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October 23, 1970 - Image 38

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1970-10-23

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

Daniel_Elazar
to Deliver Haar
Lectures Here

The 1970-71 cultural season of
the Sholem Aleichem Institute will
begin with the third lecture series
sponsored by the Moishe Haar
Memorial Foundation, Oct. 31 8:30
p.m. and on Nov. 1.
The Saturday lecture will take
place in the Southfield Recreation
Center Auditorium, and the Nov. 1
talk, at 2 p.m., in the Zionist Cul-
tural Center, Southfield.
The foundation will present
Dr. Daniel Elazar, director of
the Center for the Study of
Federalism at Temple University,
who will speak on "Crisis of
American Politics and Federal-
ism" and "Israel-Diaspora Re-
lations."
Dr. Elazar received his PhD in
political science from the Univer-
sity of Chicago in 1959. He was
the recipient of a Guggenheim Fel-
lowship in 1965 and is the author
of 10 books, including "The Ameri-
can Partnership," "A View from
the States" and "Cities of the
Prairies." He is a contributor to
many scholarly journals.
Elazar is a graduate of the
United Hebrew High School and
the Midrasha here and attended
the College of Jewish Studies in
Chicago. Be founded the United
Hebrew Schools library and served
as its head librarian. His father,
Albert Elazar, is UHS superintend-
ent.
The public are invited at no
charge. Refreshments will be
served.

Exhibits Added
to War Crimes
Museum in Orion

Stanley Bozich has acquired a
number of new exhibits on the
Nazi regime for his War Crimes
Museum in Keatington's Antique
Village, Lake Orion.
The museum, which has been
praised as the only one of its kind
in the country, provides a compre-
hensive documentary of the Nazi
regime going back to 1919.
It is open to the public daily ex-
cept Monday.
Among the new exhibits are two
manikin caricatures of Adolf Eich-
mann and Josef Goebbels — the
former to point up the results (the
gas ovens) of Goebbel's anti-Semi-
tic propaganda campaign.
Also new are Gestapo execu-
tion orders from November 1941
and a series of photographs illus-
trating what happened to the Jews
—from the roundup to the final
selection for gassing.

Bozich has divided the muse-
um into three rooms and is pre-
paring miniatures of the Buch-
enwald concentration camp. He
is planning to tape the entire
museum tour, so that he need
not be present while the exhibits
are being viewed.
The Royal Oak firefighter and
longtime collector said he has had
the cooperation of another experi-
enced collector, Eric Lind, whose
own knowledge of the Hitler era
has been of assistance.
Bozich is encouraging Jewish
schools and organizations to call
him for group tour arrangements.
For information, call him evenings
after 6 p.m. at 585-9617.

Ulpan Courses in Hebrew
at Seven Sites in East

NEW YORK—Ulpan classes this
fall for the study of Hebrew will
be given, beginning Sunday, in
seven sites throughout the Greater
New York area.
Conducted by the department of
education and culture and the
Theodor Herd Institute of the Jew-
ish Agency for Israel, the 60-hour
courses will be given not only at
the headquarters of the Ulpan
Center at 515 Park Ave., New
York, but also in Queens, the
Bronx, Brooklyn, Westchester, Long
and. Westfield, N-J-

Bat Mitzva

Community
Calendar

Oct. 26—Beth Israel Sisterhood
Board Meeting, 12:30 p.m.
—Temple Beth El Board
Meeting, 8:30 p.m.
27—Bnai Brith Women Meet-
ing, 8:30 p.m.
—Bnai Brith Board Meet-
ing, 8:30 p.m.
29—JWVA Dinner, 7 p.m.,
Sweden House _
—General Assembly Dele-
gates Meeting, 7
Temple Beth El
—Council Board of Gover-
nors Meeting, 8:30 p.m.,
Temple Beth El

Ida Krasnick, 69,
Former Teacher

THE DETROIT JEWISH HEWS
Fridsy, October 23, 19711-3!

Marcia Blum, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Sam Blum, will be called
to the Torah as Bat Mitzva Oct.
31 at Cong. Beth Israel.

Your Bar Mitzva or Wedding

A wicked fellow is the most
pious when he takes to it. He'll
beat you all in piety.
—Samuel Johnson
Ida Krasnick, 69, a former Flint
school teacher, died Oct. 15.
Miss Krasnick, 915 Court, retired
in 1964 as a homemaking teacher
at Bryant Junior High. She had
been with the Flint schools since
1923, teaching first through sixth
grades, science and English in sev-
eral other.schools before moving to
Scandinavian
Bryant in 1958.
She was a member of Temple
Beth El and held degrees from
Eastern Michigan University and
the University of Michigan.
She leaves two brothers, John of
Detroit and Max of San Diego; and
two sisters, Mrs. Ellis Warren and
Mrs. Barney Brown of New York

ROSEN BLAT
ORCHESTRA

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Entertainment
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DANISH IMPORTS

Furnishings

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TREMENDOUS SAVINGS

Due to Direct Imports

The Flint Chapter of Bnai Brith i City.
Women, having concentrated in
September on fund-raising for the
children's home in Israel, is turn-
ing its attention to the local scene.
The October meeting, set 8 p.m.
Tuesday, will offer "Judicial In-
sights" by Judges Thomas C. Yeo-
tis, Luke Quinn and. Donald R.
Freeman. They will conduct a
panel discussion on Probate, Dis-
trict and Circuit courts in Judge
Freeman's courtroom. The meet-
ing is open to the public.

khrtsch_

Scandinavian Furnishings

Monday and Thursday
111 a.m. to sae p•m.
Tuesday, Friday,
10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Sunday--Neer to 5:30 p.m.
Closed Wednesday

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Vo Milo H. of 12 Milo EL

Plow. EL 24020

Comings ...
and
... Goings

Mrs. Bernard Schaenen, na-
tional chairman of the United
Jewish Appeal's
women's division,
announced the ap-
point ment of
Mrs. Michael Pel-
avin as a mem-
ber of the board
for 1971. Mr s.
Schaenen said
Mrs. Pelavitz
Would be respon-
sible for develop- Mrs. Pelavin
ing the new concept of regional
districts in the state of Michigan.

GrandRapids
News Notes

Dr. Bruno Bettelheim, author of
"Children of the Dream," a study
of communal child rearing on the
kibutz, will speak at 8 p.m. Sun-
day at Cong. Ahavas Israel. Dr.
Bettelheim, professor of education
and professor of psychology and
psychiatry at the University of
Chicago, is director of the Ortho-
genic School, the university's resi-
dential treatment center for sev-
erely emotionally disturbed chil-
dren.
• • •
Temple Emanuel sponsored a

testimonial dinner Thursday for
Maurice Glaser in honor of his
60th birthday and in recognition of
his many years as cantonal soloist
at Temple Emanuel. Cantor Harold
Orbach of Temple Israel, Detroit,
presented the musical program.
• • •
Bnai Brith Women will hold
its annual Menora Luncheon 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the Holiday Inn on
28th St. An original skit by Mrs.
Philmore Dennen and Mrs. Isadore
Sernick will be presented at this
25th anniversary event.
• • •
Ahavas Israel Synagogue's first
study group will meet 1 p.m. Tues-
day. Mrs. Joel Chazin, chairman,
will lead the discussion of "Jewish
Point of View on Abortion—An-
cient and Modern.' Meetings will
be held the last Tuesday of each
month, except December.
a • •
Ahavas Israel United Synagogue
Youth will hold a retreat Oct. 31-
Nov. 1 in Kalamazoo.

OCT. 22, 23, 24, 25—MUR. fR1• SAT. SUN.

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