12—Friday, Sept. 13, 1974
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Mosad Aliya,
Mizrachi Village
Made for Youth
Since Rosh Hashanah last year,
The Endowment Program
has
AIDED 31 students in technical, undergraduate, and graduate schools with scholarship
help through the Jewish Scholarship Service
UNDERWRITTEN the Institute for Jewish Life, a national program concerned with
the continuity, quality and enrichment of Jewish life in America
FUNDED Project JOIN, an internship program in Jewish communal- careers
administered by the Jewish Vocational Service & Community Workshop and the
Jewish Community Center
INITIATED a Jewish cultural enrichment pro-
gram for a group of mentally retarded clients
in the Arnold E. Frank Community Work-
shop of JVS-CW
SENT the final installment of an emer-
gency allocation for the restoration
and rebuilding of Jewish community in-
stitutions in flood-stricken Wilkes-Barre
PROVIDED funding for the community-
wide Tay Sachs disease screening program
run by Sinai Hospital and the Ford Hospital
Genetic Counselling Clinic
GIVEN special "seed money" grants to Hillel organizations on campus at Wayne
State University, the University of Michigan, and Michigan State University to
expand Jewish programming and service for collegians
ENDOWED a professorial chair in Jewish History at the University of Michigan
AND MUCH MORE, made possible by the generosity of our community!
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Mandell L. Berman
Alfred L. Deutsch
President, Jewish Welfare Federation
President, United Jewish Charities
William Avrunin
Executive Vice-President, Jewish Welfare Federation
C. Kenneth Sarason
Secretary, Endowment Program
The Endowment Program
163 Madison Avenue
WO 5-3939
These children are attend-
ing a day camp for 600 boy ;
and girls on the grounds of
the Mosad Aliya Children's
Village, a project of Ameri-
can Mizrachi Women. Vaca-
tions for children fro_,m. Is-
rael's tense border settle-
ments, and day care for chil-
dren of working mothers, are
receiving special emphasis in
programs of American Mizra-
chi Women since the 1973
Yom Kippur War.
Israeli Wins Gold
Medal in Teheran
TEL AVIV, (JTA)—Danni
Brenner, the 21-year-old son
of a Haifa shipping tycoon,
Mila Brenner, won Israel its
first gold medal in an inter-
national sporting event at
Teheran last weekend.
Brenner, whose father is
co-owner of Maritime 'Fruit
Carriers Lt., scored an upset
victory in the 100-meters
free-style swimming event at
the Asian Games. He beat
the favored Chinese and Jap-
anese swimmers with a time
of 55.64 seconds.
Israel's jubilation over the
win was tempered by the un-
friendly political atmosphere
at the games. The Chinese
men's and womens fencing
teams refused to meet the
Israelis. Pakistan, which will
host. the next Asian games,
failed to show up for a bas-
ketball game against the Is-
raeli team.
The Kuwaiti team asked
for a postponement for the
football (soccer) semi-finals
from Sunday to Monday, the
day the Israeli team must
leave Teheran to be home in
time for Rosh Hashana.
Vile 'Protocols'
Printed in Italy
NEW YORK (JTA)—The
Anti-Defamation League of
Bnai Brith's representative'
in Rome report that the in-
famous czarist forgery "The
Protocols of the Elders of
Zion" has just been published
in Italy by the firm Costan-
tino Catapano in Lucera, near
Foggia.
Printed from a French
translation which originated
in Beirut in 1972, the current
anti-Semitic docunient is re-
portedly being distributed to
priests, schools and private
persons.
Against a background of
deteriorating economic con-
ditions, ADL's representa-
tive f ears "scapegoating
Jews among reactionary ele-
ments "for whom the 'Proto-
cols' is an appropriate tool."
Several thousand copies of
the books are said to be in