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Song of the Six Million
BY DAVID M. MILLER
Derived from "The Song of the Partisans"
in Yiddish by Hirsch Glick
Never say that you have walked the final way;
Though skies of lead will still conceal the blue of day;
Our longed-for hour, our hope is drawing near;
The drum-beat of our march will shout that we are here!
We are the ones who have survived the brutal blow;
And we are here despite our pain, despite our woe;
For though our blood
has drenched the sa4dened earth,
Our new-born courage rises full in our rebirth.
Eternal hope will bring a future without fear;
rutal foe will vanish with our yesteryear;
hough the night delay the coming of our dawn,
et shall we redeem our freedom from its ,pawn.
Our song is written with our blood. It shall endure!
We are not crushed. We rise to wipe away the slur.
Our martyr flesh has pierced the scarring wall of flame.
Our spirit stands in pride. On us no brand of shame!
Then never say that you have walked the final way;
Though skies of lead will still conceal the blue of day,
Our longed-for day, our hope is drawing near;
The- drum-beat of our march will shout that we are here!
They Made The Grade
Flautist ELLEN HERMAN,
a junior at Cass Technical
High School, won a medal in
statewide instrumental com-
petition sponsored by the
Michigan State Band Orches-
tra Association. Then she
went on to share honors with
Linnie Golightly, also of
Cass, in a duet for flute. The
.competition, which took
p l a c e at Ferndale High
;School, was one of four held
throughout the state, and
participants qualified by
making a top rating earlier
in district competition. Ellen,
the daughter . of Wayne State
University humanities pro-
fessor Martin Herman and
,Mrs. Herman, also received
a gold key in drama writing
in the Michigan Scholastic
Writing Contest.
* *
ALLEN M. WOLF, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Sy Wolf of
Cloverl•wn Ave., Oak Park,
has been appointed news di-
rector of Wayne State Uni-
versity's student radio sta-
tion, WAYN. A sophomore at
WSU, Wolf has held positions
of newsman, campus editor
and assistant news director.
He is a broadcast journalism
major, and is the evening
newsman at WPON, Pontiac.
The fact that we're all
born equal is what makes it
so very difficult to under-
stand the success of our
friends.
RUSSELL SCHREIBER ASSOCIATES
AGENCY OF THE SHOW WORLD
• Orchestras• c Entertainment
Speakers • Concerts
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Friday, April 12, 1974-31
Southfield Miss Named Queen THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
of Michigan White Cane Week Sisterhood Volunteers Cheer
A pretty blonde high school
student who believes "blind
persons are the least preju-
diced people in the whole
world because they have
never seen color" is the 1974
Queen of the Michigan Lions
White Cane Week, April 28-
May 4.
She is 5-foot Denise Bra-
yell, 18, of New Jersey Ave.,
Southfield, who is an honor
roll senior at the Michigan
State School for the Blind in
Lansing. She was chosen by
her principal to symbolize
the annual statewide drive by
the Lions to aid the handi-
caped.
This spring, Denise will be
graduated from the Lansing
school, where she has ma-
jored in music. She plays
piano and organ, often writ-
ing her own music. She also
writes poetry.
"In our world", said De-
nise, 'everyone is the same.
Each person is an individual
and we are never aware of or
DENISE BRAVELL
influenced by the color of his
skin or any ethnic physical she had done her research in
appearance."
Braille books.
Denise returns home to
She is learning Spanish,
spend weekends with her computer programing and
parents, Morris and Arlene Saturday mornings takes pri-
Bravell, her brothers Paul, vate music lessons at home.
23 and Scott, 16, and sister . She also enjoys bowling and
Sandra, 10. While none of the swimming and occasionally
other family members have dates and dances.
sight impairments, Denise
As a reward for her enthus-
was a premature baby who iasm and scholastic achieve-
later lost her sight.
ments, she and 14 other stu-
Her parents noted that dents and faculty members
while some people believe made a 10-day trip to Belize
the blind play music by ear, (formerly British Honduras)
the fact is Denise and other to appear in concerts and on
students learned notes and radio stations.
music through Braille and
White Cane Week will be
then committed the pieces to ushered
in by proclamations
memory.
from Governor Milliken and
At Thompson Junior High, from
the mayors of hundreds
she mastered typing and pre- of cities
and towns in Michi-
pared all of her own reports gan.
and research papers, after
Denise will make personal
TV and radio appearances to
Volunteers Recruited help create public awareness
the White Cane effort.
for 6-Month Project of Proceeds
will help support
NEW YORK — 'Project the Leader Dog School for the
Etgar," which seeks to in- Blind in Rochester, Welcome
terest high school graduates Home for the Blind, built to
and college-age men and fill the needs of the aged
women in educational and sightless, the Michigan Lions
work opportunities in Israel, Eye Bank, which assists in
is launching a six-month vol- the restoration of sight to the
unteer recruitment d r i v e unsighted and Lions Care
under the auspices of the Program.
American Zionist Youth
Foundation.
The project was initiated
at the request of Israel,
which is now confronted with
severe manpower shortages
due to the Middle East con-
flict. It is expected that the
first group will depart in late
June.
Livonia Teen
to Get 'Eagle'
The program requires a
volunteer to sign up for a
six-month period during
which he takes an intensive
six-week Hebrew language
course, spends three months
working on a kibutz or mo-
shav and an additional six
weeks of work in a work/job
environment of his own pref-
erence.
For information, contact
Paul Levy, an eighth
Project E t g a r, American
grader
at Bryant Junior High
Zionist Youth Foundation, 515
Park Ave., New York, N.Y. School, Livonia, and singer
Park Ave., New York 10022, with the choir at Beth Abra-
ham-Hillel Synagogue, will
(212) 751 6070.
receive his Eagle scout
badge in special ceremonies
People will never wander May 28 at Tyler School,
far from the straight and Livonia. Paul, 14, an all-A
narrow path just as long as student and member of the
they insist on using the Bryant School track team, is
golden rule to measure their the son of Fay Levy and
actions.
Leroy Levy.
-
Nursing Home Residents on Pesah
The Jewish Family and
Children's Service sisterhood
nursing home volunteer pro-
ject assisted more than 300
Jewish residents in 15 area
nursing homes in celebrating
Passover, said Fayga Dom-
bey, coordinator of the pro-
gram.
In . many homes abbreviated
sedarim were held, while in
others the women visited
with residents individually,
she said, adding that the
over 100 volunteers are old
friends by now to most of
the residents. This is the
fifth Passover being cele-
brated since the inception of
the program.
Mrs. Dombey said it is
particularly the lonely who
have no one who comes 'to
visit, that the volunteers seek
out. They go to the rooms of
the bedridden who are not
able to join the festivities.
Many of the teams visit their
"friends" year around, not
just at special times.
Sisterhoods participating in
the project are: Adat Sha-
lom, Beth Achim, Beth El,
Beth Abraham-Hillel, Beth
Moses, Beth Shalom, Beth
Jacob of Pontiac, Bnai David,
Bnai Moshe, Shaarey Zedek,
Temple Israel, Temple
Emanu-El, Young Israel of
Oak-Woods and Bnai Brith
Couplets. Rabbi Joshua
Sperka of the Council of Or-
thodox Rabbis is chaplain to
the nursing homes.
Cooperating nursing homes
are: Arnold Home, Bedford
Villa, Bloomfield Hills, David
Nursing Home, Edgewater
Convalescent Center, Farm-
Bnai Moshe Youth
to Have Activities
- Bnai Moshe junior congre-
gation will have services 10
a.m. Saturday in the board
room, and story hour (age
3-7) also will meet in the
school building. Senior United
Synagogue Youth will hold
regular services in the
chapel.
*
Halutzim USY (grades 5-6)
is planning a mystery bus
ride 2 p.m. April 21, leaving
from the synagogue. Other
USY groups will meet after
Passover.
*
Talit and Tefilin Club will
resume its regular Sunday
meetings April 21. Services
are held, with breakfast and
discussion, followed by boWl-
ing. For information on Bnai
Moshe youth activities, call
the synagogue office, 548-
9000.
ington Nursing Home, Frank-
lin Manor, Grace Convales-
cent Center, Georgian Bloom-
field, Georgian Northwest,
Medicos, Medicenter, Mount
Vernon, Lahser Hills, Petos-
key Hall and Sherwood Hall.
Director of Hospital
Quadrangle Named
Alfred F. Popoli has been
named executive director of
the Metropolitan Northwest
Detroit Hospitals Quadrangle,
a corporation for med by
Grace Northwest, Mt. Carmel
Mercy, Providence and Sinai
hospitals to share services in
an effort to reduce costs . of
health care.
As chief administrative of-
ficer, Popoli, 41, is respons-
ible for promoting further co-
ordination of h ea 1 t h care
services among member hos-
pitals.
Incorporated in 1972, the
Quadrangle has taken steps
toward consolidation of pedi-
atric and maternity services,
joint training programs in
graduate medical education
and shared services of a
neonatologist (a physician
who specializes in the care
of sick newborns).
Popoli will promote co-
operative research and pre-
ventive 'medicine programs
in addition to health care
and health personnel training.
He was vice president for
administration at Good Sa-
maritan Hospital in Dayton.
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