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January 22, 1971 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1971-01-22

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

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Community

10—Friday, January 22, 1971

Calendar

Beth Israel Women
Plan 40th Annual
Donor DinnerMarch7

Jan. 25—Beth Isr a el Sisterhood
Board Meeting, 12:30 p.m.
—Temple Beth El Board
Meeting, 8:30 p.m.
26—Commission on Jewis Ii
Beth Israel Sisterhood will hold
Education Meeting, 8 p.m.,
a sentimental 40th annual donor
office of B. Morris Pela-
dinner March 7—it will mark the
vin
last donor event in the present
—Bnai
Brith Board Meet-
synagogue.
ing, 8:30 p.m.
Ken Corday, tenor, who has ap-
27—Cong. Beth Israel PTA
peared in on-B roadway, off-
Meeting, 7:30 p.m. --
Broadway and operatic produc-
28—Council Board of Gover-
tions, will be guest artist. It will
nors Meeting, 8:30 p.m.,
not be Corday's first appearance
Temple Beth El
in the area: he performed in Damn
Yankee" in the Flint Musical Tent;
La Boheme, Tosca and La Traviata,

If you have any old pic-
tures, papers or memor-
abilia of the Jewish
Community of F lin t,
please call Sidell Sor-
scher, 232-2938.

I

Stewart Epstein, Gordon Suber, Sheldon
Wolin, Leonard Bragman and Morrie
Young.

News

Beth Israel School
to Register Students

Second semester registration for
Cong. Beth Israel's supervised

nursery school program is now
available. A bicultural program for

preschool children, age 3 to 5, is
offered. Interested parents may
contact the school's educational
director, E. Pinhas Fellus, 233-5386,
for information.

Sunday is second semester regis-
tration day for students in the
elective program. Students of
grades 7 and 7X and the 8th grade
students of Temple Beth El join-
ing the elective program are ex-
pected to be at Beth Israel from
9 to 11 a.m. until registration is
approved and completed.
* *
Beth Israel PTA will meet 7:3)
p.m. Wednesday when members of
the Beth Israel school staff will be
available to meet with parents.

Marriages

PRESS-JACOBY: A champagne
brunch hosted by her children fol
lowed the Sunday wedding here o
Mrs. Abraham H. Jacoby of Bay
City to Mr. Leonard Victor Press
of E. Second Ave. Rabbi Jossef
Kratzenstein of Temple Israel, Bay
City, officiated at the ceremony,
held in the Flint residence of the
"iride's son. Attending her 'mother
was Mrs. Richard B. Michelson;
and the bride's son, Michael R.
Jacoby, attended Mr. Press. The
couple will reside in Flint.

q

I

Il

DEAR MRS. HOUSEWIFE:

Bar Mitzva

Youth on
the Move

Mrs. Sam Gottlib will be toast-
mistress.

.a.atirmauemaszimmtmetvomenissek.

fit b9f9Uitt

Andrew Mitchell Rosenberg. sor
of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rosenberg
will be called to the Torah as a
Bar Mitzva Saturday at Temple
Beth El.
Robert Mark Fishier, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Avery Fishier, will be
called to the Torah as a Bar
Mitzva Jan. 3 at Temple Beth El.

all with the Flint Civic Opera; and
in concert with the Flint Sym- Rose Binder, Age 73
phony.
Rose Binder, 2211 Hills, died
Jan. 14 at age 73.
In the cast of "The Merry Wi.
Mrs. Binder was born in Poland
dow" on the Lincoln Center Na•
tional Tour, Corday has appeared and lived in Flint for the last 48
many times on television and in years.
She was a member of Cong. Beth
clubs throughout the country.
Chairman of the donor dinner is Israel and its sisterhood, Hadas-
Mrs. Milton Rosenbaum, assisted sah and Pioneer Women.
Surviving are her husband, Leo;
by co-chairman Mrs. Ed w ard
Osher and Mrs. Arnold Schaffer. two sons, Harry and Albert; three
brothers,
Cantor Abraham Hoch
Others on her committee are:
Mesdames Arnold Hartz. Harry Weis- and Isadore Hoch, both of Brook-
berger, Ted Vinacow, Percy Braun, lyn, and Myer Hock of Belleville,
Aaron Weston. Simon Indianer, Sidney N.J.;
two sisters, Mrs. Minnie
Rachwal, Isadore Sugarman, Morris
Gold, Edwin Elk, Lou Reale, Irving Raab and Mrs. Harry Moochnek,
Katz. Soil Gaynor, Milton Siegel, Irving both of Brooklyn; and six grand-
Wiseman, Jack Brenner, Gerald Schrei-
ber, Albert Binder. Gilbert Gottlieb. children.

Flint

noind3fa

Flint College of the University of
Michigan awarded degrees to the
following graduates in mid-year
graduation ceremonies last week:
Stanley H. Levy, Lubena Wax, Ed-
ward H. Witkow and Ronald S.
Schwartz.

Deputy Speaker's
Post Is Splitting
Arabs in Israel

JERUSALEM (JTA) — The at-
tempt to appoint an Arab to a sub.
cabinet post for the first time has
been temporarily stalled on the
initiative of the prospective ap-
pointee.
Seif A-Din Zouabi, a Nazareth
Moslem who is a deputy speaker
of the Knesset representing the
four-seat Minorities Party, has
asked Premier Golda Meir to can-
cel the move. Although he has felt
himself deserving of the appoint-
ment in view of his long Knesset
service, Zouabi acted to end the
matter after all but one cabinet
minister rejected him as an aide.
Shimon Peres, minister of trans-
port, communications and posts,
accepted Mrs. Meir's suggestion
that Zouabi become deputy minis-
ter of communications; but the
Moslem MK said he would prefer
to serve as deputy in a newly
created ministry of Israeli-Arab
affairs, a proposal Mrs. Meir is
studying.
The situation is complicated by
the fact that Seif A-Din Zouabi's
cousin Mapam MK Abdel Aziz
Zouabi of Nazareth, also claims a
deputy ministership and is sup-
ported for it by his party. And
the two Zouabis dislike each other
intensely.
Futhermore, when Mapam and
the Labor Party reached agree-
ment on a compromise whereby
both cousins would be appointed to
similar posts, leaders of the Druze
community complained, asserting
that they were more loyal to Israel
than Arabs and that therefore they
should not be deprived of a deputy
ministership while Moslems got

The things taught in colleges
and schools are not an education,
ti
but the means of education.—
Ralph Waldo Emerson. : two.

You should know these
8 important reasons why
EMPIRE KOSHER chickens
and turkeys taste better:

1.
2.

3.

4.

We use only the finest quality, healthiest poultry avail-

able, direct from the farms.

Each individual chicken is killed by a trained and quali-
fied Rabbi to assure a proper cut for proper bleeding.

Only continuously-flowing cold water, less than 60° F.,
is used in defeathering and in all processing to assure
cleanliness and wholesomeness.

Each individual chicken is inspected by a U. S. Govern-
ment Inspector for wholesomeness.

5.

Each individual chicken is inspected and checked, in-
side and out, by an authorized Rabbi for Kosher purity
and quality.

6.

According to Kosher Law, each chicken is soaked for
1 /2 hour, is hand-salted, then stacked for proper drain-
age for 1 hour, and then is rinsed 3 times.

7.

8.

Each chicken is quickly chilled to 37° F. or lower to
protect freshness.

Each chicken is checked by Inspectors for quality before
shipping to market.

Can the same things be honestly said about
the poultry you buy? Give your family the
assured quality, purity and good taste of
cleaned, ready-to-cook Empire Kosher Poultry.

KOSHER

Look for this Trade Mark or ask for
Empire Kosher Poultry by name at your
butcher shop, dally or food market.

The Most Trusted Name
in Kosher Poultry

EKPI, 1971

For stones moor you, ploosa coil Distributor:

CITY POULTRY CO.

3273 HUBBARD

PHONE: 825-3000

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