12 November 7, 1975

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

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Names & Symbols

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4-2..11.1

T4
E

L

OPEN
A' ,MON- SAT

rniPLACE

9:30-5:00

North Park Plaza , Room 120
17117 W. Nine Mile Road
Southfield, Michigan 48075
(313) 5596140

■

Jewish Book Fair Opening Saturday

The 24th annual Jewish
Book Fair will open at 8:30
p.m. Saturday with an ad-
dress by Israeli Ambassa-
dor to the United Nations
Chaim Herzog.
Herzog, author of the re-
cent best-seller "War of
Atonement," will lecture in
the Center's Aaron DeRoy
Theater on "Israel and the
United Nations." There is no
charge.
An architect of Israeli
military intelligence, Her-
zog served twice as director
of military intelligence'
(1948-50 and 1959-62). He
was defense attache at the
Israeli embassy in Washing-
CHAIM HERZOG
ton (1950-56), and served as
first military governor of ing himself as Israel's
the West Bank of Jordan in leading military and polit-
1967.
ical commentator. During

Upon retiring from the
army, Herzog headed an
industrial group in Israel,
at the same time establish-

the Yom Kippur War, he
broadcast on radio and
television approximately
15 times a day.

The author of several
other books, Gen. Herzog
was awarded an Honorary
Knighthood by Great Brit-
ain in 1970.
Most of the events in the
week-long Book Fair pro-
gram are free. For informa-
tion about any program, call

the Center Cultural Arts
Department, 341-4200. Mrs.
Grace Colton is chairman of
Book Fair and Mrs. Phyllis
Schwartz is vice chairman.
Events for which there is a
charge or reservations are
required are noted in the
Book Fair calendar below:

SATURDAY

8:30 p.m. — Gen. Chaim Herzog, topic: "Israel and the
United Nations,"
Aaron DeRoy Theater.

SUNDAY

10 a.m. — Children's programs by arrangement.
11 a.m. — Speaker for high school and college students,
Shiffman Hall.
2 p.m. — Children's theater: "All-of-a-Kind Family Comes
to Book Fair, DeRoy Theater (charge).
2 p.m. — Pre-school story hour, Library.
2:30 p.m. — Ruth Rubin, "The Story of Yiddish Folk Song,"
Room 384.
8:30 p.m. — Sam Levenson, "Grandma and Grandpa Are
Freedom Fighters," DeRoy Theater and Shiffman Hall.

MONDAY

10 a.m. — Anne Bernays, "Mothers and Daughters," DeRoy
Theater.
Noon — Sisterhood Day luncheon, Shiffman Hall (charge
and reservations).
1 p.m. — Dennis Prager, "The Jewish Enemies of the Jew-
ish People," DeRoy Theater.
8 p.m. — Lucy Dawidowicz, "Confronting the Holocaust,"
DeRoy Theater.

TUESDAY

0 ,10'ce

10 a.m. — Midge Decter, "Whatever Happened to the World
Famous Jewish Family?," DeRoy Theater.
Noon — Hadassah Education Day luncheon, Shiffman Hall
(charge and reservations).
1 p.m. — Frank Gervasi, "Future of the Middle East: Is-
rael's Continued Existence," DeRoy Theater.
8 p.m. — Beate Klarsfeld, "One Woman's Moral Crusade
Against Nazism," DeRoy Theater.

0 111 ; 1, o>
s °

t4P`

WEDNESDAY

9:30 a.m. — Continental breakfast, Room 202, (charge and
reservations).
10 a.m. — Dorothy Goldberg, "The Jewish American in
Public Life," DeRoy Theater.
Noon — Mini-luncheon, Shiffman Hall, (charge and reser-
vations).
1 p.m. — Prof. Henry L. Feingold, "The Jews are Alive and
Well and Living in America: A Bicentennial View," De-
Roy Theater.
8 p.m. — Yuri Suhl, "For Life and For Honor — The Story
of Jewish Resistance," DeRoy Theater.

,

Business
Checking Accounts:

THURSDAY

9:30 a.m. — Continental breakfast, Room 202 (charge and
reservations).
10 a.m. — Rabbi Lawrence Kushner, "Kabala in an Ameri-
can Idiom," DeRoy Theater.
Noon — Brunch, Shiffman Hall (charge and reservations).
1 p.m. — Zelda Popkin, "Who are We — Where Did We
Come From — Where are We Going?," DeRoy Theater.
8 p.m. — Rabbi Jack Riemer, "Wisdom for the End of Life:
Whenever it May Be," DeRoy Theater.

only $1.00 a month
at NBS
or FREE!

SATURDAY

Nov. 15

8:30 p.m. — Yiddish Theater Evening with Ginetta La-
Bianca, Herschel Gendel and the Music Study Group Cho-
rus under Don Frohman, DeRoy Theater (charge).

When your business checking account's with National Bank of Southfield, you
pay at most a SI.00 monthly statement charge — write as many checks as you like,
make as many deposits as you like, and no minimum balance. If you keep 5200 .
or more in your NBS account, then you get free checking. (Check printing
is charged at our cost.)

SUNDAY
Nov. 16

Now compare ours with a business checking account that charges, let's say,
10c for every check, 20c for every deposit, and 2c for each check deposited plus
a statement charge. Over an average month, that can add up fast — S10, S15,
'
even S20 or more. An NBS business checking account also gives you a monthly
statement, and it's itemized with each deposit made and each check paid. And
you needn't carry a big checking balance to offset charges. It's 51.00 or nothing.

You get a lot more for a lot less when you check with National Bank of
Southfield. So come in and see us about your new account today. It's simply
good business.

NATIONAL
BANK OF
SOUTI 11-7ELD

A subsi diary of NBS Fmanctd1 Corp.

Member FDIC / ,Member Federal Reserve Systen

• 29201 TELEGRAPH ROAD** at 12 Mile Road
• 17000 WEST 8 MILE ROAD, Southfield Office Plaza
• 15565 NORTHLAND DRIVE, Northland Point
• 20000 WEST 12 MILE ROAD** at Evergreen Road
• 27100 LAHSER ROAD** at 11 Mile Road
•
• 6070 WEST MAPLE ROAD** at Farmington Road

Offering
Complete
Trust
Services

HOURS:
9:30 to 4:30 Daily
(except Friday),
9:30 to 6:00 Friday

"'These offices open
Saturday, 9:30 to 4:30

ALL DRIVE-IN WINDOWS
open 8:00 to 4:30

PHONE: 354-4000

NILE' Neighborhood banks that are big an d siren g

.

10 a.m. — Children's programs by arrangement.
10:30 a.m. — Prof. Joseph Gutmann, "Moses Jacob Ezekial:
Artist, Patriot, Jew," Room 384.
2 p.m. — Children's Theater: "All-of-a-Kind Family Comes
to Book Fair," DeRoy Theater (charge).
2-p.m. — Pre-school story hour, Library.
2:30 p.m. — Yehuda Elberg, Yiddish lecture, "The People of
the Book," Room 384.
4 p.m. — Miriam Schneid, Hebrew lecture, "A New Light on
the Poetry of Tschernichowsky," Room 384.
7:30 p.m. — Esther Broner, "The Stolen Legacy and Inter-
ruption of Ritual Between Mother and Daughter," DeRoy
Theater.

1,000 Participate in Koach Mission

NEW YORK (JTA) — A
record-breaking 1,000 young
Jewish leaders from vir-
tually every corner of Amer-
ica, embarked on the United
Jewish Appeal Young Lead-
ership's Koach Mission of
Strength Thursday.
"The timeliness of the
Koach Mission and the unity

and strength which it repre-
sents, cannot he under-

stated in light of recent
n
s I (11..it.s. - ..e.n.fan 4 t4uu

from the world stage of the
United Nations, which ma-
lign Israel and the Jewish
people," said Frank R. Lau-
tenberg, LTJA's general
chairman.
The largest mission in
WA's history will run 10
days. Once they arrive in
Israel, the group will be di-
vided into smaller operat-
ing units or mini-missions,
joining together only for

