Center Sponsor
of 2 Courses in
Adult Education
A new course, "Major Tradi-
tions of the Arts of the West,"
will be offered by the Wayne
State - University of Michigan
Adult Education Division at the
Jewish Center, 18100 Meyers,
this spring.
It will pursue man's creative
expression—painting, architec-
ture, music and literature—in a
lecture - discussion series pre-
sented by the University faculty
members.
Lectures will center on the
classical, romantic, and realist
attitudes toward experience as
embodied in the various arts.
Co-sponsored by the Jewish
Center, the 10-week course
meets on Mondays from 7:30
to 9:30 p.m., beginning Feb. 12.
Registration opens' at the Cen-
ter Tuesday.
Another course, "The Expres-
sion of Jewish Culture in the
Arts," will meet in the Detroit
cultural area with the first
session scheduled for Mondays,
1 to 2:30 p.rn, starting Feb. 12.
This 12-week class will explore,
through discussion and analysis,
the Jewish types in the arts,
literature, and music. Among
the artists whose works will be
studied are: Libermann, Offen-
bach, Schonberg, Chagall, Ep-
stein, Bergson, Buber, Kaufman,
Chaplin and Weber.
The instructor will be Euge
I. Schuster, M.A., instructor
humanities, Wayne State
versity.
Registrations may be mad
the Rackham Educational
Farnsworth, begii
save 400
a der L
Oakland
B
is Almond Kisses
Miniature Nut Choco-
tes are specially pric
ill January
th.
larly
no 1.49
Got
of
250
on thes
favorit
Ju
treat urseif? Buy
Save 40c. (No
be
sneezed at.)
January
th
Then back to
1.
Almond Kisses, 1 lb.;
Miniature Nut Chocolate.
12 oz., 70 pieces.
B A RT ,,,,.utarrtalat
L QN S
Exclusively at
24111 Coolidge
Hwy.
At 10 Mile Rd.
Across from
Dexter Davison Mkt.
18309 Wyoming nr. Curtis
Barton's Confections and
Baked Delicacies Are Also
Available a t Crowley's
Street Floor.
Open Sundays and Eves.
in Heads
mocrats
- Sander M.
in was recently
elected chain
of the Oakland
County Den
atic Committee.
e was .,phos
y acclamation at
a meeting
e Oakland County
precinct
,sates and appointees
s`e C
y Committee Meeting
Po
Central High School,
Po
in lives in Berkley, with
wife, Vicki, and their two
children. He is the son of Bess
L. Levin and the late Saul R.
Levin, and a nephew of Judge
Theodore Levin of the Federal
Court.
Levin has been in law practice
since 1957 after receiving his law
degree from Harvard Law School.
He was graduated from the Uni-
versity of Chicago in 1952 and
took his Master's degree in inter-
national relations at Columbia
University in 1954.
He is a member of the Michi-
gan regional advisory board of
the Anti-Defamation League.
Harold Silver Speaks
at Workmen's Circle
Harold Silver, head of the
Jewish Family and Children's
Service, will discuss "Case
Studies in Jewish Juvenile De-
linquency" 9 p.m. Saturday at
the Workmen's Circle Center,
18340 W. Seven Mile, before a
joint meeting of Branch 460
and Branch 1060. The public is
invited.
Plan ahead for the future, but
don't overlook the present.
LAST APPEARANCES — DON'T MISS THIS!
THE GUITARIST
and FOLK SINGER
JOSH WHITE
and
MURRAY ROMAN
Comedian star of "Hungary i" — San Francisco
"The Village Gate" — New York
For 3 Weeks — In Honor of Jewish Music Mo
with her boundless repertoire of Hebrew and Yiddish
Groups and Organizations call for
reservations and discount information
19940 LIVERNOIS
UN 2-4455
Jewish Family and Children's
Selected as One of 40 U.S.
for Specialized Ford Fou
The Jewish Family and Chil-
dren's Service has been se-
lected to participate in a spe-
cialized Ford Foundation-spon-
sored project designed to im-
prove and expand services for
helping older people and their
families. Max M. Shaye, presi-
dent of the agency, announced
the selection.
"It is an honor," Shaye
stated, "that our agency was
one of 40 from among the to-
tal of over 300 accredited mem-
ber agencies of the Family
Service Association of America
(FSAA) to be chosen for this
project."
The 40 agencies selected
will conduct demonstrations
in 31 local communities for
a three-year period to im-
prove counseling, homemaker
service, foster care, friendly
visiting and other services
to the aging.
The projec
iced by a
$300,000 (1
from the Ford
Found.
, employs a small
high mobile staff of special-
ist
xperienced i work with
t
aging an
he
emit of vol socia
ies. A nati
mittee to
by Cong ssi = Ge
Wallhau of New J . Di-
rector o he pro heodor
R. Isenstadt.
Cou
b for elderly peo-
their families on prob-
ems of emotional and social
adjustment is the core of the
project's work both on a na-
tional basis, and in relation to
the work of the JFCS. The proj-
ect is also giving attention, how-
ever, to other programs for
the aging. These are: home-
maker service, to keep older
people in their own homes when
it's financially and physically
advantageous as well as psy-
chologically better than custo-
dial care; placement in selected
and supervised foster homes;
friendly visiting by trained vol-
unteers; information and refer-
ral services; research into the
causes and solutions of prob-
lems of the aging; and coop-
eration with other organizations
and public officials in the pro-
motion of high-priority services
such as adequate nursing home
care and guardianship services.
"In our own agency," Shaye
said, "we have been able to
•
Federation to Mark
36th Anniversary
at Feb. 6 Meeting
The Jewish Welfare Federa-
tion will celebrate its 36th an-
niversary at its annual meeting,
Feb. 6, at the Jewish Center.
The Fresh Air Society will
mark its 60th aniversary at the
meeting.
A dinner will be held at 6:30
p.m. and the meeting will start
at 8:15 p.m. Dinner reservations
can be made by calling WO
5-3939.
The program for the meeting
will include three addresses,
"The Drama of Camping," by
Maxwell E. Katzen, president of
the Fresh Air Society; "The Year
in ederation an-
repo
M. Fisher,
resi•, and "We
e Off the
Front- Page—Why?" b Isidore
Sobeloff, executive vic presi-
dent of the deration.
The re I.
tzel M orial
v,
sente
ave ge number
pupils
pe elementary sch
teacher
in Israel is 23
among
the lowest •
e world for
high literacy. In
g ypt it is 38, in Iraq 33, in
Jordan 37 and in Syria 33. Even
in England it is 28 pupils per
elementary school teacher.
serve some 300 older pe
during the past year. We
in our own agency that in
difficulties of elderly peo
are eased or resolved whe
our caseworkers can help
with their feelings and those
of their families toward each
other."
dren'
mainly
tion
Campaign.
"An Artist's - Artist"
SIGNED BY FRIENDS
At the end of the three-year
period, FSAA's project staff
will draw conclusions and make
recommendations based upon
the specific work of the 40
agencies. These results, it is
expected, will have important
implications for the entire Fam-
ily, Service field—as well as for
other voluntary agencies work-
ing with the aged.
The Jewish Family and Chil-
JAN VAN ECH-H
O
FRANK LLOYD RIGHT
STOP VAN GOGH
SAM BEETHOVEN
"LEFTY" RENOIR
Int*:
-
•
OTHERS
NAL WEEK!
OFF
POPULAR BOOKS
RECORDS
MAZUZAHS
14 K. GOLD CHARMS
ISRAELI MERCHANDISE
SPITZER'S
HEBREW BOOK &
GIFT CENTER
"The House of Bargains"
18295 WYOMING
UN 3-0543 — UN 3-1557
NEW HIGHER
EARNINGS ON
ALL SAVINGS
e No Certificates
• No Time Savings
• No Minimum
• No Makimum
GET
MORE 7-11
4 TIMES*
A YEAR .71.
*Payable
Quarterly
Et
tffn, it,e:Vtre,
Now at Guardian Savings the hi
earnings on insured savings in Detroit.
Make
that your savings are earn-
ing
4% (current rate) payable
q
erly on
egular
nt. Y
gs
$10,000 by
a9en c
.f t
nment.
10-
ncrea-
into'.
Bi.
%
s. 0 n a Guardian Savings
nt now—if you can't come in—
save by mail. We're as near a
mail box and we pay
stage
both ways.
IAN SAMS
Downtown: CADILLAC SQUARE corner RANDOLPH
Northwest: 13646 WEST 7 MILE corner TRACEY
Both offices open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
Northwest office open Thursday Night till 9
Downtown Friday till 6