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September 28, 1962 - Image 62

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1962-09-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

17—HOUSES FOR SALE

17—HOUSES FOR SALE

.

V:;K*:2i14eK,XICK2g€K.›WK:,,i3e?:;> :.*:?, :›1*.X.X4.1i:LK.liQiWKAW.I.g*XX.X:ge

M

*

.., $

'^ x

JDC Helps 23,000 Bust of Late Congressman Bloom
Children Attend Presented to Negev Institute
Summer Camps by U.S. Foreign Affairs Comm.

m
GENEVA, (JTA)—More than
....
,.' 23,000 needy Jewish children
•,.4 attended summer camps this
y
year organized in 15 countries
4 .,
N,
frg
'.', in Europe, North Africa and
V the Middle East with 'help from
N the Joint Distribution Commit-
tee, Charles Jordan, JDC direc-
,..?.

•, ':. tor general, reported in a re-
X
view of Jewish summer vacation
:),
X programs.
He said that in France alone
sA
M there
had been 9,000 Jewish
m
v , children in summer camps,
m
x
;$ . compared with 5,900 during the

previous summer. The increase
M
was due almost entirely to new-
comers from Algeria. Parents
(...giCKAW7:41W . ."44tICAO.N:2.X.W.ACK.:40.X.ACK"?.:0XXWZAO.X.AW.X2W7n
still in the former French col-
ony also sent their children to
50—BUSINESS CARDS
40---EMPLOYMENT
vacation camps in France be-
FURNITURE repairs and refinishing cause no vacation program
Free estimates. Call UN 4-3547.
could be organized in Algeria
this past summer, he said. A
majority of such children did
DRESSMAKING
not return to Algeria. They
All Kinds of Alterations
went to France to which their
Call for Appointments
Experience preferred, but not
parents emigrated during the
necessary. We will train you to
become a professional Real Es-
vacation period, he stated.
UN 3-8283
tate Salesman. Must have the
desire to earn a minimum of
He reported that the second
17175
ROSELAWN
$10,000. Our school will start
largest summer vacation pro-
Sept. 17th. Call Bud Chamber-
NEW METHOD — Carpets cleaned; gram was arranged in Poland
lain, LI. 7-2000.
walls washed, by machine. Work
guaranteed. Free estimates. KE 5- for 3,000 Jewish children and
8470—KE 8-1778.
he called these camps "of par-
ticular importance because in
LARKINS MOVING
Poland—as in Yugoslavia—the
24621 COOLIDGE, JUST S. 10 MI.
AND DELIVERY SERVICE
children have hardly any con-
tact with Jewish life for prac-
Also Office Furniture.
Any time.
tically the entire year."
If you need good domestic help
Reasonable.
An entirely new practice has
call us.
3319 GLADSTONE
been added to the JDC-sup-
4-4587
TY
REEVES
ported summer vacation pro-
exterior painting, odd gram in Austria where, in. ad-
EMPLOYMENT SERVICE INTERIOR,
jobs, neat, reasonable. C. Piotrow-
dition to some 350 children,
ski. TY- 8-5485.
LI 4-5138
146 aged persons were given a
summer holiday this year, Jor-
57—FOR SALE: HOUSEHOLD
N...00• ■■■•••■■■ 0"IftroNroo ■ rre• ■■ •""
dan said. In Sweden, summer
GOODS AND FURNISHINGS
camps were attended by needy .
CARPET. Fine quality. All Wool, Jewish children from all Scan-
Beige,
94
square
yards,
and
pad-
Career
ding. Sunday, DI. 1-160, week- dinavian countries, he added.
days before 9:30 A.M. or after Other European countries
8- P.M.
Opportunity
where such programs were in
operation included Belgium,
Salesmen and 2 District Managers
HAY RIDES BARN DANCES West Germany, Greece, Italy,
62
needed for new sales office
HAY RIDES, heated barns, dance Portugal and Spain. Programs
being opened. Representing the
floor and piano included. Reason- also were set up in Australia,
largest company of its kind in
able rates. 349-1542.
Iran, Morocco and Tunisia.
the world. Beginning earnings

X
v

REAL ESTATE
SALES OPPORTUNITY

ektaamwg,



in excess of $750 per month. Our
experienced managers earn in
excess of $20,000 per year.

If you are between 25 and 45
years of age, are willing to work
hard, and have sales experience,
you may qualify.

PHONE 562-5310-

for confidential interview with
Mr. Zarit. Monday and Tuesday
only. 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.

40 - A — EMPLOYMENT WANTED

STENO - BOOKKEEPER desires posi-
tion. Call TY 7-2305.

GIRL DESIRES day work, or week.
References. Experienced. Call TY
7-7710.

45 — BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

SUPERMARKET for sale. Good loca-
tion. 6300 Beechwood. TY. 4-2723.

OWNER RETIRING. Good General
Store for sale. Reasonable price.
8611 West Eight Mile Road. De-
troit. UN. 2-8216.

50—BUSINESS CARDS

TILE

DO YOU NEED TILE WORK?

New and Repair Special

U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO.

UN 1-5075

REPAIRS, brick, cement, plaster,
pointing, chimneys, porches. Steps.
UN. 2-1017.

FOR BETTER wall washing, call
James Russell. One day service.
TO 6-4005. 526 Belmont.

ALL CARPENTER work. Kitchen cabi-
nets, front doors, railings, cedar
closets, porches, floors, partitions,
steps. Work myself. 342-1880.

LOUIE'S Re-upholstering, Repairing
Satisfaction guaranteed. Reason
able. Free estimates. UN 4-3339
VE 5-7453.

I. SCHWARTZ. All kinds of carpenter
work, no job too big or small. BR
3-4826. LI 5-4035.

UNDERGROUND sprinkler systems
installed and serviced. Quality
work at reasonable prices. Free
estimates. 527-5044 or 372-9439.

-

17th Century Synagogue, Destroyed
During War, Reopens in Leghorn

ROME (JTA) — With im-
pressive, all-day ceremonies at
which the participants included
major Jewish and non-Jewish
religious and community lead-
ers, representatives of the gov-
ernment and municipality, and
official representatives of Israel,
a new, $400,000 synagogue was
consecrated Sept. 24 at Leghorn,
seat of a great Jewish commun-
ity whose origin go. es back to
the late sixteenth century.
The original house of wor-
ship, a beautiful Renaissance
structure built on the same site,
in the 17th century, was dam-
aged beyond repair during
World War II. The new edifice
includes, in its interior, stones
from the old synagogue. Funds
for the synagogue were contrib-
uted in large part by the Gov-
ernment under the War Damage
Act, and sizable aid was re-
ceived from the Conference on
Jewish Material Claims Against
Germany, the Joint Distribution
Committee, the City of Leghorn,
and philanthropiAs throughout
the world.
Among the speakers at the
ceremonies was the aged Rabbi
Alfredo Toaff, father of the
present Grand Rabbi of Rome;
Prof. Zlio Toaff, the Grand
Rabbi; official representatives
of the Catholic Archbishopric;
leaders of the local and Italian
Jewish communities; the Mayor
of Leghorn; diplomats repre-
senting the Israeli mission here;
and Professor Giulio Racah,
rector of the Hebrew Univer-
sity at Jerusalem, who read a
personal message to the Leg-
horn Jewish community from
Israel's President Izhak Ben-Zvi.
The Italian government was of-

ficially represented by Senator
Giovanni Giraudo.
Most of the speakers recalled
the greatness of the Leghorn
Jewish community which, under
Ferdinand I, Grand Duke of
Tuscany, was given, by a de-
cree in 1593, a special charter
making Leghorn—known as Li-
vorno—a free port with the
right to admit Jews and Mar-
ranos then being persecuted in
Portugal. Later, the Jews were
granted full civic status, includ-
ing the right to conduct their
own courts and levy taxes. The
city became one of the fore-
most centers in the world for
Sephardic learning. Under the
Mussolini regime, the rights of
the Jews were gradually re-
duced, and the numbers of
Jews fell to no more than about
1,000. Many of those were anni-
hilated during the war by the
Nazis.

Bnai Brith Adds
to International Board

JERUSALEM, (JTA) — A
gift from the United States
House Committee on Foreign
Affairs, a bust of the late Con-
gressman Sol Bloom, was pre-
sented to the Negev Institute
in Israel dedicating the insti-
tute's new Sol Bloom Audi-
torium.
United States Ambassador
Walworth Barbour presented
the gift in behalf of the Foreign
Affairs Committee to Abba
Eban, Israel's Minister of Edu-
cation and Culture. The insti-
tute, which is devoted to the
studies of desert economy, agri-
culture, development of new
settlements and desalination,
is a project of the America-
Israel Cultural Foundation.
The auditorium is a gift to the
institute from the Sol Bloom
Family Foundation, which
made $50,000 available for this
purpose and $25,000 for an
institute scholarship program.

The bust will occupy a perma-
nent place in the auditorium.
The institute is located near
the Sde Boker Kibbutz.
In making the gift, Rep.
Thomas E. Morgan (D.-Pa.),
chairman of the House Commit-
tee on Foreign Affairs, noted
Rep. Bloom's distinguished
service as its chairman for many
years. He said: "We are privi-
leged to honor our late col-
league and friend, Congressman
Bloom, in this manner. He
served his country well and
contributed much to the cause
of world peace."
(In a statement from the
New York office of the
America-Israel Cultural Foun-
dation, Samuel Rubin, presi-
dent, said: "The new audi-
torium is a valuable addition
to the institute which will help
advance the important work
being done in the Negev which
will benefit not only Israel but
other nations as well.")

Israel Chief Rabbi Gets New Year
Messages from Behind Iron Curtain

(Direct JTA Teletype Wire
to The Jewish News)

JERUSALEM — Chief Rabbi
Yitzhak Nissim's office disclosed
Tuesday that the Chief Rabbi
had received for the first time
Rosh Hashanah greetings from
Moscow's Chief Rabbi Yehuda
Leib Levin.
New Year greetings also
were received from the Czecho-
slovakian Chief Rabbi Eliyahu
Katz, the Federation of Jewish
Communities of Yugoslavia and

the Jewish Community of Novo-
sibirsk.
In previous years, the Mos-
cow Chief Rabbi's greetings
were addressed to Rabbi Reu-
ven Katz, head of the Petach
Tikvah Rabbinate, both per-
sonally to an old friend and to
the Israel Jewish community
but not to Israel's Chief Rabbi.

Avida-Zlotnik, Israeli
Scholar, Dies at Age 74

JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Cabi-

net Ministers, government offi-
Memorial Established in
cials, and religious and educa-
N. Y. by Texan for Jews
Who Were Killed by Nazis tional leaders, were among the

NEW YORK (JTA) — A
bronze and marble plaque was
dedicated by the East Midwood
Jewish Center in Brooklyn as
a memorial to the 6,000,000
Jews murdered by the Nazis
during the Second World War.
The $10,000 memorial was
donated to the synagogue by
Paul Lewis, a Jewish industrial-
ist of Dallas, who has financed
the construction of memorials
to the victims of the Nazi holo-'
caust, in a number of cities
throughout the country. Mr.
Lewis, who was a rabbinical
student before he emigrated
from Germany to the United
States, has built an entire syna-
gogue in Texas, as a memorial
to Nazi victims.

OBITUARIES

ABRAHAM DAVIS, 747 Nia-
gara, Windsor, died Sept. 26.
Survived by wife, Jennie; one
son, Nathan; one daughter,
Mrs. Max Appel; three brothers,
four sisters, six grandchildren.
* * *
SIDNEY Z. WISE, 18646
Woodingham, died Sept. 25. He
is survived by wife, Mildred;
a son, Peter; three daughters,
Suan, Penny and Mrs. Howard
Goldberg; his mother, Mrs. Re-
becca Wise, and two sisters,
Mrs. Harry Simon and Mrs.
Irving Goldstein.

Ulin Elected President of

Philanthropies of Boston

BOSTON (JTA) — Benjamin
Bnai Br i th announced the
addition of five members-at- thin, veteran Boston Jewish
large to its international board community leader, was elected
president of the Combined Jew-
of governors.
ish Philanthropies of Greater
Maurice Weinstein of Char- Boston at its 67th annual meet-
lotte, N.C., who recently com- ing. Edwin Wolf, 2nd, presi-
pleted a term as international dent of the Federation of Jew-
vice president, was appointed by ish Agencies of Greater Phila-
Bnai Brith president Label A. delphia, was guest speaker.
Katz for a three-year term.
Katz also reappointed Her- Perce Golden Real Estate
man Fineberg of Pittsburgh, Moves to New Offices
Perce J. Golden Real Estate
Superior Court Judge David A.
Rose of Boston, Isaac Wagner and Insurance Agency, former-
of Chicago and Max J. Schneider ly of 16909 Livernois, announces
the removal of their offices to
of New York.
16861 Livernois. The telephone
number is DI 1-5805.
Want ads get fast results!

thousands of persons who at-
tended funeral services Sept.
23 for Rabbi Yehuda Leib
Avida (Zlotnik), scholar and
Mizrachi leader, who died last
Friday at the age of 74. He was
the author of many books in
Hebrew and Yiddish.
Eulogies were . delivered by
Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Nissim and
by representatives of the Jew-
ish Agency, the Jewish National
Fund and the World Mizrachi
movement. Rabbi Avida's son,
Mordechai, director of the cul-
tural department of the For-
eign Ministry, recited the kad-
dish at the graveside.
Born in Plock, Poland, Rabbi
Avida was one of the founders
of the Mizrachi movement in
that country. He was director
of the Zionist Organization of
Canada in the 1920's and early
1930's and was director of the
Board of Jewish Education of
Johannesburg, South Africa,
from 1938 to 1948. He emi-
grated to Israel in 1949 and
settled in Jerusalem where he
served as director of the Rav
Kook Institute.

Ceremony in Belguim
Honors Memory of 26,000
Belgian Jewish Martyrs

BRUSSELS (JTA)—Memorial
ceremonies were held for the
26,000 Belgian Jews who were
deported by the Nazis to Ger-
man extermination camps be-
tween 1942 and 1944.
The ceremonies were held
under the auspices of the Bel-
gian Union of Jewish Deportees
which organized a pilgrimage
to Malines, where the Jews were
concentrated before being sent
to Germany. P. Burstein, presi-
dent of the Israel Organization
of Former Nazi Prisoners,
addressed the meeting.

Gross Realty Moved
to New Location

Gross Realty Company, for-
merly of 9107 Linwood, has
moved to new and larger quar-
ters at 17350 Livernois. The
firm's new phone number is
DI. 2-1300.

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