32—Friday, Nona lbw 26, 1971

THE DETROIT

JEW" MEWS

News Brevities 1

Czechoslovakia's premiere folk
Detroit Natural Hygiene. Society
dance troupe, BROLN, comes to presents DR. JACK GOLDSTEIN
the Masonic Auditorium, 8:20 p.m., speaking on "My Six-Week Fast,"
Dec. 3. At home in the province of Dec. 4 at the Northland Concouise
Moravia, Broth has enjoyed end- auditorium, Dr. Goldstein will tell
less popularity ever since it was how his experience with fasting
founded in 1952. Outside their na- and a vegetarian diet restored his
tive land, the company has toured health.
a a a
Great Britain. Poland, Germany,
the Netherlands and Russia for the
Nearly 30,000 Michigan busi-
past 15 years. The Current tour nesses have less than six weeks
which will bring the company to to comply with the requirements
Detroit is the troupe's first ' to of the 1970 WATER POLLUTION
North America. .
SURVEILLANCE ACT. The Mich-
• •
igan State Chamber of Commerce
The SCARAB CLUB OF DE- will provide business representa-
TROIT is holding its annual arts tives with the necessary technical
and crafts exhibition through-Dee. assistance for compliance by hold-
23. On display are art works in ing a statewide conference Wed-
various media. Items may be nesday at the Olds Plaza Hotel in
viewed 10 a.m.-4 p.m. , weekdays Lansing. The Michigan Act, which
and 2-5 p.m. Saturdays and Sun- requires businesses to pay the
days. The club is at 217 Farns- Michigan Water Resources Corn-
niission for necessary investiga-
worth.
tion, monitoring and surveillance
• a •
The 22nd annual HOLIDAY EX- of waste water discharges, is the
HIBITION- AND SALE will open first of its kind in the country.
Sunday at Garelices Gallery, The act becomes effective Jan. 1.
for the conference,
Birmingham. Sunday gallery hours To register
George Graff, manager of
from then until the show closes write
Environment Programs, Michigan
Dec. 24 will be noon-5:30 p.m. State
Chamber of Commerce,
Monday-Wednesday hours are 9:30 Lansing.
a.m.-5:30 p.m.; Thursday, Friday
o a •
and Saturday, until 8:30 p.m.
GERALD GOODMAN, harpist
troubadour,
will
present "A Joy-
Diagnosis of eye diseases and ous Musical Program"
for Detroit
retinal damage will be discussed Town
at the Fisher Theater
at an educational seminar spon- 11 a.m. Hall
Dec.
8.
Tickets
can
be pur-
sored by the ASSOCIATION OF
at 405 Fisher Building or
MICHIGAN OPTOMETRISTS Sun- chased
the Fisher Theater looby the
day at Stouffer's Northland Inn, in
lecture.
Southfiel1l. Dr. Paw F. Shulman, morning of the
o- a a
professor, Illinois College of Op-
RAVI SHANKAR, India's noted
tometry, will present six hours
of education approved for license musician, will introduce to Detroit
his
own Concerto for Sitar and
renewal by the Michigan State
Board of Examiners in Optom- Orchestra when he appears with
the Detroit Symphony Orchestra
etry.
'at Ford Auditorium Dec. 3, 8 p.m.

Candy Centerpieces

MAROA MASSERMAN

Caricatures

Call

399-1320

Balfour Sup porter

Jibs. Jack - Greenberg (teal,
chairman of the women's cont.
mittee for the 39th annual Bal-
four Concert of the Zionist Or-
Ranisation of Detrpit, and Mrs.
Iga G. Beekman• directed a
group of women in! a telethon to
enroll concert attendeel and sup-
porters of ZOIrProfeela here and
in • Israel. The telethon Wits con-
ducted in the office of Richard
Kramer: The caner:xi, featuring
Vladimir Ashkenazy, with the
Detroit Symphony "Orchestra di-
rected by. Pierre Beta, - will be
held at FOrd Auditorium, Dec. -5.
• * •

,

Concert Evoivation
Is Given by Tickton

A music evaluation lecture given
by Prof. Jason H. 'Tickton Tuesday
evening, at the meting
of the Zion-
.

I

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McGee Due at Medical fete

U. S. Senator Gale W. -McGee
Wyoming:- will be' 36e giest speak- -
er at the third annual dinner-dace
sponsored by the Israel Bondained- -
icatprofessions held.
Dec. 8 at Cong. .Shaarey,:Zedelc.'
Dr. Hyman S. Mellen will be pre-
sented with the Eleanor Roosevelt
Humanities Award:
Sell'. McGee, who was . first
elected to the Senate in 1958, is a
key member of the foreign relations
committee and of the appropria-
tions committee and Chairman of
its committee on foreign Operations._
He is Chairman. of the PosC .Offiee
and civil service Committee and
1 heads the subcommittee on African
!affairs. . - •
Prior to his election to the Sen-
SEN. GALE W. McGEE
ate, he was a professor of Ameri-
can history at Wyoming University, was 'nominated for the Woodrow
Can
where he headed the Institute of Wilson Foundation Award.
International Affairs. He is a fore-
Dr. Morris Starkman is general
most authority on American his- chairman of the dinner committee.
tory and international relations and Dr. Simon Dolin is honorary chair-
has received awards in recognition man. Dr. Paul a Feldman will be
of his distinguished public service. the toastmaster. Dr. William M.
His book, "The Responsibilities of Staler is ticket chairman
World Power." published in 1968,
Eric Rosenow and his- Continen-
tals will play for the dancing. The
cocktail
reception -will start at
Tel Aviv U. Establishes
6:30 p.m. For reservations to the
German History Institute dinner, call the Israel Bond office,
With Aid of Volkswagen 557-6770.

TEL AVIV—The University of
Tel Aviv has opened an Institute
for Germany History. In coopera-
tion with the German Research
Association and the Volkswagen
Foundation, Prof. Waltei Grab of
Tel Aviv developed a program and
procured the funds for the first
five years.
The school will concentrate on
supporting scholarly research and
publications of its members, in-
vitation of Gernian professors to
lecture in Tel Aviv, the compila-
tion of a library for German his-
tory, grants for advanced studies
)33 Germany and the publication
of a yearbook on German social
history, German-Jewish relations
and-Germany and the Middle East.
Among the German professors
scheduled to lecture at the institute
are Richard Loewenthal, Free. Uni-
versity of Berlin, Karl D. Bracher,
Bonn University, and Prof. Flet-
cher, Frankfurt University.

2,000 Olim Choose Kibutz

JERUSALEM (ZINS) Israel's
kibutzim absorbed approximately
2,000 new immigrants last year,
representing roughly 4.5 per cent
of the total immigration for 1970.
(The entire kibutz membership is
Mill only 3.3 per cent of the over-
all Jewish population in the coun-
try).
The 2,000 who chose to settle in
kibutzim come from South Amer-
ica, the U.SA., West European
lands and South Africa. Very few
are recent arrivals from the Soviet
Union or from other Communist-
controlled lands.

.

Bar-Lev to Vacate Post
as Israel Chief of Staff?

Personalized Party
. JERUSALEM (ZINS). — Haim
Mementos .
Bar-Lev, chief of staff of Israel's
defense forces, is expected to leave
Invitations and Party AC-
his post next year, after four try-
cessOries for all occasions.
, ing but successful years of service
as Israel's top military figure.
Sources close to the Israel De-
fense Ministry believe that Moshe
Dayan has already selected a suc-
646-6138
cessor. subject to confirmation by
The government.
Gen. Bar-Lev, a popular folk
hero, will be prominently featured
in the political circles of the United
Labor Party and will appear high
on the list of Labor's candidates in
the next Knesset elections.
Prominence also will be given to
for your party
a former chief of staff and present-
ly Israel's ambassador to the Uni-
ted States, Gen. 'Itzhak Rabin, who
By
is expected to receive a ministerial
portfolio in the next government.

SAM FIELD

Telethon Enrolls

PROF. JASON R. TICWTON
ist Organization Of Detroit, review-

ed the program ,scheduled for the
Balfour Concertos Dec. 5.
Dr. Tickton was especially en-
thralled with Leonard Bernstein's
"Jeremiah," and he rated among
the highest the Chopin Concerto to
be played by Vladimir Ashkenazy.
Dr. 'nekton illustrated his lecture
with symphonic recorded music,
personally played some excerpts
from the concert offerings on the
piano and defined some of the in-
tricacies in the program at the
concert which will include the fol-
lowing:

BACCHANALE from "SAMSON
AND DELILAH" ,,
SaintSaens

SYMPHONY No. .1

(JEREMIAH)

Leonard-Bernstein

Overture from "MANYRED," Schumann
PIANO CONCERTO No. 2 .. Chopin

`Hot Line' for Troubled

LOS ANGELES" (JTA) — A
"hot line" maintained by the Jew-
ish Family Service at its main
office and at three district of-
fices offers quick service to Los
Angeles Jews . with problems.
JFS officials said that ,calls are
handled immediately and referred
to a JFS intake worker, or to
another agency if the problem is
outside the programs of the agen-
cy.
Frances Saltman, a JFS case
aide, said the agency handled '28,-
325 telephone : calls during the
1970-71 period, many of them on
the "hot line." She said the MS
acts as a clearing house for a
variety of questions and problems,
using a file of agencies and or-
ganizations as a source of referral
"from convalescent homes to legal
aid groups." She said many callers
want help in dealing with aged

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LA's 'Martyrs Month'
Supported by Mayor

LOS ANGFLF-S, (JTA)—Mayor
Samuel W. Yorty proclaimed Nov.
15-Dec. 15 "Martyrs Memorial
Month," and asked the entire
community. to support the Jewish
Federation Council in its plans to
Memorialize the - Six Million
The JFC has established a com-
mittee to build a memorial "as a
tangible tribute to these victims,
as a reminder of the Jewish com-
munity's remembrance of the past,
as an inspiration for generations
to come, and as a declaration that
knowledge of history can serve
to avoid its repetition." •
The memorial is to be part of
the present Jewish community li-
brary, on the grounds of the fed-
eration and is to be a memorial-
archives-lbrary complex. It will
house, in addition to the memorial,
Jewish community archives, his
torical documents pertaining to
the Nazi era, exhibits and a sanc-
tuary. A fund-raising drive is now
under way.

'

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