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March 04, 1966 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-03-04

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

Devoted Care Continuously Given
Rabbi Morris Adler at Sinai Hospital

Retaining faith, instilling hope
in the community, every faction in
Jewry, all congregations, continu-
ally are chanting Psalms, reciting
special prayers for Rabbi Morris
Adler's speedy recovery.
Still in a coma in the intensive
care area of Sinai Hospital, still
considered in a critical state, Rabbi
Adler nevertheless is responding
to the mechanical treatments and
hope has never been abandoned
that he will recover and will soon
regain all his faculties.
Mrs. Adler, who has not left
the hospital since she accom-
panied her husband in an ambu-

S. African Court
Hears Victims of
Egyptian Bank

CAPE TOWN, South Africa
(JTA) — The Supreme Court here
granted a temporary injunction
Feb. 24 against the Standard Bank
of Cape Town, freezing securities
held by the bank for the National
Bank of Egypt, which a Jewish
couple claims were confiscated
from them by the Egyptian gov-
ernment.
In a petition filed in the Supreme
Court here, Eli Leon Gani and his
wife, Marguerite, who emigrated
from Egypt to France in 1964,
asked to be declared the owners
of the stock in a number of South
African companies.
Gani, who resides temporarily
in London, declared in an affi-
davit that, in 1956, after the start
of the Sinai campaign, under the
threat of imprisonment, he was
forced to sign documents trans-
ferring the stocks to the Egyp-
tian government, which immedi-
ately transferred the shares from
Barclays Bank here to the
Standard Bank in Cape Town,
where they have remained since.
Gani, a Greek citizen, though
born in Cairo, said that, after leav-
ing Egypt, he filed claims thro–ugh
the Greek consulate in the Egyp-
tian capital for the stocks and oth-
er properties confiscated by the
Cairo government.
The case has aroused widespread
interest in legal circles here be-
cause it concerns principles of
international law with respect to
confiscation of property on the
basis of religious discrimination.
David Cohen, attorney for the
Ganis, cited cases in England
where British courts had refused
to recognize confiscations by the
Nazis of property belonging to
Jews.
After granting the temporary in-
junction, barring the withdrawal
of the securities by the Egyptian
National Bank, Justice Water-
meyer postponed further hearings
on the case until April 27.

Plane to Drop Reminders
About Purim Over Israel

TEL AVIV—Tens of thousands
of leaflets will be dropped over
numerous cities in Israel to remind
the citizenry to hold special Purim
observances, it was announced by
the Lubavitch Youth Organization.
The remainder states that aside
from hearing the Megillah (Book
of Esther) reading on the eve and
morning of Purim, and observing
other significant obligations as the
recitation of the "Al Hanissim"
prayer. there are two special pre-
cepts incumbent upon all to ful-
fill on the day of Purim, namely,
Mishloach Monos—sending food
gifts to friends, and Mattonos lo-
Evyonim—donating to the poor.
The Lubavitch Youth Organiza-
tion has also prepared thousands
of Mishloach Monos packets to be
distributed among school children
throughout the country.

Though a tree grow ever so
high, its falling leaves return to
the root.—Chinese proverb.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
8—Friday, March 4, 1966

lance to Sinai after the occur-
rence on Feb. 12, is the most op-
timistic—the inspirer of confi-
dence in an early turn for the
better and a certain improvement
in her husband's condition.
At all public functions, in all
synagogues, prayers are chanted.
In the Shaarey Zedek, again there
were special prayers last Sabbath
and Psalms 27 and 30 were read.
The "Mi Sheberakh" was chanted
by the synagogue sexton, Jacob
Epel. And daily, at the Shaarey
Zedek, in other synagogues and
also in churches and at non-Jewish
meetings, there are prayers for
the seriously ill rabbi.
Mrs. Adler has been provided
with a room in interns' quarters
at Sinai so that she should be at
her husband's side whenever pos-
sible.
The physicians' staff that has
been caring for Dr. Adler is in
constant attendance and there is
round-the-clock nursing service to
watch over him.
"The vigil goes on," Dr. Julien
Priver, executive vice president of
Sinai Hospital said on Thursday.
He commended the physicians and
nurses who "felt very close to the
situation" for their devoted care
of Rabbi Adler in round-the-clock
assistance being given him.
As of Thursday noon, Dr.
Priver reported that "there has
been no significant change in
Rabbi Adler's condition."
Dr. Myer Teitelbaum and Dr.
Harvey Gass continue to head the
physicians' staff that is providing
continuous care for- Rabbi Adler.

The Little Symbol
With Big Appeal

Derision was loud when a mem-
ber of the Ku Klux Klan told the
House Un-American Activities
Committee that he financed litera-
ture aimed at "exposing the kosher
food racket' a few weeks ago.
He was, in essence, attacking the
small "U" symbol on food labels
that has come to mean "strictly

Cincinnati Federation
to Mark 70th Anniversary

CINCINNATI (JTA) — Herbert
R. Bloch Jr., a past president of
the Associated Jewish Agencies of
Cincinnati, has been named chair-
man of the 70th anniversary April
observance of the AJA and its
two predecessor central planning
agencies here, it has been an-
nounced by A. Marcus Levy, AJA
president.
The original central Jewish
group of health and welfare agen-
cies, United Jewish Charities, was
formally organized April 4, 1896.
Later, the UJC earned Commun-
ity Chest assistance and became
the United Jewish Social Agencies
in 1920. The AJA was formed in
1958 as an outgrowth of the
UJSA. Bloch served as AJA presi-
dent in 1961-64. His father served
the same role from 1945 to 1948.

supervised according to the laws
of Kashruth."
To those who observe these laws,
it means the product contains
nothing forbidden as impure. To
those who do not—both Jews and
non-Jews—it is merely an added
assurance that the product gets
an "extra once-over," at no extra
cost.
Well-known companies use the
kosher certification, probably be-
cause it results in increased sales
—usually at such a slight addi-
tional cost that no price rise is
necessary for their products.
Rabbi Alexander S. Rosenberg
is rabbinic administrator of the
40-year-old Kosher Certification
Service, created by the Union of
Orthodox Jewish Congregations of
America.
Members of the Union's rab-
binic arm, the Rabbinical Coun-
cil of America, inspect food
manufacturing facilities of the
companies that apply for certi-
fication. The Kashruth Commis-
sion studies their reports and
determines who will receive the
U symbol.

WHEN YOU

,Pf.

The inspecting rabbis are not
paid directly, by the company, but
are responsible only to the Kash-
ruth Commission, which has con-
tracts with the companies for
periodic inspections.
The new directory published by
the service lists 475 companies and
more than 2,000 products that have
been certified. This number is
double what it was six years ago: - --
Not only Jews look for the
sign. Seventh Day Adventists ands:
other religious groups believe in - -
certain aspects of the Jewish diet-
ary laws and look for the symbol.

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