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PAGE 12 THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE June 20, 1986
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fH^ Grand Opening
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Dinner for Nunn provides
big boost for Israel Bonds
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The Atlanta-Israel Bonds
community wide dinner held on
June 2 at the Regency Hyatt Hotel
was a huge success, according to
Asher Benator.
Benator, general chairman of
the Atlanta-Israel Bonds campaign,
said the dinner honoring U.S. Sen.
Sam Nunn generated sales of over
$600,000 in regular Bonds, $250,000
to the Mount Vernon S&l. and
$500,000 to the C&S Bank in addi
tion to the million dollar note they
have already purchased this year.
The total to date is over $2,350,000.
Benator said that this is a sub
stantial increase over last years
results.
Sen. Frank Lautenberg of New
Jersey, the keynote speaker, told
the large crowd of the importance
of Israel to the United States. He
said that every dollar spent by the
United States to help Israel is
greatly repaid in valuable infor
mation the Israelis supply to the
United States. Nunn pointed out
the importance of Israel’s friendship
to the United States as a strategic
ally. He said it is imperative for the
United States to keep Israel as a
strong democratic nation in the
Mideast.
Both senators told the crowd of
the importance to Israel of the
Israel Bonds program and urged
them to support Israel through the
purchase of Israel Bonds.
Dr. Marvin C. Goldstein, Geor
gia state chairman for Israel Bonds,
presented Nunn with Israel’s “Peace
Medal" for his support of Israel’s
right to exist in peace.
Co-chairing the dinner were
Gilbert Bachman, Bennett Brown
and S. Stephen Selig Ill. Janet and
Marvin Goldstein (left) presents Sam Nunn with Israel’s Peace Medal
award.
Chuck Wolf chaired the Host in charge of reservations and ar-
Committeeand Helen Cavalier was rangements.
Jewish Eagle Scout
gets trip to Antarctica
by Joseph Polakoff
I STs Washington correspondent
WASHINGTON —Louis Sugar-
man of Southfield, Mich., a fresh
man at the University of Michigan,
will represent the Boy Scouts of
America during two months of
research in Antarctica next autumn
in cooperation with the National
Science Foundation.
Sugarman, 19, was selected by
NSF from among 147 candidates.
Boy Scout officials estimated that
some 50,000 young men between
17 and l9'/2 years old were eligible
to enter the competition. All had to
be Eagle Scouts and currently active
in scouting. An excellent academic
U
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record, strong background in
science and experience in cold-
weather camping weighed heavily
in the selection process, the NSE
said.
Selection of Sugarman marks
the fifth time in 58 years that the
Boy Scouts have teamed with the
NSForother agencies to enable an
outstanding young adult to partic
ipate in Antarctic research, the
NSF said. The NSF, a federal
agency, funds and manages all U.S.
activities in Antarctica.
Sugarman will leave for Mc-
Murdo Station, the main scientific
outpost in Antarctica, in early
October and return in late De
cember. While there he will visit
the Amundsen-Scott South Pole
Station and other locations.
A member of the scout troop at
St. Ives Catholic Church in South-
field, a Detroit suburb with a large
Jewish population, Sugarman
earned his Eagle rank, scouting’s
highest, in 1982. He is aiso a
member of the Order of the Arrow,
a service-oriented scouting fellow
ship. At Southfield-Lathrup High
School he was president ot its
National Honor Society chapter
and won all-league and all-regional
honors as a member of its cross
country team. In 1985 he won a
$500 scholarship award for com
munity service from the League of
Jewish Women’s Organizations.
In a telephone interview,
Sugarman explained that the St.
Ives troop is the only scout group
in Southfield and has five to 10
Jewish members at times. While at
Southfield-Lathrup, he attended
United Hebrew High School in
Detroit and graduated in 1983. In
1984-85, he was president of the
United Synagogue Youth group at
Beth Achim Synagogue in Smith-
field.
In the summer of 1984, Sugar-
man, who speaks Hebrew, spent
five-and-a-half weeks in Israel in a
program sponsored by Detroit s
JCC. Asked whether he would
take Jewish religious articles with
him to Antarctica, he said “1 haven t
gotten that far into details but 1 am
bringing a yarmulke with me.