A Chagall Helps Open New Gallery THE DETROIT JEWISH HEWS Friday, April 3, 1970-33 News Brevities be the theme of the fourth annual Inter-Faith Seminar on Religion and Contemporary Man to be held this weekend on the campus of Northwestern Michigan College, Traverse City. Resource leaders will include Rabbi ROBERT J. MARX, director of the Chicago FERRANTE and TEICHER, the Federation of the Union of Ameri- famed tiro-piano team, comes to can Hebrew Congregations. the Masonic Auditorium April 25. JOSEPH KALI CHSTE IN, the pianist who won the 1969 Leven- tritt Award, will appear with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra 8:30 p.m. Saturday at Ford Auditorium. Valter Poole conducts. . . .... : .... . . Pianist GEORGE SHEARING will appear at the Masonic Audi- torium 3 p.m., Sunday. Gault Galleries vice president Sol Camhi (left), director Judith Karbal, and owners Pat and Manny Gorman (right), view a $1,500 March Chagall painting at the opening reception of the new art gallery, 325 S. Woodward, Birmingham. David Merrick's smash musical, "I DO, I DO," with Phil Ford and Mimi Hines will be staged at De- troit's Masonic Auditorium, 3 p.m., pril 19. A MSU's Kadema Out to Win Judaic Studies Accreditation Convinced that Hebrew is more relevant to Jewish students than is Swahili, the newly f ormed Kadema organization at Michigan State University is attempting to get Judaica studies accredited. If enthusiasm has anything to do with it, the group will succeed in obtaining the required signatures. David Asher, a founder and cur- rent chairman of Kadema, said the small organization (30 actives, 100 on the mailing list) has an active program on Israel under way and has ambitious plans for other pro- graming on such issues as Soviet Jewry. Through distribution of litera- ture, meetings and lectures on Is- rael, Asher hopes to make some impact on the 1,500-2,000 Jewish students at MSU. It will take some work, for Asher views the assimila- tion tendency at the university as "terrible." Through Israel, he said, "I thought some kind of identity might be stimulated among the Jewish students." He. said the Jewish faculty has been helpful in trying to get Hebrew into the curriculum, and there is cooperation with both Hillel Foundation and the Is- raeli Students Organization, which has some 25 members. With the sponsorship of the MSU chapter of American Professors for Peace in the Middle East, Kadema took part in a Free University course on Israel, addressed by members of the faculty. The organization also joined with the Israeli students in sponsoring a program on opportunities in Is- rael, attended by 150 students and addressed by Dr. Ralph Smuckler, dean of international programs at MSU. A Yom HaAtzmaut (Israel In- HAL GORDON MUSIC For All Occasions BIG BANDS or SMALL COMBOS 642-5520 dependence Day) celebration also is scheduled for May, as well as a weekend at Camp Tamarack, when the theme for discussion will be Zionism. Formed in October out of the now-defunct Students for Israel, Kadema is affiliated with the loosely federated Michigan As- sociation of Jewish College Stu- dents. Members of the association meet at the Jewish Center during vacations, publish a newspaper and attempt to tackle problems that are common to Jewish college stu- dents throughout the state. Asher, son of Cantor Arthur Asher of Temple Israel, is a sopho- more in James Madison College for the social sciences. He'll be going to. Israel this summer for a Leadership Conference of Jew- ish College Students, sponsored by the American Zicnist Youth Fed- eration, liaison to the Jewish col- lege organizations across the coun- try. Being a small organization, Kadema hopes to draw strength out of a tight core of activists. Paul Korda is in charge of Is- rael programs, Gilda Listopad, secretary, and Sheldon Freilich, head of the "crisis •committee." The latter is designed to react immediately to any anti-Israel or anti-Semitic manifestations that arise, such as a letter in the school paper. Arab students are not a powerful force on campus, he added, but occasionally a profes- sor will write a "powerful" letter against Israel. Asher admitted to some concern with the "Jewish Uncle Toms"— those leftists "who forget they're Jews." The trouble with them, said Asher, is "they're tied up in their own revolutionary rhetoric" and "their facts are mixed up." He credited the black students with establishing a precedent for minority groups. "If Jews see the need for them, things the black students are doing for themselves will stimulate the Jewish students too," he said. JWV SOL YETZ-MORRIS COHEN POST and AUXILIARY will meet 8:30 p.m. Monday at the JWV headquarters. Hostesses will be Anna Silverstein and Goldie Wolf. Nominations of officers will be held. Chairman Ann Rubin, KE 5-4031, is seeking volunteers for the annual Passover seder at the Bat- tle Creek Veterans Hospital. s••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••■ • • • • • • Hair Design Studio • •• • • • Style Director FORMERLY OF 7 MILE RD. • • • • • THOMAS HATCH • : • TUES. & WED. ONLY $500 : • • REGULAR $6.25 VALUE • i SHAMPOO & STYLING • • • • • PLUS MANICURE 29505 NORTHWESTERN HWY. kt,innrney's Restaurant/ (N,, , 357-0470 r a me•momeetteeewesseeseetmemmombeev••• • . . • • • • •• The Community Concourse at NORTHLAND will house its first ART SHOW beginning April 9. The exhibit will consist of paintings, sculpture, ceramics and handi- craft by artists from metropolitan Detroit. In its annual artist concert the Tuesday Musicale of Detroit is presenting pianist OZAN MARSH, 8 p.m., Tuesday, in the Rackham Auditorium of the Enginereing So- ciety. The public is invited to attend this concert as guests of the Tuesday Musicale as it celebrates its 85th anniversary. Young piano students are especially urged to attend. There is no admission charge, and tickets are not neces- sary. • GUY LOMBARDO and his Royal Canadians will be at the Masonic Auditorium May 1. . • • Members of the CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL CLASS OF 1950 are seek- ing 200 missing students to be in- vited to the 20-year reunion June 6 at the Roostertail Restaurant. For information, call Phyllis Katz, 626-0080. • The Metropolitan Detroit Chap- ter of the COALITION ON NA- TIONAL PRIORITIES will hold a statewide education conference on Phase II of ABM at the Univer- sity of Detroit Student Union Ball- room 5 p.m. Saturday. Speakers will include Congressman JOHN CONYERS, JR., 1st Congressional District; DR. J. DAVID SINGER, professor of political science, Uni- versity of Michigan; and DR:MARC ROSS, professor of physics, Uni- versity of Michigan. * • THE COMMUNITY OF FAITH IN THE MODERN WORLD will U.S. Transportation Dept. Re-Evaluating Funding of Road to Passion Play WASHINGTON—The department of transportation is re-evaluating the release of funds to build a high- way that would provide better access to a pasion play and exhibit run by known anti-Semite Gerald L. K. Smith in Eureka, Ark. In a letter to JWV National Commander Bernard Direnfeld of Cleveland, Department of Trans- portation Secretary John Volpe in- dicated that he had requested the Federal Highway Administration "to furnish new data concerning traffic volume presently using this facility." The secretary also indi- cated that he had asked his gen- eral counsel to "review the legality of using federal funds for improv- ing this roadway." According to Secretary Volpe's letter, funds for the highway have not yet been approved. On the whole, perhaps it is the great readers rather than the great writers who are entirely to be envied. They pluck the fruits, and are spared the trouble of rearing them. —Alexander Smith For the first time, a young psychoanalyst, Joel Kovel, investi- gates white racism in a new book, WHITE RACISM: A PSYCHO- HISTORY. As an assistant pro- fessor of psychiatry at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Dr. Kovel has drawn from his teach- ing experience, psychoanalytical thought, and the literature of sev- eral fields to reach an understand- ing of the causes underlying the crisis in our culture. In studying the fantasies and symbols that have evolved throughout our past and in examining basic attitudes to children, relations, property, and power, we can find the ori- gins of the irrational force that has become so central to the crisis of racism. A champagne reception for U.S. Sen. PHILIP A. HART will be held 3-5 p.m. Sunday at the Shera- ton Motor Inn, 1001 N. Woodward, Pontiac. 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