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February 28, 1975 - Image 34

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1975-02-28

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

34 Friday, Febhubfji 28;1975

IlifOETlionJEWISH 7NEWS

Junior YI Teens Plan Activities Bnai Brith Parlor meeting

AIM

Young Israel Halutzim
(grades 3-5) will present the
Walt Disney feature film
"Son of Flubber" at 2:30
p.m. Sunday, at Young Is-
rael of Greenfield. Refresh-
ments will be served. Denna
Schram is group president,
Lillabeth Mandel, vice presi-
dent; Steven Katz, secre-
tary; and Jenny Mandel-
baum and Gabriel Levi,
treasurers. -
A special arts and crafts
event will be held for 4-7
year olds, 12:30 p.m. Sun-
day, at Young Israel of
Greenfield. Refreshments
will be served.
Junior Young Israel
Teens (grades 6-8) and
Halutzim (grades 3-5) will
sponsor a family day at the
Ice Capades March 16.
Parents and children are
invited. The group will
meet 1 p.m. at Young Is-
rael of Greenfield, and
travel by bus to Olympia
Stadium. Ticket reserva-
tion forms must be re-
turned to the synagogue
office by Wednesday. For
information, contact Har-

kids •

- BOYS t GIRLS

Lincoln
Center .
10 1 /2 Mile & Greenfield

We*

SAM
BARNETT

AND HIS ORCHESTRA

tiati•,1 No. I in I hi. I

bettirr•

ft,

t11 Ii ■r■

From $79.50

QUIST

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CO. INC.
1717 STEPHENSON HWY.
( North of Maple)
TROY • 689-8000

N

OUT THEY GO!!
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NOW

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3 Days only: Fri., Sat. & Sun.
Special Group Of Fine
SPORT COATS
reg. $90-$125:
WHILE THEY LAST!

$59.50

HARRY THOMAS

Fine Clothes for Over 39 Years

24750 Telegraph at 10 Mile

Daily to 6 P.M. Thurs. to 8 P.M.

OPEN SUNDAY 11 to 4

Nets $400,000 for Bonds

.-

!1.1wfa

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"rigifivorrmia
ssasoloofsgal

i

Day Camp Seeks
Program Head

Raanana Day Camp, a
Jewish day camp for chil-
dren in grades 1-6, is seek-
ing a program director with
a strong Jewish background
and administrative experi-
ence.
The camp, which will be-
'gin its fourth season with
two, two-week sessions in
July, is designed to transmit
Jewish heritage to children
through the camping experi-
ence.
Sponsored by the Jewish
Community Council of
Washtenaw County, the
camp program allows camp-
ers to relive epochs in Jew-
ish history. Activities in-
clude drama, crafts, music,
dance, cooking and games.
For applications, contact
Helen Hasenfeld, 2008
Shadford, Ann Arbor,
48104, 769-6861, or Sunnie
Tait, 1610 Morton, Ann Ar-
bor, 48104, 769-5039.

Detroiter Named
Radio Manager

968-2563

Amor in and

tley Harris, evenings,
968-3563.
Shabat meetings will re-
sume at Young Israel for 4-7
year olds with a post-Purim
party March 8. Meetings are
held 2:30 p.m. every Satur-
day at Young Israel of
Greenfield. Games and re-
freshments are featured.
For information on
Young Israel junior group
events, contact coordinator,
Hartley Harris, 968-3563.

NEW YORK — Michael
Luckoff has been named
general manager of KGO
Radio in San Francisco, and
will be nominated for elec-
tion as a vice president of
American Broadcasting
Company at the next meet-
ing of the board of directors
of American Broadcasting
Companies, Inc.
Scion of a Detroit - adver-
tising family (L.H. Luckoff
and Co.), Luckoff launched
his 17-year career in broad-
casting directly after grad-
uation in 1958 from the Uni-
versity of Michigan. He
began at WJBK, Detroit, as
a salesman and, in 1964,
joined Metromedia, first
with Metro Radio Sales in
Detroit and Chicago and,
later, at KLAC in Los An-
geles as general sales man-
ager.

We specialize in Misses & Half Sizes
SIZES 10-20 • 1 2% -24 1 /2

Einstein Lodge and Chapter of Bnai Brith raised
more than $400,000 in Israel Bonds at a recent parlor
meeting at the home of Henry Dorfman. The parlor
meeting, which honored Allen Charlupski, was held in
advance of the Israel Bond 25th anniversary dinner-
dance at which Charlupski will be honored on the occa-
sion of his 60th birthday. Guest speaker was Yehuda
Hellman, executive director of the Conference of Presi-
dents of Major American Jewish Organizations and for-
mer UN correspondent and commentator. Hellman said
Jewish survival in 1975 depended on the success of the
Bond drive and added that Israel "desperately needs
these loans because there is no military strength without
economic success." Shown are, from left, seated: Mrs.
Sam Freedman; Mrs. Allen Charlupski, Mrs. Henry
Dorfman and Mrs. Marcus Last. From left, standing
are: Sam Freedman, Charlupski, Dorfman and Hell-
man.

Israelis Defuse Explosive
Found in Jerusalem Market

JERUSALEM, (JTA) —
A home-made explosive de-
vice was found in a bag of
vegetables and defused
without causing any dam-
age in the Jerusalem open-
air Mahane Yehuda market
Sunday.
Police, called to the scene
by a stall-holder suspicious
of a bag left standing on a
street corner, held a large
crowd back as sappers dis-
connected an electric timing
device from a box containing
three kilos of gunpowder.
Another device was de-
fused last Friday at the cen-
tral bus station. Others have
been found in various parts
of this city but almost all
have been dismantled before
they could explode.
Meanwhile, a Palestin-
ian terrorist gang that at-
tempted to enter Israel
Sunday was foiled by an
Israeli patrol in the area of
Shetula in Upper Galilee.
In the ensuing gun battle,
one of the terrorists was
killed. There were no Is-
raeli casualties.
The dead terrorist was
carrying a personal weapon,
a loudspeaker and pamph-
lets in Arabic, Hebrew and
French. The pamphlets,
which carried the signature
of the Popular Democratic
Front for the Liberation of
Palestine, demanded the
release of a number of im-
prisoned terrorits.
In another incident, two
heavily armed Arab terror-
its were arrested during a
routine police check of the
Petah Tikva organge groves
where large numbers of
Arab workers from north-
ern Sinai are employed.
Police detained 30 other
Arabs for questioning.
The terrorists were spot-
ted by a civil defense patrol-
man who summoned re-en-

forcements. The pair was in
possession of a Karl Gustav
submachine gun, hundreds
of rounds of ammunition
and several magazines of
bullets. A search of the
groves yielded no other
weapons.
Meanwhile, travel agen-
cies have received official
warning from the Japa-
nese Embassy in Stock-
holm, telling them to be on
the lookout for "Red
Army" terrorist activities.
The terrorist who is par-
ticularly feared is Kyoichi
Shimada, 30, who was
named in connection with
the Lod massacre in 1972.
This was the first time the
Japanese Embassy has is-
sued such a warning.

Israel Aids Flooded Bedouins

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Oper- bodies have been re-
ation Rescue became Opera- trieved. According to the
tion Relief as hundreds of soldiers, some of the cas-
Bedouins whose lands were ualties were suffered be-
covered by severe floods in cause the nomadic tribes-
northern Sinai and the Ne- men refused to be
gev over the weekend separated from their live-
flocked to El Arish where stock.
Israeli army units distrib-
The Public Works Depart-
uted clothing, flour, sugar ment, meanwhile, is prepar-
and milk.
ing to restore the roads
Many of the same sol- damaged by the floods and
diers, aided by helicopters, to help the Bedouins rebuild
rescued 500 Bedouins from their homes. Scores are
the raging torrents that col- being housed temporarily in
lapsed hundreds of mud El Arish schools and of
houses, swept away their buildings.
utensils and destroyed
The flood waters h
countless livestock.
subsided in most areas.
An estimated 20 Be- Meteorologists said the
douins died in the floods, floods were the worst rec-
though so far only nine orded in this century.

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Is-
rael has protested its exclu-
sion from an international
conservationist conference
to be held in Teheran next
May. The International
Union for Conservation of
Nature and Natural Re-
sources (IUCN) failure to in-
vite or even to notify the
three Israeli conservationist
agencies that are officially
members of the body and
attended its meetings in
prior years.
The subjects on the
agenda of the Teheran
meeting include arid zones
and the coral formations in
the Red Sea.
Israeli conservationists
learned of the fourthcoming

--- s\•

Thousands of pennies
may make a fortune, but no
amount of small talk adds
up to wisdom.

ik

-

go.., th e ur,id

meeting only by chance
from circulars published at
IUCN headquarters in
Switzerland.

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Center Book Series
Plans Discussion

The Jewish Community
Center Book Series will
meet 1 p.m. March 12 in the
Henry Meyers Memorial
Library in the main Jewish
Center. "Call It Sleep," by
Henry Roth will be dis-
cussed.
The Book Series, chaired
by Mrs. Pauline Jackson
and Mrs. Gertrude Ober-
stein, meets every other
Wednesday in the main
Center. The next session,
April 9, will feature a dis-
cussion of "Jews Without
Money," by Michael Gold,
contrasted with "Every-
thing But Money," by Sam
Levenson.
Center members and non-
members are invited. For in-
formation, call the Center
Cultural Arts Department,
341-4200.

4

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