3S-FrIder, °claw 9, 1970
1
111E "meow XWBII NEWS
City of Hope Official
to Talk at Dinner Here
Prof. Aaron Levenstein, director and Tomorrow," cited as authority
of the department of human rela- in decisions of the U.S. Supreme
tions of the City of Hope in Duarte,
Calif., will be guest speaker at the
Detroit Businessmen's Group, City
of Hope, champagne dinner-dance.,
6:90 p.m. Nov. 1,
at the Raleigh.
House.
Associate p r o-
fessor of business'
administration at
the Bernard Ba-
ruch School of
Business and Pub-
lic Administration
of the City Col- venstein
lege of New York, Prof. Levenstein
specializes in human relations re-
search and training for American
industry.
A member of the New York
bar, Prof. Levenstein directed
the human relations division of
the Research Institute of Amer-
ica for 21 years prior to his asso-
ciation with CCNY. He is a mem-
ber of the labor panel of the
American Arbitration Ass o c I a-
tion, and Is vice president of the
Coordinating Council on Educa-
tion for the Disadvantaged.
His books include: 'Labor Today
FOR THE BEST IN
MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT
SAM EMMER
And His Orchestra
358-0q38
Court; "Why People Work;" "They
Chose Freedom," a history of the
International Rescue Committee;
"The Art of Personal Problem-
Solving;" and "Freedom's Advo-
cate," a review of the issues of
human freedom in the last 25
years.
Prof. Levenstein did graduate
work in labor law at the New York
University School of Law and was
adjunct professor of management
at NYU's graduate school of engi-
neering.
He has been involved in City of
Hope activities since 1957.
Co-chairmen of this year's din-
ner-dance by Detroit Business-
men's Group, City of Hope, arc
Dr. Leonard Moss, Joseph Braver
and Sammy Lieberman. Harry
Brodsky is president of the group.
Judaic Studies, Hebrew
Popular With Collegians
NEW YORK, N.Y. (JTA)—More
than 500 students have registered
for Brooklyn. College's new Judaic
studies program. In addition, al-
most 600 students have registered
for Hebrew and Yiddish courses at
the institution, a unit of the City
University of New York.
Some registrants could be ac-
commodated only by the estab-
lishment of special additional sec-
tions. Many students were turned
away when classes reached their
attendance limits.
Judaic studies may be taken
toward full interdisciplinary un-
dergraduate majors for liberal arts
students leading to bachelor of
arts degrees in Judaic studies. The
faculty coordinator of the program
is Prof. Samuel Abrahamson, for-
mer president of the Faculty Hil-
lel Associates and specialist in
international education.
Single Adults to Hear
M. E. Specialist at Center
GOOD NEWS!
For the Finest
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The Single Adults of the Jewish
Center will hear George Gruen,
Israel and Middle East specialist
in the foreign affairs department
of the American Jewish Commit-
tee, 8:30 p.m. Oct. 20 at the dele-
gate assembly of the Jewish Com-
munity Council. in the Jewish Cen-
ter.
Painting and Sculpture
By sculpture I mean the sort
that is executed by cutting away
from the block: the sort that is
executed by building up resembles
painting.—Michelangelo.
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Brevities
The OAK PARK CHESS CLUB,
at its recent election of officers,
named Dr. Jack Goldstein presi-
dent; Art Blatt, vice president;
Steve Feldman, secretary; Her-
man Rosenberg, treasurer; and
Gerald Levold, tournament direc-
tor. The club meets 8 p.m. Thurs-
days at the Oak Park Community
Center, and invites anyone, re-
gardless of chess experience, to
join.
• • •
From Oct. 20 through Nov. 10,
Allen Rubiner Gallery will be hav-
ing a one-man show by BILL
HOUSE, Detroit artist. It is com-
prised of 25 oil paintings and 10
monoprints inspired by a recent
Mexican trip.
• • •
THE GIFT TO BE SIMPLE, an
exhibition by the Guild of Shaker
Crafts, opens at the Bloomfield Art
Association today as a national
first. The Shakers, a religious
group who thought work was
prayer, were 19th Cenutry Amer.
ican craftsmen. They designed the
famous wooden slat-backed chair,
the swivel stool, rocking chair,
clothespin, flat broom, rotary saw
and a washing machine. The ex-
hibit will continue through Nov. 1.
• • •
A benefit performance of "HOL-
IDAY ON ICE" to raise funds for
scholarships in registered nursing
will be sponsored by the Detroit
District of the Michigan Nurses
Association, American Nurses As-
sociation, 8 p.m. Wednesday at
Cobo Arena. Cash prizes for schol-
arships in nursing and for nursing
projects will be awarded on the
basis of dollar volume of ticket
sales through a contest under way
in hospitals, health agencies, nurs-
ing homes and schools of nursing.
The contest winners will be pre-
sented with their awards at the
performance. Tickets may be ob-
tained at the Cobo Arena box of-
fice, all J. L. Hudson and Grin-
nell ticket outlets and at the De-
troit District Association office,
316 Fisher Building.
• • •
Three new productions of THE
AZTECS, THE REVOLUTION and
GAMES—works which have con-
tributed to the celebrated reputa-
tion of the Ballet Folklorico of Mex-
ico—will headline spectacularly col-
orful presentations at the Masonic
Auditorium, 8:20 p.m., Oct. 17, and
3 p.m., Oct. 18. Choreographer-
Director Amalia Hernandez has
created, especially for this seventh
tour of the U.S. and Canada by the
troupe, a new version of her bal-
let based on'the rites of the ancient
Aztecs.
• • •
The OAK PARK PUBLIC LI-
BRARY will be open Sundays from
1:30 to 5:30 p.m. beginning Sun-
day through mid-May. This year
the College and Adult Study, which
was closed to the public for the
past year, is again open. The room
has been renovated, and a new
stereo and monaural record player
installed for in-library listening.
The rest of the week, the library
is open 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday
through Thursday; 10 a.m.-5:30
p.m. Friday and Saturday.
David Gornbein Heads
Center Culture Club
The Jewish Center Culture Club
installed David Gornbein as presi-
dent at its recent installation party.
Other officers are Charles Driker,
vice president; Max Lankin, treas-
urer; Ben Falek and Jennie Schu-
biner, secretaries; and William
Burton, hospitaler.
The Culture Club meets 1:30 p.m.
on Tuesdays and Thursdays at the
Center. All retirees who are inter-
ested in Jewish cultural activities
are invited.
Paradox
The paradox is the source of the
thinker's passion, and the thinker
without a paradox is like a lover
without feeling: a paltry medio-
crity.—Soren KIrkegaard.
World Series Falls on Yom Kippur — Again
NEW YORK (JTA) — This year
— not for the first time — a World
Series baseball game will be play-
ed on Yom Kippur.
The 1970 series between the
Cincinnati Reds and the Baltimore
Orioles begins in/ Cincinnati this
Saturday, which In addition to be-
ing the Day of Atnement is also
the Sabbath.
A spokesman for the baseball
commissioner's office here ac-
knowledged to the Jewish Tele-
graphic Agency that such sched-
uling, which prevents observant
Jews from attending, watching (on
television), listening (on radio) or
playing in a game on Yom Kippur,
"has been going on for so many,
many, many years" that "there
isn't really much you can do about
it."
The spokesman said the matter
had been considered "very
thoroughly: very carefully," but
that the team owners bad ac-
cepted the predicament and de-
tided not to make as issue of It.
The owners, the source said.
have consistently rejected the Idea
of World Series night games —
scheduling, for example, this Sat-
urday afternoon's game for Satur-
day night — as being too radical
a move. A special committee
named by Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn two years ago to recom-
mend ways to improve the game
apparently made no headway on
the problem of series games on
Yom Kippur.
'Tis a wrong way to proportion
other men's pleasures to ourselves;
'tis like a child's using a little
bird, 0 poor bird thou shalt sleep
with me; so lays it in his bosom
and stifles it with his hot breath;
the bird had rather be in the cold
air. --John Selden.
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