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February 05, 1968 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1968-02-05

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

Allied Jewish Campaign Divisions
Mobilize Forces, Plan Solicitation

Richard L. Kux has been named
chairman and Alan E. Luckoff co-
chairman of the arts and crafts
division of the Allied Jewish Cam- ,
pz., ign-Israel Emergency Fund by
Alfred L. Deutsch and Maxwell ,
Jospey, co-chairman of the cam-.!
pa ign.

Kux is a mem-
ber of the board
of the Jewish
Community Cen-
ter and the com-
munity relations
division of the
Jewish Welfare
Federation. Luck-
off is a member
of the Detroit
flux
Service Group
and the health and welfare divi-
sion of the Jewish Welfare Federa-
tion.
Other officers of the division
are: I. William Sherr. vice-chair-
man; Sam Frank and Samuel
Schiff, associate chairmen; Her-
bert A. Aronsson. David Goldberg
and Wiliam M. Wetsman, pre-cam-
paign chairmen; Irving Goldberg
and Harvey Willens, advisors.
Executive committee members
are Stanley R. Akers, Maurice
Aronsson. Nathan Balaban. Sol
Balaban. Robert A. Benyas, Leon-
ard R. Frenkel, Adolph Goldberg
and Hyman Safran.
Advertisers and communications
section chairman is Stanley T.
Burkoff; co-chairman, Alex Shu-
man.
Office suppliers and paper prod-

ucts co-chairmen are I. William
Oberfelder and Jerome Silver.
Chairmen of the musicians and
photographers section are David
Dombey and Sam Barnett.
The florist section chairman is
Nathan Korash.
Sanford I. Hansel and Roger S.
R o bin son are co-chairmen of
amusements and bowling lanes.
Co-chairman of printers, pub-
lishers and employes section is
Carmi M. Slomovitz.
The arts and crafts campaign
workers will met 8 p.m. Monday
at the Benyas-Kaufman Studio,
8775 W. Nine Mile. George
M. Zeltzer, who recently visited.
Israel, will present his impressions
of the situation overseas and needs
at home. Other important items
on theagenda are election of year-
round officers of arts and crafts
division and the assignment of
campaign prospects.

The professional division of the
Jewish Welfare Federation will
conduct two special briefing ses-
sions for workers participating in
the Allied Jewish Campaign-Israel
Emergency Fund, at the Jewish
Center, 10:15 a.m. Sunday, and
8:15 p.m., Wednesday.
Information to be discussed in
the sessions includes an explana-
tion of aims and needs of the cam-
paign and instruction in appropri-
ate campaigning techniques. A
film, "An Act of Kindness." will
be shown. It is narrated by Her-
bert A. Friedman, executive vice-

Bnai Brith Lodge Aids Campaign

The Dov Frenkel Lodge of Bnai Brith presented a gift from its
treasury to the 1968 Allied Jewish Campaign-Israel Emergency
Fund. Pictured (from left) are Sheldon Sherman, president of the
lodge; Louis E. Barden, chairman of the metropolitan division of
the campaign; Murry Hartz, Joseph Frenkel, chairman of the Israel
committee of the lodge, and Hyman Lipsitz, chairman of the organ-
ization section of the campaign's metropolitan division.

Youth Corps Prog ram Aids Dropouts

By BEN GALLOB
JTA Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK (JTA)—Fifty-four
New York City high school drop-
outs, mostly Jews and some Puerto
Ricans, are enrolled in a city-wide
Neighborhood Youth Corps pro-
gram directed by Tora Umesora,
national organization for Hebrew
day schools, under a grants from
the Office of Economic Opportu-
nity.
The program is designed to find
jobs with status and a career po-
tential for the young men. To
reach that objective, Tora Ume-
sora develops work experience as-
signments for the enrollees to help
them compete effectively in the
real job market. In addition to
gaining experience and work skills
in jobs which fit their aptitudes.
each enrollee receives $45 a week.
This out-of-school program has
been funded from December 1967
to December 1968, at $124,000 for
the period. About $103,000 will be
used to pay the enrollees, all of
whom are from poor families in
designated poverty areas in New
York City, and the balance is as-
signed for administrators and for
the remedial counselling which is
part of the program.

6—Friday, February 9, 1968

Rabbi Ronald Greenwald, staff
member of Tora Umesora, is direc-
tor for the out-of-school project.
Rabbi Moses Biberfeld was en-
gaged by the agency to act as co-
ordinator for the project. Coun-
selors and guidance specialists
provide vocational training and
personality rehabilitation for the
enrollees.

The agency finds both the pros-
pects for the program and appro-
priate work assignments. The 54
enrollees are working at clerical
posts, tutoring, junior mechanic
tasks, machine operators, kitchen
assistants and building mainten-
ance. The work sites are schools,
Jewish centers and hospitals—
all non-profit institutions.

The day school agency also ad-
ministers a Neighborhood Youth
Corps program for teen-agers in
poverty areas aimed at preventing
students from becoming dropous.
This "in-school" program, funded
at $68.000 for 134 teen-agers, pro-
vides them with some money as
well as experience in such jobs as
library aides. teacher aides, cleri-
cal helpers and recreational in-
structors, in non-profit institu-
tions.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Egyptians Held Responsible
for Seitz Clash Last Month

INVENTORY SALE

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chairman of the United Jewish
All sales final
REPAIRING
Appeal.
The chairman of the profes-
sional division is Albert M. Col-
man. Co-chairmen are Dr. Eli M.
25250 Greenfield at 10 Mile, Oak Park
Brown and Herbert P. Sillman.
Phone: 548-5590
* * *
The special gifts section of the .••00•111•111••••410•••••11141•111111••••••• 11111111/11/••0••••• 100• 6
metropolitan division of the Allied
Jewish Campaign Emergency Fund
will hold a fund-raising meeting
at the residence of Mr. and Mrs.
Louis E. Barden, 25961 Raine, Oak
Park, 8 p.m. Tuesday.
STORE HOURS
Presiding wil be John Nemon,
chairman of the special gifts sec-
MONDAY and THURSDAY 12 Noon to 9 P.M.
tion and an officer of the council
• •
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY and
of administration of Jewish War
• •
SATURDAY
9:30
A.M.
to
6
P.M.
Veterans. Co-chairman of the sec-

SUNDAY 11 A.M. to 4 P.M.
tion is Alan Nathan; associate
chairmen are William Greenberg
and Bernard Linderman.
Nemon indicated that contri-
botions to the special gifts section
will "enable all Jews who make

FINE CLOTHING FOR OVER 30 YEARS
up the basic population of the •

Detroit Jewish community to con-

W.
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15200
tribute to the success of the 1968 •

campaign endeavors."
• •
3 Blocks East of Greenfield Corner of Sussex

A color film. "In Our Time,"
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1
will present an overview of the 5•• ■
Jewish Welfare Federation's par-
ticipation. locally and abroad, in
alleviating human perils and de-
privation.
The chairman of the organiza-
tional section of the metropolitan
10 DAY DELUXE
11 DAY DELUXE
division. Hyman Lipsitz, will high-
light his section's achievements to
date. Associate chairmen of the
organizational section are Sam
Lieberson and Mrs. Julius Ring.

ROBINSON'S LEATHER SHOP

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PUERTO RICO
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* * *

The pacesetters of the syna-
gogues and schools section of the
Allied Jewish Campaign - Israel
Emergency Fund will meet 8:15
p.m. Thursday, at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard S. Danzig,
23195 Laurel Valley, Southfield.
Dr. Samuel Krohn, lecturer in
periodontics at the University of
Detroit Dental School. will speak
to the group on the objectives and
significance of campaign efforts
to w a r d contributing to Jewish
agencies in Detroit and abroad. He
will share his experiences as a
member of the 1967 Detroit Serv-
ice Group Israel Mission. Dr.
Krohn is president of the Jewish
Community Council.

11 Breakfasts

8 Dinners

Welcome Cocktail Party

Yacht Cruise

APRIL 11th - 21st 1968

$469

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APRIL 12th -21st 1968



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WE ARE PROUD TO

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1968 MAN OF THE YEAR:

JACK WARNER

Distinction in any profession is very largely made up of things that cannot
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Agency Manager

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• •
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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Frdiay, February 9, 1968-7

Bonn Accuses Publisher W ho Printed Hitler Photo

MUNICH (JTA) — The publisher
of the neo-Nazi weekly Deutsche
National and Soldaten Zeitung has
been formally charged with dis-
seminating a Nazi emblem. The
paper ran a picture of Adolph Hit-
ler on its front page last July in
violation of the law of the Federal
Republic. It was paired with a
photo of Israel's Defense Minister
Moshe Dayan under the headline,
"Israel's Auschwitz in the Desert
—the Mass Murder of the Arabs
—Dayan in Hitler's Footsteps."
Dr. Gerhard Frey, the publisher
of the right-wing journal, made
news in another way last week
when he. named Moshe Menuhin,
father of violin virtuoso Yehudi
Menuhin, "permanent editorial ad-

viser on cultural policy." The
elder Menuhin has been a long-time
contributor of violently anti-Israel
articles to the weekly which fea-
tures articles in defense of Nazi
war criminals. Menuhin recently
wrote a letter to Frey calling him
"my friend."

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••

Egypt's defiance of Israel's warning not to send ships into the
northern section of the Suez Canal, blocked since the June Six-Day
War, triggered the Jan. 30 Israeli attack on Ismailia on the canal's
west bank.
* *
* * *

UNITED NATIONS (JTA)—A
United Nations report placed on
Egypt the blame for the Jan. 30
artillery exchange between Israel
and Egyptian forces on the Suez
Canal.
Secretary General U Thant's re-
port in effect substantiated Israeli

charges that the Egyptian effort

to send survey boats into the
canal's northern sector was , under-
taken in full knowledge of the
fact that Israel had refused to
agree to such operations there and
despite last minute warnings on
Israel's position which were trans-
mitted to Egypt on the morning
of the clash by Lt. Gen. Odd Bull,
the UN cease-fire observation
chief. The goal of the survey was
to prepare the way to clear the
southern end of the canal for the
exit of 15 foreign merchant ves-
sels trapped in the canal since
the June war. Israel had agreed
to the survey in the southern
sector.

Simons' Article

Nationally Noted

By DR. SAMUEL SILVER

(A Seven Arts Feature)

The UN report also support-
ed Israel's stand that the Egyp-
tian dispatch of boats from Lake
Timsa into the northern part of
the canal was a clear violation
of the Egyptian-Israeli cease-fire
agreement on non-use by either
nation of the canal.

The secretary general indicated
a belief that the 15 ships may be
stranded in the canal indefinitely
because of the fighting and that
future possibilities of clearing the
waterway "are in serious doubt."
Al Ahram, the authoritative Cairo
newspaper, said Egypt would not
free the trapped ships until the
Middle East crisis was settled and
that, as far as Egypt was con-
cerned, such salvage operations
were finished.
The UN report said Israeli firm-
ness made it necessary for the UN
Truce Supervision Organization to
warn Egypt that trouble was likely
if the survey boats moved north-
ward, a warning Gen. Bull per-
sonally passed on to Egypt, Thant
several times asked Israel to re-
consider its opposition, arguing
that the survey, including the
northern sector, was only a "tech-
nical undertaking." Thant at the
UN and Gen. Bull in Cairo warned
Egypt that the northern survey
could not be done without risk of
a clash.
Foreign Minister Abba Eban
said in a letter to Thant, on the
day after the clash, that if the
canal cease-fire agreement could
he set aside "unilaterally" by
Egypt, the precedent would af-
fect "the entire process of es-
tablishment of peace through
the promotion of agreements."

When a rabbi talks about reli-
gion, it's what you expect.
When a layman talks religion
it's news.
One of the most articulate lay-
men around is a one-time shul
president, Leonard N. Simons, of
Detroit. Simons' livelihood is
advertising, and his interests are
wide-ranging. Everyone in Detroit
knows him for his activities in
civic endeavors.
Simons can write, too. In
Gen. Yigal Allon. the Israeli
The Detroit Jewish News, Editor
Philip Slomovitz t h ought Si- labor minister, said in New York
mons' credo was printable. You that Israel was willing to separate
will, too, when you read it. This the question of the reopening of
is what Simons wrote under the Suez Canal for international
the heading "I Believe in God." use from the general Arab-Israeli
After reading it, you might want peace talks, but he stressed, Israel
to tell the author what you think would insist that its ships have
equal rights with the ships of all
of his views.
"In my heart and mind I believe there other nations in peaceful use of
must be some Supreme Being who made the waterway.
possible everything I see around me. I
don't think these things just happened.
In Tel Aviv, Prime Minister
I don't have to prove by my own expe-
rience that God exists. My heart—nzy Levi Eshkol said it was Israel that
faith—tells me there is a Supreme Be- took the initiative for clearing the
ing. I don't know what shape He takes.
I am not referring to any special kind southern end of the Suez Canal to
of God when I say I believe in God. I free the stranded ships. He said,
just believe there must be some Su-
preme Creator of everything in the at a question-and-answer session of
universe, and I hope He is a personal Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan,
God so I can pray to him and C0711711101e
with Him. Whether He listens to me or that he had suggested to the UN
does anything for me is beside the peace emissary Gunnar Jarring
point.
"I believe there is a God, but I can't that the ships leave by the south-
describe Him any more than anyone ern end when Jarring had asked
else can. I believe that somehow some
way, some people get Divine inspira- for some kind of "gesture" on the
tIOn from God and that God, in his way, canal issue. The premier said the
brings His message to the world. What
powers He has, I don't know any more artillery exchange, in which five
than you do. But Z believe He could do Israeli soldiers were wounded and
anything He wanted to do if He so
one Israeli and two Egyptian tanks
desired.
"Maybe all God does is to give us a were destroyed, "proves that we
chance by bringing us into the world,
and then it's entirely up to us to make mean business."
of our lives what we can or want t. do.
(In Washington it was reported
I don't think I can accurately explain
my feelings when I discuss this subject. that the United States government,
All I can say is that I am sincere in preoccupied with p r o b 1 e ms in
my belief that there is a God, and I
Korea and Vietnam, is quietly seek-
will pray to Hint as long as I live.
Everything becomes a ?natter of faith. ing to disengage from involvement
As Mainronides expressed it in the First
the
cause
in the Arab-Israel issue and is
is
Principle of Faith—"God
of all existed things—the Author and looking to the UN to resolve mat-
Guide of everything that has been cre-
ated." And for that we must have faith ters such as the flareup of vio-
in the existence of a Divine Providence. lence on the Suez Canal.)
This I have."

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