JWV Offers Tivo Scholarships
Two Area Communities Testing Yeshiva U. Project for Retarded
The Department of Michi-
The qualified student should
gan, Jewish War Veterans write a letter requesting
is again making available scholarship information and
two annual Michigan college forms to the Scholarship
scholarships in the amouLt Committee, 16990 W. 12 Mile,
of $300 each. Southfield 48076. All complet-
e forms must be returned
There are no restrictions ed
as to race, color or creed. by April 15.
Mrs. Arnold Grossman and
Need for financial assistance
is paramount. Any veteran, Saul Glasser are co-chairmen
the son or daughter of a vet- of o the scholarship committee.
eran, is eligible.
Applicants may include
students attending accredited
institutions on a college
level, as well as members of
the January or June 1974
LT. RAYMOND ZUSSMAN
high school graduating class. AUXILIARY will meet 8:30
p.m., Monday in the home of
the president, Mrs. Charles
7reative Party Planning
Hauptman, 29450 Sharon,
Southfield. Plans will be
including
completed for servicing the
Candy Centerpieces
children's home. Members
are asked to bring canned
Personalized Party
goods for the program to aid
Favors
needy Jewish families. For
Invitations and Party
transportation, call Mrs.
Accessories for all occasions.
Hauptman, 352-2696.
JWV
The public school systems
of Plymouth and' Mount
Clemens have joined the
Yeshiva University network
for testing an innovative cur-
riculum for the mentally re-
tarded.
The Social Learning Cur-
riculum, designed for the
education of mentally handi-
caped children and youth,
is being developed at the
Curriculum Research and
Development Center in Men-
tal Retardation at the uni-
versity's Ferkauf Graduate
School of Humanities and So-
cial Sciences in New York.
Taking physical, social and
psychological elements of the
environment into account,
the Social Learning Curricu-
lum is designed to equip the
special student with know-
ledge, skills and behaviors
that will enhance his oppor-
tunities for success.
In Plymouth, the program
is headed by Dr. Edwin R.
Page, director of special
education. It is being field
tested in Mount Clemens un-
der the supervision of Nancy
Kaye of the Macomb County
Intermediate School District.
In the Plymouth Commu-
Taxes and Your Future
Editor's Note: Guidance on
important problems provided
by the Jewish Welfare Fed-
eration — United Jewish
Charities Endowment Fund
Tax Advisory C .mmittee,
will be offered periodically.
Professional advice about is-
sues discussed in these col-
is not hurtful because umns should be secured from
MARCIA MASSERMAN it Sin
is forbidden, but it is for- an attorney or an estate plan-
646-6138
bidden because it is hurtful. ning adviser. Questions of
general interest in these mat-
—Benjamin Franklin.
ters should be addressed to
munity and get an income
"Taxes and Your Future,"
tax deduction now while you
you
=77,77..,
Easy on you -=_! _ ic
care of The Jewish News.
can enjoy it.
—I. M.
Q. I had heard and read
about "charitable remainder
A. Thank you for your let-
trusts," and contacted the ter. For information, call C.
398-1182
Candids - Portraits - Movies
Jewish Welfare Federation Kenneth Sarason, 965-3939.
1*==="tiC==0114==XICZ:=X
who sent me a questionnaire. It will be strictly confidential.
At their suggestion, I took
Small foundations which
the figures given to me to may be terminating because
"Let Gs Entertain ion -
my attorney. who showed me of provisions in the tax law
what my wife and I could of 1969 might consider the
The
receive for the rest of our capital needs of the new
Sheldon Rott
lives and still provide for Jewish Community Center to
the future of the Jewish com- be built at Maple and Drake
Orchestra
and
munity.
Rds. in Bloomfield Township.
I created a trust (unitrust).
Vickie Carrol
Private foundations that
Now we get a 6 per cent re- hold stock in family or
255-1540
turn on property (stock) that closely-held businesses should
543-7226
had been earninly only 1 consult with their tax coun-
per cent. (It was growth sel about the "January 1975
stock, and I had a large capi- deadline for buy-back." Ar-
tal gain.) So I've increased rangements made through
our own income quite a bit.
the United Jewish Charities
I also received an income can continue a family founda-
tax deduction for the value tion under the UJC charitable
of the charitable interest umbrella and at the same
which reduced my out-cf- time provide for the com-
pocket cost. My unitrust is munity's future.
Eleanor Heyman
Marion Feuerman
not subject to gift tax, and
El-Mars has expanded to serve you better
there will be no estate tax.
I didn't have to pay a
WE CAN SELL YOUR MINK COATS, JACKETS,
capital-gains tax. My attor-
STOLES, FUN FURS, PERSIANS,
ney tells me that the trust
will be included in my gross
BROADTAIL FURS, FUR TRIMMED SWEATERS,etc
estate, and that there will
also be a charitable deduc-
tion from it. When I figure
how much I've saved in
13661 W. 11 Mile, just West of Coolidge
taxes, I'm actually getting
a 13.2 per cent return.
Oak Park, Mich. (Across from A & P)
Why wait? It seems to me
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 11 A.M. to 4 P.M.
that if you plan to provide
No phone calls please.,
for your wife in your will,
you might as well provide for
yourself, her, and the corn-
r 7,7.7 ,
Sandy Friedman Photography
FOR QUICK SALE
OF YOUR UNWANTED USED FURS
El-Mars Suburban Shop
Dr. Tanter to Be
ZOD Speaker
El-Mars Furs
CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS
Helen Zinberg R.E.
The hair you pluck will come back to haunt
you. Before you tweeze again. remember this
Quotation from one of the foremost medical
authorities on the subject of human hair:
"Plucking out strong hairs should never be
advised." Why not? Because the long term
penalties for continued plucking can be so
_ severe:
1. You may .stimulate the
growth of additional hairs
now
around the one you pull
out.
able to you. This is the first
2.
that
Air-cooled
jet
Stream Electrolysis is avail-
method of permanent hair
removal with everything to
You may cause succes-
sive generations of hair from
commend it. Air-cooled Jet
the abused follicle to grow
ceorser, longer, darker.
3. You may cause skin irri-
fortable.
Electrolysis is the
tations, pits, scars.
4. You may make eventual
permanent removal slower
anal costlier by pulling the
root • and
follicle
out
of
place.
Such risks are needless
Stream is %faster, more com-
only
medically approved method
to remove hair permanently.
Investigate this suprior spe-
cialized service for the per-
manent improvement and
confidence. You owe it to
yourself to look your best.
ANNOUNCING NEW LOCATION
16125 W. 12 MILE RD.—OPEN MON., WED. & FRI.
9 to 5 P.M. — 557-8115
8221 Curtis Open Tues. & Thurs. 9 A.M. to 6 P.m. UN 2-8914
nity School District's Far-
rand Elementary and West
Middle schools, five teachers
trained by a Yeshiva U. con-
sultant are instructing some
48 children, age 5-14.
The program is being field
tested in 22 states, Canada,
New Zealand, West Ger-
many, Taiwan, Australia,
Denmark and Norway under
a continuation grant from the
U.S. Office of Education's
bureau of education for the
handicaped
In the spring, the program
will be available commer-
cially through Charles Mer-
rill Publishers of Columbus.
Dr. Page said that the Ply-
mouth school district ap-
proached Yeshiva Univer-
sity with the request that
field testing take place in
that community. He ex-
plained that the need for
such a program was recog-
nized. "Kids in special edu-
cation often go into a job
from school and immediately
get fired—not because they
haven't the skills, but for so-
cial reasons; they don't work
well with others, or they
don't have steady work ha-
bits, and so on." He said he
is pleased with the results
since the program's intro-
duction in the fall.
The underlying assumption
in development of the curri-
culum is that mentally re-
tarded children can learn to
function in society, accord-
ing to Dr. Herbert Goldstein,
director of the Yeshiva Uni-
versity Curriculum Research
and Development Center in
Mental Retardation.
Children who are accepted
into the program are edu-
cably handicaped, with an
IQ from 50 to 72. They are
referred by parents or teach-
ers and evaluated by a
school psychologist. An edu-
cational planning and place-
ment meeting, and meetings
of parents with teachers, are
held, while additional evalu-
ation takes place. At each
stage, there is testing so
that accumulative records of
achievement are obtained.
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, February 8, 1974-37
MAX SCHRUT
for qualify photographs
and fast service
call me at
BLAIR-KEITH
STUDIO
Larry Freedman
Orchestra and Entertainment
Weddings, Bar Mitzvas
We come to your home with samples
1 647-2367
398-91 1 1 or 895=8805
A GIFT FOR EVERY OCCASION
Complete Selection including the Finest 14 Kt. Gold Jewelry
See Morris or Joel Watnick
F GIFTS
FINE JEWELRY
Thurs. & Fri. to 9 p.m.
283 Hamilton
644-7626
Birmingham (Near Crowley's)
Jt'
C rui3ewear
,lime
O ur Place
Southern Jews Aid
Arab Naturalization
MERIDIAN, Miss. (JTA)—
Seymour Marcus, president
of the Jewish Federation in
Birmingham, disclosed that
four Meridian Jewish resi-
dents had helped Amman-
born Sam Dabit of Meridian
to get citizenship papers.
Dabit was described by
Meyer Davidson, one of the
four Jews, as an Arab who
came to the United States
four years ago and had be-
come a very successful mer-
chant in Meridian.
1.
Davidson said he, Herman
I.
Feld, Sam Niemetz and Saul
Feinstein drove Dabit to Bil-
oxi for a hearing on his ap-
plication for citizenship.
1
Davidson said the group
I had been assured by the nat-
uralization commission that
Dabit would get his citizen-
ship papers in about a month.
Dr. Raymond Tanter of the
University of Michigan will
speak on "Oil and the Mid-
del East" at a general mem-
bership meeting of the Zion-
ist Organization of America-
Detroit District, 8:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Zionist Cul-
tural Center. A special film,
"Israel Now," will be shown,
and there will be discussion
of plans for a Zionist Organ-
ization study mission to Is-
rael April 1-15. The two-week
trip, with an option for a
third week, will include side
trips. For information, call
the ZOD, 353-3636. A reserva-
tion deposit payable to El
Al Airlines, is due by Feb.
20. The public is invited to
the meeting, at which re-
freshments will be served.
Much to Choose
from at
20% off
Daily
9:30-5 — Sun. noon 4
-
COOLIDGE at NINE MILE, OAK PARK