Bnai Brith 'Teach-In' Aids Arabs
Student teacher Abu-Fallalt Minis instructs pupils in a small Arab
village. He is one of a team of Arab and Jewish students recruited by
Hillel Foundation at Hebrew University for an Arab-Israel "teach-in"
program sponsored by Bnai Brith Women.
•
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Children aids; and students have been help-
in three small Arab villages have ing the children in subjects which
been given a new lease on their are the most difficult in Israel's
future as a result of an Arab-Is- schools, chiefly physics, chemistry
rael project being sponsored by and English.
Bnai Brith Women.
The "teach-in" program grew
According to Mrs. Arthur G. out of Arab-Jewish student dia-
Rosenbluth, BBW chairman for in- logues instituted by the director of
ternational affairs, the project the Hillel Foundation at the He-
consists of a series of experimen- brew University, Dr. Jack Cohen.
tal "teach-ins" being conducted in The project was approved by the
the villages of Um-Al Fahm, Ara BBW triennial convention last
and Arara. The teachers are joint March. A young Moslem graduate
Arab-Jewish teams, who have been of the Hebrew University is assist-
recruited by the Bnai Brith Hillel ing Dr. Cohen in recruiting mem-
Foundation at the Hebrew Univer- hers for a teacher task-force, ad-
sity in Jerusalem to conduct educa- vising him on programming for
tional and social service programs the Arab students and supervising
in Arab villages and cities. its implementation.
The goal of the project, Mrs.
Rosenbluth told board members,
was to provide an occasion for a Miss Schreidell to IVed
small group of Arab and Jewish Mark Morganroth
students to work cooperatively
within the Arab community. It
was decided, as a beginning, she
continued, to send teams of two
Arabs and two Jews to villages
in the Wadi Ara area where they
could live for a month, providing
remedial and enriched studies for
students of secondary school age,
establishing libraries for pupils of
elementary and secondary schools,
and engaging in conversations on
educational subjects withl adult vil-
lagers. The Arab schools in these
villages, it was learned, were vir-
tually devoid of extra-curricular
reading material a n d teaching
Am: Britlz
Activities
PISGAH LODGE will sponsor a
panel discussion on Negro-Jewish
relationships 8:30 p.m. Monday at
the Labor-Zionist Institute. Richard
V. Marks, director of the Commis-
sion on Human Relations, will act
as moderator. Panelists will be
Rev. James E. Wadsworth, presi-
dent of the Detroit Chapter of the
NAACP; Richard H. Lobenthal,
director, Michigan Regional Board
of the Anti-Defamation League;
Detroit Councilman Nicholas Hood;
and Burt Levy, director of commu-
nity services of the state of Michi-
gan.
r **
ENTERTAINMENT F.**
4,f HANUKAH PARTIES 4C
It- Meetings .. Bar Mitzvas . .4(
Cocktail Parties—Comedians*
"In— Caricatures — Strollers4,,
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*Seymour Schwartz Agate k
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BERKLEY, MICHIGAN
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356-8525
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gnvitations
HATTIE
SCHWARTZ
356-8563
THE NEWEST
IN WEDDING • Et.P. MITZVAH
CONFIRMATION AND PARTY
Aeee§SOrieS "
Linowitz, Envoy
to Latin America,
to Address Dinner
Ambassador Sol M. Linowitz,
U.S. representative to the Organi-
zation of American States, and to
the Inter-American Committee of
the Alliance for
Progress, will ad-
dress the Satur-
day night banquet
of the 70th anni-
versary national
biennial conven-
tion of the Union
of Orthodox Jew-
ish Congregations
of America. The
convocation, at-
tended by 2,000 Linowitz
delegates from synagogues through-
out the United States and Canada,
is being held at the Washington
Hilton in Washington during the
coming week. Linowitz, former
chairman of the State Department
advisory committee on internation-
al organizations and chairman of
the National Committee for Inter-
national Development, is a vice
chairman of the board of John F.
Kennedy Center for the Perform-
ing Arts and a fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and
Sciences. He is former chairman
of the board of Xerox Corp.
Friday, November 29, 1968-27
Security Services Starts Phone Training Program
Security Services, Inc., security
contractors and consultants located
in Farmington, has inaugurated a
telephone training program for its
field personnel.
It is patterned after a program
being used in California, according
to Allen B. I. Silvarman, executive
director of Security Services.
These recordings will include
juliet
Suburban
such subjects as public act 330 (the
guard licensing law), laws of ar-
rest, search and seizure, report
writing, court appearance, firearms
training program and uniform
neatness.
The recordings will be changed
on a weekly basis, and the system
will be in operation 24 hours daily.
GREEN-8
ONLY!
SATURDAY & SUNDAY!
1 /2 of 1 /2 Sale!
4-4V
•
:
5
Import
Knit
Brevities
I
The annual MEL RAVITZ RE
PORT DINNER is scheduled for
6:30 p.m. Feb. 15 at the UAW
Local 212. State Attorney General
Frank J. Kelley will serve as toast-
master.
s • s
"THE NORWEGIANS," a top
musical group from Scandinavia,
will make its first Detroit appear-
ance at Detroit Town Hall Wednes-
day morning, in Fisher Theater.
• • •
Men over age 21 are needed to
work in the volunteer field of boy
scouting. For information, call
Clude E. Jones, Detroit Area Coun-
cil, BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA,
897-1965, ext. 46.
* * *
The "IMAGE TRANSFORMED"
exhibition planned at the Ger-
trude Kasle Gallery Dec. 7-30
brings together four artists who
take the world around them and
MISS NANCY SCHREIDELL
transpose what they see in unique
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Schreidell ways: May Wilson, Philip Van
of Kipling Ave., Oak Park, an- Brunt, William Schwedler and
nounce the engagement of their Michel Doner.
daughter Nancy Hope to Mark
Morganroth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Stamp Shows Product
Ben Morganroth of Providence Dr.,
Developed at Rehovot
Southfield.
REHOVCIT — A new Israeli air
The bride-to-be attends Eastern
mail stamp depicts the production
Michigan University.
An Aug. 24 wedding is planned. of heavy oxygen, an important
local export based on develop-
ments by researchers at the Weiz-
mann Institute of Science.
Heavy oxygen and dozens of
TAU EPSILON RHO LAW FRA- compounds enriched with heavy
oxygen,
now produced by Miles-
TERNITY, Detroit Graduate Chap-
ter, will hold its annual convention Yeda, in Rehovot, are widely used
kick-off dinner 6:30 p.m. Dec. 14 at as tracers and in measurements
Al Green's Celebrity Room, Fisher by laboratories around the globe.
Building. This affair will be a pre- These products are probably the
lude to the national convention of most expensive liquids in the
the fraternity to be held in Miami world.
Dec. 26-Jan. 1. Reservations must
Exports of these products now
be made before Dec. 11 by calling reach over $100,000 a year, and
Marshall Keltz, 542-1770.
sales are rising.
I
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Sale!
Knit Dress
& fully
lined
Knit
Coat!
was $145
now ;72.50
SATURDAY
do
SUNDAY
ONLY !
$3
s-r
inap t pL
-
•
•nr
Men's Clubs I
CHARGE IT
Security
Juliet
Mich. Bankard
activities in ociety
Committee chairmen for the second annual "Heart of Gold" awards
ceremony were busy this week prepariUg reports for the Volunteer
Award Council meeting scheduled for noon Dec. 2 in the Staler Hilton
Hotel. At work on the structure committee is the vice chairman, Mrs.
Aaron Gershenson, and the nominations committee chairman, Mrs.
Fran Harris. The awards luncheon will be held Feb. 11 in Cobo Hall to
honor outstanding women volunteers in the Wayne-Oakland-Macomb
area. Deadline for nominations is Dec. 1.
Edward H. Friedman and William Colman, agents for Sun Life
Insurance Co.; recently returned from a four-day visit to Las Vegas,
where they and their wives attended the 1968 General Agency Business
Conference of Sun Life Insurance Company of America, at Caesars
Palace.
Bodzin Farnily Club will meet 8 p.m. Sunday at the home of Mr.
arid'
MO . Itenselaer, Oak Park.
SATURDAY & SUNDAY !
GREEN-8 ONLY !