•

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
38—Friday, August 2, 1974

Another Date Set
for Machpelah Case

awry on tile

ETERNAL LIGHT
Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday.
Station: WWJ.
Feature: Norman Podho-
retz, editor of Commentary,
and Midge Decter, author
and critic, will analyze "The
Old Bunch," by Meyer Levin.

A new date—Sept. 6—has
been set by Oakland County
Circuit Court Judge James
Thorburn to hear the suit con-
testing control of Machpelah
Cemetery.
The case was to have been
heard Monday.
HIGHLIGHTS
This is the fourth post-
Time: 9:45 a.m. Sunday.
ponement since the original
Station: Channel 2.
suit was brought by two con-
Feature: "Leonard
gregations — Beth Jacob-Mo-
gain Abraham and Bnai Is- Schwartz, Sculptor: Product
rael-Beth Yehudah — against of This JeWish Community."
members of the Oppenheim
family who serve on the Taxpayers May Claim
Machpelah board of trustees.

Undelivered Checks

Michigan taxpayers who
Classifieds Get Quick Results have undelivered refund
checks waiting for them et
the Internal Revenue Serv-
ice are asked to call or visit
a local IRS office as soon as
possible.
According to R. L. Plate,
Do poi adv
district director of IRS for
Michigan, the most common
reason for an undelivered
check is that the taxpayer
has moved and left no for-
Creative Party Planning
warding address with the
including
U.S. Postal Service.
Plate said that in all refund
Candy Centerpieces-
inquiries to the IRS, the tax-
payer should be prepared to
Personalized Party
provide the name and ad-
Favors •
dress as it appeared on the
Invitation; and Party
return, the actual name and
Accessories for all occasions. ,
address if different, the So-
cial Security numbers and
MARCIA MASSERMAN the type of form filed.
Taxpayers with refund in-
646-613$
quiries may call the IRS in
Detroit, 355-0900.

POE

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This Week's Radio and Television Programs

West Bloomfield
Thurs. & Fri. till 9
Saturday till 6

INTERVIEW IMPROMPTU
Time: 10:30 p.m.
Station: WDEE (1500)•
Feature: Hon. Wat T. Clu-
verius, deputy director of
Israeli and Israeli-Arab af-
fairs, U. S. Department of
State, will speak.
* *
"IF NOT NOW .
•
Time: 7 p.m. Tuesday.
Station: WDET-FM (101.9).
Feature: Issues confronting
the Jewish community.
• * *
VISTAS OF ISLIEL
Time: 6:30 a.m. Sunday.
Station: WOMC-FM (104.3)•
Feature: Songs for 24
Hours.
*
MESSAGE OF ISRAEL
Time: 6:35 a.m. Sunday.
Station: WXYZ (1270).
and
Time: 10:45 p.m. Sunday
Station: WDEE (1500).
Feature: Rabbi Jack Stern
of the Westchester Reform
Temple, Scarsdale, N. Y.,
will 'speak on "The Jewish
Family."
• * *

Balfour Concert Role of Wine in Jewish Ritual
According to the Bible,
The ceremonies of kidush (
Kickoff Slated Noah
was the first to plant and Havdala on Sabbaths

Dr. and Mrs. I. Walter Sil-
ver, 1131 Stuyvessant, Bloom-
field Township, will host the
42nd annual Balfour kick-off
brunch, 11 a.m. Sunday.
Hubert J. Sidlow, past presi-
dent of the Jewish Commun-
ity Council, will speak.
The Balfour Concert will
take place at Ford Auditor-
ium 8:30 p.m. Nov. 24.
Richard Tucker and Robert
Merrill will present a duo

*

* * *

BNAI SHALOM

Time: 10 a.m. Sunday.
Station: WBRB-FM (102.1).
Feature: Jewish humor,
music, culture and literature.

Bus Driver Fired
for Keeping Shabat,
Then Reinstated

LONDON (JTA)—A Jewish
bus driver who was fired
by London Transport because
he refused to work on Satur-
days has been rehired on the
basis he could change sched-
ules with a Christian driver
who does not want to work
on Sundays.
After the driver was fired,
Labor MP Maurice Orbach,
general secretary of the
Trades Advisory Council, a
Jewish group that combats
discrimination, met with the
bus company's personnel su-
perintendent but got no re-
sults.
He then turned to Sir
Richard Way, chairman of
London Transport, who made
the suggestion allowing the
Jewish driver to have Satur-
days off.

and festivals should be per-
formed with wine. Four cups
of wine must be drunk at the
Passover seder, two cups at
weddings, and one at circuit ,
cisions. Indeed, the goblet of
wine and the benediction re-
cited over it symbolize the
festivity of the occasion. In
accordance with the biblical
injunction to "give strong
wine to him that is ready td
perish, and wine unto ti
bitter in soul" (Prov. 31:"
a "cup of consolation" is
fered to the bereaved aftei
the funeral at the "meal of
comforting."

The rabbis considered that
wine taken in moderation in-
duces appetite, sust a in s,
makes glad and is beneficial
to health. According to some
opinion the "tree of knowl-
edge" of which Adam ate was
a vine. The rabbis are known
to have indulged, maintain-
ing that wine helps open the
heart to reasoning, the En-
cyclopedia Judaica says.

HUBERT SIDLOW

concert with the Detroit Sym-
LUBAVITCH
phony Orchestra, conducted
JEWISH HOUR
by Theo Alcantara. Chair-
Time: 9:30 a.m. Sunday.
men are Dr. Theodore Man-
Station: WNIC (1300).
dell and Mrs. Jack R. Green-
and
berg, and program co-ordin-
Time: 1 a.m. Monday•
ator, Prof. Jason H. Tickton.
Station: WNIC-FM (100).
and
., Dr. Sidney Z. Leib, presi-
Time: 10:45 a.m. Sunday. dent of the Zionist Organiza-
tion of Detroit, said early
Station: WPON (1450).
Feature: Rabbinical re- reservations can be made at
Zionist House, 353-3636.
marks, Jewish music.

RELIGION IN THE NEWS
Time: 9:05 a.m. Sunday.
Station: CKWW.
and
RELIGIOUS SCOPE
Time: 11:30 p.m. Sunday.
Station: Channel 9.
Feature: News in the Jew-
ish community.
* *
ROZHINKES
MIT MANDLEN
Time: 9 a.m• Monday,
Wednesday and Thursday.
Station: WIID (1090).
Feature: Israeli and Yid-
dish music, news,, recipes
and other features.

a vineyard. This statement
seems to reflect an ancient
attitude that grape culture
and the making of wine
were essential to civilization.
There were several types of
wine, according to the En-
cyclopedia Judaica, some of
which are mentioned in the
Bible. Wine was considered
the choicest of drinks, and
archeological excavations
have brought to light a great
number of presses for tread-
ing of the grapes. Wine was
considered an intoxicant with
a stimulating effect upon
human disposition.

Excessive
consumption,
however, was frowned upon
and overindulgence was
thought to be injurious to
health. Sleep or a long walk
was prescribed for those who
became heavy with drink .. .
remedies that are still used.

BY POPULAR DEMAND!

Road Rally Set

Temple Beth Jacob of Pon-
tiac will sponsor its fourth
annual road rally 7:30 p.m.
Saturday leaving from the
Bloomfield Plaza, Maple and
Telegraph Rds.
The Henry Winkelmans,
Murray Schlussels and Lee
Marks will host the event.
For information, call the
temple, 332-3212.

The one sure way to have
no future is to live in the be-
lief that the future is tomor-
row.

JEWELRY

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emanating, Jewelry & 14 filch Repaiiin

SUITE 364 ADVANCE BLDG.
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(313) 557-1860

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SAM By FIELD

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399-1320 )

ED BURG

and His Orchestra

851-6118

Buckley Tackles
United Nations

William F. Buckley chroni-
cles his three-month "odys-
sey" as a delegate to the 28th
General Assembly of the
United Nations in his new
book, "United Nations Jour-
nal," to be published by Put-
nam.
The book is peppered with
wry, incisive commentary
about such issues as how the
UN , operates ("sporadic-
ally") ; what its concerns are
today ("colonialism, sov-
ereignty over natural re-
sources, the right of have-
not nations to economic
help") and Buckle y's
frustrations ("the rep•esenta-
tives of the United States .. .
shall at all times act in ac-
cordance with instructions
from the President").
As always there are Wil-
liam Buckley's insights into
and anecdotes about people
and situations: Henry Kis-
singer, Buckley's longtime
friend, Saudi Arabia's Jamil
Baroody, Russia's Malik and
how to get a visa to China
through the Ethiopia airline.

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