22—Friday, January 27, 1967
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
outh News
Rabbi Gordon to Speak at Ann Arbor Services
Rabbi James I. Gordon of Young
Israel Center of Oak Woods will
deliver the sermon at Sabbath
services of the University of Michi-
gan Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation,
jointly with the
Beth Israel Con-
gregation, at the
Zwerdling - Cohn
Chapel 8:30 p.m.
today.
The service will
be chanted by
Hille l's student
cantor John Plan-
er, assisted by
the Hillel Choir, Rabbi Gordon
conducted by Steven Ovitsky. For
this service the choir will be
augmented by members of the Beth
Israel Congregation.
Rabbi Harold White of Beth Is-
rael and Dr. Herman Jacobs, direc-
tor of Hillel, will participate in the
service, with members of the con-
gregatiOn and of the student body
Center Tweeners Plan
`Plum Street Hop', Feb. 4
The tween dance committee of
the Jewish Center is sponsoring a
"Plum Street Hop" 8 p.m. Feb. 4
at the Jewish Center.
The dance is open to all 7th, 8th
and 9th graders.
There will be an admission
charge.
The hop will feature a band, the
Master Beats, and prizes. Dress
for the dance is casual.
An open house will be held at
the Southfield branch of the Beth
Aaron Religious School, 9:30 to
11:30 a.m. Sunday. The Southfield
Branch is located at the Adlai Ste-
venson School.
Parents and friends are invited
to attend and observe kindergar-
ten through grade four classes.
Meetings with the teachers will be
followed by a coffee-social period.
New registrations will be wel-
come at this time.
A. r112
tiYnnouncements
Jan. 13 — To Mr. and Mrs. Mar-
tin B. Goldin (Penny Rossin), 7371
Edinborough, Birmingham.
* * *
Jan. 18—To Mr. and Mrs. Larry
A. Kronen (Irene Gordon), 19960
Dorset, Southfield, a son, Michael
Lee.
* *
Jan. 15—To Mr. and Mrs. Sidney
Finkelstein (Adrienne Schon), 422
Girard, Royal Oak, a daughter,
Robyn Lynne.
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By DAVID
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assisting in the leading of prayers
or responsive readings.
Ford's January 1967 graduates
The public is invited. The Zwerd-
ling-Cohn Chapel is located at 1429 were honored Monday at Class
Day. Principal Samuel Milan pre-
Hill, Ann Arbor.
sented department awards, schol-
and magna cum laude and
Camp Moshava Reunion arships
cum laude awards.
Scheduled This Week End
Among those receiving depart-
Rabbi Benjamin Shandalov, di- ment awards were Michael Iczko-
rector of Camp Moshava at Wild- vitz in science and Mark Levine
rose, Wis., will be in. Detroit for in health education.
a reunion of Moshava Bnai Akiva
Scholarships were won by Mi-
campers of Chicago and Cleveland chael Iczkovitz, Jewish War Vt.ter-
3 p.m. Sunday at Cong. Beth ans; Mark Levine, Temple Uni-
Yehudah.
versity; Edward Weiss, Detroit
The Detroit contingent will pre- High School Student Aid Founda-
sent an original skit on Moshava tion; Philip Sandberg, Parent
camp life. Avi Schwartz, adviser, Teachers' Club; and Penny Good-
has been assisted by Darlene Hend- man, Girls' Letter Club.
ler, Esther Goldman, Shoshana
Phi Beta Kappa of Detroit
White, Pearl Fishman, Harvey awarded
who bad a 3.5
Schloss, Marilyn Eisenman, Eva or better seniors
average in academic
Cik, T. Herskovitz and B. Weber-
subjects. Frances Hessler, Mi-
man.
cheal Imzkovitz, Marsha Malbin,
Parents and friends are invited. James Forgenstern and Edward
A catered buffet dinner will be Weiss received this honor. -
served, camp-style.
In addition, James Morgenstern
Rabbi Shandalov will show slides was recognized for being a semifin-
of campers taken last summer. alist in the National Merit Corp.
Youth director Rev. Marshall Gold- scholarship program.
man will take applications for
The Galaxy, school yearbook,
next summer.
recently received journalism's
Triple Crown by gaining the top
awards of the National Scholastic
Press Association, Columbia Scho-
lastic Press Association and the
National School Yearbook Associa-
tion.
This was only the second time
that a Detroit high school year-
book won the award. The other
winner was Cody's 1958 book.
* * *
Members of the Ford political
science seminar recently hosted an
By DOUGLAS ZUSMAN
interesting duo of speakers from
Southfield High School students the John Birch Society.
will have the opportunity to attend
* * *
-
classes in a planetarium, according
The
Quill
and
Scroll,
honorary
to the terms of a recent donation
to the Southfield School District. society of _journalism recently held
Students in all grades through 12 an induction and award ceremony.
will be able to attend classes in Among those inducted were Shari
the planetarium, attached to the Alper, Marilyn Saulles and Nancy
Morris Adler Elementary School, Zelder. Graduating senior Gary
now under construction in the Civic Casselman received an award for
outstanding service.
Center.
Basketball fortunes continued
Southfield debaters received a
downward
as Ford lost its sev-
second-place trophy after compet-
ing in a statewide-invitational tour- enth straight league game to
nament held at Kimball High Southwestern. Gary Lincoln
School last month. The tournament boosted his all-city chances,
involved six rounds of debate in though, by scoring 26 points in a
which approximately 20 schools 59-73 losing effort. In their pre-
took part. Competing for Southfield vious game, Ford lost to Redford
were Jeff Komarow, Frank Sals- in the closing seconds, 64-65.
Ford swimmers gave one of their
burg, Morris Podolsky and Bob
best performances in losing to Coo-
Feder.
Students from SHS now have ley. They had previously beaten
the opportunity to continue re- Mackenzie and Eastern by wide
search at the school library on margins, but the Cooley loss has
Wednesday nights. The entire hampered their chances of winning
operation of this program is being the West Side championship.
financed by the Community Rela-
tions Seminar. One of the pur- Pirchei Group Plans Party
poses of this senior club is to ren-
The Pirchei Melav malka will
der, services to the community, be held 7:30 p.m. Feb. 4 at Cong.
and this goal is being accom- Shomrey Emunah. Movies will in-
plished through the new library - elude Israel's first puppet film,
program.
"King Boor," and "A Stamp Is
Last month, the humanities clas- Born." Refreshments will be
ses bussed their way to the Toledo served. Nominal admission for non-
Art Museum, where the "Age of members.
The Pirchei member selling the
Rembrandt" Exhibit was on dis-
play. Earlier trips of the humani- most tickets will receive a prize.
ties classes include a visit to the
Stratford Shakespearean Theater in Israelis Win Essay Prizes
Canada.
TEL AVIV (JTA) — Three stu-
dents of Israeli high schools have
prizes in an essay contest
`Milky' on Omnibus Show won
sponsored by the American Em-
"Milky the Clown" will replace bassy. Walworth Barbour, the
the production of "The Snow American ambassador, presented
Queen" which was scheduled for prizes of 1,000 pounds ($333) and
the Omnibus series of the Jewish 25 books to the three winners. The
Center 2 p.m. Sunday.
topic was "any American idea or
The cancelation was necessary institution that can be adapted
due to the death - in the family of effectively for modern Israeli
a member of "The Snow Queen" needs."
cast. Tickets already purchased
Is not light grander than fire?
will be honored Sunday. Others
will be on sale at the cashier's It is the same element in a state
of purity. —Carlysle.
office.
•
Southfield
High
School
Newsline
Beth Aaron School
Open House Sunday
The
Ford
Scene
JDC-Malben Program for Israel Aged
Aided by Gift From Counterpart Fund
NEW YORK—The U. S. govern-
ment has awarded a grant of 497,-
000 pounds ($165,686) from U. S.
counterpart funds to Malben, the
Joint Distribution Committee pro-
gram on behalf of aged, ill and
handicapped newcomers to Israel,
JWB's Solender
Defends Center's
Open Membership
NEW YORK (JTA) — Participa-
tion of non-Jewish members in the
programs of Jewish community cen-
ters "does not deter or adversely
affect the capacity of the center to
fulfill its Jewish purposes and pro-
gram," Sanford Solender, executive
vice president of the National Jew-
ish Welfare Board, asserted.
In a reply to criticism by Label
A. Katz, former international presi-
dent of Bnai Brith, of an open mem-
bership policy in Jewish centers,
Solender declared that on the aver-
age, approximately 4 to 5 per cent
of center members were non-Jews
and he declared that "center ex-
periences indicate that non-Jewish
participation is primarily in physi-
cal education facilities and pro-
grams and in activities of general
community inter es t." He noted
further that "such participation gen-
erally is minimal in the group as-
sociational programs for children
and youth."
The JWB official insisted that
"open membership is the only ten-
able policy for a center. It is sup-
portive_ of basic Jewish values. It is
expressive of the unity of that
which is American and Jewish."
Open democratic membership
practices, he said, in the context
of firm adherence to Jewish pur-
poses," is a guideline to the crea-
tive integration of the American
and Jewish components of our
future." It was "inconceivable,"
he said, "that the center close its
doors to non-Jews. As a people
who have experienced the pain of
discrimination, we could hardly
inflict this on others."
He concluded that "it is possible
to maintain an open membership
policy in a center which places
primary emphasis on Jewish goals
and programs without conflict with
the center's major purpose."
it was announced by Harold Trobe,
JDC director for Israel.
COunterpart funds accrue from
sales by the U. S. government to
the Israeli government of food and
other commodities. In addition to
the grant, the U. S. donated over
2,300,000 pounds of Food for Peace
supplies to Malben institutions in
the first six months of 1966 and
will do the same for the first six
months of 1967.
The grant will be used by JDC-
Malben for urgent repairs and re-
placement of defective equipment
in its 11 old age homes, in two hos-
pitals for the chronically ill and
handicapped and in other related
facilities.
Trobe reported that the generous
gift, made through the U. S. gov-
ernment's Agency for International
Development, would relieve the
growing pressures on its 1967
budget of 18,000,000 pounds.
Folk Song Session Set
Beth Aaron Young Adults in-
vites all single people age 21 to 37
to join them 8 p.m. Wednesday for
an evening of folk singing at Beth
Aaron. Refreshments will be served
at a nominal charge. For informa-
tion, call Loretta Weintraub, LI
8-9430.
Simple Truth
So long as men are imprudent
in their diet and business, doctors
and lawyers will ride in carriages.
—American Farmer (Oct. 1860)
J. J. CLARKE STUDIO
Portraiture of Distinction
For Your Weddings
Formals - Candids - Direct Color
3223 W. McNichols
Nr. Muirland
Call 341-4141
HAVING A PARTY
Club Meeting, or Reunion?
Liven it up with Folk Songs.
Call Folk Singer
BOB MILLER
WO 1-1940 or 833-1137
VIOLIN INSTRUCTION
Specializing with Children of
All Ages
Call Evenings for Appointment
UN 4-8488
Music for All Occasions
FOR BOOKINGS CALL:
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TE 2-9193
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