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February 26, 1971 - Image 28

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1971-02-26

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

ME

211—Friday;Feliniftri 26.'1971 .

itheorfnivism

NEWS

i'aMorgenthaft Lodke- Art Auction Set
fzy ...70

Hundreds of pieces of art and art Objects will be featured at
an art auction scheduled by Henry Morgenthau Lodge of Bust Brith,
_7:31 p.m. Sunday at Young Israel of Oak-Woods. A champagne hour
6-"win be held at 6, and a signed Dail etching will be awarded. Shown
are (from left) Hal Soskin, Mrs. Soddy, gallery owner Fred Gross-
man, Evelyn Sedley, president of Morgentkau Chapter, and Art
&bossier. Norman Bernstein is president of the lodge.

Yiddish Theater Ensemble Due Here

A Yiddish Theater Ensemble of
five stars of the New York Amer-
ican-Jewish musical stage will be
presented here 8 p.m. April 3 at
Oak Park High School. _it was an-
nounced by Farband City Commit-
tee and Workmen's Circle.
The ensemble Includes Chayele
Ash from Israel and AH Furman
and Abraham Furman, character
actors and Yiddish humorists.
The revue will include dramati-
zation from some of the best loved
works in modern Yiddish litera-

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ture, as well as songs in Yiddish,
Hebrew and English.
Operatic s in g e r Ginetta La
Bianca will sing arias and Yiddish,
Hebrew and English folk songs.
The ensemble will be accompanied
by pianist Edith Kesselman.
The appearance is part of a
nationwide tour under the auspices
of the Workmen's Circle and Far-
band.
Tickets may be obtained from
Dexter Davison Market and Born-
stein's Book Stores.

Mizrachi Melave Malka
to Feature Cyperstein
as Guest Speaker

The Religious Zionists of Ameri-
ca (Mizrachi-Hapoel Hamizrachi)
of Detroit will hold a melave mal-
ka, 8:30 p.m. March 18 at Young
Israel Center of Greenfield.
Guest speaker
will be the rosh
yeshiva of Yeshi-
va University in
New York, Rabbi
Avigdor Cyper-
stein, member of
World Mizrachi
in Jerusalem. A
feature of the
evening will be
the presentation
o f membership
cards to new
Mizrachi m e m -
Cyperstela
bers. A farewell
will be extended to Mizrachi mem-
bers and friends who are leaving
shortly for Israel, and a welcome
home to those recently returned.
Rabbi Ernest Greenfield, assist-
ant to the president for member-
ship, will greet the new members.
Refreshments will be served. There
will be no solicitations and no ad-
mission charge.

Rabbi Talks at Papal U.
—1st Time in 419 Years

a

'Israel


,

A one-year program cif-Hebrew
and Jewish studies for foreign
college graduates in Arad, Israel,
is being promoted by its young di-
rector, currently in the United
States for speaking engagements
on college campuses.
The three - year - old WUJS
(World Union of Jewish Students)
Center — the International Gradu-
ate Center for Hebrew and Jewish
Studies at Arad — was described
this week to students at the Uni-
versity of Michigan.
The director, Michael Copeland,
a native of England, Is traveling
with an alumnus of the Arad cen-
ter, Steve Danz, a law school
graduate who hails from Seattle.
Copeland said the one-year
program draws 350 students a
year, and some 40 countries
have been represented. Of late,
more of them are from the
United States.
Requirement for admission is a
college degree and the intention
to pursue a specific career. Age
limit is 30.
At the end of five months of
study in Hebrew, Jewish history
and philosophy and other subjects,
the student spends seven months
working at his chosen field, earn-
ing a salary just as he would if
he were an average Israeli. At the
end of his year in the program,
the graduate should be able to
make an educated decision as to
whether he will stay in Israel.
Information on the program, in-
cluding nominal cost, is available
from the WUJS Center, Arad,
Israel, or call Yitzhak Margalit at
the Jewish Center Hebrew depart-
ment, DI 1-4200.

Director of Youth Aliya
in U.S. Is Announced

Th e appoint-
ment of Mordecai Peled as direc-
tor of the Youth Aliya office in the
United States and Canada was an-
nounced by Joseph Klarman, head
of the Youth Aliya department.
This department, instituted in
the United States only a little
more than a year ago, makes the
80 Youth Aliya high schools and
villages available for education of
children of Americans planning on
future aliya for themselves and for
Israelis living in the United States
who would like to have their chil-
dren resume their education in Is-
•ael schools.
Peled, wro succeeds Dr. Israel
Margalith In this past, is him-
self a Youth Aliya graduate. He
Is a member of the pedagogical
secretariat of the ministry of
education and taught in the de-
partment of education of Tel
Aviv University.
In announcing Peled's appoint-
ment, Klarman said that during
the current academic year, there
are now 155 American children
studying at Youth Aliya institu-
tions, whereas there were only 20
Americans at Youth Aliya schools
before 1E69-70.

JERUSALEM



ROME—Rabbi David Neiman,
39, a Jewish-theology professor at
the Jesuit-run Boston College, be-
came the first rabbi to lecture on
Judaism at the Pontifical Gregor-
ian University here Feb. 19.
The school is 419 years old and
is the alma mater of six of the Masada High. Schoolers
past eight Popes. Rabbi Neiman's Plan a Coffee House
course is on "Judaic Literature in
The high school chapter of Mas-
the Time of the New Testament."
ada, a new group formed by the
Zionist Organization of Detroit
for high school and college stu-
dents, will meet 1:30 pm. Sunday
at the Zionist Cultural Center.
All students are invited.
The group plans an Israeli Cof-
fee House March 13. For informa-
tion, call Judy Weiss, 851-4916, or
Pamela Rhodes, KE 5-1425.

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Singles Weekend in N.Y.

Cong. Bnai Moshe Young Adults
plans a "Singles Winter Week-
end," open to all Jewish single
young adults, 'at Grossinger's
Hotel, Match 12-14. The program
includes meals,entertainment;
dancing, - health- clubs, 'cocktail
party, Ice skatin• and skiing, 'P-Or
information or graup-ratea,' call
the synagogue, LI . 13-9000.

Collegians Plant Trev_

Tabnudical Academy
of LA to-BelIonoreil
at Melave Malka

WASHINGTON' (JTA)--Fiff:een
Jewish students of the Bnal Brith
Hillel Foundation at the University
of Maryland celebrated the holiday
of Tu b'Shvat by planting a holly
tree in front of the university's'
administration building. The stu-
dents contributed and collected
funds from other Jewish students
at Maryland for purchases and
planting 20 trees in Israel. The
students also observed a moment
of silence at the end of the cere-
mony for the victims of the dis-
astrous earthquake in California.

The Detroit Friends of the West
♦ oast Talmudical Academy will
tender the annual melave malka
in honor of the Los Angelas Torah
Center, headed
by Rabbi Simcha
Wasserman, 8:30
p.m. Saturday at
Yeshivath Beth
Yehudah.
Rabbi Wasser-
man, formerly of
Yeshivath Beth
Yehudah, has
been on the West
Coast for the
past 15 years. In
high school and
adult classes, the
West Coast Acad-
emy has educat- Wasserman
ed hundreds of children in Torah
and traditional Judaism. It is a
"Jewish Center" as well as a Bala
Medrash for tahnudical studies
taught by Rabbi Wasserman.
For reservations and informa-
tion, call Mrs. Israel Notis, DI
2-4489.

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Hillel Launches Project
of Israel Study for
N. American Students

JERUSALEM—A bridge-building
program for North American stu-
dents in Israel has been introduced
by the Bnai Brith Hillel Founda-
tion at its Jerusalem Hillel House.
Established in partnership with
the Hebrew University, the Hillel
Enrichment Program is an extra-
curricular activity which provides
over 50 students with opportunities
to study issues of concern to Israel
and world Jewry.
The focal point of the program is
a series of weekend seminars.
Some are directed to increasing
student understanding of inner Is-
rael, and deal with such subjects
as her social and economic struc-
ture and Israeli socialism. Other
seminars encompass international
and regional affairs.
Much attention is given to learn-
ing about the Arab communities of
Israel. There have been field trips
to Arab villages and interviews
with leaders from various walks
of Arab life. Visits to the homes
of new immigrants give students
the opportunity to learn at first
hand about the problems of absorp-
tion with which Israel must deal.

ANTIQUE SHOW &
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Sunday, Feb. 28

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INFORMATION AND INTERVIEW WITH LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE:

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Home Tel. 313-542-1834



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