_tROIT JEWISH NEWS _ --rriday, August 3, 1973 Gail Panto. /0 II 11r. Charles Taylor Wekoine' Not `Mekane' in News Commentary A regrettable error ap- pegred in last week's Purely Commentary quotation of a Yiddish-Hebrew saying cred- ited to Dr. Henry A. Chap- nick, in the item "Jewish Angle in Watergate." The quotation should have read: "A nekome oif die vantzen az die 'hoiz brennt" not "mekane die vantzen." The proper saying means: "Vengeance on the bedbugs when the house is on fire." Beth Yehudah Camp Creates Busy Summer MISS GAIL PANTER Mr. and Mrs. Harold Prof. ORA KEDEM, inter- Panter of Pinetree Dr., nationally-known expert on Southfield, announce the en- mebranes, including their gagement of their daughter role in water desalination and Gail Louise to Charles Tay- purification, has been named lor, son of Mr. and Mrs. first incumbent of the M. Norton J. Taylor of Rocking- Myer Cyker Chair in Mem- ham Ave., Southfield. brane Research, within the Miss Panter attends East- framework of the polymer ern Michigan University. research department of the Her fiance attends the Uni- Weizmann Institute of Sci- versity of Detroit's dental ence, in Rehovot, Israel, it school. was announced by the insti- A December wedding is tute acting president, Prof. planned. Israel Dostrovsky. Zionists to Meet PORTRAITS Branch Seven, Labor Zion- ist Alliance, will meet 8 p.m. Sunday, at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Chaim Milinsky, 32467 Evergreen, Birming- ham. Plans will be made for the coming year's programs. Mrs. Louis Slabosky, chair- man, invites guests. CANDIDS CUSTOM FRAMING RESTORATIONS *Ural:thin r— FIRESTONE JEWELRY holesale Diamonds & — Birmingham P11,11, Remountine. Jewelry & awl) Henan - Our SUITE 364 ADVANCE BLDG. 23077 Greenfield at 9 Mile (313) 557-1860 647-5730 • ■ 1•1111•Ell. The Sheldon Rott Orchestra Vickie Carrol Shemilltioth Couldry Club For All Occasions Banquet Manager at 682-4300 We Cater for All Occasions — Seating for 400. *00 0 OO OO O O OO O OOOO OOOOO OOO OO O O 00 OO OOO O 00 0 4 00 0 00• e Cherow, Says: • • Ab YOUR FURNITURE DESERVES • : OUR TENDER CARE. : WE CAN DO MORE FOR YOU. . : BECAUSE WE'VE BEEN UPHOLSTERING HALF A CENTURY AND WE'VE LOVED EVERY MINUTE OF IT. I UPHJLSTER FOR FRIENDS AND RELATIVES BECAUSE THEY Ahavah BBG will hold a 1950s dance to benefit vic- tims of muscular dystrophy 7:30 p.m. Aug. 11 at the Southfield Civic Center. Tick- ets are available at the door. Refreshments w i 1 1 be served and two bands, J. orker, Zionism Frank Gorosh and his Mich- It is clear to me that we igan Mover Groovers and Axis, will provide music for can only assure that Herzl's Zionism will not be a vain dancing. * * dream and that all the sacri- fices of Zionism will not be Bnai l3rith Girls futile — if the Zionist move- Skating Party ment is a synthetic move- Plan Skating Disraeli Bnai girls ment of liberation, a pro- will sponsor a "skating gressive movement, a move- scramble to benefit victims ment of creation and peace, of muscular dystrophy 7 p.m. whose basis is the united and Aug. 20 at the Northland organized Hebrew worker Roller Rink. and whose leadership and There will be games, realization are determined prizes, refreshments and mu- by a constant and faithful sic. There is an admission covenant between the entire charge, and skates are not labor camp and the other included. creative forces within Zion- ism. — Bed Katzenelson, "Is There a Solution to the Dis- integration of the Zionist Movement?" (1933). • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • They Made The Grade RICHARD BERNSTEIN of • • • Rochester and SHELLEY : CALL US FOR A FREE HOME : FELDMAN and KENNETH • ESTIMATE OR VISIT US. : LEVINE, both of Pontiac, • • were among the 13 Oakland CALL LU 4-5900 • : University students who have • ARTISTIC UPHOLSTERERS : been named recipients of Na- x> • • 5755 SCHAEFER RD. r • • tional Science Foundation un- • (1 block North of Ford Rd. , • dergraduate research par- .,,,,:?,, 2,i3 o • Dearborn . LU 4-5900 o ticipation grants in the bio- : ABE CHEROW, President, Open Daily 8 a.m. to 5 p m. logical sciences. to••••e•••e•s••••00•s•e•••0000 ,coo2e9 : DESERVE THE VERY BEST. The president of the De- I trait Retail Kosher Meat Dealers Association said that in 35 years as a meat dealer he has never seen a beef shortage as serious as the one presently engulfing the country. Allan A. Cohen, owner of Cohen and Son Meats on W. Seven Mile Rd., said that while beef is available, some cuts — notably ribs and brisket — are impossible to get, at any price. These kosher cuts, from the fore- quarters of the cattle, are being grabbed up, along with rear quarters, by hard- pressed supermarkets, he said. The prices of lamb, veal and poultry have soared as a consequence of the short- age of beef. Liver and tongue also are in short supply, he said. At least one kosher sausage company, Sinai, has closed down for the lack of beef, said Cohen. Morris Flatt, owner and president of Primeat, Inc., Michigan's largest beef pack- ing house and one of three suppliers of kosher meat, was quoted Wednesday as saying he would be out of beef by today. Saying he will be forced out of business by the week- end, Flatt explained that there is enough cattle in Michigan, but farmers are keeping them off the market because of the price freeze. He said he has given his 80 employes their five-day lay- off notices. None of the 16 member shops of the Detroit Retail Kosher Meat Dealers As- sociation have been forced to close for want of mer- chandise, said Cohen. But he could not predict the fu- ture, "We go from day to day," he said. Meanwhile, customers are rushing in, hoping to stock up. By way of example of rising prices, Cohen said that six months ago, calves were being sold for 60 cents a pound; today, they're go- ing for 90 cents. Poultry prices have jumped 10 to 35 cents a pound, so that a w Call Our FURNITURE FOR OVER Turning what it describes as "10 weeks of unproductive boredom for most children" into a summer of learning and recreation is the design of the Beth Yehudah day camp, which is in the midst of one of its three two-week sessions. Rabbi Jacob Levi, director, said the Beth Yehudah sys- tem strives for maximum usage of school facilities, which unlike other schools remains open around the calendar. There is a summer recess of four weeks. The more than 200 children who attend the camp repre- sent the entire spectrum of the community, and the two- tier program of study re- flects their differences. Kin- dergarteners-on up through 12th graders (counselors) are accepted. Morning study is followed by a lunch program and afternoon trips, games and crafts. A counselor-in-training pro- gram provides jobs for ninth through 12th graders, par- ticularly those who are in need of a financial boost. Last year, six counselors were assisted by the Neigh- borhood Youth Corps; al- though funds were cut off this year, several were ac- commodated. Children who already at- tend Beth Yehudah schools are not charged an extra fee for the day camp program; those from other schools pay a nominal fee. 1950s Hop Slated by Ahavah BBG and • • • • • • • Youth Price of Kosher Meat Soars, Some Cuts Impossible to Get ALEXANDER G R E E N- DALE, national director of the housing division of the American Jewish Commit- tee's department of social action, and of the AJC's na- tional job-linked housing cen- ter, has been elected chair- man of the Interreligious New Communities Coalition (INCC) for the year begin: ning September.' Bonds Honors Cohodas of UP pullet sells wholesale for $1 a pound and retail $1.30. He added that kosher meat prices are about the same as non-kosher meat prices. "It's a pathetic situation for those on fixed incomes," he said. (President Nixon, acting under Phase 4 economic con- trols issued two weeks ago, lifted the price freeze on food with the exception of beef. Those controls on beef will remain until Sept. 12.) There's little action the as- sociation can take, Cohen said, except to send tele- grams to the White House. "If the government really clamped down, and would forget the European and Asian markets, we'd be in better shape. Right now, the Canadian and Asian pro- ducers are outbidding the American market." Nor is the situation any better for kosher meat deal- ers elsewhere in the coun- try, he said. "My father, in California, told me that kosher veal is selling for $6 a pound. "I checked back and found that prices today are 100 per cent higher than they were during World War II. We had it better during ration- ing." Consul General Shaul Ra- mati, left, presents Sam Cohodas, Upper Peninsula Israel Bond chairman, with the Israel Prime Minis" ,-'s Medal at the UP Israe Anniversary Bond dinner. 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