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July 09, 1971 - Image 33

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1971-07-09

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

Beth- El YOlith'Plant Garden in Israel

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, July 9, 1971

-

33

Center Group Starts

Careers
Young Dancers Guild Graceful. Age 10

Mona Gubow Will Study
at Israel's Hiatt Institute

Percy Kaplan, executive director of the Jewish National
Fund, presents a certificate for a garden of 100 trees in Israel to
Jill Colman of the Young People's Society of Temple Beth El. The
group, composed of about 115 teen-agers, has made the garden one
of its main projects. Four members, David Shapero, Bill Kux, Peggy
Lindenbaum and Jill, will be in Israel this summer and will make
a symbolic dedication of the garden in the Bar Kokhba Forest. Shown
with Kaplan and Jill are (from left) David Canvasser, Jon Colman,
Mark Schatz and Rabbi Morton Kanter, the group's adviser.

111111Y0 Business

For the third straight year,
Michigan Region BBYO has won
the District 6 AZA newspaper
contest.
Won in 1969 by the Akiba AZA
AARDVARK and in 1970 by the
Sporn AZA SOUL, the contest was
won this year by the Posen AZA
PRESS, co-edited by Jeff Shifman
and Ken Hershenson.
Michigan BBG has an enviable
achievement, too, winning the dis-
trict BBG newspaper contest for
the second time in the last three
years. This year's winner is THE
RAPPOPORTER from Rappoport
BBG, edited by Wendy Sanders.
In the BBYO joint chanter cate-
gory. the Eilat BBYO BULL
SHEET from Ann Arbor, co-edited
by Barry Margolis and Bernie
King-Smith, won second place for
the second consecutive year.
All winning entries are placed
in the national contest, to cul-
minate at the international con-
vention in August at Camp Bnai
Brith.

In other contests, Michigan Re-
gion placed second in the AZA
song contest, with Sporn AZA's
winning regional entry. Sue Alter-
man of Zangwill BBG placed third
in the BBG storytelling contest.
Serving as volunteer staff mem-
bers at the convention were Karen
Zuckerstein of Oak Park, with
Richard Segal of Ann Arbor, who
advises Eilat BBYO in that city.

*

Joining previously listed local
BBYO members admitted to the
International Leadership Training
Conference at Camp Bnai Brith
in July and August will be Jeff
Shifman, recently elected aleph
godol (president) of the newly
formed Great Lakes AZA Council,
and David Green, aleph moreh
(new member trainer) of the same
council.

Round-Clock Scholar

3 Caravans of Israelis
to Perform in U.S. Camps

NEW YORK —Three caravans,
sponsored by the Jewish National
Fund, will depart shortly for their
annual summer visits to 300 camps
and centers throughout`the United
States.
Each caravan is composed of
three Israeli entertainer-teachers,
who will bring the message of Is-
rael to many thousands of Jew-
ish children and older adults in
all corners of the country.
The JNF teams of singers and
dancers bring' in visual and musi-
cal terms, the history of Israel
and of the decades preceding its
creation.
In addition to their appearances
in youth camps, they will appear
before regional conferences and
youth conclaves scheduled to be
held this summer.

Israel Scouts Camping
in U.S. This Summer

I

1.11

IDLEWILD, N. Y. — Nineteen
Israeli Scouts, 13 boys and six
girls, recently arrived at Kennedy
for a sum-
Imneterrnoaftionl
mer
camping
the United
States.
The scouts. called TsofinIAJM :
brew, are 17-year-old. They were
greeted by leaders' of-thee4nterna-
tional Welcoming Committee of the
Boy Scouts of America and Mrs.
Morris Popkin, national chairman
of the Hadassah Zionist Youth
Commission, which is sponsoring
the program with the Boy Scouts.

This 4-year-old is one of '70
youngsters between the ages of 3
and 7 living. playing and learn-
ing around-the-clock at the Beth
Hayeled Bakka Sleep-In Nursery
in Jerusalem, a project of the
Mizrachi Women's Organization
of America. Bakka cares for
children of homes broken by ill-
ness, tragedy or stress.

Mona Gubow, daughter of Judge
and Mrs. Lawrence Gubow of Sun-
ningdale Dr., Bloomfield Hills,
left last weekend for a six-month
stay in Jerusalem to study at the
Jacob. Hiatt Institute.
Founded by Brandeis University
in 1961, the institute accepts a
small number of American under-
graduates and
provides them.
with an opportu-
nity to pursue a
program of full
academic credit
while researching
and studying in
Israel.
Miss Gubow, a
religion - political
science major at
Mount Holyoke Miss Gubow
College, South Hadley, Mass.,
hopes to utilize the resources of
the institute to research state-
religion relations in Israel.
'Following a month of travel in
Europe, Miss Gubow will return
to Mount Holyoke in February to
write her senior honors paper
from materials collected while in
Israel.

Israeli Summer Tours
for Foot-Loose Students

NEW YORK—Operation Joshua,
a unique summer Program in Is-
rael run by and for college stu-
dents, began its second year last
weekend. The program is designed
as an inexpensive and yet inform-
ative way in which a student can
get to know Israel in depth.
A special project of the Student
Coordinating Committee for the
Israel Emergency Fund (SCCIEF),
the Operation Joshua tours take
college students to kibutzim along
the Beit Shean valley, to immi-
grant absorption centers, develop-
ment towns and other areas in-
dicative of Israeli life today.
The one-day trips are run on
Sunday through Wednesday —
from July 4 to Aug. 19 — and
originate from both Tel Aviv
and Jerusalem. For three dol-
lars, a student can participate
in a day's tour (including lunch)
and then attend one of the spe-
cial Thursday briefing sessions
conducted by prominent Israelis.
Operation Joshua is open to any
American college student. Once a
student has arrived in Israel, he
can obtain more information or
register by phoning Jerusalem —
(02) 39273.

If would not he better for man-
kind if they were given their de-
sires.—Heraclitus.

The Young Dancers Guild of the
Jewish Center marked its 10th
anniversary with a look back and
arolook ahead.
Officers of the past decade were
present to recall with slides and
songs, 10 years of performances.
Officers for the 1971-72 season
were announced: Lori Verier, pres-
ident; Laura Freedman, vice pres-
ident; and Erica Herman, secre-
tary.
The training and experience
that guild members receive under
the direction of Harriet Berg and
Denise Szykula have provided a
foundation for many careers in
dance.
This summer, a number of
Young Dancers Guild members
will be doing intensive study
with leading artists. Christopher
Pilafian, a graduate of Inter-
lochen Arts Academy, will be
attending Connecticut College
American Dance Festival, as will
Harriet Berg, director of the
guild.
Lisa Goodman will be studying
in New York with Alvin Arley and
Henry Bergdoff. Harriet Freedman
will attend a special workshop at
Eastern Michigan University, and
Laura Freedman and Jan Messer
will study in Washington, D.C.,
with Paul Taylor and other promi-
nent artists.
Ronnie Michaels will attend the
Fred Berk Teachers Workshop
at Blue Star Camp and then will
join Berk for his third annual
Israeli folk dance seminar in Is-
rael this summer.

ir

I

1
1
1 I

1

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1

Young men or women who are
qualified and who would like to
audition, may call the educational
services division of the JeWish
Center, DI 1-4200, Ext. 268. Audi-
tions will be held 10 a.m. Sept.
12 in the dance studio.

For an Evening of
Superb Entertainment . . .

For Your Bar Mitzva or
Weddings, etc. . .

MORI LITTLE

AND HIS

ORCHESTRA

356-4745

TUES. & WED .
SPECIAL!

_

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TINT

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PERMS. $ 995

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Call 351-0470

Thomas J. Hatch
Style Director

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Excess Summer Workers
on Kibutzim a Possibility

TEL AVIV (JTA) — The min-
istry of tourism has accused cer-
tain travel agents in France
of overbooking students for sum-
mer work programs at Israeli
kibutzim. But the ministry prom-
ised that all of the students reg-
istered would be brought to Israel
and. Places found for them.
:ministry conceded that some
iliutzim had aggravated the situk
'fib* by cancelling : invitations to
foreign students. A spokesman said
if work could not be found for all
of the registrants at kibutzim, they
would be assigned to archeological
teams in various parts of the coun-
try.

the

mart Set Salon

(formerly at 10 Mile & Southfield)

WE'RE HERE
)NOW

e•

9cit





,..t ;

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Honeywell Bldg, (lower level)

17515 W. 9 Mile at the N. Western Service Drive

For appt. 356-4898

and join us for coffee

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