100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

November 10, 1967 - Image 24

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1967-11-10

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

1111••••••••

Preparing for Luncheon

g reivry

On the

This Week's Radio and
Television Programs

MAGIC DOOR
Time: 6:30 p.m. Monday.
Station: Channel 56.
Feature: Tiny Toy once more.
• • •

HEAR OUR VOICE

Last-minute preparations for the donor luncheon are keeping
these women of the Department of Michigan Jewish War Veterans
Auxiliaries busy; (from left) Mesdames H. Sallan, William Love,
Sam Wagner, Arnold Grossman and Sidney Cohen. The luncheon
will take place noon Wednesday at the new Raleigh House in South-
field. TV personality Jackie Crampton will narrate a fashion show,
and more than 100 gifts will be awarded including a mink-collared
sweater donated by Mr. and Mrs. William Love. Mrs. Irving Silk
is luncheon chairman, and Mrs. William Greenberg is president of
the Department of Michigan.

O

JWV

Rights Commission
Elects Shevitz

BLOCH ROSE AUXILIARY will
hold a special meeting to distri-
bute tickets for Wednesday's donor
luncheon at the New Raleigh
House. For information, call Mir-
iam Lawrence, UN 2-1467.
• • •

Chabad Choir.


The Jewish War Veterans De-
partment of Michigan is compiling
a record of all veterans and serv-
icemen of Jewish faith who have
served, or are serving, in the
armed forces of the U.S.A. since
and including the Korean War.
The department is particularly
SIDNEY SHEVITZ
interested in servicemen who are
overseas now so that packages
The
Michigan
Civil Rights Com-
could be sent in time for the holi-
days. (Mailing deadline is this mission elected Sidney M. Shevitz
co-chairman
with
the Rev. A. A.
Saturday). For information, call

the Jewish War Veteran s, Banks Jr. Shevitz, a former presi-
dent of the Jewish Community
342-8161.
Council, is an original member of

Birmingham Temple will pre-
sent Dr. Alvin Reines, professor
of philosophy at
Hebrew Union
College, Cincin-
nati, discussing
"Polydoxy — the
Religion of Rad-
cal Freedom"
8:30 p.m. today
at Robert Frost
Junior High
School.
The temple is
presenting a lee-
Dr. Reines
ture series on "The Challenge of
Humanism," of which this talk is
a part.

! ! WHY WORRY ! !

Leave Everything to Us

WYN and HAROLD LANDIS

HOME CATERING

Phone

EL 6-8411

• STYLE
• ELEGANCE
• BEAUTY
WYN-HAROLD CATERING

Drinking Customs Among Jews Cited in Report

Positive attitudes toward drink-
ing among American Jews have
resulted in a remarkably low inci-
dence of drinking problems, a re-
cent government study issued by
the Cooperative Commission on
the Study of Al-
coholism reveals.
Commenting on
the report, Eben

Fridenberg, assis-
tant to the presi-
dent of Gooder-
ham and Worts
Ltd., importers of
Lauder's Scotch
and Canadian
Rich and Rare,
observed, "T h e Fridenberg
Jewish home provides a setting
where distilled beverages are used
in a positive social situation. Drink-
ing within a social or family set-
ting offers strong controls that
temper and moderate drinking be-
havior."
Used this way, there is no lure
of the "forbidden," so often asso-
ciated with the use of alcohol
beverages. "Attitudes toward dis-
tilled spirits are shaped early in
life Fridenberg commented. "The
child in a religious Jewish house-
hold is likely to associate the first
drinking he sees with religious

the commission and has served
since its establishment in 1964.

• • •

JCCouncil Endorses
'Fair Housing' Bill

`Dual Responsibility
of American Jew'
Young Adult Topic

"The American Jew—Dual Heri-
tage, Dual Responsibility" will be
discussed by Detroit School Super-
intendent Dr. Norman Drachler 8
p.m. Wednesday in the Jewish
Center Music Room. Young adults
are invited to the forum, sponsor-
ed by the Junior Division of the
Jewish Welfare Federation. For
information, call Lillian Bernstein,
:atiViser; WO 5-3939.

MRS. JOSEPH MALTZER of
Huntington Woods, president of the
Michigan Federation of Temple
Sisterhoods, will play an impor-
tant part in the 26th biennial as-
sembly of the National Federation
of Temple Sisterhoods at the Sher-
aton Mount Royal Hotel in Mon-
treal, Nov. 11-16.

For the HY Spot
Of Your Affair
Mask by

Hy Herman

And

His Orchestra

(Hy Utchenik)



Distinctive Ceremonies
a Specialty!

342-9424

lithElae°

FINE JEWELRY

• •

283

Hamilton

Thurs. and Fri. to I' p.m.
Birmingham (Near Demers)

HIGHLIGHTS
Time: 9:30 a.m. Sunday.

GIFTS

644-7626

Station: WJBK.

and
Time: 9:45 a.m. Sunday.
Station: Channel 2.
Feature: "Old Roots, New Blos-
soms" a series on Jewish litera-
ture, continues with Dr. James
Miller, author of the "Detroit Yid-
dish Theater," who will discuss
the Yiddish theater and the cur-
rent Center Theater.
• • •
MESSAGE OF ISRAEL
Time: 8 a.m. Sunday.
Station: WXYZ.
Feature: "Contemporary Chal-
lenges to an Eternal People," a
panel discussion feautring Rabbi
Maurice N. Eisendrath, president
of UAHC; Irvin Fane of UAHC;
and Melville J. Dunkelman, Cin- 1
cinnati religious and communal

Mina

To: Darling
From: Me
Subject:

The "fair housing" proposal
(H 2035) presently before the spe-
cial session of the Michigan Legis- leader.
lature, has received the endorse-
ment and support of the Jewish 111. 211- orris Arotzky
Community Council of Metropoli-
tan Detroit through the Council's to Be 80 Next 117- cek

executive committee.
Spearheaded by the New Detroit
Committee, headed by Joseph L.
Hudson, Jr., the bill makes illegal
and imposes penalties for acts of
discrimination in the sale or rental
of housing when based upon race,
creed or color.
In addition to that of the New
Detroit Committee, the bill has the
backing of all the major religious
denominations and of leading labor,
civic and industrial groups.
A letter to Council organization
leaders and to the community's
rabbis from Dr. Samuel Krohn,
president, and Lawrence Gubow,
community relations committee
chairman, urged letters and organi-
zational statements in support of
the bill.

rites, where wine is sipped by
members of the family. Drinking
is removed psychologically from
the realm of the taboo, -eliminating
the guilt associated with it."
As a result, although 90 per
cent of Jews consume, they ac-
count for a strikingly small pro-
portion of problem drinkers. Gen-
erally, the Jewish attitude toward
drinking is casual. Specifically,
disapproval of drunkenness is
strong.

See Morris Watnick

recordings from the Lubavitch
weekend conference of university
students. Musical interludes by the

JWV Compiles Listing
of Servicemen; Deadline
for Mailing This Weekend

Philosophy Professor
to Discuss Humanism

Time: 11:30 p.m. Sunday.
Station: WCAR.
Feature: "Renditions by the Cele-
brated Cantor Gershon Sirota" will
be narrated by Cantor Harold
Orbach.
• • •
IN CONTACT
Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday.
Station: WJR.
Feature: Rev. Nichols Hood, De-
troit councilman, and Rabbi Rich-
ard C. Hertz of Temple Beth El
will discuss open occupancy.
• • •
ETERNAL LIGHT
Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday.
Station: WWJ.
Feature: "Hot Iron," a historical
drama about the Dreyfus case,
written by Joseph Mindel.
• • •
LLTBAVITCH JEWISH HOUR
Time: 8 a.m. Sunday.
Station: WKNR.
Feature: Rabbi Yitschak M .
Kagan will speak on "Noah, Abra-
ham and Moses—A Comparison."
A continuation of a series of live

Friday, November 10, 1967-25

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Morris Arotzky, active for many
years in landsmanshaften and
philanthropic causes, will observe
his 80th birthday Wednesday.
Mr. Arotzky, 14883 Santa Rosa,
has been a Detroit resident since
1911, having come to this country

They're having
a final Sale
at Claire Pearone's
( 1/2 Reductions)

six years earlier, at age 18. He
was born in Alshan, Lithuania.
With him to observe the birth-
day will be his wife Molly, three

daughters, Jeanette, Rita and
Hilda, and other relatives and
friends. Mr. Arotzky also has a
son, Cecil, in New York, and
five grandchildren.
Mr. Arotzky was recording sec-

May I go?
... please!

retary for the Michigan Home Pro-
tective Society, a landsmanshaften
group, for 32 years, and recording
secretary for the Detroit Auxiliary
for the Los Angeles Sanitarium

and Ex Patient Home, forerunner
to the City of Hope. For more than
20 years, he has been secretary to
the Mogilever Society and helped
with the relief campaigns of the
former Jewish Lithuanian Society.
A veteran of United Auto Work-
ers Local 51, he is retired from
Chrysler Corp., where he worked
more than 40 years.

THE CHAMBER MUSIC WORK-
SHOP will present its second pro-
gram-meeting of the season 8 p.m.
Sunday at he Institute of Musical
Arts.

labu2 Pizalumv2

\I.

19452 Livernois
Detroit

397 Fisher Road
Grosse Pointe

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan