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October 18, 1968 - Image 33

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1968-10-18

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

34—Friday, October 18, 19611

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Youth News

Kids to Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sansom

TRICK CR TREAT,
EH? 1-151-1-1-1E1-1,
WELL,THIS
FOR UNICEF!

HE SAID,"THIS

IS FOR YOU,

NICZP!

HOW SHOULD •

KNOW?

GAN'T EVEN
FIGURE HOW

HE KNEW
MY NAME!

Grotesque, contorted features.
Grim, tragic lines etched by hun-
ger and disease.
Fanciful, whimsical caricatures.
Bodies deformed by starvation.
Silhouettes comically shaped by
padding and bizarre costumes.
Childre n, one and all. Some
wearing masks over healthy, smil-
ing faces, and others presenting
their own emaciated, pitiful bodies
to the horrified observer's inspec-
tion.
What relationship can exist be-
tween youthful trick-or-treaters do-
ing their rounds on Halloween and
the small victims of Man's own in-
humanity to man?
The connection is a very real
one, amid so much sorrow and
frustration in the face of a new
emergency — this time the suffer-
ing children and mothers on both
sides of the fighting lines in Ni-
geria.
UNICEF, which has branched
f r o m emergency aid following

Couple to Serve
in Peace Corps

Mr. and Mrs. Norman D. Levin
have been invited to serve in the
Peace Corps in Korea.
They will train for three months
at the Peace Corps Training Center
at Hilo, Hawaii, where conditions
under which they will live in Ko-
rea will be simulated. Their train-
ing includes learning to speak,
read and write Korean as well as
training to be a part of the com-
munity where they will spend 24
months.
Levin was with the National
Teacher Corps; served as youth
adviser of United Synagogue Youth
at Adas Shalom and head of youth
activites at Beth Aaron.

All-City in football at Mum-
ford High School, he played foot-
ball for three years at Wayne
State University. He received
his BA from Wayne State with a
major in political science. He
has worked in an Israeli kibutz
and attended Ramah Camp, grad-
uated from the United Hebrew
Schools and attended the Mid-
rasha for several years.

Mrs. Levin (Gloria Burns) also
was graduated from Wayne State,
with a degree in special education.
A speech therapist in the Detroit
schools for the past two years, she
has been youth adviser at Cong.
Beth Shalom, taught Hebrew at
the Beth Hillel Religious School,
and until now was youth director
of Ahavas Achim-Beth Aaron. She
was awarded the Mildred Simons
Rosenberg Youth Award for out-
standing community participation
and has also been to Israel.
The Levins, who have been mar-
ried one year, are the children of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Burns
of Oak Park and Mr. and Mrs. Mil-
ton Levin of Southfield.

World War II, into long-range self-
help programs now under way in
120 countries, still stands ready
when another crisis erupts threat-
ening children's welfare.
Children of the United States,
ringing doorbells, collecting pen-
nies, nickles, dimes, are part of a Yiddish Course Offered
new children's crusade — a cru-
sade which last year prompted the to Students at WSU
President of the United States to
The Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation
proclaim Halloween — Oct. 31, Na- at Wayne State University has re-
tional UNICEF Day, in honor of ceived a grant from the Farband-
these generous American kids.
Labor Zionist Order for a Yiddish
course during the current academic
Fraternity Lecture Series
year.
A great deal of interest was
to Memorialize Member
shown last year in a Yiddish course
Tau Epsilon Phi Fraternity at for beginners taught by Rabbi Max
Wayne State Unversity will hear Kapustin under the auspices of
Circuit Court Judge Charles Kauf-
the foundation.
man as the first speaker in a series
Under the Farband grant, Hillel
of lectures 8 p.m. Wednesday in is offering a noncredit course in
DeRoy Auditorium, on the WSU Yiddish for beginners two after-
campus.
noons a week in Room 446 of the
The series is in memory of Rich- University Library. Instructor will
ard Aronsson, a TEP member whe be Movsas Goldoftas, veteran De
died Dec. 9, 1967.
troit educator, who has served as
principal of the Hayim Greenberg
Shute for 25 years and is also
teaching at the Midrasha College
of Jewish Studies.
Interested students are asked to
contact the Hillel Foundation, TE
1-0129, immediately. If necessary,
there is a possibility of changing
the 3:30-4:20 scheduled time.

Trig No Problem to 16-Year-Old Prof

They Made
The Grade

Freshmen two years older than she is are learning trigonometry
from Edith Stern, 16-year-old student instructor at Michigan State
University. Edith, from North Miami, seeks a master's degree in
theoretical mathematics and is considered a genius, with IQ of 201.

RUTH DEBORAH GOODMAN,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Goodman of Tracey Ave., is spend-
ing her junior year at Massad
Alonei Yitzhak Secondary School,
in Israel. Ruth is a graduate of the
United Hebrew Schools.
* * *
HOWARD M. DAVIS of Elgin
Ave., Oak Park, a senior at Wayne
State University's Monteith Col-
lege, recently returned from a
three-month trip into the North-
west territories of Canada. He and
two companions traveled by kayak
from the south shore of Great
Bear Lake to the Arctic Coast
via the Anderson River. Davis is
a member of the fencing team at
Wayne State University.

ROSS REALTY Co.

Light for General

Israeli Consular Official
to Meet With Advisers

Youth advisers will meet with
Ehud Lador, consul for cultural
activities of the Israel Consulate
General in Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Tues-
day at the Jewish Center.
Following dinner, Lador will dis-
cuss ways in which the Israeli
Consulate can help youth organiza-
tions with their Israel programing.
A discussion of current plans of
the Jewish Youth Council will com-
prise the second portion of the
meeting, at 7:30 p.m.
For information, call Marty Ra-
binowitz, DI 1-4200.

Family Tree Contributes
New Branch to College

NEW YORK — Michael Miller
of the Bronx has become the 26th
'member of a single family to
attend Yeshiva University over
the years.
Michael, who enrolled at Ye-
Students of the Shaarey Zedek shiva College this fall, is the son
school form a living menora to of Dr. Israel Miller, himself an
hail the forthcoming visit of Is- alumnus, who was recently ap-
pointed assistant to the president
rael's Ambassador Itzhak Rabin
for student affairs at the uni-
at the "Bond With Israel Din- versity.
ner," which also will honor Can-
tor Jacob H. Sonenklar, Oct. 31
Share in
at Shaarey Zedek. Shown (from
the top) are Carol Sonenklar,
Freedom
granddaughter of t h e cantor,
Sign up for
Julie Fishman, Denise Baron,
U.S. SAVINGS BONDS
Davida D on es on and Nancy
NEW FREEDOM SHARES
Schulman.

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