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COfrriQM HTO/fTA
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B’nai B’rith Youth
Organization
ON
PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
M-MY 1-YIU 2-11YEM
tIK£ WCT. $1,M MM. U,M MOL
ON SAVINGS CERTIFICATES
UlikllA
THREE LOCATIONS
Branch Office
27 Smith Street
Fairborn, Ga. 30213
Branch Office
ISO W. Lanier Ave.
Fayetteville,
Ga. 30214
Home Office
606 S. Central Ave.
Hapeville, Ga. 30354
SAVING'S
A BREEZE
WHEN YOU
This announcement is neither an offer to sell nor a solid*
tation of an offer to buy these securities. The offer is made
only by the Prospectus, and only to Georgia Residents.
New lew 300*000 StUNTCS July 1,1970
Dynamic Industries* Inc.
Class A Common Stock
($.50 Par Value)
$3.00 PER SHARE
Dyynamic Industries, Inc., will engage in the business of
manufacturing, selling and distributing modular homes;
developing . modular home subdivisions, buying, selling,
leasing and otherwise dealing in real estate of all kinds
and types, either as principal or agent; and developing
industrial, commercial and multi-unit apartment dwellings.
Dynamic industries inc. also owns Radon & Associates, e
corporation engaged in the business of advertsiing,
marketing and Public Relations. Copies of the Prospectus
may be obtained from the issuer of these securities qt the
address below.
DYNAMIC INDUSTRIES, INC
300 ChepofaM St.
Smyrna, Ga. 30000
jld like to see • Prospectus. I Certify thsrt I am e
% of lh. Sto.ot
a • ' ■* F- «,<•*- -v V -a
Schedule of Events
75th Annual National Convention of the
Jewish War Veterans of the United States of America
Regency Hyatt House - Atlanta, Georgia August 16-23,1970
SUNDAY, AUG. 16
3:00 P.M.—Meeting of National Conv. Com.
8:00 P.M.—Early Bird Ice Breaker Party
MONDAY, AUG. 17
10 A.M. - 4 P.M.—Registration
10 A.M.—National Conv. Com. Meetings
8 P.M.—National Policy Com.
TUESDAY, AUG. 18
10-4 P.M.—Registration
10 A.M.—National Conv. Com.
11 A.M.-Joint JWV-JWVA, VAVS Workshop,
Guest Speaker: Peter A. Miller, Veterans
Administration
2 P.M.—National Exec. Com. Meeting.
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 19
10 - 4-Registration
10 A.M.—National Corrv. Com.
9-11 A.M.—Commanders Workshop
12 Noon-Mayor's Luncheon Honoring r
Mayor Sam Massed ’
2:30 P.M.-Opening Session of 75th National
Conv.
‘ Speaker: Donald Johnson, Administrator
of Veterans Affairs, Veterans
* "‘■A 1 -RlJ-.t11 ■ f ^ • • . W " i-
Administration
Tuesday, Aug. 18, Stone Mountain trip - ...—
m Wednesday, Aug. T9, Six flags viatt ^ s ' ^ . In to the bysinw s^igfts^^jtarrtln.
.' Wednesday nighf, Aug. W «mves< Baseball men*adwcfcle is:, ‘hwojviw* vwoawun *
lame.
THURSDAY, AUG. 20
10 - 4—Registration
10 A.M.—Second Session of National Conv.
2 P.M.—Second session (cont.)
Guest Speaker: Sen. Alan Cranston,
Calif.-D.
7 P.M.—Cocktail Party
8 P.M.—Banquet in honor of National
Commander
FRIDAY, AUG. 21 '
10 - 4—Registration
10 A.M.—Third Session of National Conv.
Reports
Constitution and By-laws
Resolutions
2 P.M.—Regional Elections and Meetings
8 P.M.—Religious Services and Oneg Shabbat
11 P.M.—Reception for Century Club Members
SATURDAY, AUG. 22 j
10 - 12—’Workshop-Committee
2-4 P.M.—National Shripp Meeting., ,
2-4 PJMi—Workshop-Committee
2 - 4 P.M.—Second Region Elections 1
8 P.M.—Final session, nominations and elections
s’uiu;. i of National Judge Advocptp and
jo Commahder, inauguration,.'meeting of '
£ 1/ ' new national executive committee.
Md*y,
U'
of
ansiomsm
If the mistakes and bad
guesses made by American pol
icy planners over Russian stra
tegy in the Middle East are add
ed to some of the other illus-
sions about Moscow widely held
here since the fall of Khrush
chev, a rather sorry, even alarm
ing picture emerges.
How could one great power
be so wrong about fundamental
directions of the other? The fait
accompli of Russian pilots, anti
aircraft gunners, missile tech
nicians, and military advisers in
Egypt is the most immediate and
visible testimony of this failure
of judgment.
Of course, now, that reality is
staring the White House in the
face, and every daily intelli
gence summary brings some new
report of Russian vigilance and
harassment of the United States
Sixth Fleet in the Mediteran-
ean, President Nixon’s senior
advisers warn of the dangers of
a “Soviet lake,” the threat to
Europe’s oil supplies, the pres
sures of moderate Arab govern
ments, and major shifts in bal
ance of power.
All this is quite independent
of the threat to the very in
tegrity of Israel’s existence. But
it has come into clear, sharp
focus because of the Arab-Israeli
conflict. The question worth
asking is: Why did it take so
long for American analysts to
accept views about Russian stra
tegy which Israeli analysts had
accurately outlined soon after
the 1967 war?
The White House has admitt
ed it was taken by surprise when
the Russians sent pilots and mis
siles into Egypt. But the White
House has also been surprised
by the unwillingness of Moscow
to persuade Hanoi to talk peace
in Vietnam.
For those whose memories go
back that far, one of the first
major diplomatic initiatives of
the Nixon administration was to
enlist the support of the Rus
sians in moving towards a Viet
nam settlement But after a few
months it became clear that no
surih help was forthcoming.
And what has happened to the
era of negotiation for the seven
ties which President Nixon laid
he hoped would replace the era
of confrontation of the cold
war? Apart from the limited
progress being made in Vienna
towards some agreement on the
Strategic Arms Limitations
(SALT), relations between the
two super-powers have deterior
ated. The main problem has
been that while Russian policy
has changed very little from Its
fundamental objectives the eval
uation of those objectives by
the wishful thinkers of the West
has changed from hard-headed
realism to rationalization in
search of detente. .
The classic example of this
wishful thinking has been the
view that so long as the Soviet
Union was embroiled in its dis
pute with China it would be un
willing to take risky military
initiatives elsewhere. But in
1968 came Chechoslovakia, and
now the Middle East It is now
clear that as much because of
her dispute with China as any
thing else the Soviet Union is
actively seeking an expansionist
aggressive stance. Using conven
tional military strength, espec
ially a massively bnilt-np navy,
thte Soviet Union has become for
the first time in Russian history
a global military power, and the
push into the Middle East is
only part of the wider strategy.
Late last year a number of
senate committees held hearings
on Soviet military strength. Be
cause the chairmen of those
committees have reputations as
"hawks” and extreme anti-Com-
munists very little of their work
has been widely publicized. But
one leading authority’s warning
is timely. Professor Leonard
Sehapiro of the London School
of Economics pointed out how
little had changed in Moscow:
“Soviet policy is unremittingly
dynamic. It is not directed tow-
p^ace
to romatn- dogmatic. ^ the #
Russian# 4 Are tying their diplor ffrgf
matic moves closely to thett •mil- ? 'MifiM sttfigS 1 lJ 4 tM
itary intervention. Roth are aim- that objecttven M. l»oMWT
ed at far more important!long- prepared tp.fto any means, now
term ends than the hnmedigte diplomatic, now military, fttW/
issue of a tempority cease-fire. Israel our W the 1 “ •'<“
Those ends are the widest ex-
ards achieving equilibrium, or
balance of forces, or peace, or
collective security, or certain
ultimate aim is Victory,’ which
means Communist rule on a
specific concrete objectives. Its
world scale.”
That is a somewhat unfashion
able kind of assessment because
it sounds so much like the
rhetoric of the cold war. But it
has the advantage of being dead
ly accurate, which is something
that cannot be said for those
who atttempt to reassure us by
describing Russian moves in the
Middle East as “defensive” and
“cautious.”
All this must be kept in mind
as we watch the Moscow game-
plan in action on the diplomatic
front. The Soviet-Egyptian move
to accept the American peace
plan ahead of Israel has made
Reuther Tribute
GROSSINGERS (JTA)— More
than 1,200 representatives from
trade unions and labor fraternal
organizations attending the 70th
jubilee convention of the Work
men’s Circle paid tribute to Wal
ter Reuther, president of the
United Automobile Workers
Union and Mrs. Walter Reuther
who were killed recently in a
plane crash in Michigan. Mr.
Reuther, one of America’s most
prominent labor leaders, was a
member of the Workmen’s Circle
and a long-standing friend of the
State of Israel. In one of his
last public actions, the president
of the almost two million-mem
ber union helped draft a resolu
tion that was adopted by the
22nd convention of the TJAW in
Atlantic City last month which
urged the Big Four to “use their
separate and combined influence
to bring all partiess to the Mid
dle East conflict to the confer
ence table to settle the political
issues.” Mr. Reuher viewed Is
rael as an “oasis in a troubled
and turbulent area of the
world.”
is nOw accepting registration
vJcni
in the AZA and BBG Program, j
.it'
for coming year. w ■
* IMfeul
l)i.j
.'ill
ALL eighth thru twelfth grade youth .who are
in belonging to an AZA or BBG group can
now at the BBYO Office. , .«.!
’ ' • - :: ik ’■ ■
Offices located In Atlanta Jewish Community
Center, 1745 Peachtree Ed* N R* - v
Atlanta, Ga.. . , < ; • j
For further information please eputaet
Goodfriend, Secretary to BYYO Director.