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August 22, 1969 - Image 25

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1969-08-22

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

Friday, August 22, 1969-25

Brzai Brith Activities

IVAN S. BLOCH CHAPTER will
have a rummage sale 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
Thursday at the Ferndale Women's
Club, 1256 W. Nine Mile Rd. Mrs.
H. Kelly, vice president, is in
charge.

• • •

LOUIS MARHALL LODGE AND
CHAPTER will host a cocktail
party 8 p.m. Sept. 2 at the Work-
men's Circle Center. Max Sosin
will entertain, and refreshments
will be served. Guests are invited.

* * *

25th Annual Leadership Seminars,
Workshops Scheduled by Bnai Brith

On his first official visit to De-' Weinberger, consultant; Bnai Brith
troit since his election as President Youth Organization, Irwin Alpern,
of Bnai Brith District 6, Dr. Leon chairman, Julius Kahn, consultant;
E. Fellman of Omaha will address i community and veterans service,
the lodge and council leadership Sherman Goldman, chairman, Har-
of Detroit at the 25th annual lead- ry N. Katz, consultant; Covenant
ership seminars and workshops Credit Union, Philip Chapnick,
Monday at Cong. Bnai David. chairman; fund raising, Paul Per
Dr. Fellthan, who will be keynote ry, chairman, Sol Moss, consul-
speaker at the 6 p.m. dinner, has tant; lodge bulletins, press and
served Bnai Brith since 1932. He publicity, Rudolph Meyersohn,
has been a member of the Bnai chairman, Harry Pearson, consul-
Brith Adult Jewish Education tant.
Commission.
Also. lodge presidents, Herman
The annual seminar-workshops Kasoff, chairman, George Tarnoff,
are designed to indoctrinate
consultant; lodge programs, Ber-
lodge officers and committee nard Whiteman, chairman, Morris
chairmen with their responsibili- Direnfeld, consultant: member-
ties and objectives and to plan ship, Ronald Kane, chairman, Ar-
Bnai Brith committee programs thur C. Schott, consultant: mem-
for the coming year.
bership retention, Henry Edelman,
The following committees will chairman, Louis Weber, consultant;
meet at the leadership seminars: and athletics, Harvey Gallison,
Adult Jewish education, Bernard chairman, Mark Klinger, consul-
Dosie, chairman, Bernard Panush. tant.
Anti -Defamation
consultant;
Chairman of the dinner-seminar
League, David Bittker, chairman, is Louis Segel, vice president of
Lou Barden. consultant; blood the council. Co-chairmen are Ar-
bank, Henry Cohn, chairman: Bnai thur Schott and George Tarnoff.
Brith Hillel, Nathan Rubenstein,
For information and reserva-
chairman, Milton Weinstein, con-
sultant; Bnai Brith insurance, bons. call the council office, 341-
Harry Oberstein, chairman, Al 0863.
Bounin, consultant; Bnai Brith Is-
rael-trees. Leo Hack, chairman. Collegian to Help Make
Samuel Greenberg, consultant.
Bnai Brith Hillel Policy
Also, Bnai Brith Israel-Bonds.
Felix Rosenzweig, chairman, Harry STARLIGHT, Pa. (JTA)—Jewish
college youth will gain voting rep-
resentation on the policy board of
the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation
next week when four undergradu-
ates will be named to the board.
They will be elected from an as-
sembly of 230 students at the week-
long Hillel Summer Institute that
opens Tuesday at Camp Bnai Brith
here. The four will serve a one-
year term as voting members of
Hillel's national commission.
The action was instigated in
March when the commission met
ill
with a representative group of
Jewish activists from 32 campuses
and leaders of 27 national Jewish
organizations.
The commission de-
,
cided at that time to allow the col-
5
G
lege youth to join the policy board.
wee
1 The students, who were asked
to comment on the Jewish "es-
, tablishment," voiced criticism
of their "disenfranchised status"
and the failure of the organized
community to include the student
generation into its decision-mak-
ing structures, according to the
Bnai Brith.
Students from 118 American and
Canadian schools will participate in
, the summer institute. They will be
asked to devise a procedure for
future elections that can provide
for broader student representation
among the undergraduate commis-
sioners, including that of students
not formally affiliated with the
Hillel movement.
Rabbi Benjamin M. Kahn, Hillel
national director, said the purpose
of the move "is for the students
themselves to determine how they'll
choose their representatives." He
said that the "proportion of stu-
dents who will sit with the com-
mission as voting members will
increase substantially."

We
have
so much

Bnal BrithWomen THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Aspiring Artists Invited to Compete for Awards
Forming Chapter
Krajenke Buick Inc. will help can be brought Tuesdays and
for Frances Solovich send five talented metropolitan Thursdays, 9 a.m.-9 p.m. and Sat-

The Bnai Brith Women's Coun-
cil of Metropolitan Detroit an-
nounces the formation of a chapter
to be named for the late Frances
Solovich.
The chapter is being formed as a
tribute and in memory of Mrs.
Charles Solovich, who served as
international president of Bnai
Brith Women and was a practicing
attorney in Detroit.
The final charter meeting will
be held 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
Michigan Credit Union League
building, Southfield.
Anyone interested in becoming a
charter member is asked to con-
tact Joyce May, 541-6132, or Vera
Eisenberg, 399-2254.

area artists to the Charles McGee urdays 9 a.m.-4 p.m. All samples
School of Art in a special scholar- will be returned, and winners will
be notified ley Sept. 21.
ship competition.
McGee, whose work hangs in the
Smithsonian Institute in Washing-
ton, D.C., opened his school in
June and already has over 55 stu-
dents. Courses in ceramic graphics
and jewelry design soon will be
added to the present curriculum
of painting and sculpture.
Aspiring artists can enter the
scholarship competition by bringing
FROM THE
a sample of work to the Charles
McGee School of Art, 8230 W. Six
Mile. Deadline is Sept. 10. Samples

Authors Relate War
Betrayal in Paris

_

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IMPORTER AND CUTTE RS

OF FINE DIAMONDS
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At dawn, on July 16, 1942, the *BIG BAND OR SMALL COMBOS:
DI 1-5515
French police force—obeying or-
ders issued by the occupying :UN 3-8982 UN 3-5730*
Germans—rounded up and arrested
12,884 foreign Jews. Childless
adults were sent to a camp at
Drancy and from there to Ger-
many or Poland; families with chil-
dren were held at a Paris sports
arena, the Veldrome D'Hiver.
Deluxe OH Manicures
Six Operators to Serve You

"Betrayal at the Vel D'Hiv," to
be published by Hill & Wang,
STYLING, PERMANENTS, TINTING, BLEACHING, FROSTING
Oct. 9, describes the agony of
Hours: Tues.-Sot. 9 to 4:30
more than 7,000 people, imprisoned
in this vast glass cage and left
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GREENFIELD
without water in the suffocating
mid-summer heat. Among them
were 4,051 children. Thus in one
day only, the French police bad
rounded up and delivered to the
Germans nearly 13,000 Jews. This
was part of Operation Spring Wind.
Claude Levy and Paul Tillard
Our 50th Year
have collected the stories of those
who survived to tell what they saw.
REMAKING & REPROCESSING DOWN

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FOR GIRLS

Classic slIpon In Burnished
Brown. Supportive. To else
10, AAA to E.

Centurion Brown with
Kiltie Flap. Other Oxfords
In red, navy, grey, olive.
Some styles to EEEE.
Thomas and regular heels.

FOR BOYS

251 Merrill

Merrillwood Mall Bldg.
(top of the escalator)

"Meet your friends for coffee"

Phone 6464760
Open Thurs. till 9 p.m.

Oakland Hills Country Club, Bir-
mingham, will host the fourth an-
nual Michigan Golf and Field Day
Sept. 22.
Sponsored by the Michigan and
Border Cities Golf Course Superin-
tendent Association, the Golf and
Field Day will raise funds for the
Michigan Turf Foundation, which
in turn will donate to the Michigan
State University Soil Service De-
partment.

4

CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

33 EAST ADAMS AVE
DETROIT
19360 LIVERNOIS
DETROIT
20901 KELLY ROAD
EAST DETROIT
235 PIERCE ST.
BIRMINGHAM

Golf, Field Day Planned

Fashions for Women

Wide strap In Sandalwood
Tan. Supportive. Other
straps in grey, black, navy.

Medallion tip with monk
strap. Supportive. Bleck,
brown, tan. Other slipons
and lace oxfords, AA
to EEEE.

Long wing tip in black fine
grain Italian calf.

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