Growth of Extremism in Germany Is Feared Wilbur Cohen to Address Joint JFCS and RS Meeting' Dr. Wilbur J. Cohen, former secretary of the U.S. Department of Health. Education and Welfare. and newly appointed dean of the school of educa- tion at the Uni- versity of Michi- gan, will be the featured speaker at the joint an- nual meeting of the Jewish Fam- ily and Children's Serivice and Re- settlement S e r ice. 8 p.m.. Sept. 16. at the Jewish Center. The meet- ing will be open to the public. Cohen Dr. Cohen helped draft the orig- inal Social Security. Act and be- came technical adviser to the Social Security Board. and its first commissioner. Arthur J. Altmeyer. in 1934. In 1960. he was chairman of President Kennedy's Task Force on Health and Social Security which recommended Medicare and for a Sweet mew `Year New from ROKEACH Vir1 Gefilte Fish 4 Portion Cal OP federal aid for medical education. During the years he served in that post, he was responsible for handling some 65 major legislative proposals which became law, in- cluding such landmark measures as the Higher Education Facilities Act of 1963, the Vocational Educa- tion Act of 1963. the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. and Medicare. In 1965 he was appointed undersecretary of HEW, became secretary in May 1968, and was instrumental in reshaping this department as well as coordinat- ing major policy issues between the legislative and ex e cut iv e branches of government. Dr. Cohen is author of many books on Social Security and reci- pient of several awards for serv- ice, including a Rockefeller Public Service Award and the Bronfman Prize for Public Health Achieve- ment. In May 1968 he was awarded an honorary degree of doctor of humane letters by the University of Detroit. His topic at the Sept. 16 meeting here will be 'The World of 1976"- a look into the future, at life in the United States 200 years after the signing of the Declaration of lode- Dreyfus Acquires Bert Smokier Co. The Dreyfus Corp. and Bert L. Smokier and Co. Tuesday con- cluded an agreement of acquisition under which its new subsidiary, the Dreyfus Development Corp. acquired all the stock of Bert L. Smokier & Co. All of the shareholders of Smok- ier. of which the three principles, Bert L. Smokier, Mandell L. Ber- man and Charles O'Neil, owned over 90 per cent, exchanged their shares of Smokier stock for approximately 377.694 shares of the Dreyfus Corp.'s common stock. The Dreyfus Corp., a New York corporation listed on the New York Stock Exchange, is manager of the Dreyfus Fund, the Dreyfus Lever- age Fund and investment adviser to the Dreyfus Offshore Trust. Bert L. Smokier and Co. is perhaps Michigan's largest home builder and one of the largest in the United States. The acquisition of Smokier and Co. was accomplished thru the formation of the Dreyfus De- velopment Corporation, a wholly- owned subsidiary of the Dreyfus Corporation, which in tern ac- quired all of the stock of Bert L. Smokier and Co., a Dela- ware corporation. Smokier has been in the busi- ness for 24 years operating prin- cipally in the Detroit-Ann Arbor area. In previous years projects were also built in Kansas and Missouri. The company produces a variety of dwelling units. Multi- family housing construction has dominated company production since 1963. Management plans, however, in 1969 and 1970 to em- phasize the construction of single family detached homes. wilnoLtee°A4ctvrq kosbeal SALAMI 1),DD PURE BEEF Koshruth Supevision by prominent Orthodox Rabbi: t Rabbi Ben Zion Rosenthal 4 ` and two steady Mashgichim k0919-er2:, tor of both agencies, will describe the casework services provided to' families with marital problems, j emotionally disturbed children re- quiring outpatient treatment, resi- dential or foster home care. The agency had handled 2,294 cases in 1968, conducted 12,149 office inter- I views, 18,944 telephone contacts I and 3.149 home visits. Mrs. Samuel J. Caplan, president of Resettlement Service, will re- port at the annual meeting on the increase in the number of refugee families that arrived in Detroit this past year. Counseling and guidance and financial assistance is current- ly being given to 30 cases consist- ing of 89 persons, nearly double last year's figure. This is largely due to the influx of refugees following the Russian invasion of Czechoslova- kia. and the rise of anti-Semitism in Poland. William Wetsman, JFCS, and David I. Rosin of RS, will present nominating committee reports. Mrs. Benjamin Schottenfels is chairman of the committee that is making plans for the meeting. 60607 SALAMI • FRANKFURTERS • CORNED BEEF • BOLOGNA * Social Democratic Party, Helmut Schmidt, said in Hamburg that if his party won in the national elec- tions, it would take steps to out- law the extreme right-wing, neo- Nazi National Democratic Party (NPD). Dr. Norman Drachler, superin- tendent of Detroit Public Schools, announced the resignation of Dr. WILLIAM W. WATTENBERG, as- sociate superintendent of the child accounting and adjustment divi- sion. Dr. Wattenburg will return to Wayne State University where he had been a professor of educational psychology for many years. Juliet Suburban * Green-8 Center Only! * I* BIRTHDAY SALE! * ♦ SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 * and SUNDAY 12 TO 5 * * * * * Business Brevities Charge It: Juliet Security Michigan DETROIT BREAKFAST FURNI * TURE MANUFACTURING CO. an * nounces the retirement of William * Fisher, president I* of the firm for i* the past 21 years. I* DEFCO, m a n u- facturers of din- ing furniture, will be under the di- rection of Irving Landy, who has been appointed general manager. Landy Landy is devel- oping a new style line and new * ideas of merchandising to help * dealer organizations. * * * Bankard IMPERIAL DEPARTMENT * STORE. 10 Mile at Orchard Lake * Rd., in the Bel-Aire Shopping Cen- ter. features top-quality clothing for the whole family. All nationally 7," advertised brands are available, and there is a new men's tuxedo rental department. Under the dhection of Sidney Weiner, the store is open daily from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. It is closed Sunday. SATURDAY and SUNDAY * * * Some:30 to 40 artists in all media New Tourist Record Mid-season reports indicate Mich- U. S. Gov't 1•sp•ct•0 Distributed in Detroit and Michigan by: * will be represented at the first show of the PINK PALLETTE, 29535 Northwestern, 11 a.m. till dark Sunday. Painting, sculpture, textiles and antiques are among the items up for sale. Cider and doughnuts will be served next door. r}o iLrlc• -- WILNO KOSHER 2f-,7g.;:t.c:.!Ei=r: pendence. He will also comment man Central Jewish Council warn- on President Nixon' s welfare pro- . ed Monday of new threats to demo- posals and school desegregation cracy in the country. The council, policies; as well as current trends which represents the relatively in health care for the aged and small organized Jewish commun- children. ity in the West German Republic, Arnold Faudman, president of voiced concern with the growth of Jewish Family and Children's extremism at home. Service, will outline the wo rk A statement issued in Dussel- this agency during the past year. dorf said: "The Jewish community particularly the expansion of in this country, which has once homemaker service to families before fallen victim to disastrous where the mother is physically developments, feels obliged and or emotionally unable to provide within its rights to raise its voice the needed care for her children, in warning along with other demo- and for aged who can be kept out cratic forces." of institutions through such home. The parliamentary leader of the care. Another service to be high-1 lighted is that performed by 65 volunteer women, organized into 10 visiting teams, who regularly visit the aged and infirm resi- dents in nursing homes through- out the tri-county area served by the agency. Samuel Lerner, executive direc- igan is headed toward another record-shattering tourist year with new seasonal highs already rec- orded in most sections of the state, according to William T. McGraw, Michigan Tourist Council director. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS JULIUS POLLAK, 14558 Wyoming, Detroit Tel.: 931-0300 36—Friday, September 5, 1969 SALE! Glamorous, Washable Polyester Crepe . . . Ideal for the 4( social and washing machine whirl alike! Wondrous polyester ..yr made to look like expensive crepe. Navy, black or brown with -r_ white ruffled collar. Sizes 8 to 12 only. SALE PRICED SATURDAY and SUNDAY $1 6 Yesterday $32 "1k GREEN-8 CENTER ONLY ! GREENFIELD-8 MILE RDS • ********************ie