Youth YO Business THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, June 25, 1971-15 District 6 Bnai Brith Youth Or- Camp Bnai Brith will be Lisa Dorf- Barclays, Israel Discount ganization convention delegates man, president of the council, and Are Forming New Bank Make 'em holler uncle! from Michigan left on Thursday Sherrill Kurland, first vice presi- NEW YORK — Barclays Bank for Elkhart Lake, Wis., where they dent. The three-week program dur- Call will take part in numerous BBYO ing July and August offers leader- D.C.O. and Israel Discount Bank 862-3200 Limited announce that agreement activities and programs devoted to ship opportunity experience for 160 topics for the coming year. These youth leaders of BBYO throughout in principle has been reached for the formation of a new Israel bank will relate to 'the role of Judaism North America. to be called Barclays Discount Orthodox Students for teen-agers today, Israel, pollu- Bank Limited. tion, war and peace, poverty and The AZA softball league is going Rap Dull Courses The new bank will be equally morality. Leading the Michigan into its third week. The leaders of in High School Poll PEST CONTROL SERVICE. Inc. delegation will be Jeff Shifman Division A are Goode AZA (De- owned by Barclays Bank D.C.O. Guaranteed Control of Roaches, NEW YORK (JTA—Fresh proof and Lisa Dorfman, AZA and BBG troit) and Ohr AZA (Southfield), and IDB Bankholding Corp. Ltd. Mice, Spiders and Clover Mites. that the Orthodox community has presidents. and the leaders of Division B are and will have capital funds of E. John not 'been left untouched by the Brandeis AZA (Southfield) and 50,000,000 pounds. - Jewish youth rebellion has emerged Barry Simon and Gorden Siegel, Shalom AZA (Livonia). The league at one of the nation's best Jewish members of Albert E. Einstein will continue throughout the sum- day high schools, the Ramaz school AZA, will be among 100 BBYO mer at Angling Rd. School on Manhattan. members from around the country Franklin Rd., Southfield. • s • :The ferment at the elite coeduca- participating in the BBYO Israel Michigan BBYO announces the tional day high school, sponsored Summer Kallah, an eight-week Asst. Sales Manager appointment of I. Leon Etelman by Kehillath Jeshurun, a leading study tour of Israel. AT as adviser to Louis D. Brandeis Orthodox synagogue, was made * * AZA. New positions will be opening manifest in a poll of 167 high Among the leaders of Michigan for advisers, and interested per- school students about their opinions BBG attending the National Sum- sons may contact the BBYO office, OLDSMOBILE INC. of the Judaic courses at the AT TEL-TWELVE MALL 354-3300 school, which comprise about half mer Leadership Conference at 354-6100. • of the class load. Conducted by the Rain Page, the student publication, the poll found that one of four of those participating considered t h e Judaic studies "uninteresting" or LET US WORRY ABOUT THE THINGS YOU'RE WORRIED ABOUT. worse." A round-table discussion on the You always told her to same issue, concluded that many Ramaz high school teachers "are look both ways and cross at the corner. either not dedicated enough or the lacking certain qualities necessary You're concerned about her, for good teaching.". her future, your family's future. 'Headmaster Rabbi Joshua Bakst said that while he did not neces- And of all the things you worry about, sarily agree with the recorded your estate is surely views of the students in the poll and at the roundtable, he felt such one of the most important. student-sponsored evaluations were useful. It's the dollars and cents reality ANTS? ! ? ews • Right Place • Right Car • Right Price • Right Person HARVEY FREEDMAN GLASSMAN Marathon Puts Quartet on Wheels for 100 Hours By now—with some luck and sheer grit—four area teen-agers should have just about completed their 100-hour bicycle marathon against air pollution. Harry Levine, Dan Silverman, Jerry Strauss and Larry Gelfund, all going into the 10th grade at Berkley High School, have been peddling since noon Monday, part- ly in hopes of beating the Michi- gan bike marathon record but mostly to draw attention to the ecological and physiological bene- fits of bicycle riding. (One benefit is the discovery of muscles the boys never knew they had. All are sore.) A fifth young man, Fred Dobro- witsky, had to drop out because of illness. Each of the quartet rides one hour and rests for three in a tent set out on Harry's front lawn. They can't ride very far because inevitably they come to a stop sign, and stopping isn't allowed, according to the marathon rules. Th4 riders' mascot, Nancy Dorf- man, is their moral support. They Made TheeGrade Dr. JAMES B. LESSER, son of Dr. and Mrs. Morton B. Lesser of Southfield Rd., Southfield, is intern- ing at the University Hospital, Ann Arbor, where he lives with his wife, the former Joan Brandes, and his new daughter. A recent graduate of the University of Michigan Medical School, Dr. Lesser was vice president of the Phi Delta Epsilon Medical Fra- ternity. Sign up for U. S. SAYINGS BONDS, FREEDOM SHARES of your family's future. It's all the things you own, all the things they'll own. It needs special attention. The kind of attention that only a growing, innovative bank can offer. At CNB our trust department is made up of professionals who take a personal full-time interest in your interests and those of your beneficiaries, and see that you get the attention that most other banks just talk about. So, when you're ready to find out about the benefits of trust services, find out from a bank that knows what they're all about. Call Don Levitt in our trust department at (313) 965-1900 Ext. 356. TRUST DEPARTMENT 2NIJ CITY NATIONALoB B A NK Member F.D.I.C.: