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The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

January 25, 1974 - Image 23

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1974-01-25

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

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THE SUSSEX HOUSE

Fine Dining and Cocktails
19701 W. 12 Mile Rd. (Just East of Evergreen)

352-22-33

• Businessmen's Luncheons
• Complete Dinners

OPEN MON. THRU SAT.
FROM 1 1 :30 A.M.

BANQUET FACILITIES FOR UP TO 275

• WEDDINGS • SHOWERS • BAR MITZVAS
• PARTIES FOR ALL OCCASIONS

riALIAN-AMERICAN C4FE

• Lunches • Dinners
• Cocktails

PRIVATE BANQUET FACILITIES

• Closed Sundays •ATTENDANT PARKING

1 7 ,2°,..nclawRR° 869-3988

KONEE'S

FAMILY RESTAURANT
"The Finest Food For The Nicest People"

2150 Woodward, Cor. Square Lake Rd. Kin gs=rZeater)

AUTHENTIC

GREEK SALADS

COMPLETE MENU

INCLUDES . . STEAKS,
LASAGNA, SEAFOOD,
SHISH KABOB, ETC.

WE BAKE OUR OWN PASTRIES

It's a
family
affair...

Sunday at Laffrey's.

All those phone requests to open

on Sundays. So now we will be,
from 3 to 8 PM, starting Jan. 27.
Bring the whole family in for

those famously delectable meals
you've enjoyed before. And a
special Children's Menu, too.

STEAKS
ON THE HEARTH
7 Mile at Telegraph Rd.

Do yourself a favor and 4W
538-4688 for reservations.

Scholars Join to Prepare Massive
Home-Study Education Project

NEW YORK — A college-
credit project in adult Jewish
education, which will enable
high school graduates to pur-
sue home study courses in
various aspects of Jewish
history, tradition and culture,
was announced this week by
the American Jewish Com-
mittee.
To be known as the Acad-
emy for Jewish Studies With-
out Walls, the program will
offer courses designed by
distinguished scholars of Ju-
daica.
Yehuda Rosenman, direc-
tor of AJC's Jewish com-
munal services department
will serve as director.
Dr. Abraham Kaplan, dean
of the faculty of social sci-
ences of the University of
Haifa, and former professor
of philosophy at the Univer-
sity of Michigan will serve as
the academy's dean.
The Academy for Jewish
Studies is sponsored by the
AJC in association with the
University of Haifa, and has
the cooperation of the In-
stitute for Jewish Life of
the Council of Jewish Fed-
erations and Welfare Funds.
Initial funding for the acad-
emy's development was pro-
vided by the Jacob Blau-
stein Institute for the Ad-
vancement of Human Rights.
Registration will begin in
May, and courses will start
officially in October. In-
quiries should be addressed
to the Academy for Jewish
Studies Without Walls, 165
E. 56 Street, New York 10022.
In its first year of opera-
tion, the academy will offer
students a choice of eight

By GIL SEDAN

JERUSALEM—A group of
30 families from different
parts of the country is con-
ducting a major drive to con-
vince the government to al-
low Jewish settlement in Na-
blus at the heart of Arab
Samaria.
The group was originally
formed at Kiryat Arba, the
Jewish settlement near Arab
Hebron. There was a general
agreement among the partic-
ipants that once Kiryat Arba
was well organized—it is now
covered with rows of modern
apartment buildings—it would
be time to continue with the
settlement in other areas.
As Orthodox Jews, the par-
ticipants claimed that Nablus
was the best place to carry'
out their settlement plans,
"since Jacob bought their
land for money, and thus se-
cured J e w i s h settlement
rights in the area."
The initiators recruited ad-
ditional families to join in
the project which was sup-
posed to end with the actual
settlement of a Jewish Nab-
lus.
Kiryat Arba was formed by
a group of religious families
who settled in Hebron after
the Six-Day War without offi-
cial backing. It took the gov-
ernment 21/2 years to give
the go-ahead for the construc-
tion of buildings.
Now, the originators of the
Jewish Nablus idea plan to
go the other way round: They
want to secure a government
agreement to settle in Nab-
lus, and only then will they
begin to do so.
They began meeting with
ministers, Knesset members
and other influential persons
prior to the Yom Kippur War
and, according to them, re-

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, January 25, 1974-23

••••••••••

DELI TRAY

courses, each designed by
an outstanding Jewish schol-
CARRY-OUT DELICATESSEN
ar. The courses are "Bibli-
29285 W. 14 MILE AT MIDDLEBELT (In Franklin Shopping Center)
cal Thou gh t," "Talmudic •
Thought," Medieval Jewish
PARTY TRAY SPECIALISTS
Thought," "Modern Jewish
HOT SANDWICHES ... DAIRY AND
Thought," "Judaism and
DELICATESSEN FOODS TO GO
Christianit," "Hasid-
ism," "Jewry in E a s tern
LUNCH ORDERS QUICKLY MADE UP
Europe" and "History of
SUNDAY MORNING ONE STOP SHOPPINGL
American Jewry."
BAGELS, LOX, CREAM CHEESE
85 1 -81 1 8
Each.. registered . student
AND SMOKED FISH
01160041111141191111/611110
will receive textbooks and a
syllabus for the course he
chooses. As.. he.. completes
each writing assignment, he
PIZZERIA
will mail it to his course in-
structor, via the academy
RESTAURANT
office, for evaluation and cor-
• CARRY OUT • DELIVERY • DINING ROOM
rection.
* Bar B Q Ribs
* Pizza
A student may enroll in a
* Chicken
* Spaghetti
BEER
course at 'any time, and will
* Shrimp
* Ravioli
* Sea Food Platter
• Lasagna
have 12 months from the date
&
WINE ,
HOURS: MON. thru THURS. 4 to 12 Mid.
of enrollment to complete
Dining Room or to Take Out
FRI. & SAT. 3:30-2 a.m. SUN. 3-12 Mid.
the course. On completion,
4033 W. 12 MILE
credit will be granted by the
PRIVATE
BANQUET
Just E. of Greenfield
University of Haifa and a
FACILITIES
Berkley
certifica by the academy.
Group study and discussion
under the leadership of quali-
fied instructors will be en-
couraged in each community.
The American Academic
Advisory Council, under the
chairmanship of Dr. Edward
Bloustein, president of Rut-
COCKTAILS BEING SERVED
gers University, includes Dr.
Nathan Glazer, professor of
sociology and education, Har-
Featuring Food Prepared Before You
vard University; Dr. Irving
• Businessmen's Luncheons
Howe, professor of English,
• Complete Dinners
1 1 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Hunter College; Dr. David
5 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Sidorsky, professor of philo-
16825 MIDDLEBELT
Closed
Mondays
427-3170 .
Just South of 6 Mile
sophy, Columbia University;
Dr. Marshall Sklar, profes-
sor of Jewish studies, Brand-
deis University; and Dr. Ma-
What were Dr. Funk and the Black
rie'Syrkin, professor emeritus
Widow doing with a Samoan Fog Cutter?
in literature, Brandeis Uni-
What set them free? Come to exotic
versity.

IL

548-3650

la? M W5-
•. .!?FSTA UR ANT,

JAPANESE TEPPAN STEAK HOUSE

Trader Vic's and find out for yourself.

Drive to Settle in Nablus Begun

(Copyright 1974, JTA, Inc.)

141111
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

* t .

Detroit Hilton,Washington Blvd. at
Grand Circus Park, (3 1 3)965-7800

ceived encouraging respons-
es. However, Mrs. Meir sug-
gested that the families set-
tle in the Golan Heights rath-
er than in Samaria.
The families are optimistic.
They believe a large number
of ministers from the out-
going government supported
their idea, and that the same
will be the case in the next
government. They think the
next coalition will have to
include the National Relig-
ious Party.
They have a letter from In-
terior Minister Yosef Burg
promising that "first priority
will be given for the estab-
lishment of settlement cen-
ters in the heart of Samaria,
such as in the Nablus re-
gion."
Even now, they say, Nablus
is only a few kilometers away
from the proposed Allon Plan
border, "so why not extend
the border in a few kilome-
ters?" Besides, they add, the
first step can be the creation
of a field school on Mount
Grizim near Nablus, a step
that can be taken without ex-
cessive publicity and thus
avoid world criticism.
The group currently in-
cludes families from Karyat
Arba, Jerusalem and the
Jewish settlements on the
West Bank such as Mar
Etzion.

FIGHT FOR RIGHTS
Women Libbers may have
a point — the Suffragettes
won the ballot only after they
decided they had been de-
voted long enough.

Fascism . . . like all real
revolutions (is) but the re-
ceiver of the bankrupt age
that preceded it. —Hans J:
Morgenthau.

PRIVATE CATERING AND BANQUET FACILITIES
• Businessmen's Luncheons • Dinners

• After Theater
Snacks

27822 ORCHARD LAKE RD.

At 12 Mile, Just
Off U.S. 696

851-4094

Open Mon. thru Sat.
11:30 a.m.-2:30 a.m.

2

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