago and affiliated with its national group in New York, considered to be the oldest American Jewish Fraternal Benefit society. It caters to men and women of all ages and supports all Jewish programs. Through its "Foun- dation Fund," called the heart of the Free Sons of Israel, it finan- cially supports the WECARE and JCC programs, not only financially, but the co-chairmen, Mike Weingarten and Lewis Gold, contribute clothes and various items to these groups. The Foundation Fund also supports the indigent and handi- capped, sends needy children to camp, and the elderly to homes when necessary. It gives thousands of toys to handicapped children, supplies baskets for Passover to the needy and much more. For information call Herman Kaplan in Lauderdale Lakes. Happy New Year World Wide Sporting Goods 220 S. University Drive Ft. Lauderdale 475-9800 'MPORTED BY "HE NESTLE COMPANY CHEESE DIVISION 'CO Bloumingjale Ro;d White Piam& NY 10605 Maxwell House' Coffee Is Hospitality. Lox 'n bagels 'n cream cheese is al- most as much a pan of a traditional Jewish household as the Mezuzah on the door. And the most natural ac- companiment to this American gastronomical innovation is Maxwell House Coffee. The full-pleasant aroma and great- tasting, satisfying good flavor of Maxwell House has been delighting lovers of good food for half a century. And why not ? Who would ever think of serving first-rate food without great coffee! So, no matterwhat your preference- instant or goundwhen you pour Maxwell House? you pour flavor. At its most satisfyingconsistently cup after cup after cup. $m w K Onifird Kosher i Wf A living tradition in Jewish homes for over half a century ^ rhp - September 12,1960 The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Pagel3-A there's a Difficult Road Ahead! 'Playing for Time9 to be Aired [ByGARYR.GERSON Lneral Campaign Chairman, Israel Bond Organization Le High Holy Days this year tide with an anniversary of |r importance for Israel. Lirty years ago, a cross ion of Jewish leaders Renting the Council of Lh Federations and Welfare Is, the Jewish Agency, the Jewish Appeal. Keren lesod and the Zionist fciization of America, met in ^alem at the invitation of Le Minister Ben-Gurion. Out |at historic meeting came the ding of the Israel Bond tram a new financial in- nent created by .the State in kership with the Jews in the bf the world. viewing Israel's situation only three years of phood. Prime Minister Ben- Gurion pointed to the Wall of divided Jerusalem facing the conference room and reminded us that Arab soldiers were stationed no more than 200 yards away. It happened on the eve of Rosh Hashana in 1950. But the memory of it is as vivid as if it were only yesterday. Today we can celebrate the 30th an- niversary of that milestone conference with Jerusalem united and no Arab troops on patrol in the heart and center of the Holy City. In this High Holy Day period, world Jewry speaks with one voice in its resolve that Jerusalem shall never be divided again. Hopes and prayers for peace in the coming year are mingled with concern about the difficult issues that remain to be resolved. Israel also faces heavy economic burdens caused by high inflation. Weinstein Named Bonds Chairman Y~f n rmnn Weinstein (lorman Weinstein. a Plan- Dn resident, has been named lei Bonds Organization kirman for North Broward. Drding to William Littman, lirman of the Broward County Ird of governors for Israel Ida. |.ong active in Jewish com- lal affairs. Weinstein will be anizing North Broward hi- ts, condominiums, men's and nen's clubs and other groups |behalf of the effort to support ael's economy through the ael Bonds Program. veinstein also serves as kirman of Israel Bonds for the krida State Association of ai B'rith Lodges. He is past imander of the Jewish War terans of the United States served as their chief of staff [a number of years. past chairman of the iward County Multiple asis campaign, Weinstein is harter member of Hallandale ai B'rith Lodge and served terms as its president. He served as president of the \First Jewish Newspaper in Calgary VLGARY, Alberta (JTA) The first issue of The Jewish the first commercial Jewish spaper in the history of Jary, appeared here last week, new publication, to be pub- 1 every two weeks, will carry national and international is of Jewish interest, ac- ting to editor and publisher iglas Wertheimer. /ertheimer was formerly or of the Calgary community rspaper and has a social >nce background, which in- les a doctorate from Toronto Jversity. He said Calgary was fastest growing city in lada and that its Jewish com- iity has grown propor- nately to about 6,000 Jews, an ease of 50 percent between [5 and 1979. Florida Association of B'nai B'rith Lodges and has been active ,in many other philan- thropic and service org- anization'* the rising cost of fuel and a large- scale redeployment and reset- tlement program as required by the peace agreement with Egypt. These burdens add importance to the role of Israel Bonds in the New Year. When the Israel Bond program was founded, Golda Meir said its goal was to help Israel achieve economic independence as the foundation for its political in- dependence. With the aid of the $5 billion provided by Israel Bonds since 1951 the people of Israel have made remarkable progress in building a modern advanced economy. From time to time, it has encountered periods of crisis. But in recent months, the economy has shown signs of improvement with exports on the increase and imports sub- stantially reduced. There is still a difficult road ahead and a long way to go to real peace for Israel. IxH us be grateful that these are challenges that involve the making ot peace and not the waging of war. In the year ahead, let us welcome the task of giving Israel the economic strength for the attainment of the peace so historically initiated by Prime Minister Menachim Begin From JTA Sources Despite the fact that it has received many protests and that some advertising agencies are reluctant to recommend its clients put announcements on during the showing, CBS-TV has scheduled "Playing for Time" for showing on Sept. 30 from 8 to 11 p.m. Vanessa Redgrave, outspoken supporter of the Palestinian Liberation Organization, por- trays the role of Auschwitz survivor Fania Fenelon. whose story of life in the concentration camp is the basis for "Playing for Time." Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, American Jewish Congress and other groups protested that the choice of Vanessa Redgrave for the lead role was insensitive and inap- propriate. Justin J. Finger of ADL said the network's decision "degrades all those who survived Hitler's death camps and defames those who died in them." Felix Ecker Jewelers 606 E. Las Olas Blvd. V- BEST WISHES Ft. Lauderdale MARVIN G's FOR For Collectible. BATH. BED and HOME SW7N.W, 19th Street iLakee.FU 7W-2272 Warning The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous toYour Health. Page U-A The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Friday, September 12,1980 Former customers of Mr. Scott will be pleased to know that their negatives and files are still available for reorders. The Rev Color Studio has recently been acquired by Jim Dingus Por- trait Studio. Jlfn DingUS Photography 564-1008 3562 N. Ocean Blvd. Ft. Lauderdale 1 \ Happy and Healthy New Year To our Jewish friends and customers Fort Lauderdale Lincoln Mercury The Big Corner Sunrise & Andrews Avenue 76*4100 TEMPLE SHOLOM Assisting Rabbi Morris A. Skop at High Holy Day services is a graduate student of the temple's Hebrew School who is studying t become a rabbi, Randall Konigsburg. son of a past Temple President Leonard Konigsburg. Randall will chant the morning services and preach during the Rosh Hashana service on Friday morning. Eli Skop. graduate of the Hebrew Academy and the University of Miami, will again conduct the youth services in the chapel. The sacred Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur) will be ushered in i at 7 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 19, with the all-day WhiteFast on Saturday, concluding at sundown with the blowing of the Ram's Horn (Shofar) marking the beginning of the religious New Year 5741. KETER TIKVAH SYNAGOGUE Legends of the Talmud will be the theme of study in a six session course taught bv Rabbi be of by Ayn the Rabbi service starts at 8:30 a.m., Sept. 20. Yiskor will be recited at approximately 11:30 a.m.. which will be followed by another service for the general public who do not have seats. Nilah will take place at 6 p.m. The Sisterhood announces it has a block of seats for the Mass.-nkoil Russian Folk Ballet at the Bailey Concert Hall for Feb. 8. Tickets will be sold on a first-come, first-served basis. TEMPLE BETH SHALOM I)r Morton Malavsky, spiritual leader of Hollywood's Temple Beth Shalom, leads a Winter Tour to Israel, on Jan. 27, 1981. and returning Feb. 10. Conversion to Judaism: A _~ j i Seminar for Seekers will be held IJ ~-v\ Q 1 |M11" 'ZVJl fl on Sunday, Oct. 5 from 10 a.m. MJ Ildl lTlll^j ? O.II noon at the home of Rabbi Zoll, who will lead a discussion on the nature of Jewishness and the methodology of conversion. Call Rabbi Zoll by Friday. Oct. 3. Leonard S. Zoll of'Keter Tikvah Synagogue. Classes will meet Tuesday and Thursday mornings beginning Oct. 14 and 16 from 9 - 10:30 a.m. at the home of Rabbi Zoll. 11403 NW 30th St.. Coral Springs. The text will Yaakor Agffada Babylonian Talmud. Yaakov Ibn Chaviv. This classic compilation was prepared by Rabbi S.H. Glick and published in English in 1916 in five volumes. Registration may be made by calling Rabbi Zoll by Monday. Sept. 29. The course is limited to 20 participants. BETH HILLEL Kol Nidre services commence Friday, Sept. 19 at 6 p.m. Yom Kippur, Day of Atonement. Sunrise JC Mark Richman, son of Phyllis and Harris Richman. was called to the Torah on Aug. 21 at services at Sunrise Jewish Center as he became a Bar Mitzvah. One of the participants in the service was Miriam Schmerler who delievered a tribute to the youth on his accomplishment. Religious Directory LAUDERDALE LAKES OHEL BNAI RAPHAEL TEMPLE 4351 West Oakland Park Boulevard. Modern Orthodox Congregation. Saul Herman, Rabbi Emeritus. TEMPLE EMANU EL. 3245 W. Oakland Park Blvd. Reform. Rabbi Jeffrey Ballon. Cantor Jerome Klement. SUNRISE BETH ISRAEL TEMPLE. 7100 W. Oakland Park Blvd Conservative. Rabbi Phillip A. Labowitf Cantor Maurice Neu. SUNRISE JEWISH CENTER, INC 8049 West Oakland Park Blvd. Con servative. Rabbi Albert N. Troy. Cantor Jack Marchant, Irving Steinhaus. president. LAUDERHILL HEBREW CONGREGATION OF LAU DERHILL. 2041 NW 49th Ave.. Lauderhill. Conservative. Rabbi David W Gordon; President, Sol Cohen TAMARAC TAMARAC JEWISH CENTER. 9101 NW 57th St. Conservative. Rabb Israel Zimmerman. Cantor Henry Belasco. PLANTATION TEMPLE KOL AMI. Plantation. 8200 Peters Rd. Liberal Reform. Rabbi Sheldon j. Harr. RAMAT SHALOM. Reconstructions! Synagogue 7473 NW 4th St. POMPANOBEACH TEMPLE SHOLOM 132 SE 11th Ave Conservative. Rabbi Morris A. Skop Cantor Jacob Renzer. MARGATE BETH HILLEL CONGREGATION 7640 Margate Blvd. Conservative Rabbi Joseph Berqlas ' TEMPLE BETH AM. 6101 NW 9ttl St. Conservative. Rabbi Dr. Solomon Geld. Cantor Mario Botoshansky TEMPLE BETH AM. 6101 NW 9th St. Conservative. Rabbi Dr. Solomon Geld, Cantor Mario Botoshansky. New synagogue at 7205 Royal Palm Blvd. Conservative. CORAL SNMNOS TEMPLE BETH ORR. 2151 Riverside Drive Reform. Rabbi Donald S Ow- ber. Cantor Harold Dworkin. KMlf ,T,*VAM SYNAGOGUE: E2 J P.rn. Friday, Auditorium, versify Dr. Rabbi Leonard Zoll. DEERFIELD BEACH T^,^.E fETH ,SRA"l rtCwtur, nSSSf I**' Cortatrvative. Rabbi SJJS. Btrnf Cantor Joseph YOUNG ISRAEL of DoarfMd Beach M41 W Hi.lsboro Blvd^hoSoIr^" BOCA RATON TEMPLE BETH RL. 333 SW 4th Avonuo, Boca Raton. Rabbi Marl* S. Singer. BNAI TORAH. 1401 NW 4th Ave ., Rota Raton. Conservative. Rabbi Nathan Zelizer, Cantor Henry Port. HOLLYWOOD . YOUNG ISRAEL OP MOLLY*O06 FORT LAUDERDALE. 4171 Stirling Rd. Orthodox. R4 Paradise Lost? Find it again on Marco Island on Florida s West Coast Three and one half miles of unspoiled beach on the Gulf of Mexico. Golf, tennis, boating, fishing and shelling. Shopping in bountiful stores and boutiques. Dining in restaurants with varied atmospheres and surroundings. Anunhurried lifestyle on an island paradise. Temple Sholom (Formerly Jewish Community Center)...within thirty minutes. Membership of over 200 families. Hebrew School. Activities include Men's Club. Sisterhood, NCJWand Choir. Land reserved to be given to possible future builders of Temple on Marco Island. We'd like to tell you more about our Island Paradise. i ? '-" Homes or homesites on waterways, on the beach, on the golf course. Condominiums... Garden style, mid rises, high rises on the'beach r including the new Chalet of San Marco developed by Raymond Wennik, developer of several luxury residences on Miami Beach. Write us...Call us... Come see us. Together. We can make It happen. t Joan Koptan. REALTOR Assoc. Maynord (Moo) Whltebook. REALTOR Assoc I I I I I I I I wish more information Name Address City . State -Zip 'W UM.-VT """ -a*- j < 7S I -I _ I - -I. JVJarcpBeach RcaltMlm. REALTOR. 936 8i-297 NORTH COLUER BOULEVARD MARCO ISLAND, FLORIDA 33937 PHONE 813/394-2505 " *-* y, September 12,1980 The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Page 15- A Ramat Shalom yan Rubin became a Bar fvah Sept. 6 at services in fat Shalom, The Recon- ctionist Synagogue. Temple Beth Israel irol Sherr, daughter of Mr. Mrs. Alan Sherr, became a Mitzvah Sept. 5 at Temple Israel. The following jung. Eric Harris, son of Mr. i Mrs. Irving Harris, became a j Mitzvah. fn Sept. 27, Jeffrey Peck, son Ir. and Mrs. Gerald Peck, will it the Haftorah Shabbat Hoi Hamoed Sukkot, the maftir, and conduct the Musaf service on the occasion of his Bar Mitzvah. Temple Emanu-EI At 11 a.m., Sept. 27 services, Temple Emanu-EI will confer Bar Mitzvah rites on two youths: Gary Silverman and Kevin Horowitz. Temple Beth Torah David Cohen, grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Levine, became a Bar Mitzvah on Sept. 6 at Temple Beth Torah, Tamarac Jewish Center. They Speak Again 4tr/?> 56' Say They 'Regret' U.S. Vote abbi Alpert to Chant Kol Nidre jbbi Rebecca Alpert will t Kol Nidre to open the Erev ,. Kippur service, Friday, it. 19, at Ramat Shalom, The .onstructionist Synagogue, mtation. It will be followed by :larinet solo by Larry Kunin, h Deanna Blafer, Jerry dstein and Garry Wachtel iging the final version. Yom Kippur services begin at i.m- and will feature a creative da portion at 4 p.m. Poetry of erican Jews will be in- ipersed between vignettes of iddler on the Roof," with bngs to be played and sung. In le past, the Avoda services have had as many has 75 congregants involved in the presentation. The conclusion of the Yom Kippur service will be followed by the "Break-the-Fast." Congregants, friends, families and guests adjourn to the synagogue for a buffet meal. Reservations can be made by calling the synagogue office, Monday through Friday between 9 a.m. and noon. Thursday night forums at the synagogue, open to the public, begin Oct. 16 with Rabbi Alpert and her husband, Rabbi Joel Alpert, discussing "Death and Dying." NEW YORK (JTA) - A group of 39 prominent American Jews who had joined last month in advo- cating territorial com- promise and in criticizing extremists in Israel have released a statement to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency denouncing the United Nations Security Council resolution on Jerusalem and voicing "regret" that the United States did not cast a veto. The statement was drafted and circulated by Leonard Fein of Boston, editor of the independent Jewish monthly, Moment, and signed by more than two-thirds of the 56 Jewish leaders whose public declaration on July 1 caused widespread controversy in the American Jewish community. SIGNERS OF the statement included Theodore Mann and Rabbi Alexander Schindler, both former chairmen of the Con- ference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations; Stephen Shalom, past president luann imam The Broward members of the Rabbinical Association of Greater Miami extend greetings and best wishes to the entire community fora happy and healthy New Year. RaDbi David Berent RaDbi Emanuel Eisenberg Rabbi Seymour Friedman Rabbi Robert P. Frazin Rabbi sneldonj. Han- Rabbi Samuel Z.Jaffe Rabbi Carl Klein Rabbi pniinp A. Labowitz Rabbi Morton Malavskv Rabbi Jacob I. Nislick Rabbi Harold Ricnter Rabbi Ben A Romer Rabbi Emanuel Scnenk Rabbi Bernard P. snoter Rabbi Leonard S.Zoll Rabbinical Association of Greater Miami 4200 Biscayne Boulevard, Miami, Florida 33137 Telephone 576-4000 Rabbi Simcha Freedman President Rabbi Solomon Schiff Executive Vice President Star of David Memorial Gardens and HarTzion Mausoleum ANNUAL HIGH HOLY DAY MEMORIAL SERVICE OFFICIATING: Rabbi Israel Zimmerman Temple Beth Torah Tamarac Jewish Center DATE: Sunday, September 14, 1980 TIME: 11:00 A.M. Promptly PLACE: STAR OF DAVID MEMORIAL GARDENS 7701 Bailey Road, Tamarac, Florida (305)721-4112 We are proud !o serve the Jewish Community on this occasion, and wish you peace, joy. great happiness and a healthy snd happy new year. It would give us a great deal ot pleasure to have you shsre this Memorial Service with us. of the New York United Jewish Appeal-Federation of Jewish Philanthropies drive; Theodore Bikel, senior vice president of the American Jewish Congress; Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg and Sam Norich, vice presidents of the World Jewish Congress; and Arden S honker and Fanny Schaenen, philanthropic leaders. The statement said, in part: "We believe that the United Nations has no moral authority to speak to the Jerusalem ques- tion. In a complex and anguished world, the UN and its member agencies have repeatedly be- haved as if the Middle East were the only area of international crisis warranting their attention. This distortion has prevented the UN and its agencies from responding appropriately to a variety of other and not less vex- ing matters. Further, the UN's obsession with the Middle East has demonstrably failed to ad- vance the cause of peace even in that troubled region. Citizens of the United States, and of the world, are forced to conclude that the United Nations has been taken hostage by the PLO, to no good purpose. "WE REGRET that the United States did not, in its vote, have the courage of the con- victions it expressed in the course of the debate. "We find it ironic that those who have insisted upon Israel's liquidation upon the liqui- dation of a member state of the United Nations and who have adopted international terrorism as their preferred method of be- havior, should be treated with deference, while a member state which is governed by the rule of law is repeatedly villified. Finally, we wish to make it abso- lutely clear that we regard Jerusalem as the eternal capital of the Jewish State. Its integrity as a united city is beyond debate. Questions of boundaries, access and the status of the holy places may be the subject of negotiation. The status of Jerusalem as a united city, and as Israel's capital, is not." . L F.VITT - w EINSTEIN memorial chapels HOIIVWOOD* U P. -nc Rota 921 7200 NORTH MIAMI < 1Mb A U'.ie Hwy 94963*5 WEST PlM BEAO- S4" Okecnob Bid 6896700 **%,<. the ** " 1 .. H*i5fi5> toi **Sk*** ultf a-*ar dep to CO' *' ^e\b Ze' oW an" r a*A *ttf u \Vve t*1*e If boU4od^, it** st-a.. ooN svr C* Ot48' ,ni* tuon vr>e - ds oibvb tetny oft co^c- v. ^SPS-CS^ co^;fc,\* Vs-'", t >""" -y,.p je'' supPl\' k.metcs J^****?;*** i Hi ,d,e oe*v *jt*** row ^eroo to***-*" ;tsWP ,nd w- e- ,* v* ;<*^ \ p\e ***** oe jesv 33A39 lap*-** awnatan* awwut 'mksc Bfw. 16 .166 pvupat wci W *6 -W6 urtwr am vert rf *b ib* Kuwir. lr. -^"xar. vt ** Wim "r-rnif at i" war* Gb*bk> Con. nM(r ua lllinailj I! mj, BaBBar? ant ownr in* Vm s sbbb? trgaatirai1 Mow um BBBfcr iii i: ; ,WI i mpMnK vf Cjt WC tlurBB^ MO* K Cot* AjK. MWBf BBT- Park BsW. Inrafnai Ott* fraaB- r.-MVttC # A Ffak d-d Aag Fraak a aaary *f kaw ta* Kaza in Aad ta* Arab <*f pat* am- law*** a* effort* t* fami Ymv Ante Md WtkntCMtttl tb* I'aud Sauna* as a kaad of Federal official* have Dsaeasd Cnij to Maanmu Bide for thee* aad the LO 1J1 Ufa n it **iauaaifi: riiar r Z&meyv ."ysiif M onat #MjwM r^ueaunoB* tm Lbbbbbk Laoy* a -at muxnr> iiac oafoaaa c* nan u Bfl.7 'jtTJr at on.? : poittK tauDJUT.' '-annana* xmkm Hi .ewan :%ar ?*<- ra-aaj aono-.wi. mbk 11 a one tf % biu aa P a ^ro rf V ."ear* rf ta* ev*a raua&aa* an -jan as* Atar stacita tna ie-wan. Aaer II aaenaaaa; . aftero 1S#>" taa r fan-* rr. -i*Bi Has? L* ac vaar wil at aBBBwaaaB eater h. rat rauwwar year of MM art an* year BaV t Saaerwrj* a unti. Seta V for L*ia Baa tc -rwior frr Lauoernil i BbsY ?i*acx ant fta-aHT Tint Gmc ia"H 9r^aca-c< u myiT n lacj'.OK -:iir -Vi' i!f K farmer f*mr}Tr.>ia wet aatwf uxruup. *acimar> lac Lanac Sbaaax viL nacai ju mr a! iije-t w. i dmmr Sar.u-ar.' "rL tc naiaarr Hit FfoasanaE. rjiuffnn Conn ai ia IJasac yjc at aomamz. tc i nafRjm 5cfc a: V"t Vtav?cairi Ceacar for ia 9caoj of Las t-l*l ? ia: At*- fan fat iCoawnap oBea. f af mrjuot Baa apuera tarxactaruH iir aa ?owat aj*"aa ''- wcjbbc Hatt 3a?r _ Jf^TBi Oenar t Mr ' UUMII ID{ t S3-3C Hboco? ^o M a: >-t Caaaa Baaai i_iaaica t 1 J Sea Miat Goa^L f***af s aiirt sa year -em w art*anwi n ^xit lanaocau: prcaar* tn- daek Ge-aanaaf Paaaasac aaid aj a] Ort't t aaauBtat **af a=cuaBB; of wubajns inant fooc i M'iwf y: mfiueict L ~ farewrr BOIK7 feafl jBtr. bbbkIv if tea of taa Rac^Tst HB-Jorran oa toe Oarnri: -;- laytaaTtc-; - Tecc'K ---.- Orrf Aaaat Scaaal o5 . i-jtoe* apa* z.* soaeasar ac Qa fl be i**:- riBBiiir 11 OCj'Ji en mc tw taa ifforaii; - Caahw*n Taaaaag bar*- iimtu-nm net croc :_, - aaoeauaf k Jaaaaa? CaariNBlli h utiiii ir; taa Tcr^-~: > aw kajraa ' to bi foar or fi%t zan ta BBBKX v. terBatiomal robef taroagboat 1SW1 I Dr. and Mrs. Jack L 762' 9ft ST st'eet Rancaoon Ra 53317 De st Wishes foe a Morris and Sons Breyers yogurt is not just all natural its all kosher, too. a-rtBta* bob* taat ta* be avaflabie by aud- If yoa foafod to i for ta* Sapc* re*>rUatiM3 rottt are Oct. 4 for ta* So* 4 ofocttoaa Kayawar M BeraiMB, fffwlotd pn4tmnaoml *ttfnyt*r. at aBod vie* jfid*ot for tale* aad BWCBBwrira; of Fort Laoderdale Carter Coaatructioa Co. How Jewiafa can axaifod Jaanab uxiaffiiiatod or a Jeariab \y Center be wban tbey aocad event* to be bald on day* aad evanmga of Jrafoh rebctovabolidayf? frroa L. Levy, an feHutabit Life Aaauraxiee agent aiace 1976. baa been named manager of the aocMty Hf) SVV 62nd St office The Klderly Legal Servtce of Broward m expected to have a volunteer retired lawyer bagaaniric m October at leaat one day a month at the Lauderdaie Lake* Senior Citizen Center, 4300 NW 36th St. The earvka i* available, now. at Margate Senior Service Center, 6750 Park Dr. . Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) hoida iu 82nd convention Oct. 16-19 in Washington D.C. . Two great program* for Batoning and viewing pleaaure: iialalm nil Maadlfo IRaiama with Almondal on Radio WLRN SI2 m, noon, Sunday, Sept. 14; and the following week at 430 pjn.. Sunday, Sept. 21. WPBT- TV 2, broadcaata the dialogue between a Catholic and a Jew "Prophecy. State and Social Chang*," which took place in May under the aponaorahip of Miami's Anti-Defamation League of H nai B'nth. LaVyaa Dictator Maaauaar ybaiir-" is aiming a Christian 'OTDi'.'urtinigutjie nil-: ."t r o* _ *awbertf In is so kosher the Lfcaors dt C)rfjodoiKWiahCc5ngregatjons pJts to Q seat d approvtt on ewery cup And just wai utUg you bate whafs r. every cup Becmoe Breyers m the creamy smooth. Iu3 d iruft yogurt There's luscious stiawbeny, raspbeiry, black cherry, peach and lots of other favorite flavors. And don't forget, ifs made with active yogurt cultures can pick up aE LVeyeia yogurt Savors die popuiar 8 az. sae. and our piaan yogurt ts now avaiabie m 16 oz. and 32 oe contaiueiv Each one s 100* natural wim absotutety nothing artiheia] and abso- Kitety no gelatin So, when you're shopping for yogurt, look for the name wim a tradition since 1866. Look for Breyers In a word, it's Geshmak? A 10c off is kosher, too. on any 8 oz \ cup of Breyers yogurt. Mr Grocar Kraft. L-jr wt rae- bww, r>- :of *e Wo* wjt e# ~ oxipoc [u 7< hanAog lad rwi i* aaaaed -M)e*^ --e naoac ir*l*3>% rat.ims. -i paJa>. o< /!> - - laaiaaua C^or.-^; . 14300 140150 ad protabmd. arreanctsd * -~Jnrrnnt hi Miiy ne 20* Customer must ppucab*!ax ForrBdamp- Kiah Lie Du> "WCtaaon. low5?7"4 Voidm Wa Qua tc Oat* rguiatiooi EJCBBM3/3M1 ' 1 i '^T^^Jr Fri r & f ft 5? ^ 3 a s ? ^^ * r^* ho ^ cw c S 5 P" 8 ? "1 ^ h B *^" E Q. o i^ * r. 'I y. q U 5 g 33 ? Europeans tot* c/iosen to dramatize the divisive effects of the Camp David agreements in the Arab world . PLO Gains During Outgoing Year euRope's elite move towapfc Araby By ROBERT WISTRICH London Chronicle Syndicate IN RECENT months a concerted campaign has been mounted by the PLO to win diplomatic recognition in Europe. The first major success in this offensive was the royal reception accorded in Vienna in August, 1979 to the PLO leader, Yasir Arafat, by the Austrian Chancellor Bruno Kreisky. The Vienna talks between Dr. Kreisky, Willy Brandt, chairman of the German Social Democratic Party and Arafat produced no immediate practical results,. but they had a symbolic significance which should not be un- derrated, i In the presence of two such distinguished representatives of the Socialist International, the accent was placed on the PLO's diplomatic credentials and all talk of armed struggle, of the Ayotollah Khomeini and an Islamic Holy War to liberate Palestine was quietly shelved for the occasion. UNDER THE cover of the Socialist Inter- national, the blood-stained terrorism of the PLO acquired a new halo of cultured respectability. As subsequent events were to show, the purpose of Dr. Kreisky's whitewashing operation was to make his "friend," Arafat, saionfahig in Western Europe. Seven months later, "neutral" Austria became the first West European country to recognize the PLO in defiance of all previous diplomatic conventions. It would be easy of course to shrug this off as an unfortunate by-product of Dr. Kreisky's long- standing Arabian Nights fantasia. Austria is, after all, only an insignificant little Alpine Republic, incapable of affecting the geopolitical balance in the Middle East. But such a facile dismissal would be unjustified at a time when Israel's "special relationship" with its two most important allies, the United States and West Germany, is under a cloud and most West Euro- pean leaders appear to have forgotten that there are two parties to the Arab-Israeli conflict. RECENT TRENDS within the EEC make it obvious that the Arafat bandwagon is acquiring an irresistible momentum. The European Economic Community, meeting in Venice on June 12-13, resolved that the PLO should be "associated" with the trilateral talks on autonomy involving the United States, Israel and Egypt. The EEC move in essence dealt a severe blow to the Camp David peace accords and went even further to cement the image of Arafat's "respectability" in the mind of the world. There is today a virtual consensus in Western Europe that Palestinian self-determination (the code word for an independent Palestinian State) is the key to resolving the Arab-Israeli conflict and to stabilizing the Middle East as a whole. This con- sensus has if anything, been strengthened by the aftermath of the Iranian Revolution and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. These geopolitical setbacks have highlighted the erosion of American power over the past decade and the vulnerability of the West to contingent events in the Persian Gulf. Soviet encirclement of the Gulf and the Arabian Penin- sula threatens to cut off the lifeline of the Western industrial democracies while the new wave of Islamic radicalism represents a serious danger to the internal stability of all the Gulf regimes. PARADOXICALLY, these events have strengthened the hand of the PLO, especially in Western Europe. European leaders have been especially susceptible to Saudi claims that in- Continued on Page 2-B inn g ni lh HUfllEHB MT I Hi Page2B The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Friday, September 12 .1980 GuRopes elite move toward aaaBy Coatinned from Page IB stability in the Gulf it directly related to the un- resolved Palestinian question. They have con- vinced themselves that only in pressuring Israel will it be possible for the West to form a grouping of Arab-Islamic nations capable of resisting Soviet incursions. The current loss of American credibility in the Arab world, especially among the so-called "moderate," pro- Western States like Saudi Arabia, Kuwait. Bah- rein and Jordan, appears to have opened up newer possibilities for a European initiative. The time seems ripe, according to this assessment, for a new relationship between the Western Powers and Islam, with Europe as the "honest broker." Given the priorities of the cash-nexus and the dependence of Europe's prosperity and security on what happens in the Persian Gulf, it is not altogether surprising that European statesmen have now taken up the running in Middle Eastern diplomacy, nor that Israel is expected to pay the bill. Thus, in February, the Irish Foreign Minister, Mr. I^nihan, in a joint state- ment with Bahrein, called for Israel's "complete withdrawal" from all territories occupied in 1967 (including East Jerusalem) and the establish- ment of a PLO-controlled Arab State on the West Bank of the Jordan. While' in March, during a spectacular six- nation tour of the Middle East, President Giscard d'Estaing made several highly pub- hazed declarations in favor of Palestinian self- determination. The British, the Germans, the Italians and Belgians have been no less forth- coming in their calls for Israel to accept Pales- tinian political rights and to acknowledge the PLO as a negotiating partner in the peace Black heBRew Cult Qrows in lsa&el By YORAM KESSEL London Chronicle Syndicate The beginnings of the Black Hebrew cult's presence in Israel were in 1969, when the emigres from the United States were warmly welcomed as possibly returning Jews seeking to throw in their lot with Israel. The relationship, how- ever, did not take long to sour, and there were in- creasing tensions in the Negev town, Dimona, where they had settled as the cult's numbers grew rapidly to 1,500. Barred from taking a fixed place in society, they became ever more strident and hostile to the State and denounced Israel through the media abroad. These tensions have subsided some- what in the past year or two. NOW THE special committee appointed by the Interior Ministry and headed by National Religious Party MP David Glass has recommended that the Black Hebrews be granted full legal status and be allowed to estab- lish their own communal settle- ment in the Negev, south of Beers heba The committee, which spent almost two years deliberating the problem, described their proposals as a "moral, humane and Jewish solution." While not the optimal solution, it should be regarded as "the least of all possible evils." Glass pointed out that after leaders of the sect bad adopted a stridently hostile attitude, there were many people, including the police, who had felt the best option was tc expel them all from the country. Those members of the group who have been in the country for over two years will be entitled to receive full citizenship in seven years' time. Others will be granted work permits which will entitle them to citizenship as well st a later time if they remain. THEIR SETTLEMENT will be of the urban rather than farming type because of the difficulties of finding sufficient wtar arwi arahlo Iarv4 process. THE UNDERLYING motivation for ail these statements has of course been a fairly trans- parent economic self-interest and desire to ac- celerate the Euro-Arab dialogue The Europeans are naturally anxious to secure future oil sup- plies and to avoid at any cost a repetition of the Arab oil embargo of 1973, however unlikely it may be that the Saudis would allow commitment to the Palestinians to dictate their oil policy. The French, British and West Germans all require clients for their industrial exports and see in the oil-producing countries a lucrative market for their armaments and technical know-how. Beyond this, there are also political factors. The French have a compulsive desire to mark themselves off from Washington and to under- mine any Pax Americana in the region, while continuing to cultivate their "special relation- ship" with Moscow. The Germans under Chan- cellor Schmidt have become the geopolitical powerhouse of Europe, and their growing ties with the Soviet bloc, the Moslem nations and the Third World, are impelling them towards a more activist role in world affairs. Like the British and French, they have been alarmed at the lack of American leadership and Washington's uncertain handling of the crises in Iran and Afghanistan. No longer unconditionally aligned towards America, they feel strong enough to pursue a foreign policy based on their own national self-interest. Nor are they prepared for the sake of Israel and fading memories of the Holocaust to be drawn into a confrontation posture with the Arab States or the PLO. THIS BACKGROUND helps to explain Europe's lukewarm response to the American- sponsored Peace Treaty between Israel and Egypt. There has been little recognition in Western Europe of the positive sides to taV historic event arguably, the most constructive political achievement in the Middle East q recent years. The Europeans have consistently played down the fact that the treaty greatly reduced the dangers of a large-scale Arab-Israelj war such as occurred in 1967 and 1973, or the risk of a superpower confrontation over this issue. They have ignored the importance to the West of the new American-Egyptian strategic relationship which emerged as a direct result of ending the state of belligerency between Egypt and Israel; the extent of the Israeli concessions in Sinai and the historic importance of President Sadat's recognition of the legitimacy of the' Jewish State. Instead, the Europeans have chosen to dramatize the divisive effects of the Camp David agreements in the Arab world, to write off the prospects of the Israeli-Egyptian negotiations on Palestinian autonomy before they have even been completed, and to accelerate efforts to legitimize the PLO. No contrepartie has however been demanded from the PLO, no pressure for it to abandon its terrorist activities, its opposition to Resolution 242 or its commitment to the Palestinian National Charter. In other words, Europe ex- pects Israel to accept the PLO as a negotiating partner, even though the principles on which it is based involve an unequivocal negation of the existence and legitimacy of a Jewish State. THE FOLLY and self-deception of this stance is only equalled by its cynical opportunism. If Yasir Arafat entered East Jerusalem tomorrow as President of an independent Palestine State, and bus Moscow-trained guerrillas occupied the Samarian heights, not only would the Arab- Israeli conflict be greatly envenomed, but tension throughout the region would markedly increase. The Palestinian forces, standing within MAY YOU N THE BOOK OF LIFE. MAY THE NEW YEAR OF 5741 RING PE/KE PROSPERITY AN[ PINESS TO PEOPLE OF GOOD EVERYWHERE. ^Uj^^ajSf . \ Shspsrd Broad Chairman Morris N. Broad Presklpnt AMERICAN SAVINGS^ Serving the people and the communities of Florida since 5711 HUM! H 1.1 It' i 4 I r r Friday. September,12,1960 The Jewish FloHdian of Greater Fort Lauderdale ^.^ _____________________________._________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Page 3-B miles of Israel's fertile coastal plain and most tensely populated industrial centers, would X-arcely be tempted to abandon their dream o/ liberating the whole of Palestine. On the contrary, their ultra-nationalist dreams and ambitions could only be raised to a fever oitch. and they would have no further incentive lo abandon the sacred objectives of their National Covenant. The small size and economic non-viability of their mini-State would drive them inevitably to lay claim to neighboring Israel and Jordan. The rejectionist Arab States would acquire a new and far more favorable launching-pad for a fifth Arab war to destroy the Jewish State, while the Soviet Union would ^obtain a perfect base from which to destabilize the enure area. In a PLO-controlled State, the prospects of anv moderate" elements winning out in a power struggle would be extremely remote. Even if, by some miracle, this occurred, and the Palestinian leadership abandoned its principles and ideology, a few guerrilla raids by dissident factions would suffice to throw the area into a major war. 'Israel, deprived of all strategic depth, would be obliged to resort to a first strike at the smallest provocation. Thus, an independent PLO State would almost inevitably be a formula for per- petual insecurity, disorder and destabilization throughout the region, if not a prelude to a third world war. NOR WOULD such a "solution" resolve any of the West's major preoccupations in the area such as the energy shortage, the turmoil in Iran, the fragility of the oil-rich regimes in the Persian Gulf, or the Soviet presence in Afghanistan, South Yemen and the Horn of Africa. Iran and Iraq would still be at loggerheads, Syria on the brink of civil war, Lebanon in chaos, and the tidal-wave of Islamic radicalism would continue to advance under the slogan of liberating all of Palestine. --------------- Egypt's President Sadat The Arab oil producers, having successfully blackmailed the West, would be encouraged to try again. They would certainly not sell their oil to America or Western Europe in larger quan- tities or at more favorable prices. While the further shift in the military balance towards the Soviet Union would drive all the Gulf States towards accommodation with the Russians or at the very least, a policy of non-alignment. In this geopolitical context, Europe's embrace of the PLO which has thus far brought only terror, bloodshed, chaos and a hardening of attitudes to the Middle East, can only be seen as an extraordinarily self-destructive action. However much Europe may wish to establish itself as a distinct entity in world affairs, the fact is that it has no military force, no political sanc- tions, no coherent will of its own, enabling it to offer credible guarantees to the conflicting PLO Chief Yasir Arafat parties in the Middle East. INCAPABLE of effectively resisting the Soviet Union, let alone the financial extortion of the OPEC nations, its initiatives have been too blatantly one-skied and opportunist to encourage any further concessions from Israel. By cold- shouldering Egypt and undermining the possibility of a Jordanian solution to the Pales- tinian problem, it has merely encouraged the extremism of the Arab rejectionist Front and unjustifiably raised the expectations of the PLO. By its appeasement of the oil-producing States, it has exposed its own weakness and flashed a green light to the Soviets to strike at its soft underbelly in the Persian Gulf. By failing to support American mediation efforts, it has weakened the Western alliance and its credibility as a barrier to further Russian expansionism. Most dangerous of all, it has tied its own political and economic survival to the caprice of regimes that are built on sand. Vow Israeli * Planes Will Stay in Air By YITZHAK SHARGIL TEL AVIV (JTA) -Israeli planes will continue to fly over southern Lebanon as long as Lebanon does not have a Lt>;_'ovirnment that controls the terrorists on its soil. Deputy Defense Minister Mordechai Zipori declared. Zipori, in an interview on the Army Broadcasting Station, was commenting on reports from Damascus that the Syrian Air Force will try to intercept Israeli planes flying over south Lebanon. In one such attempt, Israel planes shot down a Syrian MIG-21. "WHOEVER will interfere" with the Israeli flights over Lebanon "will bear the con- sequences," Zipori warned. "If there are those who forgot the lessons in the past (when scores of Syrian planes were shot down * dogfights over Lebanon by the Israeli Air Force), we shall have to remind them." The Deputy Defense Minister stressed the flights were essential to protect the security of Israelis as long as there were terrorists in south Lebanon. "We do not intervene in Syrian flights," he stressed, "as long as they do not ,*^oss Israeli air space and as long "^ they do not interfere with our activity." ) H.J. HIVNOIOS TOBACCO CO. MewSrf*8 \ow tar iasSSKSs-* ." Male nurse desires position in nomecare. Good references, own car. Please leave name & number, pnone 792-2738 We do business the right way to 1T0S W. Oakland Part SM. rtlniiiriili.Pla.M311 :mino OAI OAKUUsP TOYOTA nnat .., ... n *... iniHtmn-.Rmn-iii-ni laaraMiiN mi fiitiiih.C muhad Page4-B The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdaie Friday, September 12, I960 UJSL Studies Israel's Use of American Arms WASHINGTON (JTA) The United States is conducting "a continuing investigation" of Israel's possible use of American weapons beyond its own borders, State Department spokesman David Passage said against the background of Israel's incursion into south Lebanon. "I don't know if the law has been violated." He said U.S. law prohibits use of American weaponry outside the borders of the country that receives them. Israeli Ambassador Ephraim Evron told repor- ters here that Israel did use American weapons in Lebanon, but there was nothing wrong with this since it was for defensive purposes. "We did not get weapons in order not to use them," he said. "The raid was part of our self-defense policy." EVRON STRESSED that "there's no reason why it shouldn't be used." He said the American weapons were given to Israel "in order to help us defend ourselves. That was the purpose of this operation." The Israeli envoy added that the "violence" in Lebanon "will stop as soon as our neighbors choose to make peace. As long as they are intent on attacking us, we will have to defend ourselves." In discussing Israel's raids. Passage reiterated previous U.S. views on Israeli penetrations of south Lebanon where Palestinian P*806- into Israel's use of U.S. arms, Passage was asked if it includes investigating the activities of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), from whom the PLO has been reported to be getting weapons which are used in attacking Israel and whether Israel's raid was impugning the integrity of the state of Lebanon or attacking "a state within a state" in Lebanon. He said that the U.S. is looking into the cir- cumstances of the raid. In Beirut, however, the U.S. Embassy there condemned the Israeli raids and said they would lead to an increase in tension in the region. LEBANESE Foreign Minister Fuad Butros criticized Arab nations for fading to formulate strategy to meet "Israel's aggressive policy." He also stated that the major powers were indifferent to repeated Israeli strikes in south Lebanon. In Cairo. Egypt also condemned the raids as a new obstacle to terrorists have military strong- holds by noting that "con- tinuing violence contributes to violence" and expressing sup- port for the integrity Lebanon. He refused to condemn the Israeli incursion, saying he has "no way of characterizing the raid except to note that it took place." PASSAGE ADDED that "We are deeply concerned by rising tensions and we call on all parties to act with restraint." Asked if the. parties include Major Saad Haddad, the leader of the Christian militia in south Lebanon, Passage replied in the affirmative He did not mention the Palestine Liberation Or- ganization in this context. Regarding the investigation At the United Nations, Lebanon requested "an urgent intervention by the United Nations and by all those who are of in a position to do so" in the situation in south Lebanon following the Israeli raids. Hassan Tueni, Lebanon's chief delegate, said it was more and more urgent that the UN in- tervene if its resolutions on the subject were to retain credibility. He did not ask for a formal meeting of the Security Council. Also at the UN, Secretary General Kurt Waldheim ap- pealed to all sides to maintain peace in the area. His spokes- man said the UNIFIL com- mander had protested to Israeli authorities. 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IBfJf ' vKaBk Jy 9/ Inviting Checking and v Savings Accounts ^^H ^^F' A Full Service Bank ^\ 485-1600 1799 West Oakland Park Blvd. Oakland Park, Florida 33310 THIS NEW YEAR EVERYTHING IS TRADITIONAL EXCEPT THE PRICE! -- '"MUSTr!.,"!>*- ^B -^..l i.B!U.'Wrra- Same traditional quality. Same traditional taste-with that Mantschewitz unique flavor and texture thatt going to please your family and guests for the holidays. Plus a special price right now- before the holidays on Manischewitz Gefilte Fish, Whitefish and Pike and the new All Whitefish. A special holiday bargain from Manischewitz. L'Shanah Tova Tikosevu. Manischewitz QUALITY JEWISH FOODS SINCE 5649 Produced under strict Rabbinical supervision B Kor Kashruth Certifh ita write Bonrd of Rabbis. P.O. Box 214. |r*ey City \| 07303 m &* < * --hjij piuun'intjoan' ",: rrrrwr \ '*-< Fridty. September 12,1980 The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Page'5-B .* Ape Ispael's Women Really fpee? By ELLEN SHARON BOB IT'S THE LITTLE things that bother you as a female visitor to Israel. The men who call out to you from their perch on the street corner. The woman next to you on the bus who tells you your blouse is too low in front. The macho bravado of the young soldiers." Yet these annoyances seem to pale next to the accomplishments of the young state. After all, what can you expect from a country that is constantly in a state of siege? A lot more, according to the women who participated in the First National Conference on Women in Israel at Brooklyn College in Mid- April. AFTER SPENDING twoand-a-half days learning about the reality of the lives of woman in Israel, the 200 conference participants discovered that the tourist-suffered hassles are only the tip of the iceberg. Despite the guarantee of Israel's Declaration of Independence of equal rights irrespective of race, religion, or sex,*' the promise has not been kept. According to Rachel Ostrovitz of the Israeli Women's Movement in Tel Aviv, "women's salaries are 41 percent less than those of men. Less than 10 percent of managerial jobs are in the hands of women Only 9 percent of Knesset members are women. There are no women in the government. There are no women mayors." OUTSIDE OF the workplace, women find that they face discrimination in the arena of personal law. Women's testimony is not accepted in the * rabbinical courts, which have the sole power over all matters of marriage and divorce. Knesset member Shulamit Aloni (Civil Rights), who participated in the conference all weekend, claimed that equality between men and women cannot be achieved until the civil courts are given jurisdiction over marriage and divorce as well. Under the current system, the rabbinical law of halitza requires childless widows to have children by their late husband's brother. Only their brother-in-law's permission frees them to marry other men. This law has given rise to extensive blackmailing of the widows who have no legal recourse. Either they pay up or are unable to remarry in the State of Israel. LESLEY HAZELTON. author of Israeli Women: The Reality Behind the Myth, also emphasized the anti-woman implications of the power of the rabbinate. "If feminism is to be achieved." she said in her keynote address. There must be a separation of synagogue and state The real issue is the political establish- ment of Orthodox Judaism." Another major difference between American and Israeli feminists is the effect of the constant strains of war on the male-female relationship. With the constant fear that their husbands, sons, and brothers might be killed in battle. Israeli women become the ultimate caricature of the Jewish mother." writer Lilly Kivlin said. Mothers are very lenient with their sons, while demanding excellence from their daughters, panelist K. M. Kroner, author of A Weave of Women, added. Ruth Rasnic. a founder of the first Israeli shelter for battered women, claimed this serves to make Israeli men "demanding, dependent, and lousy husbands. Their wives are also ner- vous wrecks." THE WOMEN'S MOVEMENT in Israel is growing slowly but steadily. Organizers have found the party machineries ineffectual and have established extra-governmental institutions. Totally voluntary and strapped for funds, fcminist-sixmsored programs include two shelters for battered wives Ian estimated 50,000 women are battered in Israel), two centers for aid Id rapt' victims, and two centers for legal aid. self-help courses and the distribution books and literature about women. Many of the leading women in Israel do not identify themselves with the women's movement. "I am a not a feminist. I am a humanist." Shulamit Aloni declared. Seasoned American feminists experienced a sense of tlvju- vii. Why do women who have managed to make it Ui the top of their fields feel so threatened by the women's movement? The American participants in the conference rallied behind the struggling Israeli feminist movement and committed themselves to work fur change They formed the "Coalition for Women in Israel." committed to education and outreach* projects within the United Stales and lo develop a support system lor olol hailushi'l (new immigrants to Israel) who wish lo make riillltVCtionH with Israeli activists. The coalition will be organized through a network of local Vhugvi Xasliini (Women s (imupxl dedicated lo consciousness -raising. due ii;"". lobbying within thp Zionist movement to mine the priority of women's issues, fund- raising, and activism on behalf of Israeli tWIIIH'll. NATIONALLY, the organization will publish a newsletter, bring Israeli feminists lo the U.S. Continued on Page 10-B Soldiers Killed in Raid Buried With Honors By YITZHAK SHARGIL TEL AVIV (JTA) - The three Israeli soldiers who were killed during the Israeli attack on terrorist bases in south Lebanon were buried with full military honors. Funeral services took place at the Netanya cemetery for Capt. Meir Knisbah, 23; at the Kibbutz Kfar Mena- chem cemetery for Sgt. Guy Shalev; and at the Tel Aviv military cemetery for (apt. YossiOved. 22. Members of Oved's family and friends recalled that the young soldier, who had lived in Tel Wiv'a Hatikvah quarter, always \pressed pridn in the fact that he had made it from that slum district to the army where he became an officer in the famed Golani Brigade. THE 12 SOLDIERS injured in the raid were reported to be doing well and were in contact with their families. One of those injured had been in a rest home recuperating from injuries he received during the terrorist attack on Kibbutz Misgav Am earlier this year. When he heard about the Israeli raid he left the camp and joined his unit and took part in the attack. He was wounded in the fighting, but not seriously. Meanwhile, Israeli army planes again pounded terrorist bases in south Lebanon after Palestinian terrorists fired a number of rockets into the northern Galilee in retaliation for the Israeli raids, and angry spokesman announced. There were no reports of any casualties or damage. ISRAELI DEPUTY Defense Minister Mordechai Zipori declared that Israel will continue its activity against the terrorists with all its power, no matter how far Israeli soldiers will have to penetrate into south Lebanon. We, and only we. shall decide the place and the time for any it ion we mav lake." he icl ion mis week 11 in the world that would have undermine terrorist activities, been able to carry out such a Chief of Staff Gen. Rafael Eitan mission with so few casualties." said. "I know of no other army Needed Several Salespersons To sell securities in the State of Florida for a large American Israel Oriented Company great opportunity - will train work from your home town. WRITE: - Ampal- American Israel Corporation 10 Rockefeller Plaza New York, N.Y. 10020 Mr. and Mrs. R. Jay Kraeer Kraeer Funeral Home, inc. and their entire staff . wish the entire Jewish community A Happy & Healthy New Year 1655 University Drive Coral Springs O.K. SERVICE CENTER 702 E. McNab Road Pompano Beach 781-0990 Wish All Their Customers and Friends A Happy New Year Page6-B The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Friday, September 12,1980 Ignored Carter Asked to Support Demo Plank delegates on the party platform Aug. 13, gave what the Rockland County official called an "am- biguous" statement on Jerusalem that "at best clouded what was a clear unequivocal NEW YORK (JTA) symbol of this stand, the U.S. A New York delegate to "2 8h?uld mved ^m the recent Democratic Tel Av.v to Jerusalem. National Convention said Gdanski ,8,ai.d * ',. l *--. committee of delegates concern* this week he is waiting for with Israe, waa fonned and a response from the White and Bruce Levine, a law student statement in the platform. House on a petition sighed from Spring Valley, and a by 250 delegates Kennedy alternate delegate, demanding President began circuUting the r*ution. Carter adhere to the HE SAID in two days they Democratic Party's gathered 250 signatures not only platform on Jerusalem. from New York. New Jersey and Sam Zalman Gdanski. a Spring Maryland but also from such states as Texas and Utah. Had President Carter of the specific platform adopted by the con- vention itself." Because of this, Gdanski and Levine delivered the petition on Aug 14 to the office of White House Press Secretary Jody Powell at the Carter-Mondale headquarters at the Sheraton Center here. But now. 11 days later, Gdanski still has not received a reply, he said. Gdanski said he wants to continue the ad hoc committee on* an ongoing basis since the Democratic Party has platform conventions every two years. He said that when the petition was being circulated, many of those who signed asked him and Levine "why a causus had not been established along the lines of the Black political caucus (at the convention) which would have concerned itself with issues affecting the Jewish community. Valley. NY. lawyer and Rockland County legislator who was a delegate pledged to Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that the answer he receives will decide whether he supports Carter in the November election. "I was a Kennedy delegate partly because of dissatisfaction with President Carter over Israel," he said. GDANSKI said that on the second day of the convention, Aug. 12, he was concerned by reports that Carter "would modify or renounce the party platform position concerning unification of Jerusalem." He noted that Carter railed to adhere to the 1976 platform which was repeated again this year. It stated that the Democratic Party supports "the established status of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, with free access to all its Holy Places provided to all faiths. As a we further time, certainly we would have received much more, since we were the only two delegates circulating a petition on the floor of the Convention" in Madison Square Garden. Gdanski said. But Gdanski said he was "disappointed" when Carter, in a written statement to the Carter's statement, which ignored any mention of moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, said: "It has been our policy that Jerusalem snouia remain torever undivided with free access to the Holy Places for people of all faiths. It has been, and it must remain our policy that the ultimate status of Jerusalem should be a matter of negotiation between the parties." GDANSKI NOTED that the Carter statement "seemed to leave the status of Jerusalem as something to be negotiated and therefore was a renunciation bv EXPERT CLOCK A WATCH REPAIRS LAMOE SELECTION OF fine CLOCKS HOUSE CALLS UAOeON CLOCKS KAMI ' CtOCKMAKEH WATCHMAKER Karl's Clock Center r*b 225 467-2696 "TST" Jfow fyem ^teetingb Wood m on t Country Club 7801 NW 80 Avenue Tamarac, Florida 7224300 (preeiitrfl you toitl) ttety \mk Jim Burton Silnutzer Inc. Sea Food... Fresh & Salt Water 4200 Westroads Drive Magnolia Park 33407 842-5237 i t WP" i \* Friday, September 12,1980 The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Page7-B The Star ' Mrs. Liliane Winn, president, American Sephardi tederation. talking with one of 200 Bar Mitzvah boys at mass Bar Mit- zvah celebration sponsored bv the World Sephardi rederation this summer in Jerusalem. Each Bar Mitzvah received a tallit and tefillin following ceremonies at the Western Wall. The World Sephardi Federation joined with Aharon Abu Katzeira, Israel's Minister for Religious Affairs, in underwriting the cost of the mass celebration. - & Rosh Hashana & Yom Kippur. The High Holy Days. Celebrations off hope. The shofar blows, heralding in the new year. Traditionally, the end of the growing season, begun as a harvest festival to give thanks for the earth's richness and to seek God's forgiveness. Now, a time for righting wrongs, mending relationships, starting anew. Rosh Hashana. The first day, the beginning of the Jewish religious life again with renewed dedication. Yom Kippur. The tenth day, the most solemn of all Jewish days of prayer and fasting to make atonement for all that has past. On these holiest of all days, Menorah Chapels offers the blessings of hope and good will, in the tradition of our faith. CljapelS Representing Kir jchenbeum Bros. Inc. in New York Piter Memof ial Chtpeit in Chicago And serving dispels throughout the U.S. end Canada. A COLLECTOR'S SERIES OF JEWISH RELIGIOUS PRINTS, SUITABLE FOR FRAMING. ARE NOW AVAILABLE. COMPLIMENTS OF MENORAH CHAPELS. A T THESE LOCATIONS: 6800 rV. Oakland Park Boulevard. Fort Lauderdale. 2305 rV. Hillsboro Boulevard. Deerfield Beach. 5915 Park Drive at U.S. 441. Margate. Exodus Momentum Ecuador to Move Embassy to Tel Aviv TEL AVIV (JTA) - Ecuador has become the third South American country to announce it will move its embassy from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv in the wake of the new Israeli law formally declaring united Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. As did Venezuela and Uruguay in announcing their decisions earlier, Ecuador insisted that its friendship for Israel is unchanged by the move. Dr. Wilson Vela Hervas, Ecuador's Ambassador, said that the move was based on a principle of his country's foreign policy which is not to recognize the acquisition of territory by force. He indignantly rejected a suggestion that the move was due to Arab pressure. "I have not heard anything about Arab threats or pressure on Israel," he said. "'We have only a handful of citizens of Arab extraction." BUT THE Israel Foreign Ministry, in expressing its regret over the announced move, dis- agreed. "It's reasonable to assume that Ecuador did yield to Arab pressure as there is nothing in the text of the Jerusalem bill that changes an existing situation or warrants such a move by Ecuador," a Ministry spokesman said. He said he hoped that Ecuador will change its mind even though Hervas has of- ficially presented the Ecuadorian decision to the Foreign Ministry. In talking to reporters, the Ecuadoran envoy stressed that Tel Aviv is also Israel, and he would be visiting Jerusalem fre- quently both in his official capacity and to maintain his social contacts. Meanwhile, announcements are expected here from three other Latin American countries with embassies in Jerusalem Chile, Boliva and Colombia. HOWEVER, Colombian Ambassador Cesar Castro Pardomo told reporters here. SS;:.:*:*:*:*:-W^ Dr. Wilson Vela Hervas Ecuador's Ambassador, said that the move was based on a principle of his country's foreign policy which is not to recognize the acquisition of territory by force. He in- dignantly rejected a suggestion that the move was due to Arab pressure.- "We have sufficient oil and any decision taken by my govern- ment will not be based on threats of oil cuts." However, the real concern here is whether Holland, the only West European country with an embassy in Jerusalem, will also move its embassy to Tel Aviv. The Dutch have come under heavy Arab pressure and the government in Amsterdam is presently considering the question. Meanwhile, a group of Jews who immigrated here from Holland demonstrated outside the Dutch Embassy in Jerusalem urging that it not be moved. 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Page8-B The Jewish Floridian pj Greater Fort Lauderdale Friday, September 12, I960 i i Legislators Seek Meeting With Muskie to Clarify U.S. Abstention By JOSEPH POLAKOFF WASHINGTON - (JTA) Angered by the Carter Administration ab- stention on the United Na- tions Security Council reso- lution censuring Israel for its Jerusalem law, 30 Con- gressmen have asked Sec- retary of State Edmund Muskie to meet with them and discuss U.S. policy toward Israel. Rep. Sidney Yates (D., 111.), dean of the Jewish members of the House, has asked for the meeting on behalf of his col- leagues to include Rep. Dante Fascell (D., Fla.), Jonathan Bingham (D., N.Y.) and James Blanchard ID., Mich.). This de- velopment followed additional statements from top-level Republicans and Sen. Carl Levin (D., Mich.) denouncing the U.S. abstention. FORMER Tennessee Sea Bill Brock, chairman of the Republican national committee, described the Security Council censure as "another step" in the "vicious campaign which by its nature, is as much anti-American as anti- Israel." Brock said that the "Palestine Liberation Organization, in concert with the Soviet Union and radical governments, have for months made clear and public their intent to expel Israel from the United Nations and to destroy the Egyptian-Israel peace treaty." Brock said the Carter Administration's "failure to veto the resolution represented an abandonment of our commitment t<> the peace process, a con- tribution to the isolation of a democratic ally and friend Israel and a violation of the trust of the American people by a government elected to represent the best interests of our nation.'' HE ADDED: "The Adminis- tration's abstentions are repug- nant; you cannot speak against a resolution and then refuse to vote against it. The action belies the words." Earlier, in another condem- nation of the U.S. abstention, Sen. Jacob Javits (R., N.Y.), said, "I appreciate the problems with other countries, but we have vetoed before. The abstention leaves the resolution as a valid Security Council resolution, and that's the difference between day and night." Levin told the Senate that the Administration's abstention was "a terrible mistake" and added, "The point that must be made and made clearly is that it does not serve our national in- terests to participate in and sanc- tion a process which seeks to focus exclusive attention on the behavior of only one of the parties involved in this complex and sensitive situation. And it does not serve the interests of peace to participate in or sanction such a process." PRIOR TO the vote 18 members of the House telegraphed Muskie, urging him to veto the resolution. This message, signed by both Demo- crats and Republicans, was drafted by Rep. Benjamin Gilman(R.,N.Y.). Rep. Benjamin Rosenthal, deputy majority leader in the House, who was one of the signers, sent a message to Muskie, following his address to the Security Council. In it, Rosenthal's office told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Rosenthal wrote Muskie that he had listened to his remarks before the Council. "I thought your statement," Rosenthal wrote to Muskie, "was as effective a presentation of American goals and strategy in mediating the Arab-Israeli conflict as any I have heard in the past 20 years. I would have pre- ferred that the United States vote against the resolution but within the. context of the con- straints operating upon our foreign policy, I understand the decision to abstain." ISRAELI Ambassador Ephraim Evron delivered a note from the Israeli government to Muskie, protesting the U.S. abstention. Muskie reiterated to Evron the U.S. position that Jerusalem's status should be negotiated in the final stage of a comprehensive settlement. 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The Prune Juke SeK-Improvement Plan. < It's a natural. Eat well-balanced foods. Exercise. Enjoy Sunsweet, the 100% pure natural fruit juke. It contains iron and potassium and vitamin B2. And it tastes good. Remember, any improvement you makeis,or SUNSWEET' i I the better you.4 health; Friday, September 12,1980 1 M r- The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Page 9-B Rearing its ugty hd Rarx) Drf||y Mai| Rumanian Musicians in Israel TEL AVIV (JTA) Some 30 young men and women comprising the chorus and orchestra of the Jewish community in Rumania have arrived in Israel headed by Rumania's Chief Rabbi Moshe Rosen. The group, which was invited to Israel by the mayors of Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and other cities, is the first from a Communist country to come to Israel to present Yiddish and Hebrew songs. Their 10-day visit to Israel was with the approval of the Rumanian government, according to a report from Bucharest. STATE OF ISRAEL BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD Invest in Israel Securities WF RE SPECIALISTS IN ISRAEL SECURITIES. TRANSACTIONS DAILY VIA TELEX TO ISRAEL STOCK EXCHANGE. / NA*- A Subsidiary offfl Bank Laumi kt-ltraal B M 18 East 48th Street New York N Y 10017 Securities (212)759-1310 Corporation Ton Free (800i 221-4818 ~*J Charlie Frymyer Paving Inc. 508 NE 43 Street Fort Lauderdale, Florida 564-5680 Happy New Year To All from Delta Air Lines. Delta Air Lines extends best wishes to our Jewish friends for the holiday season and for the year to come. May the new year bring peace, health, happiness and prosperity for everyone. jm wishes you a happy new year filled with peace and contentment We hope the coming months will be tilled with many shining moments. Including the warmth of new friendships and the joy of old ties with those you love and surmounting them all, the happiness of dreams come true Jmarsn SHOP JM DAILY, 10 AM TO 9 PM: SUNDAY, 12 NOON TO 5:30 Ptvf % (dolly, dadetartf. 163rd 'til 930 p.m.) PagalO-B Tht Jewish Floridian of Qrtatir Fort Laudtrdale Friday, September 12,1960 Isabel's Women - i Continued from Page 5-B on national speaking tours, and develop educational materials about the lives of Israeli women. The First National Conference on Women in Israel was organized by an ad hoc group of New York feminist Zionists who have agreed to serve as coordinators of the coalition until elections for a steering committee can be held. The Israeli women's messages carried a uniform theme. They are no longer willing to accept the argument that women s issues must wait until "more pressing problems" are resolved. They demand that their needs be taken seriously and acted upon immediately. "To say there is a wrong time to criticize is a vote of non- confidence in Israel," journalist Yoella Har Shefi, author of Beyond the Gunsights, said. "Israel must not put up with anything that opposes our rights as human beings." RATHER THAN being depressed by what they learned, the American participants eagerly accepted the challenge of fulfilling the Zionist dream of an egalitarian state. "We support the struggle of Israeli women through our activism," they stated in their founding principles. "We recognize that the preliminary basis of this activism is Aliyah, thereby sharing the responsibility of improving Israeli society." GOP Leaders Meet Many Prominent Rabbis NEW YORK (JTA) Members of the national Republican Party met Aug. 27 for a discussion-reception with many prominent rabbis from across the country, it was announced here by Rabbi Seymour Siegel of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. The rabbis, he said, are gathering in New York for a series of leadership meetings. It was suggested by Siegel and a member of the advisory committee of the Reagan- Bush organization to invite the rabbis and the Reagan- Bush national leadership group to share in these discussions. "THIS IS ONE of the first major events scheduled to kick off the New York fall campaign," Siegel said. "We will not merely address ourselves to the Jewish voter in New York, but we will actively and aggressively cam- paign. We are going to reaffirm Governor Reagan's strong support and commitment to the State of Israel. In so doing, we feel that the Jewish vote, which has for so many years been a Democratic vote, can and will be the vote that will put Ronald Reagan over the top in New York." Siegel and William Diamond, at whose home here the meeting took place, co-hosted the reception. 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PALM BEACH 2120 Okeechobee Blvd. 684-0120 V Friday, September 12, I960 The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Page 1 IB U.S. Abstention Jewish Leaders Tell Disappointment NEW YORK (JTA) Leaders of American Jewish organizations have expressed their disappoint- ment and disillusionment with the United States for abstaining rather than vetoing the United Nations Security Council resolution on Jerusalem. Some noted that while the resolution stopped short of calling for an economic boycott of Israel, it was the first to em- body some form of punishment against Israel by calling on nations with embassies in Jeru- salem to remove them. Other Jewish leaders said that the abstention was an act of cowar- dice and spotlighted the dif- ference between the U.S. govern- ment's words and deeds. HOWARD SQUADRON, chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, said, "Our disappointment at the latest American action is profound." Noting that Secretary of State Edmund Muskie described the resolution as "unbalanced." "unrealistic," "fundamentally flawed" and "disruptive," Squadron said that by his own statement the U.S. should have vetoed the resolution. "Instead, he abstained, citing his unhappiness with the recent action of the Israeli Knesset re- affirming the status of Jerusalem as a united city and the capital of Israel. In other words, our country's UN absten- tion was a form of punishment directed against Israel," Squad- ron said. He added that the resolution "is itself a form of sanction and lays the ground- work for additional sanctions." Maxwell Greenberg. chairman of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, called the U.S. abstention "immoral and counterproductive to the cause of peace." He said that "We are greatly disappointed and dis- illusioned by the United States' continuing refusal to react firmly against Arab and Soviet con- nivance in the United Nations." In a withering blast at the U.S. for abstaining, Greenberg declared: "SECRETARY of State Mus- kie's comments before the UN put the spotlight on the dif- ferences between our govern- ment's words and its actions. The abstention can only be described as an act devoid of courage, leadership, loyalty to an ally and unwise because of its corrosive effect on the Camp David process." Charlotte Jacobson, chairman of the World Zionist Organiza- tion American Section, said it was "inconceivable that the United States government, while upholding and supporting Israel, has acted in the opposite direction in this case." She added: "Consistency with the U.S. government's position and promise to Israel would have definitely called for a veto of this outrageous Security Council act." Rabbi Joseph Sternstein, president of the American Zionist Federation, termed the resolution "a disgrace We con- demn not only the resolution, which makes a mockery of the Middle East peace initiatives, but also our government's role in this vote. Yesterday's action was even more distressing in light of Secretary Muskie's full recog- nition of the 'unbalanced and unrealistic' nature of the resolution." RABBI Alexander Schindler. president of the Union of Amer- ican Hebrew Congregations, said: "Once again the Carter path of appeasing the Arab states and the terrorist PLO. "Secretary Muskie's 'ex- planation' of our country's vote should have led to only one action: veto. By abstaining, the Carter Administration has re- confirmed its fear of offending the very states that have damned the Camp David process. If Jimmy Carter still believes peace can come to the Middle East by placating nations that refuse to accept Israel's very existence, he has learned nothing about the Arab world or about the process of making peace." Jack Spitzer, president of B'nai B'rith, denounced the resolution and said the UN "is again ripping into the fabric of established Middle East dip- lomacy." He declared that "every other country in the world, including every member of the UN, decides for itself where its capital shall be. All other nations respect that decision. The UN should not be telling Israel where to place its capital." He asserted that the resolution "would not only undermine the Camp David accords, which have purposely deferred the issue of Jerusalem, but undermine Resolution 242 by prejudging the status of Jerusalem." MAYNARD WISHNER. president of the American Jewish Committee, said that Muskie's statement on the resolution "was a forthright con- demnation of the long series of biased United Nations reso- lutions on the Middle East. The statement made clear that this resolution added to the destructive actions taken by the United Nations in connection with the search for a just and lasting peace in the Middle East. In light of these sentiments it is distressing that the United States again decided to abstain rather than to cast a veto in the Security Council." Laurence Tisch, president of the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York, said on behalf of the JCRC's 29-member agencies that the New York Jewish community "is deeply upset by the U.S. abstention, particularly when we find out that, in this instance, there was no communication problem' within the Administration. In fact, we have been informed that the decision to abstain was made at what was termed the very highest levels': this has en- gendered dismay, anguish and a guardian of world morality refuses to block one-sided and imbalanced resolutions." ROSELLE SILBERSTEIN, president of American Mizrachi Women, expresed "extreme dis- appointment" with the U.S. abstention, adding: "Israel has always been a faithful friend and ally of the United States and a firm outpost of democracy in a region rife with fanaticism and hatred. One would expect American support and, certainly, a measure of understanding for the centrality of Jerusalem in the hearts and minds of the Jewish people." Julius Herman, president of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, in a telegram to Carter, stated: "The fact that your Administration has failed to veto yet another in a series of virulently anti-Israel resolutions in the Security Council serves only to encourage even more such diatribe in thai body, and throws into question the depth of your Adminis tration's support of Israel and her security." He added that it is most disturbing that the deep consternation in our com munitv." an rrnu row^ "czMnd tkey dkall beat their 6word<6 into plowdkared and tkeir dpear^ into pruningkook&; nation dkall not Li{t up Aword againM nation, neither dkall tkey learn war any more" ^aiak 2, IV Through the new year, may your family share the blessings of peace, joy and love. A Happy Rosh Hashanah to your whole family from the people at Publix. Page12-B The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Friday, September 12, I960 France Says Israel Flouts Int'L Law By EDWIN EYTAN PARIS (JTA) - France has accused Israel of disregarding inter- national law and carrying out "preventive strikes" in Lebanon which endanger peace and stability. French Foreign Ministry spokes- man Jean Bressot said that Israel's raid in southern Lebanon "cannot be con- sidered a reprisal but is a preventive strike." The French government also issued a communique accusing Israel of not only endangering Lebanon's territorial integrity and stability but of worsening the situation within the entire Middle East. The communique said Israel's raids in Lebanon were "running contrary to the EEC's attempts to restore peace in the area." THE FRENCH blast is one of the harshest leveled at Israel in recent years and was reported personally approved by President Valery Giscard d'Estaing. The French have appealed to the other EEC member states to press Holland to transfer its embassy from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv, repor- tedly claiming that Israel's raids in Lebanon show "Israeli intran- sigency." The French government's communique followed the disclosure here that a French en- gineering concern, Thomson - C.F.F., has just won a $1 billion contract to set up an electronic industry in Iraq. The Iraqi government's con- tract with the French concern provides for the creation of a sophisticated electronic industry which will produce com- munication equipment, radar and military devices. THE COMPANY last year signed a similar contract with Saudi Arabia where work has reportedly already started on a radar plant and a factory for the production of air-to-air missiles. Iraq has become one of France's main trading partners in the Middle East, swapping oil for combat planes, helicopters, nuclear material, missiles and enriched uranium. It is France's second largest oil supplier after Saudi Arabia. I Report Iosif Begun Out of Exile I TEL AVIV (JTA) According to reports received by the National Conference on Soviet Jewry (NCSJ), Prisoner of Conscience Iosif Begun has been released from exile, completing a second term of three years. He plans to meet his wife in the city of Tallin and from there accompany her to Moscow. Live it up. Costa's 3 & 4-day cruises from Miami aboard the Flavia. Enjoy the good life aboard our floating Italian Festivalfor 3 days to Nassau or 4 days to Freeport and Nassau Wine. dine, dance and party all the way And when you dock, play all the tennis and golf, do all the fishing, snorkehng. sightseeing and duty-free shopping the Bahamas are famous for All this at rates from just $190 to $505 per person, double occupancy Tell your travel agent you re ready to live it up1 Flavia of Italian Registry 50% SAVINGS Sept. 8 to Nov. 3,1980 Book a cabin with 2 lower beds and second occupant pays only 50%. 3rd & 4th berths also available at 50% of minimum rate. COSTA CRUISES It's an Italian Festival One BiscayneTower Miami Florida 33131 '305 358-7330 When guests 'drop in' during the holiday...'Mley la makes your welcome warmer. 1ETLEY wotUbags This is the holiday when Jewish house- wives want everything to be a "little extra special." The food is extra good. The house is extra cleanx Even the kids are dressed extra nice. And Tetley tea fits right in. Because the tiny little tea leaves Tetley packs into every tea bag gives you extra rich, refreshing flavor .. the kind of flavor only tiny tea leaves can deliver. That's why*, when friends and relatives you haven't seen all year drop in to say helloTetley tea makes your welcome a truly warm one. Tetleythe favorite tea in Jewish homes since 1875. TETLEY TLA A CENTURY OLD TRADITION Fun 'n Games in Freeport/Lucaya Only 35 minutes away on Grand Bahama Is- land is El Casino, the most lavish pleasure palace in the Western Hemisphere. Two Con- tinental restaurants El Morocco and the Oasis await your dining tastes. Tibor Rudis' Crazy Gang, a colorful revue la featured twice nightly except, Monday. Fly to Freeport/Lucaya. Tempt Lady Luck at El Casino. Visit the fabulous Garden of the Groves. Shop in the fascinating International Bazaar. Have the time of your life on Grand Bahama Island. For reservations, call your Travel Agent or Bahamasaif, Eastern Airlines, Mackey or Shawnee. Freeport/Lucaya Grand Bahama Island - Ly, September 12, I960 The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale PagelS-B kpanese ChRistians make devoted Zionist Qroup By ARYEH COHEN A long way from Tel Aviv to Tokyo, [Jerusalem to Japan, but the Makuya, a Christian Zionist group which believes o be the realization of the words of the pts, is trying to bring the people of the Red loser to the people of the Magen David. th song and good-will, the Makuya, who some 60,000 members worldwide with ents as far flung as Scandinavia and to, have been visiting Israel on annual mages for some two decades. Clothed in zests decorated with a Jewish star, which ometimes worn over traditional Japanese the Makuya take to the streets. eir goal is" t turn places like Rehov Ben Yehuda in downtown Jerusalem into seas of singing pedestrians, and they are highly suc- cessful. They brighten up parades like the Sukkot March to Jerusalem, injecting some welcome good feelings into the pressurized Israeli daily existence. BUT THE MAKUYA are more than just "do- gooders" for Israel. Their ties to the country and its people are interwoven with their central beliefs as handed down by their leader, the late Prof. Abraham I. Teshima. Prof. Teshima, the Makuya believe, had a spiritual encounter with the Divine Presence, or Shehina, on Mount Aso, a Japanese peak which clearly parallels Mount Sinai. "It is the presence of this One God the God of Abraham, of Isaac and of Jacob that the Makuya group en- deavor to experience" in their daily lives, ac- cording to their spokespersons. They emphasize the concept of Hitlahavut (excitement), a type of joyous religious frenzy familiar, to Hassidim. The Makuya further emphasize that through the deeper knowledge of Judaism, they can better comprehend Biblical messages. The Makuya stress that they are Gentiles, for all the parallels their rites may have to Judaism. They (as well as many other foundamentalist Christian groups) believe the State of Israel to be the fulfillment of the prophecies of Jesus. FOLLOWING HIS his spiritual encounter in Continued on Paae 14-B Second Meeting Carter Visits With Jewish Solons By JOSEPH POLAKOFF VASHINGTON (JTA) - the second meeting of litically acti"e Jewish citizens th President Carter at the lite House, 20 from the New |rk City area met with him in Dther hour-long session and erward several expressed iplete satisfaction with rter's policy toward Israel, gliding the U.S. abstention on Jerusalem resolution in the an ed Nations Security Council. Stanley Lowell, former head of National Conference on viet Jewry, speaking ap- fently on behalf of the Jewish >up. said its members would |urn to New York to organize strong campaign" for the rter-Mondale ticket. The esident "has not received fedit" for his efforts for "Israel America in particular," and campaign for the Carter- >ndale ticket will attract indreds of thousands of ers" for the Carter-Mondale tet, Lowell said. .OWELL SAID he was "not to explain" the President's Irpose in directing the U.S. Jstention at the Council, but he the impression that it was fated to the position of "various ab countries and Egypt" and low important it was to abstain ther than veto." Lowell said' at "over the long range, what is st for Israel and the United ates was abstention." Pressed on the Jerusalem Vie, Lowell said, "You do not ke the most difficult issue and it that up to the top and kick other side in the face." He 1 that the Knesset adopted the iisalem law "for reasons in- nprehensible." ^sked specifically if he backed jnified Jerusalem as Israel's Dital. Lowell replied, erusalem must be united under aeli sovereignty." He said, fe made that clear to President and "he was very un- anding," but that "what ppens to Jerusalem should be |jween the parties." He said the sident pledged continued gnomic and military aid to ael and support of UN Council solution 242. IOWARD SAMUELS. ner New York off-track tting commissioner, said plicitly that Israel should I>logize to Carter for criticizing "The political sense was to the resolution, but the fcsident took a very courageous kition which is in the long-term crest of Israel by abstaining," muels said. "Israel owes him [apology for the position they fe taken in attacking him ause they have been in- Bitive to the role of the sident in the long-term in- Mt of Israel." amuels said a U.S. veto |>uld have given (Egyptian Bident Anwar) Sadat an irtunity to move out of the negotiations" with Israel. He said "America cannot be in- dependent" on the issues because of the energy situation. Kabbi Usher Kirshblum of Kew Garden Hills, N.Y.. said he has backed Carter since 1976. "I have not been disappointed in any way," he added. "He was not being political." Kirshblum said of the President in discussing his abstention position. "For the U.S. to have vetoed the resolution would have done a lot of harm and allowed Sadat to beg out of Camp David." KALMAN SULTANIK. a member of the presidium of the Confederation of General Zionists, disagreed with other Jews at the meeting. He said "President Carter was very convincing." but "1 am not satisfied regarding Jerusalem. It Ls not a political question. 1 do not agree with Lowell alx>ut the Knesset. The Knesset can do what it wants. It is in a sovereign state." *& Who says kugel has to weigh a ton? Mueller's egg noodles make kugel deliriously light! M. A kugel doesn't have to lie like lead in your stomach. With Mueller's light-tasting egg noodles vou can create a perfect holiday kugel. Light..Tender. Delicious. And Mueller's quality egg noodles have been a Jewish tradition for generations because they're so light. (Your grandmother might have used them in her own kugel!) For a delicately delicious holidayTcugel Kour family will loveand for loads of other oliday dishesjust remember the red, white and blue colors that say Mueller's egg noodles. RS. Remember to try light Mueller's spaghetti and macaroni, too! Crusty-Topped Noodle Kugel I package (8 uunet's) cream cheese, softened Uj c up parve margarine, softened 1 W tups SUg.ll 8 eggs, well beaten* 4*/! tups milk 2 teaspoons vanilla I teaspoon lemon juice Dash sail 8 ounces Mueller's egg noodles V cup graham tracker crumbs I teaspoon tinnamon V Upside-Down Noodle Kugel V Beat togelhei cream cheese and mat k-" "u" Jdd sugar, mix well Blend in eggs Stir in next falll ingredients Meanwhile COoll noodles as directed; drain; combine with cheese mixture, pout IniolJ ^ 2 baking dish Mix graham cracker crumbs and , Innamun; sprinkle on top of noodle* Bake ai ^o \ about i'-* noun W until browned and crust\ on lop Allow locoolal ICMl *0 minute*; cut In squares loservt 10 to 12 servings '' cup parve margarine. softened W cup light brown sugar 8 slices canned pineapple. well drained 2 eggs '* cup cooking oil or melted parve margarine Uj cup sugar 1: teaspoon salt " teaspoon cinnamon I tablespoon lemon juice '-j teaspoon grated lemon rind 8 ounces Mueller's egg noodles vi cup finely cut dried fruits (apricot s. p ru nes. dal es) x'2 CUp I .11 Mils '? cup chopped nuts t oat square p.in with in.u gat inc sprinkle with brown sugar Clll pineapple slices in hall; place on sugar mixtuie In large bowl. DM1 eggs ind oil with next five ingredients Mem while,cook noodles .is dirc< led; drain; stir mioegg mixture Add remaining ingredients, loss well Spoon into pan Bake 40 lo50minutes at 150 I until set and golden brown Let land ^ minutes loosen with spatula and Invet i ovet t \ ing 'i-.h 8 s,r \ liikjs J Pagel4-B The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Friday, September 12, I960 Japanese Zionists Continued from Page 13-B 1948, Prof. Teahima began studying Jewish laws, Hebrew, and other Jewish texts, and passing his message to others. The establish- ment of the State of Israel was the fulfillment of Divine will he taught, and it was the Makuya's task to "show that there is a people who rejoice in the restoration of Jerusalem and who care for the welfare of future Israel." As Mr. Kiichiro, one of the leaders of this year's pilgrimage, told us through an interpreter, the State of Israel is "one of the greatest miracles of the century," and the basis for many Makuya beliefs. Most of those beliefs come from literal in- terpretations of the Bible. The word, Makuya, means Tabernacle, and the sect's religious centers have Tabernacles that serve as meeting places where prayer, singing, and often ecstatic group meetings are held. A recent Israel television report on the sect showed Makuya followers struggling to touch the garment of one of their leaders at such a meeting. THE PROPHETS play an important part in the Makuya faith., The followers of Teshima's doctrine go through what they call "Prayers of Sanctification." standing under strong waterfalls or passing over hot coals barefoot. This is in keeping with their literal interpretation of Isaiah, verse 43:2, "When you pass through the waters I will be with you and through the rivers they shall not overwhelm you; When you walk through fire you shall not be burned, and the flame shall not consume you." In Japan, the Makuya have their own version of a Lubavitch Mitzva-Mobile. They call their vehicle a "public-addressing car," which an- nounces to Ginza strollers that "The God of Israel lives, and His Divine history is at work." One can find elements of Zen in the religion as WeThe fevor of the Makuya could be seen in the faces of the members when they reached the Western Wall this year. Throwing themselves upon the stones, they beat their breasts and wailed loudly with awesome sincerity. BUT WHAT the Makuya have done for Israel cannot be measured simply by their religious ties to Israel and their attempts to cheer Israelis by annual visits. In 1967, for example, a member of the sect who had volunteered for duty in the Six- Day War was wounded while saving a medic s life. During that conflict. Teshima set up the, "Israel Emergency Relief Committee of Japan," flying supplies to Israel. Teshima himself visited the Wailing Wall as early as June 11. 1967. Embarrassed and upset by the actions of fellow Japanese nationals in the Red Army attack on Lod Airport several years later. UAHC Reaches Out To Unaffiliated Jews NEW YORK In an un- precedented move, the Union of American Hebrew Congregations synagogue arm of Reform Judaism in the United States and Canada has voted to establish a "mechanism" for offering resources and services to in- dependent religious fellowships, known as havurot, that are not affiliated with member- synagogues. The action marks the first time in the UAHC's 107-year history that the Reform movement will be open to participation by non- affiliated havurot "for the benefits that will thereby accrue to Judaism as a whole," ac- cording to a resolution adopted by the Union's board of trustees. A SPECIAL task force headed by Joseph Kleiman of Los Angeles will meet with representatives of existing UAH- C congregations and havurot to develop standards and conditions for making available its wide range of educational, consulting and other services. The UAHC is composed of 750 Reform synagogues with some 1.2 million members in the U.S. and Canada. Havurot vary in composition, size and emphasis, but typically they are close, autonomous clusters of 10 to 20 families that meet together in an ambience of warmth and shared purpose to pray, study and celebrate Jewish holidays and traditions together. The first havurah was founded in 1968 in Somerville, Mass., by a group of university students who sought to create a common Jewish experience. Since that time, havurot have been established across the country, many of them based in Con- servative and Reform synagogues. Others, however, are independent of any existing synagogue or congregational body. THE DECISION to invite these non-affiliated havurot to develop a closer relationship with the UAHC was made "to enhance the common purpose that havurot share with Reform synagogues between us," ac- cording to Rabbi Alexander M. Schindler, president of the UAH- C. The trustees' resolution notes that havurot "have succeeded in involving many previously- unaffiliated Jews in Jewish life." It also cites "the commonality of purpose which synagogues share with havurot." The Union's new policy was made public on the eve of the first summer institute of the National Havurah Coordinating Com- mittee held at the University of Hartford in West Hartford, Conn, in August. The committee is a coalition of both unaffiliated nd synagogue-affiliated havurot. "Havurot have a great deal to teach us about total family in- volvement in Judaism, about building a sense of community, about the close personal ties that can be established in a religious setting," Kleiman said. "IN TURN, the UAHC conducts programs and offers services that we believe are important to all Jews, including those participating in havurot," he noted. He cited as examples the UAHC's summer camps and other youth programs, a nationwide social action network, a wide variety of educational services and instructional materials, and consultative services designed to help Reform congregations and their members meet a broad range of human problems. Rabbi Schindler said the decision of the Reform movement to offer services to unaffiliated havurot was in keeping with the UAHC's other "outreach" programs aimari at .Iwwiiih CPtt youth and at non-Jews who are married to Jewish spouses. He continued: "We will strengthen one another, and the Jewish people as a whole will be stronger for our efforts." Working with Kleiman in developing the "mechanism" that will open the Reform movement to non-affiliated havurot will be Rabbi Erwin L. Herman of Los Angeles, director of new congregations for the UAHC. (tb Jlurop* $nn JRtaurani Thanks You tor 3 Years of Business 324 S. Federal Highway in Danla Closed Monday 925-9412 happy new yearto allourfriends New Year's greetings from Israel's first and largest bank and one of the 100 largest in the world Bank Leumi le Israel B.M. Banking with us enables you to contribute towards Israel's economic strength while benefiting from the experience and service of a large international banking network: 418 subsidiaries and branches including 55 offices outside Israel. . ,. Sftf" M*H<* "* Lauml U-lsraal B.M: 407 Lincoln road Mall. Miami Beach. Fonda 33139. Tel (305) 531-3378/9, Telex 264112 =- nu. Bank Lumi Tr Company of New York "" 579 Fifth Avenue. New York, NY 10017. Tel (212) 832-5000, Telex ITT 420-968 f.nut (26 Branches) *ui Ban" Lsurni U-Urael Branches in the U.S.A. Chtcago: 100 North La Salle St, Chicago, Illinois 60602. Tel (312) 781 -1800 Telex 0253751 Philadelphia: 1511 Walnut St. Philadelphia, Pa 19102 Tel (215)299 4400 Telex 011/17 Lo. An,*..: 9731 WHshire Blvd Beverly HHIs, C.l 90212,'Tel ,213) 278-70??>2 Telex*0698703 Cayman Islands: Georgetown, Grand Cayman Island, West Indies SSffiUKSfiSffif1 UMIDIAAH.S AND REPRESENTATIVE OFFICE! IN bank leumi tun1! pxx . September 12,1980 na and the Makuya donated an ambulance Israel in response to the raid, and offered of support as "reparations" for the y- tie sect's activities during the 1973 war were more remarkable. Japan had aligned itself the Arabs against Israel, favoring the oil- Ling countries. Despite his ill health. Prof. [ima organized a march in the streets of Itvo. Three thousand members of his sect d him on a cold December day, but the yn proved too much for Teshima, and three ks later, he died at age 63. His last words, Drtedly. were Hallelujah. .IE MAKUYA continued to back Israel iically, sending a letter of protest to the UN hwintr that body's infamous "Zionism equals Lim" decision in 1975. Some 37,000 latures were collected for the letter by Lord's Jewelers 1918 E. Sunrise Boulevard Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33304 764-6750 Happy New Year New Year Greetings to die Entire Jewish community Flowers & Gifts By Mr. Day 3518 N. 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The pilgrims could teach many Zionist youth groups a thing or two about group singing, and their several score representatives and members in Israel are often greeted with grins of delight by startled merchants amazed at their grasp of Hebrew. At present, Yossi Shinomiya, a student, at Hebrew University, told a reporter, there are some 12 students living in Israel, with other Makuya members studying at an Ulpan at Kibbutz Heftsiba, the sect's adopted settlement in Israel. Apparently the Makuya in Israel are having the same problems as native Israelis. "Too much inflation" was how Shinomiya summed up ' his first impression of the country. THE GROUP has no special ties with the 3,000 Jewish living in Japan, according to Kiichiro. Visiting Israelis are treated royally by the Makuya and by Beit Shalom, another Japanese Christian Zionist group which ap- parently is frowned upon by the Makuya. Kiichiro stressed the mixed social level of the pilgrimage members, and indeed they were attired in costumes ranging from stylish business suits to simple peasant dress. But rich or poor, the Makuya pilgrims are united on one principle. "I am in Israel to praise God and I can be nere," as one of them said. With that he grabbed his blue vest decorated with the Magen David and headed for the street to "cheer the Israeli people and pray for the peace of Jerusalem." Realty By The Sea 3360 NE 34 Street Fort Lauderdale 561-4000 Holiday QrMtinf LARRY LARSON Evelyn's COORDINATED INTERIORS 3413 Gait Ocean Drive 566-4400 Happy New Year A Rose For M'Lady 2950 Ravenswood Road Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 33312 9404)049 Happy New Year Broward Band Instruments 1316 NE 4th Avenue 565-3797 A Joyous New Year to Our Friends & Customers Medical Equipment Pool, Inc. 2586 N. Federal Highway Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33305 Happy New Year 566-5441 American Spa and Fitness Center 1001 W. 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State Road 7 Plantation 33318 587-6690 Bruce Taylor Johl K. Rotman Al Rotman Pagel6-B The Jewish Fhridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale _________Friday, September 12,198Q The people of Southeast hope that the blessings of health, happiness and prosperity will be yours in the New Year. oron n:raa rwh ^Southeast Bank You can count on us? Corporate Offices: 100 S. Biscayne Blvd., Miami 33131; (305) 577-4000 |
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REPORT xmlns http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitss xmlns:xsi http:www.w3.org2001XMLSchema-instance xsi:schemaLocation http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitssdaitssReport.xsd INGEST IEID ESVZBSGLD_4TAN91 INGEST_TIME 2013-06-29T05:46:02Z PACKAGE AA00014312_00170 AGREEMENT_INFO ACCOUNT UF PROJECT UFDC FILES Page6-B The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Friday, September 12,1980 I I Ignored Carter Asked to Support Demo Plank NEW YORK (JTA) symbol of this stand, the U.S. delegates on the party platform A New York delegate to EmDassy should be moved from Aug. 13. gave what the Rockland f. t nomnrmtir Tel Aviv to Jerusalem." County official called an "am- this week he IS waiting for with Israe, wa870nned. and what was a dear unequivocal a response from the White and Bruce Levine, a law student statement in the platform. House on a petition sighed from Spring Valley, and a by 250 delegates Kennedy alternate delegate, demanding President began circulating the petition. Carter adhere to the he SAID in two days they Democratic Party's gathered 250 signatures not only platform on Jerusalem. from New York. New Jersey and Sam ZalmanGdanaki. a Spring Maryland but also from such states as Texas and Utah. Had we further time, certainly we would have received much more, since we were the only two delegates circulating a petition on the floor of the Convention" in Madison Square Garden. President Carter of the specific platform adopted by the con- vention itself." Because of this, Gdanaki and Levine delivered the petition on Aug. 14 to the office of White House Press Secretary Jody Powell at the Carter-Mondale headquarters at the Sheraton Center here. But now, 11 days later, Gdanski still has not received a reply. he said. Gdanski said he wants to continue the ad hoc committee oh* an ongoing basis since the Democratic Party has platform conventions every two years. He said that when the petition was being circulated, many of those who signed asked him and Levine "why a causus had not been established along the lines of the Black political caucus (at the convention) which would have concerned itself with issues affecting the Jewish community. Valley. N.Y. lawyer and Rockland County legislator who was a delegate pledged to Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that the answer he receives will decide whether he supports Carter in the Gdanski said Carter's statement. which ignored any mention of movinx the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, said: "It has been our policy that Jerusalem snouia remain lorever undivided with free access to the Holy Places for people of all faiths. It has been, and it must remain our policy that the . ultimate status of Jerusalem should be a matter of negotiation between the parties." November election. "I was a Kennedy delegate partly because of dissatisfaction with President Carter over Israel," he said. GDANSKI said that on the second day of the convention, Aug. 12, he was concerned by reports that Carter "would modify or renounce the party platform position concerning unification of Jerusalem." He noted that Carter failed to adhere to the 1976 platform which was repeated again this year. It stated that the Democratic Party supports "the established status of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, with free access to all its Holy Places provided to all faiths. As a But Gdanski said he was "disappointed" when Carter, in a written statement to the GDANSKI NOTED that the Carter statement "seemed to leave the status of Jerusalem as something to be negotiated and therefore was a renunciation bv Jfow tyem tQteefaujft I Woodmont Country Club 7801 NW 80 Avenue Tamarac, Florida 7224300 (preeiitrfl you xoxty wty besf Burton Silnutzer Inc. Sea Food... Fresh & Salt Water 4200 Westroads Drive Magnolia Park 33407 842-5237 H Friday, September 12,1980 The Jewish Floridian of Greater Fort Lauderdale Page7-B m The Star A/rs. Li/tdne W7nn, president. American Sephardi federation, talking with one of 200 Bar Mitzvah boys at mass Bar Mit- zvah celebration sponsored bv the World Sephardi Federation this summer in Jerusalem. Each Bar Mitzvah received a talit and tefillin following ceremonies at the Western Wall. The Yr World Sephardi Federation joined with Aharon Abu Katzeira, Israel's Minister for Religious Affairs, in underwriting the cost of the mass celebration. Rosh Hashana &1bm Kippur. The High Holy Days. Celebrations off hope. The shofar blows, heralding in the new year. Traditionally, the end of the growing season, begun as a harvest festival to give thanks for the earth's richness and to seek God's forgiveness. Now, a time for righting wrongs, mending relationships, starting anew. Rosh Hashana. The first day, the beginning of the Jewish religious life again with renewed dedication. Yom Kippur. The tenth day, the most solemn of all Jewish days of prayer and fasting to make atonement for all that has past. On these holiest of all days, Menorah Chapels offers the blessings of hope and good will, in the tradition of our faith. Representing KindwntMum Bro*. Inc. in New York PImt Memorial Chtpeii in Chicago Stoneaky-SchloMberg-Solomon Memorial Chapelt in Boeton /U rving chepeU throughout the U.S. and Canada A COLLECTOR'S SEMES OF JEWISH RELIGIOUS F"'NTS. SUITABLE FOR FRAMING. ARE NOW A VAILABLE. COMPLIMENTS OF MENORAH CHAPELS. AT THESE LOCATIONS: 6800 W. Oakland Park Boulevard. Fort Lauderdale. 2305 rV. Hillsboro Boulevard. Deerfield Beach. 5915 Park Drive at U.S. 441. Margate. Exodus Momentum Ecuador to Move Embassy to Tel Aviv TEL AVIV (JTA) - Ecuador has become the third South American country to announce it will move its embassy from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv in the wake of the new Israeli law formally declaring united Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. As did Venezuela and Uruguay in announcing their decisions earlier, Ecuador insisted that its friendship for Israel is unchanged by the move. Dr. Wilson Vela Hervas, Ecuador's Ambassador, said that the move was based on a principle of his country's foreign policy which is not to recognize the acquisition of territory by force. He indignantly rejected a suggestion that the move was due to Arab pressure. "I have not heard anything about Arab threats or pressure on Israel," he said. "We have only a handful of citizens of Arab extraction." BUT THE Israel Foreign Ministry, in expressing its regret over the announced move, dis- agreed. "It's reasonable to assume that Ecuador did yield to Arab pressure as there is nothing in the text of the Jerusalem bill that changes an existing situation or warrants such a move by Ecuador," a Ministry spokesman said. He said he hoped that Ecuador will change its mind even though Hervas has of- ficially presented the Ecuadorian decision to the Foreign Ministry. In talking to reporters, the Ecuadoran envoy stressed that Tel Aviv is also Israel, and he would be visiting Jerusalem fre- quently both in his official capacity and to maintain his social contacts. Meanwhile, announcements are expected here from three other Latin American countries with embassies in Jerusalem Chile, Boliva and Colombia. HOWEVER, Colombian Ambassador Cesar Castro Fardomo told reporters here. Dr. Wilson Vela Hervas Ecuador's Ambassador, said that the move was based on a principle of his country's foreign policy which is not to recognize the acquisition of territory by force. He in- dignantly rejected a suggestion that the move was due to Arab pressure.- "We have sufficient oil and any decision taken by my govern- ment will not be based on threats of oil cuts. " However, the real concern here is whether Holland, the only West European country with an embassy in Jerusalem, will also move its embassy to Tel Aviv. The Dutch have come under heavy Arab pressure and the government in Amsterdam is presently considering the question. Meanwhile, a group of Jews who immigrated here from Holland demonstrated outside the Dutch Embassy in Jerusalem urging that it not be moved. Leam Interior Decorating Willsev institute (305)947-4590 Free Brochure TAPES CARTONS HANGERS POLYETHYLENE BUSINESS FORMS TAGS LABELS BAGS BOXES WIPES 776-6272 HOWARD ACKAGING IMC 1201 N E 45 STREET FORT LAUDERDALE For over 125 tasty suggestions, send for our new cook- book," Beyond Chicken Soup". In it, you'll find everything from traditional fayorites to delicious new food ideas. There's even a special section on major Jewish holidays, with appropriate menu sug- gestions for their celebration. lb get your copy, send 75* plus the label from a 32 oz. jar of Hellmanns*or Best Poods*Real Mayonnaise (or $1.00 without the label), along with your name and address to: "Beyond Chicken Soup", Dept. BCS-M,Box 307,Coventry, CT 06238, or use this convenient coupon. / M |