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August 11, 1967 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1967-08-11

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

Martin Tackier Ireds Religion Discarded Granadiers Celebrate
Golden Iredding Date
Michael Pelavin. Young Flint Leader, Linda Susan Lovinger in Rules of Placing
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Grana-
Foundlings in NYC dier,
former Detroiters of Miami
Joins NCRAC Executive Committee
Beach, celebrated their 50th wed-

11—Friday, itagest 11, 1167

Michael A. Pelavin. treasurer
and chairman of the community
relations committee of the Flint
Jewish Commun-
Council, has been
elected to the
executive c o m -
mittee of the Na-
tional Commun-
ity Relations Ad-
visory Council. '
Pelavin, recipi-
ent of the 1966
Flint Jewish
Community Coun-
cil Young Lead- Pelavin
ership Award, was chairman of
advance gifts of the Flint UJA
Campaign.

JNF Reclaims Land
in Demilitarized Areas

JERUSALEM—Since the begin-
ning of July. the Jewish National
Fund has been reclaiming 44,000
dunams (11,000 acres) of land in
the former demilitarized areas on
the previous Jordanian and Syrian
border.
Jacob Tsur. chairman of the JNF
board of directors, said the project
includes 38,000 dunams (9,500
acres) of land in the Latrun area.
on both sides of the old Tel Aviv
—Jerusalem Highway (which has
now been reactivated); some
25,000 dunams (6,250 acres) of this
area are promising for intensive
farming and the rest for pasture.
Another 6,000 dunams (1.500
acres) now under development lie
along the Syrian border.
The Jewish National Fund is
undertaking preparations for set-
ting up at least four new Nahal
(Pioneer Settlers Corps) villages
in the near future. A long road,
from Ein Gev north along the east-
ern shore of Lake Kinneret is be-
ing built by the JNF. The .INF will
invest about 10.000,000 pounds in
these assignments.

Treat Your
family
to a real
Italian
Add

Chef
Boy-Ar-Dee

We use the Jewish word

"mychel" because we don't
know how to say "extremely
delicious dish" in Italian.
Which is exactly what you get
from this one package. Cook
spaghetti to taste. Heat and
add authentic Italian Mush-
room Sauce. Top with lots of
zippy cheese. Easy, quick.

SERVE SOME TONIGHT!

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

The National Community Rela-
tions Advisory Council is the joint
planning and coordinating agency
in the field of Jewish community
relations. It consists of 74 local,
county and statewide community
relations councils as well as seven
national agancies in this field.

g3nai

Activities

LIVONIA LODGE will hold its
opening meeting of the season, '
with installation , of officers and
indoctrination or new members, at
the Livonia Jewish Congregation
8:30 p.m. Thursday. Arthur Schott,
president of the metropolitan De-
troit Council. will install president
Mark Klinger: vice-presidents Dan-
iel Waldman. Floyd Bornstein and
Leo Besserman: secretaries El-
liott Kaplan. Sanford Wolok and
Lewis Cooke; guardian Joseph Ep-
stein; warden Steve Lewkowicz;
trustees Albert Weiner. Sheldon
Onickel, Harold Michaels. Myron
Aaron, Melvyn Case. Norman Gos-
man, Edward Radner and SeymOur
Weinstein; and chaplain Nathan
Fine. Prospective members and
friends are invited.
▪ * •
PISGAH CHAPTER will hold its
annual paid-up membership games
party noon Wednesday at Cong.
Beth Billet. Luncheon is planned.
Dues are payable at door. There
will be many prizes. Guest speaker
will be Arthur Schott. new Bnai
Brith Council president. President
is Mrs. Julius (Helen) Ring: pro-
gram chairman. Mrs. Lee Franklin
Weinstock. For information or
pickup of rummage, call chairman,
Mrs. Adolph Dinetz, DI 1-1290 or
Mrs. Meyer Price. LI 7 - 5232.



• •

Bnai Brith Book
Emphasizes
Ecumenism

Crown Publishers have issued an-
other Bnai Brith book—"Face to
Face"—containing dialogue texts
on Christian-Jewish relations.
Edited by Lily Edelman. direc-
tor Bnai Brith's commission on
adult Jewish education, this volume
contains an essay on "Why Dia-
1 logue?" by Rabbi Israel Mowshow-
, itz and an introductory article by
Prof. Abraham I. Heschel. "What
Ecumenism Is."
Questions asked by Christians
and Jews are reviewed in essays
by Milton Steinberg, whose text
was formulated by the late Rabbi
Morris Adler, and Solomon B.
Barnards.
In "The Interreligious Dialogue"
Walter Jacob deals with three Jew-
ish pioneers—Claude Montefiore.
Martin Buber and Leo Baeck.
Other contributors to this vol-
ume include David Polish, Robert
Gordis, Reinhold Niebuhr. Jay
Kaufman. Seymour Siegel. Ellis
Rivkin, Poul Bourschenius, Oscar
Groner, Martin A. Cohen, Walter
A. Abbott. Arthur Gilbert. Joseph
Lichten.

* * *

1,000 Attend Seminars
on Jewish Life. History

WASHINGTON (JTA) — One
thousand adults are cttending spe-
cial Bnai Brith seminars this sum-
mer, studying Jewish life, history
and tradition, it was announced
here by Dr. William Wexler, presi-
dent of Bnai Brith. Twelve such
seminars are being conducted
under the guidance of noted scho-
lars at secluded encampments
around the country from Salado,
Texas, to Camp Tamiment in
Pennsylvania to Wild Acres. N.C.,
in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

Prof. Dr, Antonio de Oliveira
Salazar has been prime minister
of Portugal since July 5, 1932,
the longest term of any prime
minister.

MRS. MARTIN JACIIIER

Linda Susan Lovinger, daughter
of Mrs. Edward Sherman of Birch-
crest Dr. and Mr. Jack Lovinger
of Norfolk Dr. and Martin Leslie
Tackier, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Jackier of Warrington St. were
married recently in the Whittier
Hotel.
The bride wore a flowing organza
gown in a cage style appliqued with
lilies of the valley.
Julie Lovinger was maid of
honor. Bridesmaids were Cathy
Lovinger. Mrs. Lawrence Jackier,
Mrs. James Green and Susan
Newton. Amy Sherman was flow-
er girl
Lawrence Jackier and Robert
Jackier, brothers of the bride-
groom, were best men. Ushers were
Ronald Silbergeld, Ned Winkel-
man, Robert Tepper, Barry Ber-
shad, Kenneth Shiovitz, Ronald
Schneider and John Jacobs.
After a Maine honeymoon, the
couple will live in Royal Oak..

S. American WJCongress
Publishes Collection on
Great Men in History

"Nahum Goldmann" by Josef Fraenkel
(Popular Jewish Library, World Jewish
Congress, Buenos Aires, 1967 Spanish
edition).
"Isaiah" by Jaime Barylko (Popu-
lar Jewish Library, W.J.C.. Buenos
Aires, 1967 Spanish edition).

Work of definite cultural value
is being carried out through the
Biblioteca Popular Judia, publish-
ed by the South American execu-
tive of the World Jewish Congress.
This Biblioteca comprises two col-
lections, one under the heading
Grandes Figuras del Judaismo
(Great Men in Jewry) and the
other "Heches de la Historia
Judia."
The two booklets in the collec-
tion which have recently appeared
are "Isaiah" by Jaime Barylko, a
talented young Argentine-Jewish
intellectual; and "Nahum Gold-
mann" by Josef FraenkeL
In "Isaiah," Barylko studies the
aspects of prophesy in general and
the life of the prophet in particu-
lar. Barylko not only understands
his subject very thoroughly but
he is also deeply identified with
Jewish aspirations and their uni-
versal scope.
Fraenkel's is a study on the
personality of Dr. Goldmann,
whose name has been synony-
mous for many years with the
most important events in the
lives and interests of the Jewish
people. President of the World
Zionist Organization and of the
World Jewish Congress, be is
a statesman of extraordinary
talent, great perspicacity and
remarkable energy.
But he is not only an outstand-
ing Jewish statesman. He is a man
spiritually identified with Judaism,
with its deepest roots, with its
historical development, its present
difficulties and acute problems.
Thinking Jews will find a worth-
while guide in the work of Josef
Fraenkel recently published by the
Biblioteca Popular Judia.

Finnish Jewry
The Jewish community of Fin-
land, which dates back to the early
part of the 19th century. today
numbers some 1,500 persons, most
of whom live in the capital city of
Helsinki

NEW YORK (JTA) — A New
York City procedure of assigning
abandoned infants of unknown par-
entage to Catholic, Protestant and
Jewish homes in rotation has been
canceled in a major policy change
made public here.
The effect of the change is that
parents for such foundlings will
be chosen hereafter on the basis
of their qualifications. without re-
ligious requirements. Twenty to
25 foundlings come under city
care annually. About 60 per cent
of the foundlings are Negro.
The change does not affect a
current procedure applied when a
foundling is left at a house of
worship. In such cases, the infant
is assigned to that particular re-
ligion. The changes were adopted
by the city department of social
service on July 15. Private welfare
agencies which place foundlings
will receive formal notification of
the new policy on Aug. 15.
Commissioner Mitchell J. Gins-
berg said that, as a result of the
change, "the ultimate test will
be what is best for the child,
not the religion of the home into
which he is going." He added
that the religious rotation sys-
tem had led to an "element of
inflexibility" in adoption plan-
ning, and delayed placement for
some of the infants.
The rotation procedure has been
a long-standing practice. In the
1940s, foundlings were designated
Catholic and Protestant, because
the Jewish placement agencies
waived their right to accept every
third foundling in the absence of
definite evidence that the infant
was of Jewish origin. In 1953, the
Louise Wise Services asked that
the Jewish religion be restored to
the rotation procedure, and the
city did so.

The Amazon river discharges an
average of 7,500,000 cubic feet of
water per second into the Atlantic
Ocean.

ding anniversary July 30. The
Granadiers' two children, Mrs.
Jerome Rosen and Bernard Grana-
dier, honored them with a dinner
party at the Carillon Hotel in
Miami Beach. The Granadiers were
married in Detroit in 1917 and
lived here for 49 years. They
moved to Miami Beach in 1966.

The hottest recorded temperature
was 136.4 degrees Fahrenheit at
San Luis Potosi, Mexico, Aug. 11,
1933.

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