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July 16, 1971 - Image 15

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1971-07-16

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

Social Service for Elderly

International Conference Speakers

NEW YORK (JTA) — A group
of leading New York Jews who
live on Manhattan's Upper West
Side have formed an independent
committee to help provide social
services to elderly Jews of their
community.
Rabbi Wolfe Kelman, chairman
of CONCERN, the Committee of
Neighbors Concerned with the
Elderly: Their Rights and Needs,
told the JTA that there are "many,
many elderly on moderate and
declining incomes without access
to meeting places, hot meals and
other social services" on the Upper
West Side.
At the same time, he noted,
re are a number of facilities
the community which are lar-
gely unused because the wealthy
supporters of their original com-
munity programs have moved out
of the neighborhood.
Hoping to use such available but
often underutilized facilities as
those of Temple Anshe Chesed, the
members of CONCERN will try to
meet the needs of the area's Jewish
-elderly. Elderly non-Jews also will
be served.

Professionals in various fields of Jewish communal service
from all parts of the world will attend the International Conference
of Jewish Com-
munal Service,
to be held in
Jerusalem Aug.
15-20. Major
speakers n -
elude ( f r om
left) Prof. Ar-
nold G u ri n ,
Florence G.
Heller Gradu-
ate School for
Advanced Social Studies in Social Welfare of Brandeis University;
Mordecai Bar-On, director of the youth and hehalutz department of
the Jewish Agency in Jerusalem; and Prof. Freddy Raphael, of the
University of Strasbourgh, France.

,TER

INC.
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Phone: 358-0850

voilk

Seek Books of Judaica for U. of Kansas Library

LAWRENCE, Kan. (JTA) — Jewish Chronicle, the University
Jewish students at the University of Kansas offers nine courses of
of Kansas, working through the Jewish studies.
College Committee of Temple Bnai
Jehuda of Kansas. City, are seek-
ing to collect books of Jewish
HOME & OFFICE
content and interest for the uni-
REMODELING
versity library. The library, with
more than a million volumes, is
Repair —
the largest of the Big Eight
Maintenance
schools, but is deficient in Judaica.
According to the Kansas City

aaron a. Nyman

When not prompted by vanity we
say little.—La Rochefoucauld.

Kahane Pleads Guilty to Plot;
Plans Bomb-Making Seminar

WOODBURNE, N.Y. (JTA) —
Rabbi Meir Kahane, national chair-
man of the Jewish Defense League,
told the Jewish Telegraphic Agenc-
cy that "The JDL will not be
turning in any illegal weapons be-
cause we have none."
Kahane, who pleaded guilty in
Brooklyn Federal District Court
Friday to a conspiracy charge in-
volving the manufacture of ex-
plosives, was referring to a
stipulation by the government that
the JDL turn over to federal au-
thorities any illegal weapons and
firearms in its possession and sub-
mit to an inspection of its camp-
site here.
Those were part of the condi-
tions laid down by government
attorneys when they agreed to
accept guilty pleas by Kahane
and two other JDL co-defendants

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Specializing in yarns, needlepoint and handbags,
Charlotte's Knit Shop has 3 locations. Th e first is
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Your Friendly Merchant

Eleanor Hubbel, manager, started her retail experience in
her own . gift shop in Dayton, Ohio. She then became man-
ager of the gift shop at Devon Gables in Bloomfield Hills
and began her association with Charlotte's Knit Shop a
year ago.

I <

Friday, July 16, 1971-15

THE DETROIT JEWISH. NEWS

on the explosives charge while
dropping charges against Kahane
and 12 others of conspiracy to
transport fire arms across state
lines.
Kahane, 38, and his co-de-
fendants, Chaim Bieber, 41, and
Stewart Cohen, 18, originally
pleaded not guilty to the ex-
plosives charge before Federal
Judge Jack B. Weinstein. After
changing their plea, Kahane's
lawyer, Barry Slotnick, said the
agreement had the approval of
the U.S. Attorney General's of-
fice in Washington.
interviewed by the JTA at
Camp Jedel here, Kahane said
the JDL had "quite a few guns"
at the camp but that all were
"registered and legal." He said
that the manufacture of ex-
plosives at the camp got him into
trouble beause of ignorance of the
law.
He said he didn't know that the
JDL needed a $250 federal stamp
in order to explode a bomb on
its own property. And that his
purpose in making and detonating
a bomb was to show campers how
radical groups prepared their own
bombs.
Kahane said that he planned
a similar demonstration for the
press and that this time he
would "invest $250 in a stamp."
He said his guide in the bomb-
making seminar would be in-
structions published in a Black
Panther newspaper.
Kahane faces sentence later this
month on the explosives charge.
He told the JTA that if he is jailed
he did not expect the JDL to col-
lapse. "We have thousands of
young members who won't be stop-
ped by this," he asserted, adding
nue to
that he expected to conti
play a leadership role in the JDL
even from jail,
Later, claiming that he and his
Jewish Defense League represent-
ed "a new type of Jew," Rabbi
Meir Kahane said that violence
was "the only way to persuade the
Soviet Union to free its Jewish
citizens."
He said the JDL would not "rule
cut the use of dynamite, if neces-
sary," as long as innocents are
not harmed. But Kahane denied
that the JDL was responsible for
leaving 197 sticks of dynamite be-
hind shrubbery on the Palisades
Interstate Parkway. Federal au-
thorities were alerted to the dyna-
mite Sunday by an anonymous
caller claiming to be a JDL mem-
ber.

538-7618

M oNi3 Jittpperi

Fine Clothier
Summer Clearance On

Suits, Sport Coats
Coats
1/2 OFF

on Sport

Reg. $1 10 — NOW

5

55

30% to 50% Off

reg. $125

on Suits

reg. $175

reg. $150

Now $ 87 Now $ 90 Now $ 1 05

Moris Hupert Clothier

353-0395

Harvard Row Shopping Center

ll our stores

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We're
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at our
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wonderful
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groups of the following items:

PANTS

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KNIT TOPS

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• SLACI(S
110T PANT DRESSES




PT SUITS
O

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TER DRESSES

while

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Last!

Playground Dedicated

YOUR FRIENDLY HARVARD ROW MERCHANTS

Belle Jacob Wig Shop
Burton's Gal
Charlotte's, Inc.
David's Ladies' Shoes
DiRosa Hair Fashions
Empress Gardens Canonese Rest.
Former Jack's
Haber Cleaners
H. R. Barber Salon
H. R. Kosher Meats & Poultry
Jerome's Tots 'n' Teens Shoes
Jewel Bakery

Jules Doneson Travel Agency
Molter Furs
Margo's Children's Shoppe
Mark Pharmacy
Maris Huppert Clothier
National Bank of Southfield
George Ohrenstein, C.M.W. & Jeweler
Original Esquire Rest. & Deli.
Parisian Fashions
Petal Pushers (Florist)
Toggery of Harvard Row
Warren Optical Co.

JERUSALEM—The Major Adam
Weiler Recreation Area and Chil-
dren's Playground memorial proj-
ect in the Jerusalem Forest was
officially dedicated recently. The
late Major Weiler fell on the Suez
front in the spring of 1970.

The Michigan Humane Society,
a Torch Drive service, investigated
3,029 cruelty complaints involving
5,615 animals last year.

GLAMOUR AND LEISURE SPORTSWEAR

HARVARD ROW MALL

FASHIONS

11 Mile & Lahser
Southfield

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