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September 04, 1970 - Image 29

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1970-09-04

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

mazzrz5,771,-

,

Youth
N ews

Michael Lebowitz Off
to Israel for Year's Study

Detroiter Michael Lebowitz, a
member of Hashomer Hatzair, is
among the 52 American and Cana-
dian students who left Tuesday for
Israel to spend a year of study and
work there.
The study program for the stu-
dents at the Institute for Jewish
Youth Leaders from Abroad in
Jerusalem is administered by the
youth and hehalutz department of
the World Zionist Organization. In
the United States, the program is
under the auspices of the Ameri-
can Zionist Youth Foundation.

Tel Aviv U. Soccer Team
to Play Teams in East

The Tel Aviv University soccer
team, 1969 intercollegiate cham-
pion of Israel, will visit the United
States in September to play nine
of the outstanding college and
university soccer teams on the
East Coast.
The tour is being sponsored by
the Ameriban Friends of the Tel
Aviv University and was arranged
by Irving Koslofs, owner of the
Philadelphia 76'ers professional
basketball team.

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For Information

Youth Challenged to Combat
Anti-Israel Bias on Campus

STARLIGHT, Pa. (JTA) — An
Israeli official challenged Amer-
ican Jewish college students Sun-
day to combat anti-Israel propa-
ganda on the campus, "much of
it old anti-Semitism in new dress."
Moshe Yegar, consul general of
Israel in Philadephia, said that
such propaganda was being dis-
seminated at colleges and univer-
ities across the country "by pro-
Arab and certain radical groups."
Yegar addressed 225 students at
the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation's
annual summer insitute at Camp
Bnai Brith here.
He claimed that anti-Israel prop-
aganda had grown in vehemence
and scope since the Six-Day War
and that it "constitutes a danger
to both the interests of Israel and
those of the Jewish people."
The language used by pro-Arabs
at universities borrows largely
from "classical anti-Semitism —
only replacing the word 'Jew' with
the word 'Zionist,' " the consul
general said. "Whoever is not con-
vinced of the intense anti-Jewish
feeling inherent in their campaigns
is simply blind to present day
political realities and to the Jewish
historical experience," he added.
A week-long Hillel workshop at
Camp Bnai Brith on Israel and
American Jewry has been formu-
lating programs to counter anti-
Israel propaganda when the stu-
dents return to their campuses.
It was announced that student
leaders in Bnai Brith Hillel Foun-
dation will, for the first time this
fall, organize Jewish groups and
activities on neighboring college
campuses where little or no Jew-
ish programing exists.
The student leaders also will
meet with clinics of Jewish high
school seniors to inform them
of opportunities for Jewish ex-
periences in college life, and
assist Hillel directors — par-
ticularly on large campuses
where the student-rabbi ratio is
often several thousand to one —
in reachhg non-affiliated stu-
dents and working with "in-
dependent" and "radical" Jewish
student groups on issues of com-
mon interest.
These projects were presented by
Rabbi Benjamin M. Kahn, Hillel's
national director. Rabbi Kahn said
student work on campuses near
their own schools would help allevi-

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ate the pressure from more than
300 colleges and universities that
have requested Hillel's services —
"requests which because of limited
resources, Hillel has so far been
unable to answer with professional
staff."
Earlier, Dr. Aryeh Nesher, who
fought in the anti-Nazi underground
during World War II, and in the
Israeli Army during the war for in-
dependence, told 350 teen-age con-
vention delegates at Camp Bnai
Brith there can be no peace in
the world if the world permits the
destruction of Israel.
Russia's maneuvers in the Mid-
dle East, he said, recall Hitler's
conquest of small countries that
triggered a world war.
Dr. Nesher, director of the
Israel Education Fund of the
United Jewish Appeal, warned
leaders of the Aleph Zadik Aleph
and the Bnai Brith Girls that "tens
of thousands" of anti-Israel spokes-
men, including Arabs and Amer-
ican adherents of the New Left,
are spreading "poison" on the
campus and in lecture halls.
In addition, he cited televisicn
and newspaper opinion makers
who have been "disillusioned"
with Israel ever since its victory
over the Arabs in June 1967.
"For hundreds of years we were
martyrs, scapegoats —losers. Hu-
manitarians sympathized with us
when we died by the millions. But
when we decided to fight back
and refused to die and made our
oppressors die instead, we lost
much of this 'humanitarian' sym-
pathy, which now goes to our
enemies."
Dr. Nesher was guest speaker
at Camp Bnai Brith, where youth
leaders from all over North
America as well as 22 delegates
from Israel and others from Eng-
land and Uruguay held a week of
deliberations. The 47th internation-
al convention of Aleph Zadik Aleph
and the 26th international conven-
tion of the Bnai Brith Girls were
concurrently in progress.
In a resolution, the teen-
teenagers called for the United
States to "meet its moral obliga-
tions to enforce the cease fire
in the Middle East--and to use
its power to see to it that illegal
Egyptian-Soviet missile sites are
removed from the Suez area."
Delegates recalled "so-called
'peace negotiations' of the past,
engineered by big powers at the
expense of small countries—which
only increased the danger of war."
The resolution took the form of
an open letter to President Nixon.

THE DETROIT JEWISH HEWS

They Made
The Grade

Akiva Hebrew Day School an-
nounces its staff for the coming
year, opening Wednesday, will in-
clude 23 on the teaching faculty.
In the Jewish studies depart-
ment are Shmuel Betsalel, Rabbi
Aviezer Cohen, Mrs. Rachel Cohen,
Chaim Hoffman, Aryeh Skorski
and Mrs. Esther Tatelbaum.
The secular studies department
consists of Mrs. Claire Arm, How-
ard Borim, Mesdames Susan Hor-
witz, Marilyn Peiss, Linda Polk4
Naomi Roberg and Martha Rosen-
feld, Howard Weinberg and Mes-
dames Gail Wolf and Elsie Yellin.
Special subjects teachers are
Mrs. Ina Jean Egnater, Susan
Friedman, Ric hard Kaczander,
Mrs. Brunhild Kapustin, Mrs.
Charlotte Liner, Mrs. Florence
Schwartz and Rabbi William Wein-
man.
Rabbi Gerald Werner is school
principal.
For information, call the Akiva
office, 545-1060.

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The Ferndale High School adult
education department invites Is-
raelis interested in improving their
English to attend classes on Mon-
day and Wednesday evenings.
There are four classes on every
level, from beginners to advanced,
that meet 7-10 p.m. Daytime
classes also are available.
One of the teachers, Mrs. Sandra
Doron, who has lived in Israel
and has a Hebrew background, can
give special help. All classes and
books are free.
For information, call the school,
LI 2-2535. To register, come to the
school, 881 Pinecrest.

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o uch Center

Beth Moses USY'ers
Set Membership Meeting

Beth Moses Senior United Syna-
gogue Youth will hold its first
general membership meeting 7:30
p.m. Sunday in the youth lounge
of the synagogue. Everyone is in-
vited. For information, call Stuart
Horowitz, KE 3-2515.

Ferndale Teaching English
to the Foreign-Born

Four area young men left this
month to continue their studies at
various yeshivot in Israel. STAN-
LEY GORDON, son of Rabbi and
Mrs. James I. Gordon, will study
at Yeshivat Hakotel, Jerusalem;
MICHAEL GREENFIELD, son of
Mrs. Sari Greenfield at Kerem
b'Yavne in Yavne; ELI HALPERN,
son of Rabbi and Mrs. Israel Hal-
pern, at Har Etzion in Hebron;
and ISAAC SELMAR, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Selmar at Yeshi-
vat Itri, Jerusalem. All four are
June graduates of the high school
division of the Hebrew Theological
College in Skokie.

UHS High School
Classes Begin Sept. 13

The United Hebrew Schools High
School will officially open Sept.
13 with an assembly at 10 a.m.
Students will have an oppor-
tunity to meet the faculty and to
sign up for clubs and co-curricular
activities.
The UHS High School accepts
students who are graduates of a
recognized He b r e w elementary
school. For those without the
linguistic skills, the department of
Jewish studies offers subjects in
English with emphasis on under-
standing the Hebraic sources. All
classes meet in the Rohlik Build-
ing, Southfield. Transportation is
provided.
For information call the school,
352-7117.

Friday, September 4, 1970-29

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