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

April 26, 1968 - Image 22

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1968-04-26

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

Michigan State University's KO.-
log Center for Continuing Educa-
tion has hosted 39 conferences, in-
volving some 4,100 people, during
the month of April.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
22—Friday, April 26, 1968

Im o aMb.o •M111.-.1=10-0•11 ■ 41 ■ 1-0•11 ■ 041a11,04111111,0111111111.0411110.0!01111111•041.11.04
■ 041111111 ■0 1111111 0!n4011•04•111.011111111) .■ •H) 11•1041



Boris Smolar's

'Between You
and Me'

(Copyright 1968, JTA Inc.)

JEWISH TRADITIONS: I was greatly impressed seeing several hun-
dred Bnai Brith youths praying in Tefilin (philacteries) at one of
their regional conventions . . . Tefilin is the cornerstone of Bar
Mitzva . . . But while Bar Mitzva is popular, the tradition of Tefilin
is completely strange to youth . . . Rarely does an American Jewish
youth follow up his Bar Mitzva ceremony by observing the tradition
of praying in Tefilin . . . The tradition is alien not only to Jewish
youths, but to most of their parents . . . It, therefore, speaks highly
for the Bnai Brith Youth Organization that at a time when youth in
America is inclined toward hippie culture, the BBYO is seeking to
gathered for you
attract the interests of its members to Jewish tradition and learning
. . . BBYO is to be congratulated for the program guides it has just
published on the Sabbath and on the Nazi holocaust . . . Both volumes
were expertly prepared and edited by Rabbi Leivy Smolar, associate
!I
aever trust a woman," remarked professor of history and Bible at Baltimore Hebrew College . . . They
Oscar Wilde, "who tells you her age. A give inspiring guidance to Jewish youth and contain selective material
woman who tells you that will tell you which will definitely appeal to the hearts and the minds of Jewish
anything." I don't actually agree with youngsters . . . The book on the Sabbath—"Youth and the Living Sab-
this typically Wilde witticism and the bath"—follow the Bnai Brith principle that young Jews must look upon
implication that a woman's age must be the Sabbath not as a day of austerity and limitations, but one which
veiled in mystery. I maintain that it is offers opportunities for rich, enjoyable and creative Jewish activities.

Miriam Field

irrelevant. Alter all, it was not the teen-

age Juliets who set the world on fire .. .
Cleopatra was nearly thirty when Mark
Antony tossed aside an empire for her
sake. And Helen of Troy, to cite yet
another history book example, was over
forty when her fabled face launched a
thousand ships and burnt the topless
towers of Illyium (or, in more prosaic
terms, when she became the cause of the
Trojan Wars). Nor, apparently, was her
beauty dimmed when she returned, ten
years later, to her rejoicing husband.

gt

is unlikely that Helen rushed into
the kitchen to celebrate her homecoming
by whipping up a home-baked cake. But
if she had, she might (perhaps) have
made this celebration specialty called

HELEN OF TROY TORTE

cup unsifted flour • 1/2 tsp. salt
2 eggs, separated • 1 /2 cup sugar
3 /4 cup ground Planters Pecans
1 /3 cup Planters Oil
2 tablespoons milk
1 /2 tsp. vanilla extract
1 cup heavy cream • 1 tablespoon sugar
Sift together flour and salt. Beat egg yolks

1 /2

slightly; gradually beat in 1/4 cup sugar.
Add Planters Pecans, Planters Oil, milk
and vanilla extract. Fold in sifted dry in-
gredients. Beat egg whites until foamy;
gradually add remaining 1/4 cup sugar and
continue beating until stiff but not dry.
Fold into batter. Pour into two greased
and floured 8-inch round cake pans. Bake
in slow oven (300°F.) 40 minutes, or until
done. Remove from pans and place on wire
racks to cool. When cakes are cooled,
split layers in half. Beat heavy cream and
1 tablespoon sugar together until of desired
spreading consistency. Spread, whipped
cream between layers and on top of cake.
Chill until ready to serve. Your Helen of
Troy Torte will serve six handsomely—
and launch countless compliments.

*

THE TEFILIN MOVEMENT: The Tefilin mass-prayer conducted at the
conference of the Bnai Brith Youth Organization is part and parcel
of "Tefilin Campaign" started by the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi
Menachem M. Schneerson . . . The campaign aims at strengthening
JeWish traditions and Jewish identity among teen-agers and is being
directed with determination and with growing success . . . The Luba-
vitcher Hasidic movement sponsors more than 70 clubs for children
from coast to coast as well as diversified educational programs for
teen-agers and adults . . . It conducts a unique service for Jewish
farmers who live in isolated areas . . . At various intervals repre-
sentatives of the Lubavitcher movement travel by auto to these com-
munities to visit homes of the farmers and to discuss Jewish educa-
tional problems with their families . . . They help the farmers over-
come the lack of Jewish school facilities and provide them with
self-teaching literature for the home . . . Bookmobiles of the Luba-
vitcher movement are simultaneously visiting outlying communities
and provide Jews in the rural areas with the opportunity to deepen
and broaden their knowledge of Judaism . . . Incidentally, the Luba-
vitcher movement is now celebrating the 70th anniversary of its
school system . . . It was 70 years ago that the first Lubavitcher
yeshivot were established in Russia, the country where the Luba-
vitcher movement originated . . . Today one can find Lubavitcher
all-day schools in almost every country in the world except in
the Communist countries . . . Tens of thousandS of pupils are
enrolled in these schools . . . In the United States, one can find now
at least 15 Lubavitcher all-day schools in New York, Boston, Phila-
delphia, Pittsburgh and other cities . . . It was the late Lubavitcher
Rebbe, Rabbi Joseph I. Schneerson, who laid the foundation for these
schools in 1942, when he arrived in this country after being rescued
from Nazi Europe.

*

Panderers Who Use Mail Can Be Curbed

Citizens offended by pandering
advertisements sent to the m
through the mail can now take
steps to curb such mail, Post-
master Edward L. Baker said, an-
nouncing plans for administering a
new law which gives each family
the right to decide that an ad is
"erotically arousing or sexually
provocative."

When an advertisement sent
through the mails is offensive on
these grounds, a postal patron can
now ask the post office to direct
the specific mailer to send no
more mail to him and to remove
immediately the patron's name
from all mailing lists the mailer
owns, controls or rents.

for prohibitory order" on the face
of the envelope,
Baker said: "This new law
should give some protection to
American families offended by ad-
vertisements they believe to be
morally harmful, particularly to
their children.
"Last year the Post Office De-
partment received some 140,000
complaints from those offended by
pandering advertisements. While in
most cases the ads were not
legally obscene and were therefore
mailable, they are often offensive
and are usually not the type of
material one would want his chil-
dren to read," the postmaster said.

An extraordinary haste to dis-
To assist patrons, the Post Office charge on obligation is a sort of
Department has published a brief ingratitude.—La Rochefoucauld.
pamphlet — "How You Can Curb
Pandering Advertisements"—
which is now available at all De-
troit postal stations and branches.
In addition to explaining how the
0
law works, the pocket-size leaflet
R
A
contains a form letter one can use
G
A
when sending his complaint to the
0
N
post office.

RENT

The pamphlet explains that when
a patron receives an advertisement
which is, in his opinion, pandering,
he must send the ad, its envelope
and the form letter, or one which
includes its language, to his post
office with the words, "Request

S

S

Baldwin - Yamaha - Weber
Paymts. Apply to Purchase Price
SM I LEY BROS.

Detroit • Birmingham • Pontiac
MI 7-1177
FE 4-4721
Detroit Open Sunday 1 5 p.m.

TR 3-6800

-

*

BNAI BRITH ACHIEVEMENTS: Even more important than the
• BBYO book on Sabbath is its book "Lest We Forget" dealing with
the Holocaust . . . American Jewish youth is a generation born after
the fall of the Nazi regime . . . Well-educated and well-meaning as
these Jewish teen-agers are, they don't grasp sufficiently the tragedy
of the annihilation of six million Jews by the Nazis . .. Many of them
don't know the meaning of genocide, and none of them know that
among the six million Jews killed, there were 1,200,000 children
. . . The BBYO book brings to them the gloomy picture of the Nazi
aVot all beauty rituals were esoteric.
According to her perfumer and apothe- destruction of European Jewry in a meaningful way designed to help
cary-in-chief,"every morning of her life them understand what took place.

the Lady Diane tie Poitiers bathed in
rainwater . . . and this, I swear by the
soul of my honored mistress, was the
only secret with which that illustrious
dame preserved her health, youth and
beauty to the age of three score years
and seven."

Gnat is beauty? Definitions vary
and are inconclusive. Where is beauty?
In the eye of the beholder, of course.
And what does a man like to behold?
"There is no spectacle on earth more

appealing," declared Thomas Wolfe,
and pragmatic husbands would prob-

ably agree, "than that of a beautiful
woman cooking dinner for someone
she loves." For the pragmatist in your
life, bake a beautiful

CLEOPATRA CAKE
1 3/4 cups unsifted cake flour

1 3/4 cups sugar

1 tbsp. Chase & Sanborn Instant Coffee

2 /2

11/2 tsps. baking soda • 1/2 tsp. salt
tsp. ground cinnamon • 7 eggs, separated
2 /2 cup Planters Oil • 1/2 cup milk
3 squares (1-oz. each)
unsweetened chocolate, melted
2 tsps. vanilla extract
1 /2 tsp. cream of tartar

Sift together Hour, sugar, Chase & Sanborn
Instant Coffee, baking soda, salt, cinna-
mon. Make a well in center of dry ingredi-

ents and add egg yolks, Planters Oil,
milk, melted chocolate and vanilla. Beat
until smooth; set aside. Beat together egg
whites and cream of tartar until stiff peaks
form. Fold chocolate mixture into egg
whites. Pour into an ungreased 10-inch
tube pan. Bake in moderate oven (375°F.)
about 55 minutes, or until done. Invert pan
over funnel or bottle. Cool 1 hour before
removing. Makes one high handsome coffee
chiffon cake.

MANNA ABOUT TOWN
IS A STANDARD BRANDS EXCLUSIVE

EXCLUSIVELY FOR THE
BRIGHT YOUNG HOMEMAKER

Wolfson Labs Dedicated at Weizmann Institute

REHOVOT (JTA) — An eight-
story, 55,000-square-foot institute
of experimental biology was dedi-
cated - here in the name of its
donor, Sir Isaac Wolfson, promi-
nent British businessman and
philanthropist. The structure will
be part of the Weizmann Institute
of Science which it will serve as a
laboratory for investigating the
life processes, the principles of
immunology and cancer research.
The ceremonies were attended
by President Zalman Shazar of
Israel and Finance Minister Pinhas
Sapir. A mezuza was affixed to

Israeli \Writers Urge
Colleagues Fight Bigotry

JERUSALEM (JTA) — The na-
tional conference of Hebrew writ-
ers ended its first session here
with a resolution urging writers
and poets the world over to raise
their voices and use their pens
to fight anti-Semitism wherever
it may arise, in whatever form.
The writers urged their col-
leagues abroad to support the
security of Israel and hack efforts
for peace in the Middle East and
an understanding between Jews
and Arabs. The conference also
discussed the confrontation be-
tween the old and the new genera-
tion of writers. The second session
will open in Tel Aviv next month.

the door of the building by Israel's
Nobel Laureate, S. Y. Agnon, and
Wolfson's son, Leonard.
Mrs. Wolfson also attended the
dedication which was presided
over by Meyer Weisgal, president
of the Weizmann Institute. The
department of experimental bio-
logy at the new institute will be
headed by Prof. Isaac Barenblum,
one of Israel's leading cancer re-
searchers. Prof. Michael Feldman
will head the department of cell
biology and Prof. Michael Sela will
be in charge of chemical immuno-
logy research.

Aid Kidney Victims

LOS ANGELES (JTA) — Eight
victims of kidney disease are per-
forming life-saving treatment for
themselves at home with artificial
kidney machines they were trained
to use by the Cedars-Sinai Hos-
pital's home hemodialysis center.
The training was provided under
a three-year federal grant of $571,-
610.

Religion for Retarded

ALEXANDRIA, Va. (JTA) —
The Agudas Achim Congregation
here said it had been asked to or-
ganize a religious school class for
Jewish retarded children. Efforts
will be made to determine how
many children in the northern
Virginia area would be able to use
such a class.

And we'll help you by
offering up to $10 off
on a Gas incinerator.

After all, burning trash pollutes the air, smells up the nelghbortIOCKi
That's why we're giving up to $10 off, if you buy a Gas Incinerator
between now and June 17. Then let it get rid of trash, newspapetil
or anything combustible. And all it costs is pennies a day to operate,
Save now on a Gas incinerator. Low down payment, easy team.
More details are waiting for you at your dealer's or Michigan Cow
solidated showrooms. Or send the coupon below, and a represeate!
Live will be out shortly with the full story.

Michigan Consolidated Gas Company
One Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan 48226
Yes, I want to help stop air pollution—and save apt° $10, too, ftnel
out a representative with more details on a smoke-tree, odor--tre ►
Gas incinerator.

NAME

CITY

ADDRESS

TELEPHONF

MICHIGAN CONSOLIDATED GAS COMPANY

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan