THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, August 2, 1968-17

Houston Jewish Center to Be Open
on Sabbath to the Needy in Summer

HOUSTON (JTA)—The Houston
Jewish Community Center will be
open for the use of underprivi-
leged . Negro children every Satur-
day afternoon for the duration of
the summer.
The center board voted unani-
mously to accede to the request of
the Sumer Youth Program to make
the facilities available. The board
of the Jewish Community Council
and the Houston Rabbinical Asso-
ciation concurred in the decision.
It was • described as a measure
to fight racial divisiveness here
and to establish a closer under-
standing of the concern of the Jew-
ish community for the welfare of

Duties of 'Compleat Physician' Analyzed

Doctors are challenged in a crit- the doctor as the relative merits
ical work by Dr. Louis Lasagna, of oral contraceptive- and intrau-
professor of medicine at Johns erine devices, the right of a woman
to abortion, the right of a mongol
Hopkins University.
to decent treatment at the hands
Under the title "Life, Death of the more normal members of
and the Doctor," Dr. Lasagna's society. The terrors of aging and
of dying,, the specter and promise
volume, published by Knopf, de- of heredity control, the legal rights
scribes how the doctor could serve of the sick and the mad, the needs
humanity and points to the profes- of the drug addicts and the alco-
sion's shortcomings.
holics—all these, and much more,
within the purview of the Corn-
His contentions emphasized in fall
this work are that doctors are pleat Physician • • . "
obligated not only to care for peo-
HUMILITY
ple medically but also to help fight
God faileth not the humble
poverty and to raise social stand-
man
ards. He asserts:

the underprivileged None of the
center staff will be actively direct-
ing the family resource program
at the center but staff members
have volunteered to train Negro
youth to serve as program direc-
tors.
A letter from Harold Falik, pres-
ident of the center, explained to
the_ Summer Youth Program lead-
ership that the center would not
be' able to provide staff . because
the programs would be on the Sab-
bath. Falik told the Jewish Herald-
Voice that in making the center
"The threats to man from his
and its facilities available, "we environment, the race against
are following the wishes of a vast famine and the restriction of popu-
majority of our community."
lation growth are as germane to

Who knows he is but dust,
Who in his 'loving Lord doth
put
Fits heart, his soul, his trust.
Richard Palmer

How can this

,?#;114

...

•

be this?

Easy. They're the same. Exactiy the same...
except the "Mt. Whitney" cans of ripe olives
now bear the:name "Lindsay."
Actually, the change started about two years
no when. the Mt. Whitney Ripe Olive Com-
pany joined California's largest cooperative
group of olive growers the Lindsay Ripe
Olive Growers.
And now, together, they're the world's largest
group of ripe olive growers and packers, They

•

",

e

offet. the highest citWity and most rigid
standards of inspection of any ripe olives.
Actually, you can see the difference and taste
the difference...the extra goodness.
With all the care that goes into producing these
olives, it seems only right that "Mt. Whitney's
should take on the Lindsay name as well.
So that's been done and that's the name
you'll find from now on: Lindsay, the finest
of all ripe olives.

LAKE LOTS

At Beautiful Big Lake
Near Waterford, 40 min-
utes from Northland. Ap-
prox. 1/2 acre each,
$3,500, terms. Swimming,
boating, water skiing,

fishing, near local ski
areas. Congenial neigh-
bors. Only 3 sites remain-

ing. Must be seen to ap-
preciate.

Owner-Harold Weine

56 3-4282-Weekdays

62 5-3475-Weekends

