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The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

August 15, 1975 - Image 20

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1975-08-15

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

20 Friday, August 15, 1975

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Women Sponsor
Bowling Party

Flint Area News

Bnai Brith Men Plan Annual Stag

Bnai Brith men will have
their annual golf stag and
dinner Wednesday at the

Grand Blanc Golf Club:
5270 Perry, Grand Blanc.
Dinner will he served at 7
p.m.
Admission fee includes 18
holes of golf and dinner. For
reservations, call Percy
Braun, chairman, 232-9684.
The Bnai Brith men's
bowling league. for 1975-76
will begin 10 a.m. Sept. 21 at
Southland Lanes. To sign up
for a team, call Irving Si-
men, 732-5555, after 6 p.m.

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Flint People
Make News

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Saturday — Jewish War
Veterans Auxiliary Pool
Party.
Monday
Temple Beth
El hoard of education meet-
ing, 8 p.m., temple.
Tuesday
Bnai Brith
men's board meeting, 8
p.m., home of Leslie Kahn,
3706 Brentwood.
Thursday
Flint Jewish
Community Council execu-
tive committee meeting, 8
p.m., Council office.

The Country Peddler



Meadow Brook Mall
130 N. Adams
Rochester
375-0515

Tel Ex Plaza
10-Telegraph
Southfield
357-2122

The Hadassah Bowling
League will begin 9:30 a.m.
Sept. 11 at Skyway Lanes.
To sign up, call Barbara
Yale, 235-6246.
The Keren Or Group of
Hadassah will hold a picnic
for mothers and children
10:30 a.m. Thursday at Bal-
lenger Park. Everyone is
welcome.

I

SPECIAL

Reg. $5.00

Hadassah Plans
Bowling League

Sandy Goldberg, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gold-
berg of Essexville, is in Is-
rael as a participant in Had-
assah's Young Judea
program. A post-Bar Mitzva
student at Cong. Beth Is-
rael, Sandy will study He-
brew, tour the country and
work on a kihutz.

DURACLEAN HOME SERVICE

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Bnai Brith Women will
have a couples howling
party 8 p.m. Aug. 23, at
Town and Country Lanes.
There will be a "get-to-
gether" and refreshments -
after bowling at the River
Hollow club house on River
Valley Dr.
Chairmen for the event
are Jan Eisman and Sharon
Stein. For reservations, call
Sybil Goldberg, 732-7693, or
Mrs. Stein, 732-6352.



An Historical Look at Labor,
Activists and Jews in London

Between 1881 and 1914,
London's East End became
the refuge for thousands of
Jews driven from Russia by
the pogroms. The shabby
tenements of \Vhitechapel
and Stepney were turned
into sweatshops, in which
men and women labored un-
der appalling conditions.
Some of the immigrants
had belonged to the radical
intelligentsia before their
flight from the Czarist pol-
ice, and "Jewish Radicals,"
published by Pantheon
Books, division of Random
House, describes their
struggle to politicize and
unite the .Jewish workers.
(See The Jewish News, June
13, Page 64.)
Drawing on many written
sources hitherto untapped,
William Fishman vividly
records the horrors of perse-
cution in Russia and the
poverty and alienation in
the London ghetto.
He traces the spread of
anarchist and socialist
ideas in England, from
Aron Lieberman's pi-
oneering Hebrew Socialist
Union to the ascendancy of
Rudolf Rocker, the charis-
matic German gentile who
devoted himself to the

Jewish immigrant cause.
He also re-creates mov-
ingly the life-style of the
activists themselves and
their incredible dedication,
drawing on eye-witness ac-
counts of many of the events
that took place in the East
End.
"Jewish Radicals" pro-
vides with a unique and

UN Would Destroy Itself

Editor's note: the fol-
lowing is excerpted from
an article in the Aug. 7
New York Times written
by Abba Eban, former Is-
rael foreign minister and
ambassador to the United
Nations.
A family of nations bound

together in a covenant of
peace and law is, in its ori-
gin. a Hebrew idea, first
uttered by a poet of Israel in
Jerusalem.
Moreover, the United Na-
tions came to life three dec-
ades ago as an anti-Nazi
coalition. This means quite

Vietnamese mother Seeks
Citizenship in Israel



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JERUSALEM — A Phil-
istine castle from which the
troops who defeated King
Saul at Mount Gilboa May
have set out was unearthed
by archaeologists during the
fourth consecutive digging
season at Antipatris, near
here.
Dr. Moshe Kochavi, who
heads the Tel Aviv Univer-
sity part of the digging
team, said that the Philis-
tine identity has been
proved beyond doubt by the
typical potsherds found on
the tel.
Antipatris is the ancient
Aphek, an important mili-
tary and commercial center
mentioned in the Bible. It is
one of the largest tells in
Israel, covering 120 dunams.
The excavations are being
conducted jointly by the Tel
Aviv University Institute of
Archaeology, the New Or-
leans Baptist Theological
Seminary, Baylor *Univer-
sity of Texas and the Petah
Tikva Municipality.

moving picture of immi-
grant life, illustrated with a
number of photographs and
fascimiles of documents
from the London experi-
ence.
The conditions it de-
scribes had a great many
parallels in American life,
as the author points out in
his introduction.

simply that the ashes of six
million of Israel's kinsmen
are part of the constitutive
cement on which the whole
structure rests.
Therefore, Israel's ex-
pulsion or suspension as
proposed from Jidda and
Kampala is - little short of
moral madness.
Israel would inevitably
have to divest herself of all
obligations arising from
United Nations resolutions
and arrangements, with a
consequent collapse of sta-
bility.
An extreme response
from the Americas and Eu-
rope and from courageous
African and Asian leaders
— a total refusal to have an-
ything to do with an organi-
zation that violates its own
law and- ethic — is neces-
sary. not so much for Is-
rael's protection as for the
defense of all nations
against the plunder of their
own ideals.

New Chemical
Prolongs Flowers

Vietnamese refugee Fong Kim Lee, 30, has bee 10h-
successful in her attempts to marry the Israeli father of
her two children. The father, who for 12 years ran a
nightclub and hotel in Saigon, and the Fongs fled desti-
tute on April 28, aboard one of the last planes out of South
Vietnam before the communist takeover. They are now
living in Beersheba, where the father, 40, has found
work — and where the wife and seven children he left
behind a year after he immigrated from Morocco also
live. Mrs. Fong says the local rabbinate has told her it
does not want to convert her. She adds that her attempts
to acquire Israel citizenship have gone unanswered. She
fears explusion when her three-month tourist visa ex-
pires shortly. • • • . .

JERUSALEM — Agrexco,
together with Hebrew Uni-
versity's faculty of agricul-
ture, has developed a chemi-
cal which is reported to
increase the life of a cut
flower by a number of days.
The new chemical is
called "floron" and consists
of sugar and other chemi-
cals which is put into the
stalk of the flower, before it
is packed. This chemical is
only activated when the
stalk of the flower comes
into contact with water in
the customer's house.
In the meantime. floron
has been used in the export
of miniature carnations,
and Agrexco officials claim
that is has increased the life
of the flower by at least five
days.

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