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November 14, 1975 - Image 50

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1975-11-14

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



THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

50 November 14, 1975

tt

TRU-KOSHER



ODDS NEWS! l a 2

Milliken Bond Dinner Planned

I Lewes* Prices in Town

An Oak Park man has
translated his memoirs of
the Holocaust and how his
family lived in Poland and
Russia during World War

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The first planning meeting of the Michigan - Israel
Bond Dinner honoring Gov. William Milliken was held
at the home on Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Frenkel to review
plans for the Nov. 25 event at Adat Shalom Synagogue.
Shown are, from left, Irving Belinsky; Joseph Jackier,
dinner chairman; Marvin Frenkel, chairman of Corps of
Patron-Hosts; Michael Arnon, president, Israel Bonds;
Kenneth Aird, vice chairman, Manufacturers Bank;
David Pollack, chairman, Greater Detroit Israel Bond
Committee; and Rober Ruch. Milliken will be presented
Israel's Prime Minister's Medal by Moshe Kol, Israel
Minister of Tourism.

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a

Sachs screening for the en-
tire metropolitan Jewish
community to be held 10
a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday at the
synagogue.
"The mathematics are
horrifying," said Rabbi
Groner. "In three previous
Tay-Sachs screenings to
date, 2,772 people were
tested. We turned up 126
carriers of the disease . . .
among that number, we
tested five married couples
where the woman was preg-
nant . . . three of the tests,
studies of amniotic fluid
. . . proved that the babies
would be born with Tay-
Sachs disease.

"The percentages are
such that if several
hundred young people of
marriageable age come
out for the screening, we
will turn up additional
Tay-Sachs carriers . . .
and possibly the fourth —
even the fifth — doomed
fetus."

make our
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Wool & Nylon
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6 to 16

Coolidge at 9 Mile
Oak Park

"Reflections: From a
Father to His Son Concern-
ing Events During World
War II" was written by Leib
Koller and translated by
I.B. Koller from the Yid-
dish.
The 28-page booklet was
written by the author be-
cause "I desire that my chil-
dren have an understanding
of life and death as we faced
them during the years of the
War."

Koller described the
family's uprooting from
their home in Dombrowa,
their life in Lemberg
(Lvov), being sent to Sib-

Disease Screening Sunday at SZ

"We're hunting for the
fourth, maybe even fifth"
Tay-Sachs afflicted baby,
said Rabbi Irwin Groner,
spiritual leader of Cong.
Shaarey Zedek, in announc-
ing the forthcoming Tay-

t io

Tay-Sachs is a genetic dis-
ease which singles out ba-
bies born to Jews of Eastern
and Central Europeean her-
itage. It is caused by the
absence of a particular en-
zyme, hexosaminidase (Hex
A), which breaks down fatty
tissues that collect in the
brain. Without this enzyme,
an apparently healthy baby
is stricken — at approxi-
mately six months of age —
by progressive loss of physi-
cal skills, blindness, mental
retardation and coma.
Death follows by the fifth or
sixth year of life. The prog-
ress of the disease is irrever-
sible.
The absence of Hex A
identifies carriers, who,
while not suffering the dis-

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Edward Hirsch Levi was
the first Jew to be appointed
Attorney General of the
United States; he was ap-
pointed by President Ford
in 1975.
World Over

Oak Parker Prints Memoirs
of Holocaust for His Family

ease themselves, can com-
bine with other carriers of
the opposite sex to produce
a Tay-Sachs baby.

A simple blood test —
quick and painless — can
be analyzed to provide pos-
itive proof as to the ident-
ity of a Tay-Sachs carrier.

Dr. Hyman S. Mellen of
Sinai Hospital of Detroit,
co-chairman of the commu-
nity coordinating commit-
tee of the Tay-Sachs Screen-
ing Program of
Metropolitan Detroit added
that:
"Carriers do not necessar-
ily forego having children. If
they mate with non-car-
riers, there is no danger of a
Tay-Sachs pregnancy. And,
if two Tay-Sachs carriers
mate, an amniotic fluid test
can safely and quickly de-
termine whether the baby
will have Tay-Sachs disease.
The mathematics of genet-
ics provides a 75 percent
chance that a baby born to
two Tay-Sachs carriers will
not have the disease . . . but
there is a 25 percent chance
that the baby will be
stricken. That is why the
screening is so important
for young Jewish men and
women of child-bearing age,
and for pregnant Jewish
women."
There is no charge for the
screening, although dona-
tions will be accepted to
help defray the cost of the
program. The screening
program is under the finan-
cial sponsorship of the Jew-
ish Community Foundation
(United Jewish Charities)
with the cooperation of the
March of Dimes.

Manischewitz Has
Foods for Hanuka

Hanuka comes early this
year, and many are plan-
ning holiday dinners and
parties.
Among the traditional
foods will be many Manis-
chewitz products, including
red borscht, gefilte fish and
crispy matzot. Manischew-
itz's new "souper soups," all
kosher and pareve include
Noodle Soup, Rice Soup and
Matzo Ball Soup, all packed
in clear glass jars.

eria by the Russian au-
thorities, and the harried
life and destruction of the
family's relatives during
the Holocaust.

THE
PIPPIN PUPPETS

He wrote, "We, who were
spared, are but a tiny rem-
nant of a once large family.
Barely and miraculously did
we survive to reach the
shores of this free land,
which we must now protect
from the onslaughts of so-
cial misfits, political dro-
pouts, anti-Semites, racists
and all other kinds of hu-
man filth.
"We must not allow them,
or anyone else, to thrust
upon this continent the de-
struction, havoc, human
suffering and large scale
misery that was inflicted
upon Europe by their pre-
World War II counter-
parts."

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