Youth News

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LubaNitelter Center Youth Cita!? Has
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LUBAVITCHER CENTSr

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, August 11, 1972-31
Social Security
Increases in '73 -
Odessa Ra ►► i's Item°. al Is Called
Social Security benefit pay minis
to resident; of Michigan will he Harmful to Hole of ,Ileus. in I Still
increased by a total of 5373.000.0o.

in calendar year 1973 as a result
of the 20 per cent benefit increase
passed by Congress and signed
into law by President Nixon on
July 1, said Sam Y Test. district
manager of the Detroit Northwest
Social Security office .
In 1973, the first full calendar
the higher ben,
durin , which
fits will be payable. the 1 Ill o••
social security beneficiaries is
Michigan will receive a total of
more than 52 000.00i in benefits ,
compared to the estimated St.
424.000.000 they would have been
paid if the 20 per cent increase
had not 1,, cn ,!na , te-1 °
'
• ,
Tile first s
20 per'
7;

ELIZABETH, N.J. I JTA
--
Rabbi Pinchas Teitz reported
Tuesday that he had been inform.
ed on a recent visit to Russia that
Rabbi Israel Schw - artzblatt had
been removed from his post as
rabbi of Odessa's one synagogue
by Soy- ;;.! authorities,
Rabbi Teitz. a 1; -iroter member
of the presidium of the Union of
I irthodox Rabbis of the United
sixes and Canada, said he under
stood that Rabbi Schwartztilatt had
the position because the Jew
ish population opposed hint It,
was believed to have worked in
close cooperation with the gos ern
Bald, Tear , atti

benefi ,, 71 ,
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Some of the youth who participated in the Lubavitcher Center
Youth Club camping week include ahoy e (from left): Br-Nan Loser.
Michel Loser and Douglas Krieger: and below is Franklyn Krieger.

Children of the Lubalitcher Cen-
The fun and campmg was inter-
ter Youth Club experienced a week spersed with religion, discu,sion,
of camping and "religious living'' and practice. • The Bar Mitza boys
at Kensington Park recently. said their prayers donned in tel. -
Along with the campfire and tent olio each morning. The rabbi,
they also set up a "synagogue" for found that the religious study was
the prayers and services. more meaningful to the boys when
Supper was prepared each night I practiced in a youth club situa-
over a campfire—Boy Scout style. tion than it has ever been in the
The week was filled with all kinds classroom.
of recreation, highlighted by a
To quote one of the children.
visit to Cedar Point. Other places "I've learned more on this trip
visited were Bob-Lo Island and than in many weeks of Hebrew
Mackinac Island. school. –
A very •exciting part of the
trip was the horseback riding.
The children, together with the
accompanying rabbis of the
Lubavitch Center, spent several
hours horseback riding over the
beautiful countryside.

111111)
Business

The international convention of
Bnai Brith Youth Organization will
teka place Wednesday to Aug. 23
at Camp Bnai Brith in Starlight,
Pa. The convention brings together
delegates from the continental
United States, Canada, as well as
from South America. Australia,
Israel and England.
The international convention dele-
gation from Michigan will include
the AZA Council President Barry
Margolis and delegates Jerry Segel
and Jerry Byer. The BBG delega-
tion will be led by Marla Parker,
Michigan BBC; Council President
and will include delegates Gail
Pryor, Sue Marsch and Linn Pious
of Grand Rapids who will repre-
sent Michigan and District 6 in
the International Bnai Brith Girls
Oratory Contest.
The 49th annual AZA Convention
and 28th annual BBG Convention
will be highlighted by discussions
and projects related to the exami-
nation of the convention theme of
"Parshat Hadrachim — BBYO at
the Crossroads."

Important news to BBY0ers!
Secretary Esther Minkow has been
ill for some weeks. However she
is on her way to full recovery and
will begin to continue her normal
activities while recuperating at
her home. She wishes to use this
column to express her apprecia-
tion to all members of BBYO who
took time to send her greetings
during her recuperation.

At a special meeting of the
Michigan Region BBYO board of
directors a decision has been
reached indicating that two full-
time staff positions are to he filled
at the Mai Brith Youth Organiza-
tion. College graduates .interested
in working with teenagers should
call for information and applica-
tions at the BBYO office. 354-6100.

Shlomie Friedman Heft) and
Elwin Greenwald recite the
morning prayer at Kensington
Park during the l.ubasitch ('en-
ter Youth Club's recent camping
excursion.

They Made
The Grade

Three Southfield students re-
, cently won free tuition for the
fourth annual Summer Science
Insitute sponsored by the Law-
, rence Institue of Technology. They
! are: MARK SEGEL a sophomore
at Southfield High School, son of
'Mr. and Mrs. Louis Segel of Mer-
rill Rd.. Southfield; HOWARD
BARR, a junior at Southfield-
Lathrop High School. son of Mr.
and Mrs. Maurice Levine of Briar-
wood Ct., Southfield: and DAVID
GOLDSTEIN, a sophomore at
Southfield-Lathrup High School,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gold-
stein of Virginia Dr., Southfield.

Archeological Dig Set

Tel Aviv University's Institute !
for Archeological Research. headed
by Prof. Yohanan Aharoni, will
excavate Tel Meshash 10 kilom-
eters i five miles) east of Beer- '
sheha. with the participation of
a large delegation of West Ger-
man archeologists. Prof. Aharoni
believes that the Tel is the Canaan-
itelsraelde plateau mentioned in
the Bible during the period of
conquest in the time of the Judges I

Soviet Jewish Republic Ile said
the young man was in training to
be a ritual slaughterer and that
when he completed his training, he
planned to return to itirollirjan

to ,erwr ,It w; there

Colored Movies
by Frank's St,dio

Ytteocenqs Bar Atlov.os
Other Orcos/ons

474-7768

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'.11)

I

-

Hebrew U. Law Course
Attracts U.S. Students

JERUSALEM — Some 41, gradu-
ate students from law. faculties at
25 universities throughout the Un
ited States enrolled in a four-week
credit-giving summer course at
the Hebrew University uncivr the
auspices of American l'nis ersits
in Washington, D.C.
This is the third year of the
program, called Law and Polies!
Institute Abroad, initiated and di-
: rected by Prof. Niehollis Kittrie,
Professor of Law- at American
University. Its Israeli co-director
is Dr Aharon M. Rabirtowicr.
brew University Researrh Fell , ,,

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Open Dolly 110,.'
4 1 5 3255
Do- 6 Ar, -e Se=e-:

RYMOU1H HOUSE GAIERIES

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American Indian—Colima
Jalisco — Nayarit
NOW THRU AUG. 26

Weddings • Bar Mitzvas

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Upbol,,, ,.;

Pre-Columbian Art

MICHAEL KAPLIT

1. 11

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a.:‘ ■
The Elizabeth rabbi
ed that Rabbi Yaacos Fishman !he
newly - appointed rabbi of the
Choral Synagogue in Moscow. and
Ephraim Kaplun, the new presi
dent of the congregation, had start
ed an ambitious program to train
religious functionaries at the syn-
agogue's seminary, such as ritual
slaughterers but not rabbis
Rahlii Teitz said he was told
that three younger Jews had been
accepted for the revised program
o seminary. studies, one of them
from Piro-Bidjan. the so-called

- Rabbi URI DAVID HERSCHER
has been named assistant to Pre,
7 , 7.
dent Alfred Gottschalk of
Union College-Jewish
Religion. lie will he workin g
Dr. Gottschalk in Cincinna Ian 1 ,,l,
also he serving as cseol'! , !
for of the HUC-JIR
-elation and as the pre-iii ,
resentative on the HUC..ill:
of Alumni Overseers
Cincinnati in 1971), Rabbi it, r
an Israeli Sabra, takes up his
post after completing two scar, of
service on the College Ins•ctute's
Cincinnati faculty as direct.,r
admissions.

13-7392

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delivers i,f col ,
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for which the in, r , as ,
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not take any action ia
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DEEP TAN

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