Monument Unveilings Unveiling announcements may be in- serted by mail or by calling The Jewish News office. 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd.. Suite U.S. Southfield, Mich. 48075. Written an. nouncements must be accompanied by the name and address of the person making the insertion. There is a stand. mg charge: of 54.00 for an unveiling notice. measuring an inch in depth. and 57.50 for one two inches deep with a black border. • The family of the late Jay Mitchell Gordon announces the un- veiling of a monument in his mem- ory 11:30 a.m. Sunday, July 12, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Arm will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. • . The family of the late Saul Luks announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory 1 p.m. Sunday. July 12 at Chesed shel Ernes Cemetary. Rabbi Arm will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The family of the late Bertha Fox announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory 2 p.m. Sunday, July 19 at Chesed shel Emes Cemetary. Rabbi Sperka will officiate. The family of the late Mary Raskin announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory noon Sunday, July 19 at Clover Hill Memorial Park. Rabbi Syme will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The family of the late Bella Moscowitz announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her memory 11 a.m. Sunday, July 19 at Cong. Beth Moses, Rabbi Arm will offi- ciate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The family of the late Lois Ann Fine announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory 10:15 a.m. Sunday. July 12 at Chesed shel Emes Cemetary. Rabbi Syme will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. • s The family of the late Jack Sief announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory noon Sunday, July 19 at Beth Moses Cemetary. Rabbi Gruskin will offi- ciate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. Radical Students Admit Ignorance And Organize Own Judaica School By BEN GALLOB (Copyright 1970, JTA. Inc.) A group of radical Jewish stu- dents, seeking to organize them- selves to fight injustice as Jews. decided that, to do so, they needed to know more about Judaism in an acknowledgement that their sense of identity as Jews was shaky. As a first step, they agreed to a sug- gestion from a Jewish center official that they create a Free University of Jewish studies. oper- ating in the center but entirely under the control of the students. The identity struggle of the Jew- ish students was reported by Saul J. Farber, executive director of the Valley Cities Jewish Commun- ity Center in suburban Los Angeles. The center is located directly across the street from Valley College, a two-year com- munity college. The center houses the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation serving the college. The ensuing much greater involvement of the center with the Jewish radicals than with most of the school's Jewish students was described by Farber in a report in the Spring, 1970, issue of the Jewish Commun- ity Center Program Aids, pub- lished anarterly by the National Jewish Welfare Board. The encounter began when some of the Jewish radicals met with the executive director and told him they had created a "Jews for a Radical Society" group. They asked for and were given permission to hold their meetings in the center. At the first meeting, they told the direc- tor about a program they had conducted on the campus, corn- memarating the Warsaw Ghetto The Family of the Late SARAH K I RSCHENBAUM Announces the unveiling of a s monument in her memory 1 p.m. Sunday, July 19 at Chesed shel Ernes Cemetery. Rabbi Gorrelick will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The Family of the Late The Family of the Late RAYMOND FINE Announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory 10 a.m. Sunday, July 12 at Chesed shel Emes Cemetery. Rabbi Syme will officiate. Bela- tires and friends are asked to attend. LOUIS LINTON Announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory 1 p.m. Sunday, July 12 at Clover Hill Memorial Park. Rabbi Syme will officiate. Rela- tives and friends are asked to attend. The Family of . the Late The Family of the Late REGINA FIELD Announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory 11 a.m. Sunday, July 19 at Northwest He- brew Memorial Park. Rabbi Gorrelick will of- ficiate. Relatives and friends are asked to at- tend. SYLVIA KARABEN ICK Announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory 10 a.m. Sunday, July 12 at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Gorre- lick will officiate. Rela- tives and friends are asked to attend. The Family of the Late The Family of the Late DAVID HABERMAN Announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory 11 a.m. Sunday, July 12 at Machpelah Ce- metery. Rabbi Schnipper will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to at- tend. SARAH SALMANOVITZ (SALLEN) Announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory noon Sunday, July 12 at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Lehr- man and Cantor Klein will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. Uprising. Held in the campus free-speech area, the program featured poetry, reading, sing- ing and speeches, hailing the re- sistance of the Warsaw Ghetto Jews against the Nazis. At the close of the program, the Jewish students paraded, wearing arm- bands bearing the word "Jude." They were joined by other stu- dents, including some who were not Jews. The radicals told the director that the program and the parade had given them a feeling of iden- tification as Jews which few of them had known at any other time of their life. They also indicated "that they needed to know more about Judaism since their own sense of identity as Jews was shaky," Farber reported. At one of the early meetings of the new radical group, a number of Proposals for activities were made. They decided to organize a picket line against a local super- market, purportedly owned by a Jew, which was selling California table grapes. The students wanted to give direct support to the organ- izing campaign of the United Farm Workers Union. It was agreed that the students pickets would carry signs that it was "the responsibility of Jews to support the efforts of all oppressed people to break the chains of their op- pressions." At that stage, the radicals still had not dealt with the question of future programs, and "the lack of long-range goals and purposes created considerable confusion." Farber, who had been invited to sit in on the meeting, chose that point to suggest the idea of free Judaica university. He pointed out that comments of the student rad- icals had indicated that in their contacts with such groups as the Black Student Union and the United Mexican Association of Stu- dents, "it had always been taken for granted that the Jewish stu- dents had a strong identity as Jews," which in fact was not true. He told the radicals that just as Black and Mexican-American stu- dents wanted ethnic study pro- grams to learn about their cultur- al heritage, "Jewish students needed to know more about their own heritage." The 60 participants in the meeting greeted the suggestion with enthusiasm. Many admitted they knew nothing about Juda- ism and reported that this was "a handicap" in their contacts with other students. At the same time they made it clear they wanted a school program which would be theirs and not the creation of a group of adults" associated with the Jewish cen- ter, Hillel or any other Jewish organization. The executive director there- upon proposed that the "free uni- versity" be completely controlled by the radical students and that they "should set up the curricu- lum, choose the faculty and the place in which the classes or semi- nars would be conducted." At the second general meeting, both the director and Farber gave assur- ances that they would serve in the Judaica school only when the radi- cals asked them to. Chicken in the Wrong Pot Years ago, George Jessel was in- vited to luncheon at the White House with the then first lady of the land, Eleanor Roosevelt. Jes- se], of course, had a few remarks to make at the conclusion of the repast, pausing in his peroration to observe, "Never in the history The "silly question" is the first initiation of some totally new de- velopment. —Alfred North Whitehead THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 34—Friday, July 10, 1970 Handmade in Miami, Florida SOSA CIGARS TEN PER CENT CHEAPER 'BUY THE BOX' OAK PARK TOBACCONIST Custom Blended Pipe Tobacco 21178 GREENFIELD ROAD in Greens Shopping Center Open Evenings & Sundays PACKAGE LIQUOR DEALER BAR MITZVAH and SWEET SIXTEEN DANCE PARTIES! OAK PARK WATCH REPAIR We furnish everything • Selected fine jewelry and Diamonds Large Selection of Fine Opal Jewelry Watch and Jewelry Repair but the Kids! Art Linkletlers IRV ASHIN LI 7-5068 13720 W. 9 mil. Corner 12 Mile & Evergreen Phone 357-1215 or 588-0300 Near Post Office ere"eaeseVea.01emetre1eomer GIANT 149"x32'CUSTOM POOL CONCRETE -GUNITE • Blue Haven's Hawaii Garden 7., Modelral45 • • 18x32 overall. .3 to (It. 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Mrs. FDR topped him with her clearly audible aside, "I TOLD that chef not to put any chicken in Mr. Jessel's salad!" "does not come easy, and that to achieve this identification, serious efforts" must be -made by them. Courses began in July and were continued for ten week s, Far- ber reported. Average enrollment was 15 students per class. The one on socialism and Judaism be- gan with the largest enrollment but it dwindled steadily. The other three classes kept their enrollees. Members began to ask that more outside teachers be recruited as they came to recognize that with- out experts to teach, they were merely "pooling ignorance." Such requests increased each week and the Jewish professionals at the center and Hillel "fortunately were able to 'deliver' sufficiently com- petent guest lecturers and teach- ers to help the classes to remain stimulating and exciting." The final result, the center official said, was that the radicals de- cided they "wanted more courses, offered in a more systematic way." A core group of the Jewish radi- cals plans to renew the free uni- versity in the fall, he reported, with the same four courses. They have also agreed that the courses "need to be structured with a more specific curriculum and with spe- cific faculty to handle material with which the students are not familiar." He disclosed that a con- census had emerged among the young radicals that Jewish identi- fication through Jewish studies u 10111 j - Fastback Your Humble Servant PAGE IMPORTS Telegraph at 9 1/2 Mile 1970 This Year of The Toyota