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This file contains material where Mrs. Betty Ford attended a Jewish National Fund Dinner. She led the audience in prayer for Dr. Maurice Sage.
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46740321
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6/22/76 - New York City (3)
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46740321
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6/22/76 - New York City (3)
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This file contains material where Mrs. Betty Ford attended a Jewish National Fund Dinner. She led the audience in prayer for Dr. Maurice Sage.
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Sheila R. Weidenfeld Files (Ford Administration)
Sheila Weidenfeld's Trip Files
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New York
President (1974-1977 : Ford). Office of the First Lady. 1974-1977
Jews
Voyages and travels
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1976-07-31
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7
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1976
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1976
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The original documents are located in Box 26, folder "6/22/76 - New York City (3)" of
the Sheila Weidenfeld Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Copyright Notice
The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of
photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald Ford donated to the United
States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.
Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public
domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to
remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid
copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Digitized from Box 26 of the Sheila Weidenfeld Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
ReleASeD hyPathi
June 18, 1976
FRi. June 18
MEMORANDUM TO:
FROM:
PETER $ SORUM
SUSAN PORTER
SUBJECT:
Action Memo
The following event has been added to Mrs. Ford's June 22nd trip
to New York City:
EVENT: Dedication of the Martin Steinberg Center of the Stephen
Wise Congress House
GROUP: American Jewish Congress
DATE: Thursday, June 22, 1976
TIME: To be determined (4:00-6:00 p.m.)
PLACE: Martin Steinberg Center 4:00
15 East 84th Street
New York, New York
CONTACT: Mr. Richard Cohen, Associate Executive Director
O: (212) 879-4500
H: (212) 988-8042
COMMENTS: As you know, Mrs. Ford will participate in the dedication of
the Martin Steinberg Center at the time of her trip to New York
to attend the Jewish National Fund dinner at the New York Hilton
Hotel. The Martin Steinberg Cultural Center will contain
reading rooms, gallery space, music booths, a library, etc.
and is connected to the Stephen Wise Congress House (which is
the headquarters of the American Jewish Congress) by a small
CReD. 212.TR9.9300
michael AsheNbRAND
FRI-Mon NOON
FORD & LIBRARY
-2-
garden. Mr. Martin Steinberg is elderly and is in the hospital
and therefore may not participate in the dedication. The file
is attached.
Thank you.
C:
BF Staff
Red Cavaney
William Nicholson
Terry O'Donnell
Jerry Jones
David Lissy
Rex Scouten
Max Friedersdorf
Steve McConahey
Staircase
is
FORD
LIBRARY
AMERICAN JEWISH CONGRESS
STEPHEN WISE CONGRESS HOUSE
15 EAST 84TH STREET
NEW YORK, N.Y. 10028
TR 9-4500
Nightline: 879-4504
Home: 988-8042
RICHARD COHEN
ASSOCIATE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
June 12, 1976
Mrs. Betty Ford
The White House
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mrs. Ford:
I am happy to enclose the formal invitation to the
dedication of the Martin Steinberg Center Tuesday after-
noon, June 22, in New York City.
We would be deeply honored by your presence, which
will make this a day to remember for all of us in the
American Jewish Congress.
I shall await your telephone call on Monday and hope
you will say "yes."
I am grateful to our mutual friend for giving you
this letter and invitation in person.
Richard Respectfully, When
Richard Cohen
R. FORD LIB LIBIARY
The Officers of the
American Jewish Congress
Are Pleased to Invite You
To the Dedication of
The Martin Steinberg
Cultural Center
"where young Jewish artists can
come together to explore and develop
their creative talents."
Tuesday, June 22, 1976
from 4 to 6 p.m.
Stephen Wise Congress House
15 East 84th Street
New York City
RSVP-TR 9-4500 Ext. 817
R. FORD LIBE
PROGRAM
Welcome
FORD
HOWARD M. SQUADRON
"If
GERALD
Address
Hon. MARTIN E. SEGAL
Chairman, Commission for Cultural Affairs
of the City of New York
Musical Presentation
Martin
RABBI ALVIN WAINHAUS
Steinberg
Poetry Reading
DIANE LEVENBERG
Affixing of Mezuzah and Dedication
RABBI ARTHUR HERTZBERG
The Martin Steinberg Cultural Center will be a meeting place
for young Jewish men and women engaged in all aspects of
Response
Jewish artistic expression-music and dance, painting and
MARTIN STEINBERG
sculpture, poetry, fiction and film-making.
The Center will also house the Charles and Bertie Schwartz
Jewish Reading Room and the Bernard L. Madoff Jewish
Remarks
Music Library.
BERTIE SCHWARTZ
BERNARD L. MADOFF
It will be a place where young Jewish artists will exhibit their
work, read their poems, play their music, share their creative
efforts and develop a sense of community with each other.
Celebration
Exhibition-"The Lower East Side Revisited" / Photographs I
AMERICAN JEWISH CONGRESS
NATIONAL OFFICERS
President
ARTHUR HERTZBERG
Chairman, Governing Council
Senior Vice Presidents
THEODORE BIKEL
LEON KRONISH
HENRY ROSOVSKY
Co-Chairmen, Governing Council
HOWARD M. SQUADRON
PAUL S. BERGER
LEONA CHANIN
Vice Presidents
ALVIN GRAY
JACQUELINE LEVINE
Joseph Asher, San Francisco, Cal.
Mark D. Coplin, Baltimore, Md.
Treasurer
lack M. Elkin, New York
BENJAMIN M. HALPERN
Murray A. Gordon, New York
Co-Treasurer
S. Stanley Kreutzer, Great Neck, N.Y.
CLARENCE GOLDBERG
Sheldon Levison, New York
Secretary
Joel Levy, Washington, D.C.
JOSEPH GEROFSKY
Stanley H. Lowell, New York
Theodore R. Mann, Philadelphia, Pa.
Corresponding Secretary
HAROLD BECKER
Amram Nowak, New York
Esther Polen, Philadelphia, Pa.
Executive Director
Richard Ravitch, New York
NAOMI LEVINE
Walter Roth, Chicago, III.
Associate Executive Directors
Morton M. Silverman, Los Angeles, Cal.
RICHARD COHEN
Virginia Snitow, Scarsdale, N.Y.
PHIL BAUM
Jerry Wagner, Hartford, Conn.
General Counsel
Judith L. Wolf, Newton, Mass.
WILL MASLOW
Louis E. Yavner, New York
Honorary Chairman, Governing Council
Shad Polier
Honorary Co-Chairman, Governing Council
Morris Michelson
Honorary Presidents
Israel Goldstein, Jerusalem
Irving Miller, Woodmere, N.Y.
Arthur J. Lelyveld, Cleveland
Joachim Prinz, Orange, N.J.
Honorary Vice Presidents
Paul G. Annes, Chicago
Max A. Kopstein, Chicago
Max Doft, Lawrence, N.Y.
Justine Wise Polier, New York
Benjamin S. Kalnick, Kings Point, N.Y.
Harry Schacter, Bedford Hills,
R.
Theodore 1. Kolish, New York
FORD
Lillian Steinberg, Brooklyn
SHEILE
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
June 18, 1976
MEMORANDUM TO:
PETER SORUM
FROM:
SUSAN PORTER
SUBJECT:
Action Memo
The following event has been added to Mrs. Ford's June 22nd trip
to New York City:
EVENT: Dedication of the Martin Steinberg Center of the Stephen
Wise Congress House
GROUP: American Jewish Congress
DATE: Thursday, June 22, 1976
TIME: To be determined (4:00-6:00 p.m.)
PLACE: Martin Steinberg Center
15 East 84th Street
New York, New York
CONTACT: Mr. Richard Cohen, Associate Executive Director
O: (212) 879-4500
H: (212) 988-8042
COMMENTS: As you know, Mrs. Ford will participate in the dedication of
the Martin Steinberg Center at the time of her trip to New York
to attend the Jewish National Fund dinner at the New York Hilton
Hotel. The Martin Steinberg Cultural Center will contain
reading rooms, gallery space, music booths, a library, etc.
and is connected to the Stephen Wise Congress House (which is
the headquarters of the American Jewish Congress) by a small
3.
FORD
LIBRARY
-2-
garden. Mr. Martin Steinberg is elderly and is in the hospital
and therefore may not participate in the dedication. The file
is attached.
Thank you.
C:
BF Staff
Red Cavaney
William Nicholson
Terry O'Donnell
Jerry Jones
David Lissy
Rex Scouten
Max Friedersdorf
Steve McConahey
Staircase
FORD LIBRARY
=====
AMERICAN JEWISH CONGRESS
STEPHEN WISE CONGRESS HOUSE
15 EAST 84TH STREET
NEW YORK, N.Y. 10028
TR 9-4500
Nightline: 879-4504
Home: 988-8042
RICHARD COHEN
ASSOCIATE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
June 12, 1976
Mrs. Betty Ford
The White House
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mrs. Ford:
I am happy to enclose the formal invitation to the
dedication of the Martin Steinberg Center Tuesday after-
noon, June 22, in New York City.
We would be deeply honored by your presence, which
will make this a day to remember for all of us in the
American Jewish Congress.
I shall await your telephone call on Monday and hope
you will say "yes."
I am grateful to our mutual friend for giving you
this letter and invitation in person.
Richard Respectfully, Cohen
Richard Cohen
The Officers of the
American Jewish Congress
Are Pleased to Invite You
To the Dedication of
The Martin Steinberg
Cultural Center
"where young Jewish artists can
come together to explore and develop
their creative talents."
Tuesday, June 22, 1976
from 4 to 6 p.m.
Stephen Wise Congress House
15 East 84th Street
New York City
f R. FORD LIBRARY
RSVP-TR 9-4500 Ext. 817
PROGRAM
Welcome
HOWARD M. SQUADRON
FORD
LIBRAST
Address
Hon. MARTIN E. SEGAL
Chairman, Commission for Cultural Affairs
of the City of New York
Musical Presentation
Martin
RABBI ALVIN WAINHAUS
Steinberg
Poetry Reading
DIANE LEVENBERG
Affixing of Mezuzah and Dedication
RABBI ARTHUR HERTZBERG
The Martin Steinberg Cultural Center will be a meeting place
for young Jewish men and women engaged in all aspects of
Response
lewish artistic expression-music and dance, painting and
MARTIN STEINBERG
sculpture, poetry, fiction and film-making.
The Center will also house the Charles and Bertie Schwartz
Jewish Reading Room and the Bernard L. Madoff Jewish
Remarks
Music Library.
BERTIE SCHWARTZ
BERNARD L. MADOFF
It will be a place where young Jewish artists will exhibit their
work, read their poems, play their music, share their creative
efforts and develop a sense of community with each other.
Celebration
Exhibition-"The Lower East Side Revisited" / Photographs b
AMERICAN JEWISH CONGRESS
NATIONAL OFFICERS
President
ARTHUR HERTZBERG
Chairman, Governing Council
Senior Vice Presidents
THEODORE BIKEL
LEON KRONISH
HENRY ROSOVSKY
Co-Chairmen, Governing Council
HOWARD M. SQUADRON
PAUL S. BERGER
LEONA CHANIN
Vice Presidents
ALVIN GRAY
JACQUELINE LEVINE
Joseph Asher, San Francisco, Cal.
Mark D. Coplin, Baltimore, Md.
Treasurer
Jack M. Elkin, New York
BENJAMIN M. HALPERN
Murray A. Gordon, New York
Co-Treasurer
S. Stanley Kreutzer, Great Neck, N.Y.
CLARENCE GOLDBERG
Sheldon Levison, New York
Secretary
Joel Levy, Washington, D.C.
JOSEPH GEROFSKY
Stanley H. Lowell, New York
Theodore R. Mann, Philadelphia, Pa.
Corresponding Secretary
HAROLD BECKER
Amram Nowak, New York
Esther Polen, Philadelphia, Pa.
Executive Director
Richard Ravitch, New York
NAOMI LEVINE
Walter Roth, Chicago, III.
Associate Executive Directors
Morton M. Silverman, Los Angeles, Cal.
RICHARD COHEN
Virginia Snitow, Scarsdale, N.Y.
PHIL BAUM
Jerry Wagner, Hartford, Conn.
General Counsel
Judith L. Wolf, Newton, Mass.
WILL MASLOW
Louis E. Yavner, New York
Honorary Chairman, Governing Council
Shad Polier
Honorary Co-Chairman, Governing Council
Morris Michelson
Honorary Presidents
Israel Goldstein, Jerusalem
Irving Miller, Woodmere, N.Y.
SHOULD
Arthur J. Lelyveld, Cleveland
Joachim Prinz, Orange, N.J.
Honorary Vice Presidents
Paul G. Annes, Chicago
Max A. Kopstein, Chicago
Max Doft, Lawrence, N.Y.
Justine Wise Polier, New York
Benjamin S. Kalnick, Kings Point, N.Y.
Harry Schacter, Bedford Hills, N.Y.
Theodore 1. Kolish, New York
Lillian Steinberg, Brooklyn
THE WHITE HOUSE
washington
Date 2/2
TO:
Shila Wudenfield
FROM: DAVID LISSY
FYI
For Appropriate Action
COMMENTS
Phila
7.2.76
JEWISH EXPONENT
Mrs. Ford Dedicates New Jewish Cultural Center
NEW YORK - The new Jewish
The center is designed to serve as room for film presentations and
cultural institution the Martin
a gathering place for young Jewish
exhibition space for work by Jewish
Steinberg Center of the American
artists, writers, musicians and film-
artists and sculptors.
Jewish Congress, 16 E. 85th St., has
makers. it includes a music library
Before formally unveiling a plaque
been dedicated by First Lady Betty
and listening booths, a circulating
bearing Steinberg's name, Mrs. Ford
Ford.
and reference library, a screening
watched as Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg,
president of the American Jewish
Congress. affixed a mezuzah to the
doorpost of the building. The new
center is joined by a garden to the
Stephen Wise Congress House,
national AJC headquarters, at 15 E.
84th St Rabbi Hertzberg also
presented Mrs Ford with a
mezuzah
LIQUARY BERALD R. FORD
martin S - ill - conts
whose ues + to you peop + juda
made pon this into, whr you year art
poets musec t felm mlus can meet,
exch ideas + be insp to devel + expc
then talents- - so thatall years, old +
young, may reafferm their gewesh identity
then an increasing appre of their
Jewest cultural hentage
recues silve majorza mez
words of dedicat
he - heavy contrib
wife - pres was of notl womens org
anti def league
am Jewesh Comm
Congress
emphases on
litig 0 legislat
studied the law alot/ discrim, etc
(16 E. 85th) (16 E, 85th)
Richard Cohen 15 E. 84th st 10028
0: 879 4504 879 4504
h: 988 8042 (212)
FORD R. OREATO LIBRACY
Mrs. Ford's Remarks
Martin Steinberg Center Dedication
June 22, 1976
N.Y.C.
The dedication of the Jewish people throughout the centuries
to the creative arts has enlivened the music, literature and
theatre of many lands. Many American artists have been
nurtured by the Jewish heritage. This influence has contributed
to the diversity of our culture.
Because the Martin Steinberg Center will help keep alive the
legacy of Jewish creativity, I'm very pleased to share in this
ancient ceremony of blessing--the mezuzah--which symbolizes your
faith. I know this center will help continue the lively history
of Jewish cultural contributions, which bring so much joy to so
many.
2.
FORD
LIBRARY
news
AMERICAN JEWISH CONGRESS
STEPHEN WISE CONGRESS HOUSE, 15 EAST 84th STREET
NEW YORK, N.Y. 10028
TRAFALGAR 9-4500
Remarks of Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg, President, American Jewish Congress
to Mrs. Betty Ford
at Dedication Ceremonies of the Martin Steinberg Center, June 22, '76
Mrs. Ford and distinguished guests:
We are honored by your presence among us, in this house and garden, on
what is to us a most auspicious and happy occasion -- the dedication of the
Martin Steinberg Center.
The Center is the gift of Martin Steinberg, who with his wife Lillian
have been generous contributors to the American Jewish Congress for many years.
But they have been more than the givers of funds to create institutions such as
this. Mrs. Martin Steinberg -- our beloved Lillian -- has given us her energies,
her devotion and her feeling for young people. From the gifts of Martin and
Lillian Steinberg we have taken encouragement and inspiration and we have built
living institutions where young people may gather to read, to paint, to sing --
to bring out the best in themselves as citizens and as Jews. It is a noble and
beautiful work that the Steinbergs have undertaken.
Martin Steinberg is ill today and Mrs. Steinberg is at his side. Our
joy in this occasion is marred only by their absence.
Mrs. Ford, it is proper that we begin this dedication ceremony today
with the affixing of a Mezuzah to this doorpost in according with the verse from
Deuteronomy, "And thou shalt write them upon the doorposts of thy house, and
upon thy gates." There is a Mezuzah in every Jewish home in every corner of the
globe; it is fitting that there be one here.
Inside this small case is a small parchment on which are inscribed
verses from the Bible.
The scroll inside the Mezuzah enjoins us to "teach.
diligently"
the
words
of the Lord unto our children. The words of the Mezuzah are especially appropriate
for this house because the Martin Steinberg Center will be primarily a place for
young people, young Jewish men and women engaged in all aspects of Jewish artistic
expression -- music and dance, painting and sculpture, fiction and film-making.
Here they will come together to explore and develop their creative talents.
Here they will exhibit their work, read their poems, play their music, share
their creative efforts and develop a sense of community with each other --
and we believe, with the sense of past Jewish tradition on which to make
R.
their own contributions to a vibrant, living Jewish culture.
MORE
SERALS
THEY
X862
LIBRARY
- 2 -
It is only 12 days before the 200th anniversary of the signing of the
American Declaration of Independence, and we in the American Jewish Congress
should like to regard this building as a kind of contribution to the Bicentennial.
For we believe deeply that as Americans we make our most valuable and original
contribution to our community and to our country as we give authentic expression
to all that is Jewish within in. We are better Americans because we are better
Jews. We are authentic Americans as we are authentic Jews.
In the 60 years since its founding the American Jewish Congress has done
battle on many occasions for civil rights and civil liberties for all Americans
in the great and ongoing struggle to perfect American democracy. We have done so
out of the injunctions of our prophet to pursue justice, to practice righteous-
ness, to love one's neighbor as one's self.
Today we dedicate this building as a center for that part of our program
which seeks to enhance the creative continuity of the Jewish people through
programs of Jewish education, through publications of our magazines: Congress
Monthly and Judaism, through the inauguration of a wide variety of programs
designed to "teach. diligently" unto our children - and ourselves. all that
which is precious in our heritage.
We see no separation, no division, no dichotomy between the tasks of
advancing human freedom and strengthening Jewish life. These tasks are one --
joined by our past history and by our present condition. And here they are
-
joined by a garden. Here we stand in the Martin S. Steinberg Center --
the place devoted to our Jewish culture. It is a link to our past, through
the great Jewish books that line its shelves. And it is an expression of faith
in the future, a vote of confidence in our younger generation. For we believe
that works of literature and art and music that will be read here and listened to
and played and even created here will lead to a greater awareness of the Jewish
heritage, a greater appreciation of the Jewish cultural tradition, a more authentic
Jewish expression.
Opposite us is Stephen Wise Congress House, our national headquarters,
named for our founder and longtime President, a great and courageous fighter for
the noblest ideals of the Jewish heritage and of America's great promise. The
two buildings are joined not only by a garden but by the commitment we bring
to improving the world unto the Almighty and to teaching His word and his law
"diligently" unto our children.
- 3 -
Mrs. Ford, I should now like to present to you this silver Mezuzah as a
gift for you and the president from the American Jewish Congress. I remember
that when the State of Israel was declared, Dr. Chaim Weizmann, the first President
of Israel, cameto the White House and gave to President Harry Truman a scroll
of the Torah, the first five books of the Bible. Dr. Weizmann told President
Truman in presenting the gift to him that the Torah, the most precious possession
of the Jewish people, belonged not only to Israel but to America as well, for it
contains the very precepts of justice and liberty and respect for human dignity
by which our country was founded. And President Truman brought it to the White
House and then to the Truman Library next to his home in Independence, Mo.
On the eve of the Bicentennial of our country's founding, it seems to us
in the American Jewish Congress that it would be proper and fitting that you,
as the First Lady of this land, should have something that belongs to the Jewish
people and because we Jews are part of this country -- that belongs to America
as well.
Let this Mezuzah, which is fixed to the lintel of every Jewish home in
America and wherever there are Jews, be part of your home too. It represents
all that is most authentically Jewish - and hence authentically American - -- in us,
and we give it to you in friendship, in admiration and in love.
XXX
Memorandum from
AMERICAN JEWISH CONGRESS
15 East 84th St., New York, N. Y. 10028
TR 9-4500
Schedule
Dedication Ceremonies for the Martin Steinberg Center
June 22, 1976
4:00 p.m.
-- Mrs. Ford enters Martin Steinberg Center from entrance at
16 East 85th Street and is shown through the center by
Howard M. Squadron, senior vice pres., American Jewish Congress.
4:05 p.m.
-- Mrs. Ford approaches doorway separating Martin Steinberg
Center from garden adjoining Stephen Wise Congress House.
4:17 p.m. --
Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg, president of the American Jewish
Congress, affixes a Mezuzah to the door post, recites
appropriate blessing and explains significance of the
Mezuzah to Mrs. Ford.
4:22 p.m. --
Rabbi Hertzberg presents Mrs. Ford with a silver Mezuzah
in a velvet lined box as a gift to mark the occasion.
4:24 p.m.
!
Mrs. Ford accepts the Mezuzah and unveils a bronze plaque
bearing the inscription, "The Martin Steinberg Center. "
Mrs. Ford will then speak for about 3 or 4 minutes.
4:28 p.m.
The First Lady will then return to the Martin Steinberg
Center and exit from the doorway at 16 East 85th Street.
In the event of rain, the same schedule will be followed, except that instead
of standing in the doorway facing the garden (with the press and T.V. covering
from the garden itself), Mrs. Ford will face the other direction, looking into
the Martin Steinberg Center, and the press will be invited to cover the
ceremony from inside the Martin Steinberg Center.
Following Mrs. Ford's departure, the dedication program will continue inside
Stephen Wise Congress House.
Welcome
-- Howard M. Squadron, senior vice-president
American Jewish Congress
Address
-- Hon. Martin E. Segal, chairman of New York City's
Commission of Cultural Affairs
Musical Presentation -- Rabbi Alvin Weinhaus
Poetry Reading
-- Diane Levenberg
Remarks
-- Bertie Schwartz (Donor of the Charles & Bertie Schwartz
Jewish Library and Reading Room)
-- Bernard L. Madoff (donor of the Bernard L. Madoff
Jewish Music Library)
THE
Closing
-- Howard M. Squadron
212
Memorandum from
AMERICAN JEWISH CONGRESS
15 East 84th St., New York, N. Y. 10028
TR 9-4500
June 22, 1976
Martin Steinberg and Lillian Steinberg
Martin Steinberg of Brooklyn has been a generous contributor to the
American Jewish Congress for 25 years, not only to its programs in the United
States but also to its Louise Waterman Wise Youth Hostel in Jerusalem, the largest
youth hostel in Israel. With his wife Lillian, Mr. Steinberg has given the im-
petus for many innovative programs undertaken by the American Jewish Congresss.
The Steinberg have provided funds for two major additions to the Hostel,
which serves as a social and cultural center for young visitors to Israel from
around the world and for young Israelis. The Lillian and Martin Steinberg
Garden Pavilion, dedicated in 1973, serves as an informal coffee house, meeting
place and center of many of the Hostel's social and cultural activities.
In March 1974, ground breaking for the Hostel's Lillian and Martin
Steinberg Cultural Center was begun. This new three-story building will, when
completed, include a threatre, library, movie and film projection room and
dining facilities, and will also serve as a community center for the youth of
the suburbs of Jerusalem.
Lillian Steinberg has given more than a quarter century of service to
the Congress, having held leadership positions in every facet of AJCongress
work, including organization and membership, fundraising, law and social
action, international affairs and Jewish cultural affairs. She served as
president of the National Women's Division of the American Jewish Congress from
from 1962 to 1965 and was recently elected an honorary vice-president of the
American Jewish Congress and co-chairman of its Commission on Jewish Affairs.
Last December the American Jewish Congress presented Lillian and
Martin Steinberg with its Stephen Wise Award for "distinguished service to
the Jewish people."
The Steinbergs are residents of Brooklyn. Mrs. Steinberg is a former
teacher in the city's elementary schools. Mr. Steinberg is a retired realtor
and investor.
XXX
212
Dedication - The Martin Steinberg Cultural Center
15 East 84 Street, New York City
Remarks by Martin E. Segal - Chairman, Commission for
Cultural Affairs of the City of New York
June 22, 1976
Mrs. Ford, Mr. Squadron, Mr. Steinberg, Honored Guests:
I want to thank the American Jewish Congress for asking me to join in
this ceremony at the new Martin Steinberg Cultural Center. Today's dedication
of a center for the arts reminds me of a modest story for which I ask your
indulgence.
Two women emerged from an art exhibit, exhilarated by what they had
seen. Suddenly one turned to the other and said: "You know, even though
I love abstract art, I really can't have abstract paintings in my home. After
all, I do have a 16 year old daughter."
Her friend was puzzled. "What does that have to do with it?" she
asked.
"Well," said the mother, "with those abstract paintings, you just never
know whether they are decent or not."
This little anecdote about a naive mother points whimsically toward
the theme that underlies this dedication.
Thomas Carlyle, in a critical essay published in 1827, said: "The
great law of culture is: Let each become all that he was created capable
of being."
I cannot help think how that view, in all its nobility, contrasts with
another view voiced 100 years later. Said the speaker: "When I hear anyone
talk of culture, I reach for my revolver." Hermann Goering, who made that
statement, truly meant what he said - and he spoke for all Nazis as well.
Culture, which embraces that which is excellent in the arts, sums up
the aspirations of man. Needless to say, a center devoted to culture sums
up the aspirations of civilization. Its very existence affirms our commitment
to decency and excellence.
The establishment of the Martin Steinberg Cultural Center is a major
step in the enrichment of New York's cultural life. It is true that New York
is home to many cultural organizations. But it can never be home to too many.
For in an era when the City's preeminence is challenged in a number of areas,
- 2 -
its stature as a cultural leader remains undiminished. Indeed, cultural
leadership assumes new importance in these trying times.
Some 50,000 people in New York City depend for their living on the
local "cultural industry." They work in the theater or concert worlds, for
our museums, libraries, botanical gardens or ZOOS -- they are involved in
ballet and opera, film or other activities.
This industry spends over $3 billion annually in New York City, making
a vital contribution to the health of our economy. For its part, the
City spends $25 million a year, in services and in funds, to help maintain
institutions and activities which are components of this industry. In
return for every dollar it so spends, the City gets back $4 directly in
taxes and much more indirectly.
The City's contributions are, of course, vitally important to the
vigor of the arts in New York. Equally important are the financial
contributions of philanthropists such as Martin Steinberg, who through
their own resources endow the arts with moral and financial support.
Sectarian or ethnic involvement in the arts is by no means rare. In
New York it is warmly welcomed and encouraged, for our City boasts as
one of its treasures an ethnically diverse population. Its Jews, who
derive from many different backgrounds, have made valuable contributions
to the cultural life of the City. The list of Jewish musicians, singers
and artists, sculptors and composers is long and impressive. They include
Leonard Bernstein, Beverly Sills, Richard Rogers, Barbra Streisand and
others too numerous to mention.
But in addition to these distinguished Jews, and many as yet unknown
but destined to achieve success and prominence, there are the other ethnic
groups the Blacks, Hispanics, Italians and Orientals who live in
this City with us, and who enrich it with their commitments of toil and
talent.
One of New York's major contributions to American culture has been
the musical theater. It is here in this City that the musical theater,
from the early days of "Floradora" to "A Chorus Line," has grown and
flourished.
- 3 -
Over the decades, in just this one segment of the arts so uniquely
linked to New York, artists of all types and backgrounds have made important
contributions to our lives and to culture. The musicals now on Broadway
illustrate the kind of ethnic diversity which typifies that art form and gives
it such vitality.
"Bubbling Brown Sugar" is a retrospective of the best in Black music,
and "The Wiz" is a musical version of the Oz story that scintillates with an
all-Black cast. "Chicago" co-stars Chita Rivera, a Hispanic, and "A Chorus
Line" has made a singing and dancing star of Cookie Vasquez. "Pacific
Overtures" stars several Orientals, including Mako, Yuki Shimoda, and Soon
Teckoh. The cast of "Grease" includes such Italian-Americans as Albert Infinnia,
Ray De Mettis, Joy Rinaldi and Frank Piegaro.
Even White, Protestant Anglo-Saxons are represented -- there is
"Shenandoah" at the Alvin Theater.
The musical theater is a microcosm of the arts. The diversity which
characterizes it is now common in other areas -- the films, television and
the novel, for example. The diversity which New York City has found to be
so enriching has enriched the country as well, and indeed the world.
At a time like the present when the strains and stresses of the City's
financial problems are putting pressure on the City's social fabric, the
forward movement of its cultural life is truly a binding and affirmative force.
The Martin Steinberg Cultural Center, I am certain, will make a valuable
contribution to cultural activities in New York. Its list of suggested programs
is varied and ambitious. In the area of film, the Center proposes to work
closely with young film makers as well as campus groups, youth organizations
and the like, to view films at the Center. It will periodically review and
evaluate films of special interest, and through these and related activities,
become an important resource center.
The Center's library will house an extensive collection representing
all types of Jewish music, from liturgical to folk. There will be booths
in which to listen to records and tapes, and workshops, seminars and other
activities will encourage young composers and musicians to identify with the CAD
Center, to use its facilities and to meet with special guest lecturers.
LIBRARY
- 4 -
Activities planned for young writers include a writers' workshop and
poetry readings. An attempt is being made to arrange special visits and
workshops by famous contemporary writers. Also under consideration is a
plan to create a workshop for younger writers in high school in cooperation
with the Board of Jewish Education.
What I have already described demonstrates the scope of this Center's
ambitions. But there is more. In the fields of art and photography, the
Center will provide space for the display and exhibition of works by talented
young artists and photographers. Moreover, the Center hopes to get publicity
and exposure for these artists to advance their careers.
The scribal arts have a long tradition in history, and the Center
proposes to meet the special requirements of those in this field. It
similarly proposes to help the growing number of young people involved in
crafts. In response to this need, the Youth Commission is arranging an outdoor
crafts fair in cooperation with the West Side Jewish Community Council.
Needless to say, there will be emphasis on the drama. In the past year
alone, a number of theater groups have sprung up and are performing in New
York City. The Center will offer those interested in drama a place to meet
and share common concerns. Help will be provided to find facilities for
rehearsals and performances -- an area in which the Center has already been
active.
The library will have books and material relating to all the arts, and a
special section will be reserved for the books and publications of the
Jewish student movement.
Finally, the Center will sponsor an Arts Coffee House a delightful
diversion for young people involved in all aspects of cultural life. Each
monthly session will be devoted to a different art form, allowing for a broad
interchange of views and skills among those in differing disciplines. The
coffee house will give young artists the opportunity to share creatively with each
other and to develop a feeling of community among themselves.
Ad hoc committees, I am told, have already begun meeting to explore these
suggestions so that the Martin Steinberg Cultural Center can become a magnetic
center of cultural expression and serve as a model for communities elsewhere.
LIBRARY
- 5 -
It would be my hope, I might add, that the Center would serve as
a model cooperator for other ethnic groups within the City who aspire to
preserve and codify that which they have already accomplished, while
encouraging the development of further creative output. Serving this way
as a prototype for other groups, the Martin Steinberg Cultural Center would
invest with true significance Carlyle's precept: "Let's each become all
that he was created capable of being."
Before closing, I want to express on behalf of Mayor Beame and all
of the City's citizens, our appreciation for the generosity of Martin
Steinberg, which made this Cultural Center possible. In St. Paul's
Cathedral in London there is an inscription to Sir Christopher Wren: "Si
monumentum requiris circumspice." Translated from the Latin, it means: "If
you would see the man's monument, look around." How gratifying to look
around at a monument, not merely of bricks and mortar, but of the spirit
as well -- built to house a Center for that which is noblest in man -- the
art and aspirations of a great civilization.
news
AMERICAN JEWISH CONGRESS
STEPHEN WISE CONGRESS HOUSE, 15 EAST 84th STREET NEW YORK, N.Y. 10028 TRAFALGAR 9-4500
Richard Cohen, Director
Dept. of Public Relations
For Immediate Release
Mrs. Betty Ford will dedicate the city's newest Jewish cultural institu-
tion the Martin Steinberg Center of the American Jewish Congress at 16 East 85th
Street . next Tuesday afternoon (June 22) at 4:00 p.m.
The center is designed to serve as a gathering place for young Jewish ar-
tists, writers, musicians and filmmakers. It includes a music library and listening
booths, a circulating and reference library, a screening room for film presentations,
and exhibition space for work by Jewish artists and sculptors.
Funds for the new center were provided by a gift from Martin Steinberg,
a Brooklyn realtor. Mr. Steinberg, a longtime supporter of the Congress, is the hus-
band of Lillian Steinberg, an active leader of the organization who served as presi-
dent of its national women's division from 1962 to 1965.
Before formally unveiling a plaque bearing Mr. Steinberg's name, Mrs. Ford
will watch as Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg, president of the Congress, recites the appro-
priate blessing and affixes a Mezuzah to the doorpost of the building leading to a
garden that separates the Steinberg Center from Stephen Wise Congress House, national
headquarters of the Congress.
A Mezuzah is a small parchment on which are inscribed verses from the Bi-
ble, rolled tightly and placed in a small case that is affixed to the doorposts of a
Jewish home. The Jewish tradition of the Mezuzah is taken from Chapter 6, Verse 9 of
Deuteronomy, which states: "And thou shalt write them upon the doorposts of thy house,
and upon thy gates."
Following the dedication ceremonies in the garden of the center, Martin E.
Segal, chairman of the New York City Commission for Cultural Affairs, will address a
reception of leaders of the American Jewish Congress.
Mrs. Bertie Schwartz, donor of the Charles and Bertie Schwartz Jewish Read-
ing Room and Library, and Bernard L. Madoff, who contributed the Bernard L. Madoff
Jewish Music Library, will also speak.
A musical presentation by Rabbi Alvin Wainhaus and a poetry reading by
Diane Levenberg will conclude the ceremonies. Visitors to the Martin Steinberg
Center will also see an exhibition of photographs by William S. Aron, "The Lower
East Side Revisited."
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GALA NATIONAL BICENTENNIAL DINNER
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FORD
THE NEW YORK HILTON JUNE 22, 1976
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EXEC. VICE PRESIDENT
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TO THE MASORETIC TEXT
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SAMPLE CREDENTIAL RELEASE
(Initial sentence explaining event)
misism
All media wishing to cover Mrs. Ford's visit should submit credentials
requests to Michael askhinbrand (address)
,
(phone)
.
TR9-9300
Deadline for credentials request is
The following information is required:
Name
Affiliation
Social security number or passport number if not US citizen
Date of birth
Place of birth
Business phone number
12
Home phone number
5536316
The above information may be delivered in person or called in to the
office listed above. This office will be open from
to
through
Credentials must be picked up in person by each individual member of
the media at one of two locations
from
to
on
The 2- 2-3:45pm mscc at the stephen Wise Congers House
5- 6 pm, = 4th floor # Hilton # # Hotel, balcony entrance to The Ballroom
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GEAL LIBRARY
The both Anniversary
American Congress
Jewish
Souvenir Program
June 7,1976
&etropolitan Opera House
AMERICAN JEWISH CONGRESS
60TH ANNIVERSARY COMMITTEE
HONORARY CHAIRMEN
MR. and MRS. ALBERT A. LIST
GENERAL CHAIRMEN
MARTIN S. BEGUN MR. and MRS. DONALD L. JONAS
ASSOCIATE CHAIRMEN
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Adler, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold L. Ginsburg
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin R. Radin
Mr. and Mrs. David Altman
Dr. B. Bernard Greidinger
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Rosenberg
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Baumritter
Mr. and Mrs. Joel W. Harnett
Daniel R. Schein
Edgar M. Bronfman
Mr. and Mrs. Peter G. Janover
Martin E. Segal
Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan D. Farkas
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Kruger
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Shapiro
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Florence
William E. Leistner
Livia Weintraub
Dr. and Mrs. Martin Peretz
MARTIN S. BEGUN
MRS. DONALD L. JONAS
DONALD L. JONAS
A Note of Thanks
We wish to express our deep appreciation for
Our share of satisfaction in supporting the
your generous participation in the 60th
Congress tonight lies in the knowledge that the
anniversary celebration of the American Jewish
help we give will be translated into programs to
Congress.
advance human rights, strengthen Jewish life, and
Since its founding, the Congress has worked
defend the right of Israel's people to live in
with dedication and distinction to advance the
security, in dignity and in peace.
frontiers of freedom for all Americans and to
protect and promote the creative survival of the
Martin Begun
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jonas
Jewish people.
General Chairmen
GERALD FORD LIBRARY
"Not relief but redress; not palliation
but prevention; not charity but justice-
this is the only program worthy of a
great and proud people.
- Rabbi Stephen S. Wise
March 27, 1916
"I know that the American Jewish Congress will continue to participate in the urgent, great
and main needs of the Jewish nation-the establishment of a covenant of our people and a
light to the nations in our common homeland."
-David Ben Gurion
"The notable founders and leaders of the American Jewish Congress have played a historic
role and made important contributions to this nation-and worked effectively to meet the
problems of Jewish communities in many troubled areas."
-Harry S. Truman
Founding fathers Nathan Straus, Louis Brandeis, Stephen Wise.
"Over the years, the American Jewish Congress has been in the forefront of our nation's
great struggle to advance the cause of equal justice and opportunity for all Americans."
-Earl Warren
Founded by Stephen Wise, Louis Brandeis,
Nathan Straus and other distinguished American
Jews in 1916, the American Jewish Congress was
the first democratically organized national Jewish
"The eloquent voice of the American Jewish Congress has been heard not just on behalf of
movement, established on the principle that all
Jews, but on behalf of the highest ideals of freedom and democracy we all share as
members of the Jewish community should have a
Americans. Its courageous and effective campaigns to advance civil rights, protect civil
voice in the determination of policies affecting
liberties, and defend religious freedom have helped make this country a better home for
Jewish life and that Jewish unity was essential if
all."
-Lyndon B. Johnson
Jewish rights were to be protected.
Proudly pro-Zionist, the Congress in its first
action sent a delegation to the Versailles peace
conference that successfully urged recognition by
the League of Nations of the Balfour Declaration
calling for establishment of a Jewish national
"The American Jewish Congress has been deeply committed not only to the preservation of
home in Palestine.
fundamental American liberties but to the great work of advancing all our citizens who
suffer exclusions because of racial and religious discrimination and prejudice. I wish it well
The Congress delegation also demanded
for the great unfinished work of building not only a better world, but a world of peace
guarantees of minority rights for Jews by
among men and nations."
-Nelson A. Rockefeller
Europe's new post-war governments-protec-
tions ultimately adopted but barely observed.
When Hitler came to power in Germany,
which stockholder resolutions about company
AJCongress was the first national organization
policy toward the Arab boycott are introduced at
to warn of the Nazi danger and launched the
corporation annual meetings, is twofold:
first worldwide counteraction against Nazi
1) To gather information through reports to
persecution with an intensive boycott of
stockholders to the extent of the involvement of
German goods and services.
American business in and with the boycott.
In 1936 AJCongress organized the World
2) To inhibit corporate collaboration with the
Jewish Congress as an instrument for united
boycott, since fear of exposure has in the past
action to meet common danger; together the
proved to be a major deterrent to company
two agencies first brought the agonizing
surrender to Arab pressure.
appeals of Nazism's victims to the world.
Thus far, more than 25 major U.S. corporations
And in the great post-war political struggles
- including Ford and General Motors, RCA,
in Washington and Lake Success to win
Scott Paper, Xerox and other giants of American
United States and United Nations support for a
industry - have given AJCongress written
Jewish state, AJCongress was a national leader
assurances that they will refuse to cooperate with
-as it had been three decades earlier
President Ford greets AJ Congress President Arthur Hertzberg
the Arab boycott. And hundreds of members have
in Versailles.
at White House meeting on Middle East issues.
give AJCongress their proxies and their permission
to introduce such resolutions in their names.
Israel Since Statehood
Hard Questions
Arab Anti-Semitism
Thus far, AJCongress-sponsored resolutions
In the years since the rebirth of the Jewish state,
and Answers
have been voted on at the annual meetings of
AJCongress has given its highest priority to
on the Middle East
As the United States marks its Bicentennial,
nearly 100 U.S. corporations. At one such
Israel's struggle to build a land whose people
can live in peace, in dignity and in security.
4
American Jews face a new and grave chal-
meeting, the stockholder owned five shares; the
Fact and
lenge to the quality of their citizenship:
resolution received 1.2 million votes. It was
When Israel was imperiled by Arab armies-
about
the importation into American life of Arab
defeated (as expected), bût won more than 5 per
in 1948, 1956, 1967 and 1973-AJCongress
the
bigotry against Jews and an Arab boycott of all
cent of all votes cast - a phenomenal figure,
members helped mobilize essential financial,
What Is Real
who support or trade with the Jewish state
especially in view of the fact that AJCongress
military and diplomatic support to assure
of Israel.
made no effort to solicit proxies from company
Israel's survival.
What Is Politics
To meet this threat, AJCongress has
shareholders. And the president of the company
mobilized staff, lay leadership and chap-
(International Harvester), while opposing our
ters and divisions across the country in a great
resolution, pledged that his company would
Propaganda War
national effort to protect the rights of American
brook no interference with its fair trade policies
AMERICAN LAW
Jews from Arab attack and to defend the
by any Arab government.
Today the Arab states are engag in a new
THE ARAB BOYCOTT
A National Towards Energy
American principle of free trade as it affects
kind of battle against Israel-a ophisticated
commerce with Israel.
campaign, financed by oil money, to win world
support for the Arab cause. In the struggle
for public opinion, AJCongress has undertaken
Policy
The campaign includes proposals for new,
tough Federal and state legislation; public
a major effort to distinguish truth from
propaganda and answer the Arab version
An. Action Program
exposure on companies, banks, shipping lines
and others that may bow to Arab pressure;
of the "big lie."
and legal action against public officials and
One recent AJCongress publication-
private entrepreneurs who break American law
"The Palestinians: What is Real and What is
AJCongress continues to work closely
-all designed to protect the rights of
Politics"-provides essential information on the
with the makers of public opinion and public
American Jews and defend the freedom of all
roots of Palestinian nationalism, the principles
policy to demonstrate how the cause of
Americans to trade with Israel.
of the Palestine Liberation Organization
Middle East peace and America's vital strategic
and the facts needed for an understanding
interests are served by an economically and
An innovative and exciting approach to fighting
of the threat to Israel's survival posed by
militarily strong Israel with secure and
the Arab boycott is AJCongress' shareholders'
the terrorist PLO.
recognized borders.
project - the most massive campaign of its kind
ever launched. The purpose of this effort, under
Travel
The Jews of Syria
Hostel
gewish underground songs [ROM soviet RUSSIA
The tiny remnant of the once-flourishing
AJCongress has helped Israel grow in the
Twenty years ago AJCongress' Women's
SILENT
Jewish community of Syria has been described
welcome periods of quiet, too. In 1958,
Division built the Louise Waterman Wise Youth
NO
MORE
by a recent visitor as "the most oppressed
AJCongress sent 23 men and women to Israel
Hostel in Jerusalem as a memorial to its
on
tapes
smuggled
out
Jewish community in the world." Subject to
in a fledgling Overseas Travel Program for
founding president. Today the Hostel is Israel's
E
BIKEL
severe discrimination, poverty and police
members. Today more than 100,000 persons
largest-and expanding still further with the
harassment, the 4,500 Jews of Syria are denied
have visited Israel under AJCongress' auspices.
recent addition of a garden pavilion and
the right to leave or to live in dignity.
Ours is universally acknowledged as the
construction of the Steinberg Cultural Center,
AJCongress has made their plight a matter
biggest-and the best-of all group travel
to be completed in 1976.
of urgent priority. It was AJCongress that led
programs to Israel.
the successful fight against the National
The Hostel, which draws thousands of young
Geographic for publishing a false report on how
Today AJCongress sends more Americans to
people from all over the world during the
good Syrian Jewish life is. The magazaine later
Israel than all other Jewish organizations
summer vacation period, also operates
published the first correction in its history.
combined. In addition, AJCongress offers person-
year-round. There are special citizenship
More recently, AJCongress criticized the
to-person group tours to Jewish communities in
training programs for new immigrant children;
CBS-TV network for an "excessive, inaccurate
40 lands around the world. Its itineraries, service,
pilot projects bringing Moslem, Christian and
and distorted" broadcast by Mike Wallace
price and word-of-mouth praise by happy tourists
Druze youth in Israel into contact with young
on the 60 Minutes program. In response to the
have earned AJCongress' Overseas Travel
Jews; and-since the Yom Kippur War-
filing of a complaint by AJCongress with the
Program the reputation as the best and biggest of
a special program for the widows and children
National News Council, CBS acknowledged the
all group travel programs to Israel and points of
of Israeli soldiers slain in Israel's fourth
FOR
AJCongress criticism on the air, amplified
Jewish interest abroad.
war in 25 years.
TO
its original commentary and agreed to do
another program on the Jews of Syria-which
included an interview with a Syrian Jew in New
York free to tell the true story of his community's
Soviet Jewry
suffering.
More than ten years ago, when the beleaguered
Jews of the Soviet Union were still the "Jews
of silence," AJCongress was in the forefront
of a small group of organizations working to
bring their plight to world attention.
Today the courageous Jews of the U.S.S.R.
AMERICAN
themselves have written a new chapter in the
JEWISH
history of the Jewish people. And AJCongress,
both in its own name and through the
National Conference on Soviet Jewry (which
it helped to found and which its officers still
lead), continues to engage in a wide variety
American Longress
of activities to demand free emigration for
At the Louise Waterman Wise Hostel in Jerusalem.
Soviet Jews wishing to leave and full religious
and cultural rights for those choosing to remain.
AJCongress leaders join the march in New York's "Solidarity
The Steinberg Pavilion - latest addition to the Hostel.
Day" parade for Soviet Jewry.
A New Weapon Against Bigotry
The Jewish Poor
After World War II, AJCongress pioneered
The battle for equal rights has involved
in forging a dynamic new weapon in the fight
AJCongress in recent years in extensive efforts
against anti-Semitism and other forms of
to assist the Jewish poor-two-thirds of them
bigotry: the law.
elderly persons, many left behind in changing,
In major battles to protect Jews and other
I.U.E.
WE
MARCH
JOBS
hostile neighborhoods.
minorities against discrimination in housing,
FOR
DEMAND
UAW SAYS:
JOBS
NOW!
VOTING
END
RIGHTS
SEGREGATED
We have demanded amendments in Federal
education, employment and other areas,
FOR ALL
NOW!
RULES
NOW!
AJCongress brought test cases, appeared as
law so that the Jewish poor may be eligible for
PUBLIC
SCHOOLS
amicus curiae, helped establish human rights
antipoverty assistance whether or not they live
commissions and drafted fair employment
in designated "poverty areas." We have pub-
statutes in the struggle for civil rights.
lished directories in New York and major cities
throughout the country of services and facilities
Today AJCongress supports "affirmative
available to the Jewish aged. We have launched
action" programs to assure equal opportunity
legal-aid programs to help the aged poor with
in education and employment but vigorously
everything from personal problems to finding
opposes racial or ethnic quotas in college
paths through the bureaucratic maze.
admission and jobs as abuses of the equal
opportunity principle.
And in New York City we were the first
organization to call for a metropolitan coordi-
Thus, in a major friend-of-the-court brief
submitted to the Supreme Court in the historic
nating council to make possible a community-
wide effort in behalf of the Jewish poor.
DeFunis case (challenging a racial double
Today such a council is the major instrument
standard in determining law school admissions),
Rabbi Joachim Prinz (right), then president of AJCongress,
for receiving and dispensing public funds to
AJCongress argued that a university may and
with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and other civil rights
indeed should consider economic hardship,
leaders in the front line of the 1963 March on Washington.
alleviate Jewish poverty.
educational deprivation and cultural disad-
vantage in choosing among applicants-but
that it may not choose on the basis of race.
to come before the United States Supreme
Nursing Homes
In the only opinion on the issues in the case,
Court in the past 20 years affecting the religion
which the Supreme Court ultimately held moot,
THE
In mid-1974 AJCongress published "The Last
clauses of the First Amendment. These cases
Associate Justice William O. Douglas closely
JEWISH POOR
Resort-A Citizen's Guide to Nursing Home
have led to a series of major legal victories
AND THE
Reform," calling for tough new regulation
associated himself with the arguments
in which the nation's highest court has accepted
advanced by AJCongress.
our position that any infringement of Constitu-
WAR POVERTY AGAINST
of nursing homes and strong improvement
tional guarantees is dangerous for church and
\
in enforcement procedures to prevent abuse
-
and mistreatment of aged and infirm Americans
Religious Freedom
synagogue and harmful to American democracy.
the
-many of them Jews.
AJCongress is the national leader in the struggle
AJCongress has argued in our nation's courts
to protect religious freedom by maintaining
against prayer in public schools, against Federal
POOR JEWS:
Resort
Last
The AJCongress report touched off a prize-
winning series of articles in the New York Times
the constitutional wall of separation between
and state aid to parochial schools, against
revealing fraud, corruption and dehumanizing
church and state.
religious symbols on public property and
conditions in the proprietary nursing home
against compulsory chapel attendance at the
industry. State and federal government investi-
We believe the American experience has
nation's military academies.
gations led to indictments of leading nursing
demonstrated that organized religion-includ-
Citing the same First Améndment, we have
home operators. At the same time nursing home
ing the Jewish faith-has flourished in America
precisely because of the First Amendment
defended the constitutionality of the Federal
reform legislation was enacted by the
prohibitions against government entanglement
law permitting shechita (kosher slaughter),
legislatures of New York, Illinois, California
protected Sabbath observers against discrimina-
and other states-most of its based on
in religious affairs and barring church bodies
tion in employment, challenged Sunday "blue
AJCongress' recommendations.
from interfering in government.
laws" and won changes in registration and
Justly proud of its national leadership role
AJCongress attorneys have initiated or
election dates so that observant Jews could
in nursing home reform, AJCongress has
participated in virtually every major test case
participate fully in the democratic process.
launched a new nationwide program to link
nursing home patients with the outside
community through volunteer visitors.
HONORARY SPONSORS
President and Mrs. Gerald R. Ford
Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller
Photo by Mal Warshaw
Prime Minister Yizhak Rabin
Jewish Identity and Jewish Education
Steinberg House
Because we believe that an understanding and
On June 22, 1976, the American Jewish Congress
appreciation of the ideas and ideals, culture and
will dedicate the Martin Steinberg Cultural Center
traditions that make up the Jewish heritage are
opening onto the garden adjoining Stephen Wise
Sen. J. Glenn Beall, Jr.
Sen. Gary Hart
Hon. Daniel P. Moynihan
essential for meaningful Jewish survival,
Congress House, our national headquarters in
Mayor Abraham D. Beame
Sen. Philip A. Hart
Sen. John P. Pastore
AJCongess has developed into a vigorous adult
New York.
Gov. Robert F. Bennett
Sen. Floyd K. Haskell
Sen. Claiborne Pell
Jewish education agency.
Hon. Uri Ben-Ari
Gov. Ed Herschler
Mr. & Mrs. Shad Polier
The Center will be a meeting place for young
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen
Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg
Rabbi Joachim Prinz
To implement this commitment AJCongress has
Jewish men and women engaged in all aspects of
Gov. Ricardo J. Bordallo
Amb. Chaim Herzog
Sen. William Proxmire
produced a wealth of materials and undertaken a
Jewish artistic expression-music and dance,
Gov. Otis R. Bowen
Sen. Walter D. Huddleston
A. Philip Randolph
variety of activities aimed at promoting the
painting and sculpture, poetry, fiction and film-
Sen. Edward W. Brooke
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey
Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff
creative survival of the Jewish community.
making. It will also house the Charles and Bertie
Sen. James L. Buckley
Sen. Daniel K. Inouye
Bayard Rustin
Our building contains the first and only Jewish
Schwartz Jewish Reading Room and the
Mrs. Warren E. Burger
Sen. Jacob K. Javits
Gov. Thomas P. Salmon
Bernard L. Madoff Jewish Music Library.
Sen. Robert C. Byrd
Vernon E. Jordan Jr.
Sen. Richard S. Schwelker
public reading room in New York. We have
Gov. Brendan T. Byrne
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
Sen. Hugh Scott
sponsored traveling exhibits on the Holocaust,
Thanks to the generosity of Martin and Lillian
Gov. Hugh L. Carey
Amb. Eamonn Kennedy
Gov. Milton J. Shapp
produced Hebrew and Yiddish language records,
Steinberg, young Jewish artists will now have a
Sen. Clifford P. Case
Gov. Cyril E. King
Sanford Solender
conducted Jewish book fairs and produced study
Center to exhibit their work, read their poems,
Gov. Raul H. Castro
Gov. Richard F. Knelp
Howard M. Squadron
guides for chapter discussions on great Jewish
play their music, share their creative efforts and
Mr. & Mrs. Marcy Chanin
Mayor Teddy Kollek
Sen. Robert T. Stafford
books.
develop a sense of community with each other.
Sen. Lawton Chiles
Lt.Gov. Mary Anne Krupsak
Mr. & Mrs. Martin Steinberg
Sen. Frank Church
Gov. Richard D. Lamm
Sen. Ted Stevens
We also publish two of the community's most
"Tours of Jewish New York"
Dr. Kenneth B. Clark
Hon. Louis L. Lefkowitz
Sen. Adiai E. Stevenson
important Jewish journals-Congress Monthly, a
Because we believe that this Bicentennial year is
Sen. Alan Cranston
Rabbi Arthur Lelyveld
Sen. Richard Stone
lively review of Jewish affairs (which goes free to
a time for greater understanding of our roots and
Hon. Mario Cuomo
Hon. Arthur Levitt
Gov. Robert W. Straub
all AJCongress members), and Judaism, a
heritage, so that all Americans can more fully
Amb. Simcha Dinitz
Hon. John V. Lindsay
Sen. Stuart Symington
distinguished quarterly of Jewish scholarship.
comprehend the miracle that made this country,
Sen. Robert J. Dole
Gov. Arthur A. Link
Sen. Robert Taft, Jr.
Because we oppose the use of public funds for
AJCongress has provided program guidance for
Sen. Pete V. Domenici
Amb. Dr. Alfonso Moreno
Gov. Meldrim Thompson, Jr.
parochial schools AJCongress recognizes a
"Tours of Jewish New York," an exciting series of
Hon. James R. Dumpson
Martinez
Sen. John V. Tunney
special obligation to encourage greater funding
visits to the people and places that make up the
Hon. Walter E. Fauntroy
Sen. Charles McC. Mathias
Hon. Robert F. Wagner
largest Jewish community in the world.
Hon. Leonard Garment
Sen. Thomas J. Mclntyre
Gov. Dan Walker
for Jewish education from within the Jewish
Sen. John Glenn
Rabbi Irving Miller
Mrs. Earl Warren
community. Working with leaders of every
Highlighting the past history and current life-
Hon. Arthur J. Goldberg
Gov. William G. Milliken
Hon. Robert C. Weaver
branch of Jewish education, we have urged our
styles of New York's Jewish community, "Tours of
Dr. Nahum Goldmann
Hon. Clarence M. Mitchell, Jr.
Sen. Lowell P. Weicker, Jr.
own membership, American Jews at large and the
Jewish New York" are a celebration and
Rabbi Israel Goldstein
Sen. Walter F. Mondale
Roy Wilkins
funding arms of the Jewish community to raise
commemoration of the unique contribution of
Gov. Ella Grasso
Sen. Joseph M. Montoya
Sen. Harrison A. Williams
significantly the level of support for all types of
American Jews to the growth and development of
Sen. Robert P. Griffin
Sen. Frank E. Moss
Mrs. Whitney M. Young, Jr.
Jewish education.
New York.
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Justin Colin
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J. Morton Davis
Morton J. Getman
Felix Hirsch
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Nancy Meisels
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Mr. & Mrs. Arthur G. Degen
Robert S. Gettinger
Albert Hirschfeld
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William P. Balaban
Amos S. Deinard
Stanley Gewirtz
Mr. & Mrs. Albert M. Hodes
Mr. & Mrs. Harold Lane, Jr.
Howard D. Mendes
Dr. E. Clinton Bamberger, Jr.
Mrs. Harry DeJur
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Dr. & Mrs. Maxwell M. Hoffman
Mr. & Mrs. Ira N. Langsan
Mr. & Mrs. Harry Meresman
Herbert Barness
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Stanley S. Lasdon
Robert Merrill
Mr. & Mrs. George Baron
Mrs. Miriam Messeloff
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Marcus Ginsburg
William R. Howard
William S. Lasdon
Stanley I. Batkin
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Morris Ginsburg
Dr. Cesia Hupert
Albert C. Lasher
Hon. Howard M. Metzenbaum
Mrs. Agnes Bauer
Fred J. Diamant
Manuel Gitlin
Mark Hupert
Bernard Laterman
Mr. & Mrs. Edward H. Meyer
Mrs. Morton Baum
Jacob H. Diamond
Robert L. Glaser
Dr. & Mrs. George Hyman
Hon. Michael J. Lazar
Mrs. John H. Meyer
Harry W. Baumgarten
Abe Gold
Jonathan E. Lazrus
Melvin A. Michaels
Bern Dibner
Harold Becker
Arthur J. Dixon
Mr. & Mrs. David Isen
Mr. & Mrs. Martin A. Lebson
Mr. & Mrs. Martin H. Miller
Anne Gold
Jerome M. Becker
Mr. & Mrs. Max Doft
Albert Lechter
Sidney Miller
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur A. Goldberg
Lavy M. Becker
Mrs. Rita Doniger
Ben Goldberg
Anna E. Jabloner
Nathan Leder
Mr. & Mrs. Max Milner
Mrs. Judith Begun
Prof. Norman Dorsen
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence Goldberg
Mr. & Mrs. Joel N. Jacobs
Mr. & Mrs.George Oscar Lee
Mr. & Mrs. Harry Minkoff
Mr. & Mrs. Norman C. Belfer
Rabbi Israel S. Dresner
Mr. & Mrs. George S. Goldberg
Max Jacobs
Harry Lefkowitz
Hon. Robert M. Morgenthau
Robert A. Belfer
Rabbi Herbert E. Drooz
Samuel A. Goldblatt
Nathan P. Jacobs
Nat Lefkowitz
Earl Morse
Mrs. Clarence D. Bell
Hon. Burton N. Drucker
Thomas L. Jacobs
Hon. Samuel J. LeFrak
Mr. & Mrs. Lester S. Morse, Jr.
Joy Golden
Dr. Evan H. Bellin
Abraham M. Druckman
Mr. & Mrs. Fred P. Goldhirsch
Joel R. Jacobson
Mr. & Mrs. Sidney E. Leiwant
Mr. & Mrs. Charles B. Moss, Jr.
Dr. Lowell E. Bellin
Mel Dubin
Aaron Goldman
Prof. Irma B. Jaffe
Mervyn D. Lentz
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Mr. & Mrs. Carl Bennett
Mrs. Z. du Pont
Carl A. Goldman
Mrs. Lee K. Jaffe
Warner LeRoy
Mr. & Mrs. Martin Mushkin
Dr. & Mrs. Ivan L. Bennett, Jr.
Ira J. Goldman
Mr. & Mrs. Max Jaffe
Dr. Robert L. Leslie
Mr. & Mrs. Laurence E. Myers
Dr. Peter H. Berczeller
Dr. J. Frederick Eagle
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Ira M. Berger
Samuel Edelman
Nathan Goldrich
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Dr. Kenneth F. Levene
Hon. M. Marvin Berger
Mr. & Mrs. Sol Edelman
Barbara Goldsmith
Saul Jettee
Sam Levene
Hans Namuth
Paul S. Berger
Irving Eiferman
C. Gerald Goldsmith
Mrs. Bessie Jonas
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald J. Levie
Mr. & Mrs. Steve Narin
Benjamin Berkey
Joseph S. Eisenberg
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Dr. & Mrs. Milton E. Jucovy
Herman Levin
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Nass
Dr. & Mrs. Albert B. Eisenstein
Mr. & Mrs. Nathan Goldstein
Saul Kagan
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Dr. Gerald Goldstone
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Monroe Goldwater
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LeRoy Neiman
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Mr. & Mrs. Philip I. Berman
Andre Elkon
Monica Gollub
Mr. & Mrs. Morton Kamerman
Marvin Levine
Mr. & Mrs. Irving Nelkin
Dr. Viola W. Bernard
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Elkon
Mr. & Mrs. S. Lee Kanner
Mr. & Mrs. Nathan Levine
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Mr. & Mrs. Morris Goodman
Leonard Bernstein
Norman Goodman
Hon. William Kapelman
Michael Levinson
Edward G. Newman
Prof. & Mrs. Edwin M. Epstein
Mr. & Mrs. Sheldon Levison
Paul Newman
Nahum A. Bernstein
Mrs. Mildred Epstein
Hon. Roy M. Goodman
Dr. Lawrence I. Kaplan
Sidney Goodman
Hon. & Mrs. Louis I. Kaplan
Alfred W. Levy
Louis Nizer
Rabbi Philip S. Bernstein
Paul H. Epstein
Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Bernstein
Mr. & Mrs. James P. Erdman
Mr. & Mrs. Joel H. Levy
Amram Nowak
Dr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Goodman
Dr. & Mrs. Louis L. Kaplan
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Bikel
Abbot Eron
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Dr. & Mrs. M. Richard Levy
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Helene Ershow
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Frank E. Karelsen
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Mr. & Mrs. Lazarus Ogus
Mr. & Mrs. Abraham O. Birnbaum
Michael Gordon
Philip A. Levy
Jules Olitski
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David Black
William Etkin
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Mr. & Mrs. Roy H. Gordon
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Saul Lewis
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Meyer Liberman, Jr,
Lawrence Oringel
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Frederick Fagelson
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Abe Jay Lieber
Anne Orling
Charles E. Bloom
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Henry Kaufman
Robert Liebowitz
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Judith Feiffer
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Mark S. Kaufmann
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Leon H. Keyserling
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Clement Greenberg
Alan King
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Prof. & Mrs. A. Harry Passow
Jacob Feldman
Robert D. Paul
Victor Borge
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Feldman
Allan B. Greene
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Mr. & Mrs. Leo Lipkin
Jan Peerce
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Lee Feltman
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Joe Kipness
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FIFTH AVENUE & 57TH STREET
NEW YORK
COMPLIMENTS OF A SWEET FRIEND.
Best Wishes
Greetings from
Melissa Hayden Coleman
Mr. & Mrs.
BarTon's®
Vidal Sassoon
Bonbonniere
Albert Rubenstein
continental chocolates
NEW YORK LUGANO SWITZERLAND
U
Famous For Continental Chocolates
Greetings
To a Rewarding
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Brudner
60 Years
Jack Clark, CBS Apparel Corp.
Volume
Elco Coat Co., Inc.
Merchandise, Inc.
Jonbil, Inc.
A Friend
350 Fifth Avenue
Geiger Roofing Company, Inc.
New York, N.Y. 10001
Michael Jaye Sportswear Corp.
"Jeans for the Masses"
Lumer's Discount Liquor Center
Queens Region, American Jewish Congress
Brooklyn Division, American Jewish Congress
Congratulations
In Honor of
on your
Mr. & Mrs. Donald L. Jonas
60th Anniversary
International Group Plans, Inc.
S.E. Nichols, Inc.
2100 M Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20063
W. WOOLWORTH CO.
Compliments
GP
of
Greetings From
A Friend
Michigan State Council
Insurance Administrators
Laurriet Printing Co., Inc.
Northern Ohio Council
for
Southwest Region Chapters
American Jewish Congress
of
American Jewish Congress
AMERICAN JEWISH CONGRESS
NATIONAL OFFICERS
President
ARTHUR HERTZBERG
Chairman, Governing Council
Senior Vice Presidents
THEODORE BIKEL
LEON KRONISH
HENRY ROSOVSKY
Co-Chairmen, Governing Council
HOWARD M. SQUADRON
PAUL S. BERGER
LEONA CHANIN
Vice Presidents
ALVIN GRAY
Joseph Asher, San Francisco, Cal.
JACQUELINE LEVINE
Mark D. Coplin, Baltimore, Md.
Treasurer
Jack M. Elkin, New York
BENJAMIN M. HALPERN
Murray A. Gordon, New York
Co-Treasurer
S. Stanley Kreutzer, Great Neck, N.Y.
CLARENCE GOLDBERG
Sheldon Levison, New York
Secretary
Joel Levy, Washington, D.C.
JOSEPH GEROFSKY
Stanley H. Lowell, New York
Theodore R. Mann, Philadelphia, Pa.
Corresponding Secretary
Amram Nowak, New York
HAROLD BECKER
Esther Polen, Philadelphia, Pa.
Executive Director
Richard Ravitch, New York
NAOMI LEVINE
Walter Roth, Chicago, III.
Associate Executive Directors
Morton M. Silverman, Los Angeles, Cal.
RICHARD COHEN
Virginia Snitow, Scarsdale, N.Y.
PHIL BAUM
Jerry Wagner, Hartford, Conn.
General Counsel
Judith L. Wolf, Newton, Mass.
WILL MASLOW
Louis E. Yavner, New York
Honorary Chairman, Governing Council
Shad Polier
Honorary Co-Chairman, Governing Council
Morris Michelson
Honorary Presidents
Israel Goldstein, Jerusalem
Irving Miller, Woodmere, N.Y.
Arthur J. Lelyveld, Cleveland
Joachim Prinz, Orange, N.J.
Honorary Vice Presidents
Paul G. Annes, Chicago
Max A. Kopstein, Chicago
Max Doft, Lawrence, N.Y.
Justine Wise Polier, New York
Benjamin S. Kalnick, Kings Point, N.Y.
Harry Schacter, Bedford Hills, N.Y.
Theodore J. Kolish, New York
Lillian Steinberg, Brooklyn