Thursday, January 8.1981 — THE BULLETIN — 11
Professionals discuss ADL activities in Northwest
DAVID F.STAHL
Is the Ku Klux Klan really expanding its activities into B.C.? Are anti-Semitic and anti-Zionist remarks becoming increasingly fashionable? Are the Jews once more becoming a scapegoat for all the ills of the economy?
Two top professionals will discuss these questions and other topics at a special dinner meeting of Lion's Gate Lodge B*nai B*rith on Monday. Jan. 19 in the Schara Tzedeck auditorium.
David Franklin Stahl. from Seattle, serves as N.W. regional director of the Anti-Defamation League of B*nai B'rith. a body devoted to
MORRIS SALTZMAN
combating anti-Semitism and race hatred.
Morris Saltzman. from Vancouver, is executive director of both Canadian Jewish Congress and Jewish Community Fund and Council, the former handling ADL activities in this region.
The event is open to all B'nai B*rith men in the community and their guests and prospects.
Chairman for this important evening Dave Jackson stated. **It is not often that one has the opportunity to hear the latest information from two experienced men in this field of prejudice and discrimination and
human relations. We expect a large turnout of newer members, who will want to learn first-hand about ADL's'activities in this region."
Cocktails are at 6:30 and dinner begins at 7 p.m. Spokesmen said those coming just for the meeting should be present by 8 p.m.
Girls' town needs financial assistance
Rabbi Kalman Samuels will be coming to Vancouver on behalf of Girls' Town. Jerusalem. He will arrive on Jan. II for a two-week period during which he intends to visit a group of donors, according to Herb B^linsky who is making the necessary local arrangements.
Mr. Balinsky told The Bulletin that Girls' Town' cares for 540 orphaned girls and provides them wiih vocational guidance. He said that it is the only facility of its kind. The institution needs, he pointed out. $45,000 per month over and above the $20,000 provided to it by the Israeli government.
Donors not reached by Rabbi Samuels, who is the first native bom Vancouverite to become an Orthodox rabbi, may mail contributions c/o Herb Balinsky. 6010 Hudson Street. Vancouver. B.C.. V6M 2Z5. Cheques must be made out to Girls' Town. Jerusalem.
Lubavitch host Jewish family life symposium
Lubavitch will host a symposium on Jewish family life on Jan. 31 and Feb. I.
In organizing the program. Lubavitch told The Bulletin, the complete life cycle of a Jewish family was stressed from family planting, family purity, educating a child, teenagers and drugs, the dangers of cults, to learning from our ciders.
Guest speakers for the weekend symposium will include experts on a variety of topics from Los Angeles and Toronto, as well as a number of speakers from our very own community.
One of the featured speakers. Dr. Sarah Perlmaii. is already known in Vancouver for her excellent and warm delivery on subjects of great Jewish interest. This year Dr. Perlman will be speaking on the topic of family purity and family
planning, especially in light of the recent campaign of the Lubavitch Rebbe urging parents to have more children to add to the Jewish population. *
Rabbi Dr. J. ImmanueLSchochet, a lecturer and rabbi from Toronto. and a noted Bible scholar will speak on the burning issue of cults and Eastern religions as they affect our Jewish youth and even young Jewish families.
Rabbi Schochet has lectured throughout North America on this topic and is widely regarded as one of the foremost experts in this area.
Rabbi Altshul. head of Judaic Studies at Vancouver Tabnud Toiah. will lecture on the concept of educating a child, emphasizing the importance of the home atmosphere in addition to a proper Jewish school education.
There will also be workshops on
IMPORTANT AUCTION
PEKING COLLECTION
Ossental Antique Porcelains * Oriental Rugs * Screens * Jades *
Bffonzes* Object d* Art
•PLUS*
50 MUSEUM AND COUECTORS QUALITY
ESKIMO CARVINGS
SAIE DAY: MONDAY, JANUARY 12th at 7:30 p.m.
PREVIEW: MONDAY, 12 NOON TO SALETIME PLACE: ON OUR PREMISES, 1238 SEYMOUR STREET
OUR FINEST AUCTION COLLECTION EVER!!!
• FEATURING *
ORIENTAL works OF ast, faiduding jades, ivory, ANTIQUE
porcbainjarsavases;rosbvgodcarvincs^hanopaintb>
rUNCCHIHMARBL^PORCEbUN&GLASSi^plus: CAPODMONT^ UMOGSE, ROYAL dux, EGBIMANN GLASSWARE, BRASS & COPmWARB, CRYSTAL, CUT CLASS, etc, etc ori0)3TAL furniture — screens^ TABLES^ CABINETS 15 new and antique ORIENTAL ruc$, so excitincinuit carvings ol SBIPBmNE STONI, soapstone, WHALEBONE & ivory
GOODS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION! MOST GOOD ART IS SOLD BY AUCTION!
TBKMS: CASH or APPROVTO CHEQUE. Catalogues Available at tSie Auction. Subject to Additions and Deletions.
the subjects of teenagers and drugs, learning from tlie elderly* and a variety of interesting and important topics.
A spokesman said pre-registra-tion is advisable as space, w^l. be limited;^ r-.-u
The main session on Sunday, Feb. IS. will take place in the Louis Brier Home on 41st and Oak. .
Reservations may be made by caUing Chabad House (324-2400).
Maariv
reveais
(Coatiniied from 3)
offered an Arab corridor linldng Jericho and Ramallah.
Israel refused to abandou the so-called "Ation Plan.** which called fcgr a defence line along the Jordan -Valley and the first.rang^ of lowhills near the river, while returning the Arab towns and villages on the West Bank.
Jordan insisted on a military withdrawal, and the talks failed.
Altogether. Allon wassaid to have met the King 14 times; Abba Eban. who was Foreign Minister l>etween 1966 and 1974. 12 times; Yitzhak Rabin, Prime Minister from 1974 to 1977. eight times;and Shimon Peres, now the Labor P^rty leader, also eight times.
The contacts were said to liave been initiated by Dr. Yaacov Herzog. the director-general of .the Israeli Prime Minister's Office, under Levi Eshkol and Oolda Meir. who died in 1978.^
The early meetings between Dr. Herzog and King Hussein were reported to have taken place in London, at the Harl^' street consuhiiig-rooms of a Jewish doctor.
Eban renewed the London meetings for three years from Sept. 1967. From 1970, the talks were transferred to the Israeli-Jordanian border, so that Meir couM sometimes take part.
They were held at first in a boat moored in the Gulf of Akaba. then during the Rabin administration, in caravans in the desert and, later, in the Tel Aviv area. JCNS.
THE BULLETIN hMS opened its pages to coatributions from our scnior citizens which appear in this column pmodicallj. In the following article, Anne Sambad, a member of tlie Golden Age Qid), tells of the pleasure she and 45 other Je^sh seniors had on a recent trip to Reno.
Although the drive was long we had much fun and comradeship on the bus. Pick ups were right on time and the drive to Eugene was very pleasant.
We-played Bingo on the bus as usual and before we knew it we were at our Hotel. A pleasant evening was then topped off with a wine and cheese party, and so to bed.
As we travelled through Oregon we were all enthused by the beauty of the snow on the trees along the wayside. It was a beautiful looking fresh scene.
We arrived in Reno in the eariy evening and although we were all a little weary as soon as we got inside, received our luggage and freshened
up a little, there we were pulling those one armed bandits .. .
The general topic of conversation in between all that glorious food we were eating was ''well and how ate you doing?"
I know I speak for all the members when I say a good time was had by all — What better way than for 46 Jewish seniors to spend a week in Reno?
ARE YOU A BULLETIN BORROWER?
Subtcribo Now CALL —. 87M575
40% off Fall & Winter Hats
No Relunds or Ixchanges
6019 W. Blvd.
Phone 261-3620
Annual S^LmE
now^in progress at.:.
of Van^ebijverLtd.
Broadway at Mac Dona Id
736^6791