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June 14, 1974 - Image 38

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1974-06-14

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

JWF Subcommittee on Aging Surveys Programs, Future Needs

MOVING TO FLORIDA

RUTH
ROSS

Former Owner of the
DUPLEX SHOPPE

in Detroit and Lathrup Village

The subcommittee on aging,
a Jewish Welfare Federation
committee set up earlier this
year to survey present Fed-

BY POPULAR DEMAND!
Now Booking . . .

ED BURG

and His Orchestra

is having an

851-61 18

ART
SALE

inommossinir

on her OWN Oil Painting
with SOMETHING TO PLEASE
EVERYONE and AT SPECIAL
LOW PRICES

SAT. and SUN., JUNE 15 & 16
from 10 A.M. to 6 P.M.

in the

LINCOLN BRIAR
CLUB HOUSE

MAX SCHRUT

for quality photographs
and fast service
call me at

eration agency programs and
to forecast needs in terms of
community service to the
aging, will hold its next
meeting at the United He-
brew Schools, 8 p.m. Tues-
day.
The subcommittee is a part
of Federation's health and
welfare division, responsible
for budget and program re-
views of beneficiary agencies
in medical care, housing,
recreation and social service.
The Tuesday meeting, ac-
cording to chairman Wallace
M. Handler, will be with
representatives of the Jewish
Center. He said the commit-
tee is talking with each
agency in turn.

De
Eie
c.:
De
w:

DICK STEIN Inc.

Jeep Sm ith — Dick Stein
Shelby Lee — Patty Grant
Mori Little — Leonard McDonald Etc.

From one to any number of musicians
Complete Partj, Planning on Request

358-2777
`;`Music T he Stein Way"

THE BIG TICKET
ITEMS FOR LESS!

COMPLETE SELECTION

INCLUDING THE FINEST
14 Kt. GOLD JEWELRY

REMEMBER
FATHER'S DAY
SUNDAY, JUNE 16th

A GIFT FOR EVERY OCCASION

Complete Selection including the Finest 14 Kt. Gold Jewelry

See Morris or Joel Watnick

hAl2 42L

FINE JEWELRY

283 Hamilton

GIFTS

Thurs. to 9 P.M.

Birmingham (Near Crowley's)

644-7626

Alan D. Kandel, Federa-
tion's director of social plan-
ning, and Arthur Gersten,
planning associate, are work-
ing with the committee.
Arnold Faudman is chair-
man of the health and wel-
fare division of Federation.

Penny Returned Is
a Citation Earned

Every American, especial-
ly young people, are being
urged to get the penny back
in circulation and keep it
there.
Mrs. Mary Brooks, direc-
tor of the Mint, said she is
calling on the banking indus-
try to welcome the return of
pennies during June.
She noted that the price of
copper has retreated, closing
at $1.10 per pound on May
24. There will be no alumi-
num penny. The 62,000,000,-
000 pennies produced during
the past 15 years have no
numismatic value and be-
cause of the huge mintage
they will never attain great
value.
Nevertheless,
speculators
and hoarders of pennies have
caused what seems to be a
shortage of pennies in cer-
tain areas of the country.
It is estimated that over
30,000,000,000 pennies are in
circulation. Somewhere, how-
ever, in excess of 30,000,000, -
000 pennies are in hiding.
For the Mint to be forced
to continue increasing its
penny production to meet the
current extraordinary de-
mand is wasteful. One bil-
lion pennies returned to cir-
culation will save the tax-
payers $10,000,000.
For every $25, or more,
worth of pennies cashed in at
a bank, the Treasury Depart-
ment is prepared to issue a
special citation to the indi-
vidual or group responding
to the penny drive.
professor of soils. He con-

tinued work for his doctorate
degree, which he never com-
ple
Levin worked as a chemist
for a paper company, left for
other brief jobs, and re-
turned to chemistry. When he
moved to Champaign, he
founded the VioBin Corp.
which last September was
sold to A. H. Rabins Co., a
pharmaceutical firm. He is
now a consultant for that
firth.
One of Levin's major stu-
dies concerned finding a sub-
stance which ,would combat
a growing protein hunger
through the world. His con-
cept of using waste fish as a
source of high quality pro-
tein was not readily accept-
ed. However, it is now recog-
nized as an effective and ec-
onomical means of feeding
millions.
Another contribution is his
manufacture of VioKase, an
enzyme used to improve the
nutritional status of patients
afflicted with cystic fibrosis.
He also developed a soluble,
defatted and cholesterol-free
egg powder.
For the past 22 years,
Levin has sponsored a grant
at the University of Illinois
for research involving exper-
iments with wheat germ oil.

JOE MILLER „. 1

and

HIS ORCHESTRA

Music For All Occasions

LI 5-1244

r1111111111111111111=101111111.•111=11•1111111111111=111111•11111•111•MMUli

I Harris Vinyl Plasticovers

1 Custom Made Kleer Vu Furniture Covers I

1
I
I

A New Approach! A Better Job!
• Exclusive Reinforcements

Extra Arm Covers
• GUARANTEED , Free Repairs

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1 25535 Greenfield

Former Detroit Biochemist Gets E ii . No Immt . 10%
Honorary Degree From MSU

Ezra Levin, a pioneer in
biochemical and pharmaceu-
tical research, was the re-
cipient Sunday of an honor-
BLAIR-KEITH
ary doctor of laws degree
COME HAVE A CUP
from his alma mater, Michi-
STUDIO
OF COFFEE WITH ME
gan State University.
Weddings, Bar Mitzvas
AS WE DID IN THE PAST
We come to your home with samples
Levin, 81, a former De-
troiter living in Champaign,
398-91 1 1 or 895-8805
Ruth Ross
Ill., was honored as a scien-
tist
and manufacturer who
ea WWI reilKSP V4r411WW4
red
Veil
IroNtir4oNI
Irell
es reel-
Veil
IrelliVeCrea
'WV
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WWII
Ir•-4
dee
fee
dee
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41. ■ f∎ fa f∎ f ∎ are f∎ ewe ■∎ ere fee
WV WV WV WV WV WV WO WV WW WV WV WW WW WV WW WW WW WW WV WV
for the past four decades has
fdd/ ■ .1%.1.11111.•.1 P.1.4 Wo.41.•.1 P.IIM 11.•-• FAA 1...1P.A.11 EA.1 P.P.111:1:4•-•da 0.49441 wk.,
lir
made major contributions to
Best Wishes and Heartiest Congratulations to
El k
human welfare and health.
DR. and MRS. BERRY AUSTER
In the 1890s, Levin's family
on his Graduation
came to Detroit, where his
and to
father taught Hebrew. Young
Levin went to work to sup-
MR. and MRS. HENRY FELDMAN
plement the family income,
Much Nachus With Much Love
and in 1914 earned a BS de-
-
Regin6 and Jack Gilbert
gree from Michigan State.
job
-
i91626-4,,z-HwerwivumewatrnvareaysKtr...;
He taught high school in
.lez
..m
. um -
teztationlezimumaNest
Kalamazoo, earned his MS
degree at the University of
Michigan and returned to
Let The Professionals Perform
MSU to became associate

-
between Coolidge and Greenfield,
OAK PARK

25600 Briar Drive

"Getting the complete pic-
ture of the present range of
services available to the
senior citizens is our com-
mittee's first step. After that
we will be in touch with
various senior citizen interest
groups as well as profes-
sionals in gerontology from
outside the Jewish com-
munity,". he said.
Assisting Handler on the
subcommittee are Stanley L.
Berger, Mrs.. William B.
Greenberg, Mrs. Benjamin
E. Jaffe, Dr. Hyman S.
Mellen, Myron L. Milgrom,
Robert Naftaly, Daniel N.
Pevos, Mrs. D. Lawrence
Sherman, Harry L. Silver-
man and Morris W. Stein.

38—Friday, June 14, 1974

1

557-7850' 1

OFF WITH THIS AD ■ umui

NFIDENTIALLY 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
long term
not? Because the
advised." Why
penalties for continued plucking can be so
. severe:

"I. You may -.stimulate toe
growth of additional hairs
aro* the one you pull
out.
2. You may cause succes-
sive generations of hair from
the abused follicle to grow
coarser, longer, darker.
3. You may cause skin irri-
-*
tations, pits, scars.
4. You may make eventual
permanent removal slower
and costlier by pulling th;
of
follicle
out
root'''. and
place.
Such risks are needless

ricrv- i
that
4,.-cooled
jet
Stream Electrolysis is avail-
able to you. This is the first
method of permanent hair
removal with everything to
commend it. Air-cooled Jet

Stream is faster, more com-

fortable.
- Electrolysis' is the
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

Common Council
Issues Proclamation
on Soviet Jewry

Detroit Common Council
has proclaimed its "solidar-
ity and vigilance" in recog-
nition of the plight of Jewish
"prisoners of conscience" in
the Soviet Union.
The resolution, introduced
by City Council President
Carl Levin and sponsored by
all members of the council,
supported the local effort to
protest Soviet harassment of
Jews who seek to emigrate.
The council's resolution
noted that there are "count-
less prisoners of conscience
. . . who are now languishing
in Soviet labor camps. "In-
difference in the past," Corn-
mon Council noted, "has led
to the discrimination, oppres-
sion and genocide of Jews
and other sects and groups
of people." .
The council called for "un-
restricted movement for
those desiring to leave the
Soviet Union for Israel or
any other country of their
choice and for their right to
live in freedom, expressing
the religious views and pre-
cepts of their choosing."

g

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SWHNN

and

great. G ain
g i ft cBoutique and

Teauty‘Salort are together!

124 West Fourth Street, Royal Oak

(Corner of Center)

399-2018

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