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May 23, 1975 - Image 39

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1975-05-23

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

r

INVITATIONS
by HATTIE
SCHWARTZ

356-8563

STATIONERY
'PARTY FAVORS
* * * *
* * * * ENTERTAINMENT
• ASTROLOGER
SEYMOUR
• CARICATURES
• MUSIC
SCHWARTZ
• NAME GROUPS
AGENCY
• STROLLERS
• AL SIMMS BAND
356-8525
• VARIETY PLUS
* * * *

The Finest Music
and Entertainment

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and His
CONTINENTALS

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7

Summer
FUN!

10 weeks-20 sessions
CLASSES START
WEEK OF JUNE 16

Acrobatic
Gymnastics
Classes

Aliya Parley Slated

The Michigan Regional
Aliya Conference will be
convened June 1 at the Jew-
ish Community Center 10
Mile branch.
The meeting, chaired by
Phillip Stoliman, is one of
many conferences through-
out the United States fol-
lowing the National Aliya
Conference, held in New
York earlier this year.

Annual JFCS
Meeting Due

The Jewish Family and
Children's Service and the
Resettlement Service will
hold their annual meetings
at 8 p.m. June 3, in the La-
Med Auditorium of the
United Hebrew Schools.
"What Makes Today's
Youth Tick?" will be the
subject of a panel and open
discussion with Beverly
Gould, Southfield Public
Schools Director of Elemen-
tary Curriculum and Dick
Kyro, director of pupil per-
sonnel for the Oak Park
Public Schools.
JFCS community inter-
pretation chairman Carolyn
Greenberg will moderate
the program.

JFCS president Edythe
Jackier, Resettlement
• Beginner Service president Pauline
Grossman, and Samuel
• Intermediate Lerner, executive director
• Advanced , of both agencies, will re-
port on the agencies' activ-
ities during the past year.

FLOOR
and MAT
WORK!


Free
Exercise
Routines
to Music
For Girls &
Boys Ages
3 and Up

The election of JFCS
board members and officers
for 1975-76 will take place
and summaries of the past
year's activities and pros-
pects for the coming year
will be presented.
The annual meeting is
open to the public. For in-
formation, call the JFCS
office, 341-5959.

JWV

1

BALE POST 474 will

have its 19th annual golf
outing June 3 at Shenan-
doah Golf and Country
Club. Pete Yura, chairman
of the event, announces
members of the Detroit
Lions will participate. For
information, call Morris
Hoffman, 626-4295.

* * *

JWV Lauds Ford

Taught
by

Jan Peters
Phys. Ed. Major

Specialist in FREE
EXERCISE ROUTINES

IART LIN
• KLETTER

TOTTEN SCHOOLS

13•MILE and MAIN ST.

Royal Oak, 588.0300
12-MILE and Evergreen
Southfield, 3571215

WASHINGTON — The
Jewish War Veterans of
USA lauded President Ford
for his "courageous and de-
termined" action in regard
to Cambodia's attempt to
capture the merchant ship
Mayaguez.
In a telegram sent to the
White House, Judge Paul
Ribner of Philadelphia, na-
tional JWV commander,
said:
"The Jewish War Veter-
ans of the USA offers its
complete endorsement for
your courageous and deter-
mined action to free the
Mayaguez and her crew.
Your decisive use of Ameri-
can armed intervention col-
lects our resolve to show the
world that we will not capit-
ulate to international pir-
acy.

Delegates to the confer-
ence will disucss the prob-
lems and prospects of
American aliya to Israel.

David Rivlin, Israeli
consul-general in New
York, and Mrs. Charlotte
Jacobson, chairman of the
World Zionist Organiza-
tion, American Section,
will address the meeting.
Recent olim to Israel and
Americans who are plan-
ning aliya in the near fu-
ture will discuss their ex-
periences in the process
and their outlook towards
aliya.

Workshop sessions will
stress the general question
of the viability of aliya for
the individual American
Jew, methods of education
to create an atmosphere for
aliya, facilitating olim, and
alternative ways to make
aliya. Local leaders will lead
the discussion sessions.
Interested individuals are
invited. For information,
call Raya Jackson, director,
Detroit Zionist Federation, ,
968-1044 or 547-8844.

Society to Mark
Bonstelle Theater
as Historical Site

The Jewish Historical
Society of Michigan will
present a plaque at Wayne
State University's Bonstelle
Theater 11 a.m. Sunday des-
ignating the theater as an
historical site.
Built in 1903, the building
was the home of Temple
Beth El until 1922 when the
congregation moved to
Woodward and Gladstone
Ayes.
Dr. Abraham Rogoff,
president of the society, will
formally present the plaque
to WSU Provost Dr. Henry
C. Bohm. Officers and the
board of the society also will
attend.
The public is invited.

EXPERIENCE

Wisdom is not to be ob-
tained from textbooks, but
must be coined out of hu-
man experience in the flame
of life.
— Morris Raphael Cohen

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, May 23, 1975 39

Population Distribution Program
Approved by Israeli Cabinet

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
The Cabinet this week
adopted an official popula-
tion distribution program
for Israel based on a popula-
tion projection of four mil-
lion within the next five
years and five million by
1992. Israel's present popu-
lation is 3.4 million.
The program is the first
legally binding plan ap-
proved by both the National
Planning Council and the
Cabinet and will serve as the
official guideline for all lo-
cal and district planning
commissions in drafting
their future development
programs.

It calls for an increase of
the population in Galilee,
Jerusaelm and the Negev re-
gions and a smaller percen-
tage of the population resid-
ing in the presently heavily-
populated Tel Aviv region.

The program is based on
Israel's pre-June 1967 bor-
ders but assumes that re-
gardless of any future pol-
itical settlement, some
30,000 Jews will continue
to live in the present ad-
ministered territories and
their number will be mul-
tiplied in 20 years.

The Jerusalem district
will grow more rapidly than
any other according to the

population distribution
plans. Its present popula-
tion of about 340,000 will in-
crease to 530,000 by 1980.
The Tel Aviv area, which
now accounts for 28.4 per-
cent of the country's popula-
tion will decline in popula-
tion and by the 1990s only
23.9 percent will live in that
metropolitan region.

"CONFIDENTIALLY SPEAKING"

why go anywhere

else?

Oak
or

,

Fashion Apparel at Discount Prices

Argentina Prints Anti-Semitic Ad

BUENOS AIRES (JTA)
— The largest circulation
Argentine afternoon daily,
La Razon, has published an
ad publicizing a new book
called "Argentine Inflation"
by Dr. Walter Beveraggi
Allende, a professor of eco-
nomics at Buenos Aires Law
School.
The ad reproduces the
book's title page showing

Cancer Society
Sets Help Session

The American Cancer
Society will hold a meeting
for cancer patients and their
families 7:30 p.m. Wednes-
day in the Fireside Lounge
of the First Presbyterian
Church of Birmingham,
1669 W. Maple.
The purpose of this "self
help" group is to bring to-
gether persons who are ex-
periencing problems as a
result of the disease and,
with the assistance of a
nurse consultant, give them
the opportunity and encour-
agement to discuss their
mutual problems.
For information, call the
American Cancer Society at
644-0770.

INDOOR OR
OUTDOOR
TENNIS LESSONS

Reasonable rates
357-0629 or 355-0629

Argentina crucified on a
cross whose nail heads are
Magen Davids; at the base
of the cross sits a hook-
nosed person, with hammer
in hand.
Allende is the same man
who some three years ago
launched the Andinia proj-
ect slander purporting that
Jews were establishing in
the south of Argentina, an
oil-rich area, a new Jewish
state to be seceded from
Argentina.

ROOM AT THE BOTTOM

INTERIOR DESIGNERS

LOIS ROSS
BARBARA LEVIN

call

557-8490
557-8292

FREE

I
1 EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW

I ABOUT HAIR CARE! BUT WERE AFRAID 1
TO ASK.
I
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Tuesday, June 3, 7 to 9 PM

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Individual consultation on hair care & styling I
problems.

Call for reservations

14

herr

Itat

I co:

David Deitch after 6

25255

Salon

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