THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, March 29, 1968-35 Beth Aaron Youths to Lead Services; Church Group Will Be Lunch Guests On Saturday, the youth of Beth Aaron Synagogue again will con- duct the entire Sabbath service in the main sanctuary. Members of the senior and junior United Synagogue Youth groups, Talis and Tefilin Club and past graduates who will participate are: Richard Minkin, Gary Medwed, Marc Friedman, David Kaplan, Mayer Fox, Gary Friedman, Rob- ert Levy, Michael Levy, Aaron Fox, Gary Docks, Gloria Wolk, Sue Turkel, Barry Weisz, Cindy Silver- man, Ruthe Levy, Roberta Wainer . and Sam Levy. To further commemorate this "Shabat ha'hodesh" Sabbath of the New Month, the youth have invited young members of Fairview Ave- nue Baptist Church to be guests at services and together will hold a cultural luncheon study group immediately following. All youth are invited. MAUREEN HAVON LANDAU, a sixth grade Campfire Girl from Pepper School, Oak Park, was named "top salesgirl" in the Oak- land County Campfire Girl candy sale. Daughter of the Louis Lan- daus of Gardner Ave., Maureen sold 450 boxes of candy and re- ceived a silver bracelet charm. Proceeds from the drive go toward providing camperships for girls who can not afford to go to camp without assistance. * * * Rebecca Frohman, pianist, will present JILL FELDMAN in recital 3 p.m. Sunday at the Detroit Insti- tute of Musical Art. Her program will include works by Bach, Gersh- win, Scarlatti, Chopin, Liszt and Khatchaturian. Jill won first place in two piano competitions in the past year. The public is invited without charge. Center to Hold Contest for Piano and Violin The fourth annual competition for young artists will be held at the Jewish Center June 9. Two hundred dollars will be given to the winner of the violin competition and $200 to the winner of the piano competition. Both winners will be presented at a Tuesday evening concert of ae Center Symphony Orchestra :rider the direction of Julius Chajes during the 1968-69 season. The age limit for candidates is 16 to 24. The applicant must be a resident of Michigan. The deadline for receiving appli- cations will be May 1. Safari Set for Tweens Tweens (7th - 9th graders) can look forward to a summer of rec- reation, entertainment and fellow- ship in the Jewish Center's Safari '68 program. Registration is now open at the Center. The program is conducted Mon- days through Fridays from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Each day the Tweens board buses to travel to points of interest in the Detroit metropolitan area. Further information can be ob- tained from Sharon Alterman, Group Services division, DI 1-4200. JERUSALEM — Fresh opportuni- ties for much needed additional training are now open to Jerusa- lem's working youth at the new John F. Kennedy Apprenticeship Center, which was established jointly by the Ministry of Labor and ORT Israel and formally dedi- cated on Feb. 19. Participating in the dedication ceremony were Labor Minister Yigal Allon, Jerusalem Mayor Teddy Kollek and U.S. Ambassador to Israel M. Walworth Barbour. ORT Israel was represented by Acting Chairman Brig General Chaim Herzog and General Direc- tor Joseph Harmatz, who served as chairman of the dedication ceremony. Israel's Labor Minister Allon, the key speaker, read to the audi- ence of over 500 a cabled message from Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy expressing her pleasure at having the center named for her late husband and extending congratula- tions and best wishes. Allon went on to point out that the demand for skilled workers is on the rise in the country's industries. He commended the high stand- ard of ORT training and voiced the expectation that the Kennedy Apprenticeship Center, which once stood near the border with Jordan but now stands in the heart of united Jerusalem, will in the future serve boys and girls from East Jerusalem also. U.S. Ambassador Barbour con- veyed his government's apprecia- tion of the center bearing the name of the late President Ken- nedy. He pointed to the special value of vocational training in preparing youth for a productive life and the fine record ORT has Torch Symbolizes Youth's Protest for Soviet Jewry Jewish Draftees Will Be Deferred During Passover They Made the Grade ROBERT B. STULBERG, son of Dr. and Mrs. Samuel Stulberg, 19560 Roslyn, has been named to the news board of the Columbia Daily Spectator, the student news- paper at Columbia College, New York City. Stulberg, 19, • a sopho- more at Columbia, is a 1966 honor graduate of Cass Technical High School in Detroit, where he was editor-in-chief of the school news- paper, vice president of the honor society and recipient of national and state awards for debating. He holds a National Merit Scholarship. Although published by students at Columbia College, the undergradu- ate men's school of Columbia Uni- versity, Spectator functions as a universitywide publication. Israel Dedicates ORT Students' New Kennedy Center This is the symbol for Project Outcry — a protest by Detroit Jewish youth groups against the plight of Jews in the Soviet Union — which will culminate in a rally at the Jewish Center April 7, the weekend before Passover. A car march from Cong. Bnai David to the Center will be joined by marchers with- out cars at Seven Mile and Schaefer. Purpose of the march is to demonstrate a community concern for the Jews of the Soviet Union. Project Outcry is sponsored by the Jewish Youth Council for Soviet Jewry with the Jewish Center. Dr. Daniel N. Jacobs, an expert on the Soviet Union, will speak at the rally 3 p.m. at the Jewish Center. Gen. S.L.A. Marshall to Address USY Unit Brig. Gen. S. L. A. Marshall will be guest speaker at a public meet- ing sponsored by the Adas Shalom United Synagogue Youth 8:30 p.m. April 14 in the social hall. Gen. Marshall will speak on "Israel— Past, Present and Future." USY'ers from all chapters in the Detroit area are invited. Gen. Marshall will present his views on Israel's present military situation. He has been a soldier since World War I, and a military analyst since the 1920s. In prepar- ing his latest book, "Swift Sword," Gen. Marshall conferred with the top commanders and visited all the battlefields, within days after the Parent-Child Problems Most Common to Agency LONG BEACH, Calif. (JTA) — Parent-child relationship problems represented almost a quarter of all problems brought to the Jewish Family Service during January, the agency reported in an evalu- ation of its services. Marital difficulties represented slightly more than 15 per cent of the 135 families served by the agency in that period, according to president Bernard A. Landes, as the second highest category. Adult personal adjustment prob- lems also totalled slightly more than 15 per cent. Problems of the aged totalled almost 10 per cent for the fourth largest category. Other problems, in descending order of frequency, included adolescent personal ad- justments, physical illness, econo- mic problems, suspected psychosis and diagnosed psychosis. Jewish draftees may ask defer- ment during passover. The National Jewish Welfare Board's commission on Jewish chaplaincy has received an official communication from Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of the Selective Service System, announcing that all draft boards have been re- quested to give "favorable consid- eration, wherever possible," to re- quests of registrants of the Jewish faith for postponements of physical examination or induction into the Armed Forces during Passover. This communication, addressed to Rabbi Selwyn D. Ruslander, Dayton, 0., chairman of the JWB commission, was Selective Service Operations Bulletin No. 81, amend- ed as of July 21, 1967, entitled "Jewish Holy Days." The bulletin gives Jewish registrants scheduled for physical examination or in- duction immediately prior to or during the holiday the right to' re- quest deferment until after Pass- over. Requests for such deferment should be made directly to local draft boards. FOR THE BEST IN MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT Program at 12 Colleges to Boost Interest in Israel NEW YORK (JTA) — A new campus program designed to re- vive interest among Jewish college youth in Israel and Judaism has been instituted at 12 American col- leges under the auspices of Yavne, the Tora Education and Culture Department of the Jewish Agency's American section. Highlighted by a six-week tour of Israel, including three weeks of ONE WEEK ONLY! 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The purpose of the course is to share with the developing countries Israel's experience in the exploita- tion of subterranean water sup- plies. By the application of scien- tific methods, Israelis have suc- ceeded in making available large amounts of groundwater which now cover two-thirds of the coun- try's water supply from under- ground sources. Moreover, Israel's water supply has become almost independent of the vagaries of clim ate. achieved in this field. The new center, located in a developing section of Jerusalem, has a capacity for 1,200 students, with 850 presently enrolled. 16007 W. 8 MILE Music the Stein-Way DICK STEIN Corner Rutherford & ORCHESTRA 272-2522 LI 7-2770 Om, • • • • • • • • • • • Parking in Rear (I LINCOLN motor INN 155 Guest Rooms • Sauna • Free T. V. • Heated Poo! • GA! Shoo • Barber Shop • • • S Breakfast Served Daily • GAB'S Famous. 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