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January 22, 1971 - Image 29

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

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

Shelly Barak Engaged
to Joseph Guggenheim

LETTER BOX

THE DETROIT JEWISH HEWS
Friday, Jemmy 22, 1971-21

Kaufman-Goren Rites
to Be Solemnized in June

Princess Hohenloe Comments
on Axel Springer's Activities

Editor, The Jewish News:
Axel Springer, Europe's largest
publisher, has led Germans in
reconciliation with Jews. His pub-

MISS SHELLY BARAK

Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Barak, of
Wales Ave., Huntington Woods, an-
nounce their engagement of their
daughter Shelly Nina to Joseph
Irwin Guggenheim, son of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Guggenheim
'of Brooklyn.
Miss Barak is a graduate of the
University of Michigan. Her fiance
received his masters degree from
Cornell University and has com-
pleted his course work toward a
PhD from the New School of So-
cial Research.
Plans are being made for a
March wedding.

Ronald Horwitz Heads
U. of D. Accounting,
Business Law Dept.

Dr. Ronald M. Horwitz, 26060
Radelift, Oak Park, has been nam-
ed chairman of the accounting and
business law department in the
University of Detroit's college of
business and administration, it was
announced by Dr. Bernard F. Lan-
duyt, dean of- the College.
Dr. Horwitz, raised to the rank
of professor in June, taught in 1::
of D's accounting department from
1963 to 64 before moving over to
teach in the university's depart-
ment of economics and finance.
Dr. Horwitz taught at Wayne
State University from 1960-63.
While at Wayne, he received a
Stonier Fellowship from the Ameri-
can Bankers Association and the
Michigan Accountancy Fellowship
from the Michigan Association of
Certified Public Accountants.
The new department chairman
received both his bachelor cf
science degree in accounting (1959),
and his masters degree in business
administration (1960) from Wayne
State. He received his PhD in
financial administration from
Michigan State University in 1964.

State's U.S. Bond Buying
Hurt by Unemployment

Michigan residents invested
$15,191,000 in Series E and H sav-
ings bonds during September, off
30 per cent from ;21,700,000 pur-
chases of E and H bonds and free-
dom shares during the same month
in 1969.
The reduced figure reflect the
impact which unemployment and
reduced working hours had on
purchases of savings bonds via the
payroll savings plan.
Purchases of the three popular
series during the January-Novem-
ber period amounted to $230,539,000
—down 21.8 per cent from those
in the like period a year ago. E
bond buying accounted for $216,-
751,000—less by 16.3 per cent than
the year-ago tally. H bond pur-
chases were $3,795,000—under the
figure for the same period in
1969 by 165 per cent.
Investments in freedom shares,

lishing credo has four polQts, the
first being reunification of Ger-
many and the second being recon-
ciliation with Jews.
His action has not been confined
to the printed word. He has given
generously to Jewish institutions
(including Brandeis University).
His Axel Springer Foundation has
built (1969) the three-story library
and auditorium at the Israeli Mu-
seum in Jerusalem, among other
things.
Springer speaks often and well,
and rarely fails to say something
about Germany's debt to Jews.
His papers have strongly sup-
ported Israel in the Arab-Israeli
conflict, so much so that he is
personally attacked from the East
for this action. Yet in a recent
speech he said:
"I am profoundly convinced that
it is a sacred duty for the Ger
mans, and I say it again and again,
to stand by those • we drove away
and their descendants, to ensure
that millions are not murdered in
a new wave of annihilation."
Symbolism has played a role in
Springer's actions. When he de-
cided to enlarge his operations
beyond Hainburg where he started,
be chose to throw two punches at
once against totalitarianism. He
bought the pre-war Ullstein prop-
erty in the publishing district of
Kochstrasse in Berlin and built a
skyscraper a few feet from the
Wall that divides the city. That
building is plainly seen in East
Berlin where the Ulbricht regime
understands very well what it
stands for.
Neither political attacks against
Springer personally nor physical
attacks against his properties have
intimidated the publisher. Extreme
leftists attacked his plants in
Hamburg, Berlin, Munich, Cologne
and Essen in 1968 because of
Springer's anti-Communist and pro-
Israel views.
The attacks were made after
the leftist student agitator Rudi
Dutschke was shot in Berlin.
Crowds yelled "Springer assassin"
but the assailant had nothing to
do with Springer.
Springer at the present time is
the leading opponent of Chancel-
lor Willy Brandt's policy towards
Eastern Europe. Springer thinks
the chancellor is being duped and
that the Russians are using him
as a wedge to break up West Ger-
many's Atlantic alliance.
Despite his great empire, with
all the power that it gives him,
Springer retains within himself a
high sense of morality which comes
through in his papers' policies and
the attitudes he takes toward mi-
norities, especially the Jews.
Few newspaper publishers in the
world have his power and fewer
still have his high sense of politi-
cal morality. It is an anomaly that
he should be called by his enemies
in the political and publishing
worlds a "dictator" when it is
precisely dictatorship— that he
abhors.
Israel, and Jews in general, have
no greater friend in a seat of high
power than Axel Springer who be-
gan his upward climb after World
War II with a borrowed typewriter
in an abandoned air raid shelter in
Hamburg.
PRINCESS S. HOHENLOE,

Geneva,
- ' -
Switzerland

Nurse Upgrading

HEALTH FOODS

Anti-Defamation League speaker
Mel Weisz will discuss "Negro
Anti-Semitism" at the Poale Zion
Branch 7 meeting 8 p.m. Sunday
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Elbert Diamond, 19766 Snowden.
Thomas Tannis and Aaron Gorn.
bein are program co-chairmen.
Guests are invited.

ONE-O-MATIC
WEIGHT BELT

LADIES—MEN

Lose Weight &

TIMIS Up

The Easy Way. •

Special 12.95
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Rog. 10.95

Parking
Open • Y 1 tiO 7
111.21333MIPM11

POSTERS!

MISS MIRIAM KAUFMAN

Mr. and Mrs. Milton Kaufman of
Owosso, announce the engagement
of their daughter Miriam Sue to
Kalman Gideon Goren, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Phillip Goren of Whit-
comb Ave.
The bride-elect was graduated
from -the University of Michigan,
and Mr. Goren is a graduate of
Wayne State University. Both at-
tend the law school at Wayne
State.
A June wedding is planned.

Antique
Flea Market

Sunday, Jan. 24
11 a.m. to 8 p.m.

20" X 24"- $4.95 or 2 For 6.95

For Fast, High Quality Service, Mail or Bring Any Picture

or Snapshot to:

Zip Printing
Northland Center
Concourse X-BF2
Southfield 48075

Back Door Galleries
28631 Southfield
OR
So. of 12 Mile
Lathrup Village 48075

Also Available Through Back Door Galleries Only.

ROMA HALL (Livonia)

PASSPORT PHOTOS
4 FOR W=5.
NIES in IN U SK SS HUI $ l aaaa aaaaaUa 81aaaaaaaaa

(Schooleraft near Inkster)

Snack Bar and Door Prizes

Info. 771-1772

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Jerry
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Helen
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BERKLEY

Black Anti-Semitism Talk
Sunday at Poale Zion

Brow-up

NEW YORK (JTA)—Upgrading
the skills of licensed practical
nurses to perform some of the
more demanding jobs in nursing
homes and general hospitals is
the goal of two courses which
started this week at the Zeman
Center of the Jewish Home and
Hospital for the Aged of New York
City. Officials of the facility de-
scribe the Zeman Center, started
Philosophy asks the simple ques- In 1983, as the only institutionally-
tion: What is it all about?—Alfred based training center for old-age if
North Whitehead
care in the United States. '

which were withdrawn from the
market as of July 1, amounted to
$9,993,000 in 1970; during the Jan-
uary-November 1989 period the
total was $31,100,000-
Michigan's Treasury-assigned
goal for 1970 Is $294,400,000. As of
Nov. 30, 78.3 per cent of the quota
has been achieved.

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