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August 02, 1968 - Image 33

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1968-08-02

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

People Make News

At the 72nd annual convention
of the Michigan Probate and Ju-
venile Court Judges Association,
held at the Caberfae Lodge in
Cadillac, Dr. William H. Ander-
son, director of the Michigan De-
partment of Mental Health; Dr.
GORDON YUDASHKIN, assistant
director of the Michigan Depart-
ment of Mental Health's division
of mental illness; and Harold R.
Webster, executive director of the
Michigan Society for Mental
Health, Inc., participated in the
report of the Probate Judges Men-
tal Health Committee under the
chairmanship of Judge IRA G.
KAUFMAN. The discussion fo-
cused upon the plight of Michi-
gan's mentally ill and the need for
improvement of facilities.
* * *

Detroiter PERRY COHEN is
new assistant treasurer of Chrys-
ler Argentina and with his wife
Margo and three children is now
living in Buenos Aires for the
next two years. Mrs. Cohen, a
physician, has been associated
with Sinai Hospital's research
staff and plans to continue her
work at the University of Buenos
Aires.

* *

Judge GEORGE D. KENT of
Common Pleas Court has just con-
cluded a month-long session of the
National College of State Trial
Judges at the University of Ne-
vada, Reno, He was one of 150
trial judges at the college, which
is now in its fifth year. Nearly
1,000 judges from every state in
the nation have graduated from
the program. This represents 25
per cent of the nation's state trial
judiciary.
* * *

Weizmann Institute President
MEYER W. WEISGAL was made a
member of the International Asso-
ciation of University Presidents by
the head of the IAUP, Dr. Peter
Sammartino, chancellor of Fair-
leigh Dickinson University, New
Jersey, in a ceremony at the Weis-
gal home in Rehovot, Israel.
* * *
DR. WILLIAM A. WEXLER,
president of Bnai Brith, who ar-
rived in London from a six-day
visit to Romania, said he had had
a "very friendly and very useful"
conversation in Bucharest with
Vasile Gliga, the Romanian deputy
foreign minister. Dr. Wexler's
delegation also had a conference
with Jonata Barbalescu, the direct-
or-general of the ministry of cults.
It toured the provinces and visited
Jewish communities outside Bu-
charest.
* * *
Detroit Attorney SAMUEL
CHARFOOS was elected to the
board of governors of the 25,-
000-member American Trial Law-
yers Association, the nation's
second largest bar association.
Charfoos, who will serve on a 50-
man board, was elected to a two-
year term at the 22nd annual
convention of the association
meeting at the Shoreham Hotel.

a

a

a

LINCOLN MOTOR INN

O

155. Guest Rourns--Sauna—T

SMORGASBORD

0

Every Thurs.
6 to 10 p.m.

0

FRANKENMUTH

FAMILY STYLE

a

0

CHICKEN

EVERY SUN.

"APPETEASER"

a

SELF SERVICE
SOMETHING
SOMETHING
DIFFERENT
NEW

13

12 VARIETIES

a

BANQUET
SPAC.E
UP TO
1000

BRKT-LUNCH
DINNER
SERVED DAILY

DINE & DANCE

386-5000

free
Airport
1901 Southfield at

Bus -

Se7viee
Dix

a

The Metropolitan Detroit Phar-
maceutical Association announced
the election of JACK KUTNICK
of Oak Park as president. Other
officers include Joseph Wolf of
Southfield as president-elect; and
Jane L. Rogan of Detroit as secre-
tary. Among the executive commit-
tee members are chairman Stanley
C. Klein, Harold W. Baron, Martin
Barr, Donald A. Dunn, Harold
Ellias, Meyer L. Goldstein, Albert
R. Pisa, Jacqueline E. Roggin,
Morris Rogoff and Ira H. Smith.

*

*

*

Three photographs by LEO R.
KNIGHT, Detroit photographer,
have been selected for display at
the 77th annual Exhibition of Pro-
fessional Photography, the world's
largest a n d most comprehensive
print show, sponsored by the Pro-
fessional Photographers of Amer-
ica, Inc., opening Sunday at the
Conrad Hilton Hotel, Chicago.
More than 4,000 prints were
judged, but only 900 were accept-
ed for this five-day grand cham-
pionship display.
* * *
A $20,000 grant for the study of
earthquake recognition criteria has
just been awarded to Prof. ARI
BEN-MEN..4HEM of the Wiezmann
Institute's applied mathematics
department in Israel by the Euro-
pean Office of Aerospace Research
of the U.S. Air Force. This follows
an earlier grant of $40,000 in May
1966, and will enable Prof. Ben-
Menahem and his group to carry
on their work to the beginning of
1970.

New Jerusalem
Zionist Program

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, August 2, 1968-33

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(Adopted by World
Zionist Congress)
The aims of Zionism are:
i
The unity of the Jewish people i
and the centrality of Israel in its
1
life;
I
1
The ingathering of the Jewish .!
people in its historic homeland
Eretz Israel, through Aliya from
all lands;
The strengthening of the State
of Israel founded on the prophetic
ideals of justice and peace;
The preservation of the identity
of the Jewish people through the
fostering of Jewish and Hebrew
education and of Jewish spiritual
and cultural values;
The protection of Jewish rights
I
everywhere.

Juliet

Suburbans
Green-8 Center & Bloomfield Commons !

...-
,e

1

p ,

--
41.111;;."
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40.
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PLAID DRESS
& COAT
For Now!

..4,1■0. 01111 1.41 ■ 4a04•11 ■ 041!0•11•11.41 ■■•■ 041•1111•41 ■ 11•111.04 ■•1■ as

yesterday $65.

SUNDAY ONLY

GREEN-8, CENTER
‘&
BLOOMFIELD
COMMONS

'26

SUNDAY

CHOICE OF
THE HOUSE!

Protest Release
of Nazi General

EVERY

AMSTERDAM (JTA) — The
Dutch Auschwitz Committee has
formally protested to West German
Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger
against the release of former S.S.
General Wilhelm Harster.
Gen. Harster, 63, who was chief
of Hitler's Holland security policy
during World War II, , was sen-
tenced Feb. 24, 1967, to 15 years
at hard labor for his role in the
deportation and eventual death e
of some 82,454 Dutch Jews, among
them Anne Frank, the 15-year-old I
girl whose diary of her days in
hiding became world famous.
Gen. Harster was freed under a
law which allows release after two-
thirds of a sentence was served.
Although Gen. Harster had for-
many served only a little more -
than a year, a Munich court judge I.
accepted as time served the eight $
years Gen. Harster had been held
before sentencing in 1967.

SUMMER

DRESS!

NOW
EXACTLY

2 PRICE!

I

Child Agency Faces
Government Takeover i

WINNIPEG (JTA) — Govern-
ment participation in planning new
and expanded health and welfare
services is welcome to the Jewish
Child and Family Service of Win-
nipeg but "total government take-
over" is another matter, President
I. Peitz of the Jewish service agen- !
cy said.
Peitz told the annual meeting
that the JCFS faced a serious chal-
lenge embodied in a recommenda-
tion by the Public Advisory Board
of Manitoba that the JCFS should
merge into larger agencies in the
area to ensure the availability of
all funds needed to carry out JCFS
programs. He said that the recom-
mendation posed the issue of
whether "the original motivating
reasons for the establishment of a
sectarian agency were still present
in the community to require the
continuation of such an agency."
Noting that the effect of such rec-
ommendations might be to rele-
gate voluntary agencies "to an in-
significant and ineffective role in
the planning and implementation
of health and welfare services," he
told the meeting that on March
14, the JCFS board adopted unani-
mously a .resolution which reaf-
firmed the "need for the continu-
ation" of the JCFS.

Were $20 to $300.
Many darks included for
wear thru September!

Charge It!
Security
Mich. Bankard
Juliet

Outstanding
Selection!

SHOP
EARLY!

iuliet

Suburbans

GREEN-8 CENTER

Sunday 12 Noon to 5 P.M.
GREEN-8 CENTER
Greenfield-8 Mi. Rd.
BLOOMFIELD COMMONS.

BLOOMFIELD
COMMONS

Maple. & LaMer

/AM. 41.1“1•1.1 4MM. I ■•■ • 41.11111111.1 N1111.1 1111 ■ 04INN 101111 ■ 0•1111 ■ 43

NIMIN AM1.0.111111

1■M■

1 41•1m• 1 .101. 0 ■•••••0

)41.■ .11•11. ■•=-0 •I••■■ 1=0-0

IMENH AM 411M■47! 4141~10.11MHMINOMMMINK

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