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November 29, 1968 - Image 26

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1968-11-29

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

26—Friday, November 29, 1968

Irwin Burdick Named Judge

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

- Zuckerman Assumes UJC Post

g

ewry

the

This Week's Radio and
Television Programs

Irwin Burdick was named by
Governor Romney last Friday to
fill the vacancy on the Common
Pleas bench. He succeeds Judge
Joseph J. Pernick, who was named

Burdick brothers are lifelong Re-
publicans, and both labored in the
party ranks for many years.
Judge Irwin Burdick, who is 55,
served as chairman of the Repub-
lican 15th District. He has prac-
ticed law for 33 years.

HEAR OUR VOICE

Time: 11:30 p.m. Sunday
Station: WCAR
Feature: Jan Peerce will sing
several Jewish folk song classics.
Cantor Harold Orbach will com-
ment.

MUSIC BY

SAM BARNETT

AND HIS ORCHESTRA

LI 1-2563

* * *
HIGHLIGHTS

Paul Zuckerman (second from left) receives the gavel indicating
the presidency of United Jewish Charities from retiring president
Louis Tabashnik. Looking on are Irwin Green (left) newly-elected
vice president, and Judge Theodore Levin, a former UJC president.
Irwin Green was named vice president; Alfred L. Deutsch, treasurer;
and William Avrunin, executive vice president of the Jewish Welfare
Federation, secretary.
In his address at the annual meeting, Tabashnik noted that "in
1969 the United Jewish Charities will round out seven decades of
operation." The UJA cannot, nor has it any desire to "rest on its
laurels." United Jewish Charities reported grants for pilot demonstra-
tion projects of agencies and research study of $69,475, and alloca-
tions and grants for scholarships, professional staff training and
memorial in the amount of $89,501. Appropriations made from en-
dowment and trust funds between June 1967 and May 1968 totaled
$96,757.

Chancy for M.E. Peace, Youth Challenge
of Establishment Aired by Women

KIAMESHA LAKE—Ambassador Jewish professors, who should be
Arthur Lourie, deputy-director gen- Ithe natural advisers if not the idols

eral of Israel's Foreign Ministry, of our youth, do not themselves
said here that "There is now a mo- posess a basic grounding in our

ment of opportunity for a real Jewish heritage and its values, and
peace in the Middle East", if the thus are not in a position to teach
Western Powers, particularly the them.

United States, will make it unmis- I In discussing the lack of effective-
takably clear to the Arab leaders i ness of Jewish education, Dr. Mor-
that Israel's security and soverignty ton Siegel, director of the depart-
are not negotiable. ment of education of the United
Addressing the biennial conven- Synagogue, criticized "computer
tion of the National Women's education."
He stressed that the objectives of
League at the Concord Hotel here,
Lourie warned that any short-term Jewish education are not the
solutions disguised as peace would amassing of facts and information.
be "tantamount to nothing more even on Jewish subjects — but
rather "our striving for qualities
than patching over the cracks."
Rabbi Saul Teplitz, spiritual which are universal: patience,
leader of Congregation Sons of justice, mercy and honesty."

He urged parents to continue
Israel, Woodmere, L. I. and
chairman of the national youth
their studies so that they could
serve in the dual role of parents
commission, in discussing the
"challenge of youth to the Jewish
and teachers to their children
establishment", said that the fu-
and guide them in the elements
ture of the Jewish community in
of character education, inter-per-
America will depend on what
sonal relationships, Negro-white
happens to our youth during their
relationships, and sex education.
four-year stay on the campuses
"In the last analysis," he said,
of America, and that many cam-
"the parent is the model that his
puses pose a threat to Jewish
child learns to emulate."
survival, for a variety of reasons.
The delegates adopted 14 resolu-
One of the reasons he cited for tions which dealt with domestic
this condition is that many of the and foreign affairs. Among these

Pauline Gollish Will Be
Mr. Saxton 's Mfe

Time: 9:45 a.m. Sunday
Station: Channel 2
Feature: "Direction '69," a new
series which will focus on the atti-
tudes, awareness and action of the
Jewish Community Council in the
crisis that faces Detroit. This pro-
gram features Dr. Elliot Luby,
psychiatrist; Irving J. Rubin, De-
troit regional director of TALUS
(Transportation and Land Use
Study); and Walter E. Klein, execu-
tive director of the Council, dis-
cussing areas of concern in 'Detroit
in Crisis.

* $ *
COMMUNITY CURRENTS

J E R RY COOPE

E

DIAMONDS - PEARLS - JEWELRY

IRWIN BURDICK

by Governor Romney to the Wayne
Country Probate Court, to which
Judge Pernick was elected Nov. 5

for a full term.
Irwin Burdick is the brother of
Circuit Court Judge Benjamin Bur-

dick, who also was appointed to the
bench by Governor Romney. The

Time: 9:30 a.m. Sunday
Station: WJBK
Feature: "A Conversation With
Dr. Samuel Sandmel," features Dr.
Sandmel, author and authority on
the New Testament and its relation
to Judaism, professor of Bible and
Hellenistic literature at Hebrew
Union College-Jewish Institute of
Religion in Cincinnati, who is cur-
rently on sabbatical leave and
serving as principal of Leo Baeck
College, London. Rabbi Leon Fram
of Temple Israel is interviewer.
* * *

ETERNAL LIGHT

Time: 10:30 a.m. Sunday
Station: WWJ
Feature: "Reminder of the Cov-
enant," Joseph Minders drama of
the dream of Mordecai Manuel
Noah, early 19th Century publisher
and politician, to establish a tem-
porary homeland for Jews on
Grand Island in the Niagara River,
New York State, as part of the
series on "Man in Protest."

* a *

was a resolution which called for
DIRECTIONS
assistance to Jewish-owned estab- Time: 8:30 a.m. Sunday
lishments for losses suffered as a
Station: Channel 7
result of arson and looting in the
Feature: "Ingathering" features
disorders of 1967 and 1968. A re- a visit with Karl Katz, director of
lated resolution called for urgent the Jewish Museum, with photo-
support of the (Kerner) Report of graphs from the museum's present
the National Advisory Commission exhibition of Jewish ceremonial
on Civil Disorders, and instructed objects from New York collections.
the League membership to work
for programs to help the inner
cities.
Another resolution called for sup-
port of additional federal and state
gun control legislation.
Mrs. Sol Henkind of Scarsdale
was re-elected national president.

MISS PAULINE GOLLISH

Marshall Ave., Southfield, announce
the engagement of their daughter
Pauline Suzanne to Leslie Aaron
Saxon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Saxon of Greenlawn Ave.
Mr. Saxon is an accounting stu-
dent at South Macomb Community

College.
A June 15

arranged.

wedding is being

Dr. Bernard Lown, associate
professor of cardiology at Harvard
School of Public Health, Boston,
will be the visiting lecturer at
Sinai Hospital next Thursday.
Dr. Lown is internationally re-
nowned for his contributions to
Schoolteacher Maeve McGuire
modern clinical cardiology, partic-
offers counsel to one of her Rus-
ularly the introduction of "cardio-
sian-Jewish immigrant students
version" (electrical stimulation) of Scott Jacoby, in "Green Thumb in
the City" to be presented 8 a.m.
the heart.
His lecture on "Coronary Care" Sunday on Channel 4.
will begin at 8:30 a.m. in the
Mankind had rather suspect
Zuckerman Auditorium of the hos-
pital. All interested physicians are something than to know it.
--Josh Billings.
invited,

Ely

ART - LIGHTS

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WEDDINGS — BAR MITZVAS

SPECIAL OCCASIONS

El

ETERNAL LIGHT-TV

Time: 8 a.m. Sunday
Station: Channel 4
Feature: "Green Thumb in the
City," a drama by Ernest Kinoy
and second in a series dealing with
the American Jewish experience.
The drama is a tribute to a New
York Lower East Side school teach-
er, Myra Kelly, who guides her
first grade class of Russian-Jewish
immigrants with a 'firm hand and
loving heart.' Albert M. Otten-
heimer is narrator.
* * *

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