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February 20, 1970 - Image 31

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1970-02-20

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

Medicare Beneficiary Advice Offered

Medicare beneficiaries who had
doctor bills in the last three months
of 1969 that counted toward their
$50 doctor bill insurance deductible
may now count these same bills
toward their deductible for this
year, according to Sam F. Test,
Social Security district manager of
the Detroit northwest office. "If
you did not have $50 worth of cov-
ered services under medical insur-
ance before Oct. 1, 1969," Test told
Medicare beneficiaries in the north-
west area, "the doctor bills you
had in October, November, and
December before meeting your $50
deductible for 1969 can also count
toward your 1970 deductible."
Under the medical insurance
part of Medicare Test explained,
a beneficiary is responsible for the
first $50 in a calendar year for coy-

Miss Pevos, Mr. Rubin
Plan Spring Wedding

ered services before Medicare
starts paying 80 percent of the rest
of the bills. Beneficiaries should
save their doctor bills and other
bills for services covered by medi-
cal insurance until they reach $50.
A special rule applies for per-
sons who do not have $50 worth of
covered expenses in a year, or
whose covered expenses do not
reach $50 until the last 3 months
of the year. In both situations, Test
said, any bills you had in the last
3 months of the year that counted
toward part or all of your $50 de-
ductible may be counted again for
the next year's deductible.
"It is particularly important,
then, for beneficiaries who re-
ceived no payment under medical
insurance in 1969 because they
didn't meet their $50 deductible,
to save their bills for October, No-
vember, and December," Test
stressed. "If you have bills to show
for the last 3 months, you may not
have to pay all of the $50 deductible
for this year."

Israel Travel Plan
for Handicapped
Mapped for Israel

MISS SUSAN PEVOS

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert J. Pevos
of Henley Ave., Huntington Woods,
announce the engagement of their
daughter Susan Marcia to Robert
M. Rubin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Saul J. Rubin of Wakefield Way,
Southfield.
The couple plans to marry in the
spring.

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FOREST HILLS, N.Y.—Mayer
A. Stiskin, director of the Summit
Program has announced the initia-
tion of a Summit Program in Is-
rael, a therapeutically oriented,
recreation and educational seven-
week travel program in Israel,
geared to "perceptually handi-
capped" adolescents and young ad-
ults.
This program is an outgrowth
of the Summit School and Camp
programs for children with normal
potential who, because of mild
brain injury and/or emotional dis-
turbance, manifest learning diffi-
culty.
The Summit School, located in
Forest Hills, N.Y., is a special
school and educational-treatment
program for such children. The
Summit Camp Program, an eight-
week therapeutically oriented camp
for brain-injured boys and girls
with learning disabilities, located
in Honesdale, Pa., accepts similar
children for its eight-week camp-
ing program.
The "Summit Program in Is-
rael" goals include the develop-
ment of social skills and graces,
the discovery and development of
resources for meaningful and re-
warding leisure time activities and
the development of new friend-
ships with young men and women
of similar age and interests. Most
important, however, is the goal to
provide each adolscent and young
adult with deeper understandings
of himself and his world and to en-
courage his taking ever greater
strides along the road to independ-
ent living.

Hadassah Announces
Staff Research Fund

NEW YORK (JTA)—The launch-
ing of a special $1,000,000 medical
research fund for the staff at the
Hadassah-Hebrew University Medi-
cal Center in Jerusalem was voted
at the mid-winter conference of
Hadassah.
The urgency of this campaign
was stressed in view of the curtail-
ment of research funds from Wash-
ington sources, "thus endangering
the results of many important re-
search projects."

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TOGGEBY of
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Friday, February 20, 1970-31

Brooklyn College Begins ' THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
1st Judaica Major in Fall

NEW YORK (JTA) — Prospects
were described as excellent for

Arab Denies He Backs Palestine Entity

JERUSALEM (JTA)—Sheikh Mo-
establishment next September at
hammed All Jaabafi, the mayor of
Brooklyn College of the first major
Hebron, denied Wednesday that he
in Judaic Studies in the city uni-
had proposed the creation of a
versity system, long one of the na-
"Palestinian Entity" to represent
tion's major centers of college
Arabs on the West and East Banks
education for Jewish youth. Cur-
of the Jordan. Mayor Jaabari
rently , between 25,000 and 30,000 made his denial in a telegram to
Jewish students are attending day
the English language newspaper
and night classes at the eight
senior colleges of the city system. Jerusalem Post.
The Israel news agency Itim
The Faculty Council of Brooklyn

College approved in principle last
month a proposal for such a major
submitted by a faculty-student
committee established by the Bnai
Brith Hillel Foundation at Brook-
lyn College last spring. The com-
mittee has succeeded in introduc-
ing Judaic content courses in the
college's history, philosophy, po-
litical science and sociology de-
partments.
While Brooklyn College has of-
fered a major in Hebrew language
and literature for many years, the
faculty council action was the first
official approval for such a major.

reported that he advocated a "Pal-
estinian Entity" because most of
the Arabs in Jordan were Pal-
estinians living among a Jordan.
ian minority. The mayor was also
quoted as saying that Arab refu-
gees were being used as pawns by
the Arab government.
Mayor Jaabari said in his tele-
gram that he made no such state-
ments, that he bad no ambition
to head a Palestinian group and
that he had "great respect for
king Hussein and all the kings,
presidents and leaders of the Arab

Community Notes Gains

*

NEW YORK (JTA) — Record
goals for the 1970 combined regu-
lar and Israel Emergency Fund
campaigns a n d unprecedented
gains in early fund-raising have
been reported by four communi-
ties.
The Jewish Federation of Cam-
den County announced a 1970 goal
of $1,250,000 comprised of $550,000
for the regular Allied Jewish Ap-
peal and $700,000 for the Israel
Emergency Fund.

Beth Shalom Juniors
Conduct Sabbath Service

Chairman of the Beth Shalom
Religious School board Marshall
Wallace announced that the junior
congregation recently conducted
the entire Sabbath morning serv-
ice, including the prayers for the
blessing of the New Moon and the
Torah reading and the sermons.
Participants were David Barg,
Darrell Weinenger, Louis Elkus,
Michael Peisner, Marc Fitzerman,
Martin Sherman, David Salem,
Jeffrey Brodsky, Harold Weinen-
ger, Merle Sherman, Helene Nus-
baum, Benjamin Waxenberg, Ron-
ald Elkus, Jeffrey Goodman and
Robert Isackson.
Coordinator of the junior congre-
gation is Larry Platt, and director
is Sidney Selig.

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important thing was for peace to
prevail in Jordan and the rest of

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Sprainlists in Graining oral ilopairing

U.S. Students Defeat

Israelis in 1st Radio Quiz

NEW YORK—The U.S. defeated
Israel in the first of a series of
radio quiz programs to be broad-
cast in Israel by the radio station
of the Israel Defense Forces. The
series was initiated by the youth
and hehalutz department of the
Jewish Agency in Jerusalem, and
the program arrangements in New
York were made by the American
Zionist Youth Foundation.
The questions for the five quiz
programs, which will be broadcast
monthly, cover the fields of Bible,
Jewish history, current events,
popular music and, for Americans,
knowledge of modern Israel,
whereas Israelis are required to
demonstrate their knowledge of
American history.
In the first quiz, the American
Yeshiva Flathush team of Brook-
lyn defeated the team of the Tel
Aviv high school Tihon Hadash,
54-37.

They Made
The Grade

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Center College of Design, Los An-
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