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November 21, 1969 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1969-11-21

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

------ ---------- 7, 6—Friday, November 21, 1969
i

Boris Smolar's

U.S. Denies Alleged Israel Role in NATO

'Between You

... and Me

(Copyright 1983, JTA Inc.)

1 aaaaaaa• a a a ****"*a a • •4
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS , ...

1

JEWISH IDENTITY: Every year around December, when students
begin to consider their plans for the coming summer, many serious-
minded Jewish students who are distant from Jewish knowledge but
are eager to get acquainted with Jewish spiritual values ask: Where
can we spend our summer vacation in an atmosphere which would give
us a meaningful understanding of Jewishness?
Some 200 of these Jewish students find their way to the Brandeis
Camp Institute.
Located in Brandeis, Calif., some 40 miles from Los Angeles, the
institute has become a Jewish institution of national fame. Every sum-
mer it attracts many Jewish college and university students—boys and
girls—from all parts of the country. It also draws hundreds of Jewish
adults all year around for its spiritual week ends. Many of its alumni
come again and again, every year, because they feel that each visit
contributes to the strengthening of their Jewish identity in a modern
and relaxed way.
During the 28 years of its existence, the Brandeis Institute had
6,000 college students and more than 5,000 adults. In addition, it also
had about 10,000 children in its camp Alonim (Young Oaks). Its stu-
dents came not only from California but also from 15 other states, in-
cluding New York, Pennsylvania. Michigan, Ohio. Colorado, Iowa,
Minnesota, Nevada, Texas and Oregon. Some students came from
Canada.
Wherein lies the secret of this institution which is growing in popu-
larity year after year all over the United States?
The secret lies in the unique and stimulating method of education
institution with a deeper understanding of Judaism from a modern
has proven that Jewish values and identification can effectively be
transmitted to alienated Jewish youth. Living even for as little as one
month in the summer in the total Jewish environment of the ... Bran-
deis Institute has a strong impact on the students. They - leave the
institution with a deeper understanding of Judaism from a modern
point of view.
Brandeis students are never the same when' they return from the
institute to their colleges and university campuses.
It may be difficult to believe that Jewish student youth can within
one month, living in a total .Iewish milieu, be transformed from per-
sons indifferent to Judaism. into people strongly imbued with it. A visit
to the Brandeis Institute proves that this is possible. Such a visit is a
wonderful experience.
One feels the total Jewish atmosphere at the Brandeis Institute
from the very first moment he enters the gates of its 2,200 acres of
land. This atmosphere expresses itself not only during formal lectures,
or discussion periods, or even in the group dancing and in the singing
of Hebrew songs. It expresses itself in the joyful and uplifting observ-
ance of the Sabbath with all its traditions-. It is strongly felt in the
daily routine kibutz-like life which the students live on the huge
Brandeis premises where self-labor is part of the Bardin method. I

i

WASHINGTON (JTA) — The
State Department has sharply
denied a report in the semi-official
Egyptian newspaper Al Abram
that the Israeli Air Force partici-
pated in NATO maneuvers in the
Eastern Mediterranean last month.

The charge also was denied by
the British Foreign Office in Lon-
don. Al Abram, a Cairo daily that
speaks for President Gamal Abdel
Nasser, claimed that it had "in-
disputable" and "detailed" evi-
dence of Israeli participation in
the joint Anglo-American war
games and reported that the pur-
ported Israeli role "gave rise to
another wave of fury in the Arab
world against the U.S., whose sup-
port for Israel is limitless."

Al Abram claimed that radar in
an unidentified Arab country had
tracked Israeli planes returning
home from the sea-air exercises
and that the U.S. Sixth Fleet has
films of Israeli aircraft taking
part in the maneuvers.

State Department spokesman
Robert J. McCloskey dismissed
the Al Abram charge as untrue.
Ile also rejected an Egyptian
report that accused the U.S. of
trying to interfere with the Arab
sum mit conference in Rabat,
Morocco next month.

McCloskey said that both reports
"fit into a pattern of distortion
and fabrications which we find

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Observers here said that Mc-
Closkey's sharp rebuttal indicated
that the U.S. is losing patience i
with Egypt despite the opinion of
HARVARD ROW MALL
many of the State Department's ;
Mid East specialists that anti-U.S. ;
11 MILE & LAHSER
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"We can't
goon,

"Melvin, we've got to stop meeting
like this. I think the Phillips' salesmen
are getting suspicious. They're even
trying to break us up because they're
constantly waiting on us:' —"That's
ridiculous Anita, quick courteous service
is part of their job. Besides, they have
so many new styles and colors in all the
famous brand names we can spend
hours together:'—"Wait a minute, this Is
nonsense. We have so much in common
we should get nnarried:'..."Oh, Melvin
I thought you'd never ask:' "Let's tell the
Phillips' salesman we'll take 12 pairs of
shoes to tie to the back of our wedding
car. After all, we did meet here!"

Phillips has a pair of shoe stores
at Northland. One for bachelors and
another for loving couples, (where 20
toes can live as cheaply as 10).

phillips shoes

Northland Center

(2 Stores)

Security Charge Michigan Bankard

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