THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 44 Friday, October 15, 1976 The past is for inspira- Honey and all sweet thing:- make a man's eye tion, not imitation, - for con- tinuation, not repetition. — lightsome. ill ■ —The Tal.T.4,1 Israel Zangw •• ■ ■ ■ ■ r IMM.4111.041 1.1 0■ .) 1,4•1 41.1111110.41 111. CATERING SUPREME from ANTIPASTA To ENGLISH TRIFLE GOURMET FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICES. IN HOME OR HALL DANIEL WARTEL — SUPREME CATERING 1 869-0720 838-2233 ■ 1.1••• MEM. 1 ■ 11.11111111.1411•111. 0 ■ 11•11MI. 1• ■■ • HINI.01111111• • Color PASSPORT PHOTOS while you wait Rabbi Who Rescues Rev. Moon Disciples Due at Adat Shalom Rabbi Maurice Davis, founder and president of Citizens Engaged in Reuniting Families, Inc., will speak 8 p.m. Monday at Adat Shalom Syna- gogue, sponsored by the sisterhood and men's club. His topic will be "Cults and Our Chil- dren. - Rabbi Davis and his or- ganization have been re- sponsible for rehabilitat- ing more than 80 young adults from the effects Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church. He also is responsible for reuniting these youth with their families. Downtown Farmington Center 474-7762 1 1 11 111111 111 11111 1111 11 11 1 1 11 1 411111M. •••111. •• ■ •• 94ditestut 9e4et 546)4 ••11111. ••••• ••■ 41111O• VEIN. •11•11. 4111MD• •■•■• 41•11. 41111. .1111111. 4•111. 40. 4N/I• •1111M• .0111•• is happy to announce that .1•111. IOW .11•10 •IMIN• 411111. •1111M• VAL .1111r ••■ •nwo 41•11. AMIN. .1111111. •flINIP ••1•1• aria, •••• ■ Is Back• and Will Be Pleased To See Her Old Friends •1111/1. .11111. QM. .11• ■ •• ■ •• ■ • 41110. AMP. ••••• 4111.• AMID, •■■ AND. 24950 Coolidge •■ ••• (in Dexter Davison Center) AIM •• ■ ••• For APPT. .1111111. 4•11.• 411•11, 548-3747 ••••• •11•11. 4•111. You're invited . • • to a Fall Fashion Show * at studio of walleovering-t.ise. Come see the latest, most exciting concepts in wallcoverings and designer fabrics. There will be two showings daily. *Show Special!... 20% OFF: all walleoverhags. f1 ant and 1 pm 19 Wednesday, October 20 1 pm and 7:30 pm 11 am and 1 pm fof Thursday, October 21 11 am and pm Events: Friday, October 22 Calendar Tuesday, October 0-0-cjaffiv) Roberta Davidson. Interic‘Designer Trudy Sabourin R.S.V.P. 543-2270 Owned and Operated by Jerry Moss. Chuck Gayer, Tom Jehl 2718 W. 12 Mile Road, Berkley, MI. 48072 • Phone (313)' 543-2270 Noted Israeli Fashion Houses to Exhibit in Israel Bond Event RABBI DAVIS This Week's Radio and Television Programs 23352 Farmington Rd. oaso sisted by Mrs. Fred Ben- deroff, Mrs. Robert Katchke, Mrs. Robert Dunsky, Julius Wainer and Ralph Woronoff. Sis- terhood president is Mrs. Daniel Knopper. Men's club president is Dr. Harry Maisel. The community is in- vited. For information, call the synagogue 85 1 ,, 5100. Jewry on the Air Bel-Crest Studio •••111. Rabbi Davis is Nite pres- ident of the Westchester (N.Y.) Board of Rabbis and co-chairnian of the Westchester Task Force. He is a member of the executive board of the New York Federation of Reform Synagogues and a columnist for the Jewish Post and Opinion. Program chairman Dr. Harvey Nussbaum is as- VISTAS OF ISRAEL: 6:30 a.m. Sunday, WOMC-FM (104.3), Israel culture and literature, a calendar of events in the Jewish community fol- lows. * * * MESSAGE OF ISRAEL: 6:30 a.m. Sunday, WXYZ (1270) and 10:30 p.m. Sun- day, WDEE (1500), an ad- dress to the Jewish com- munity. * * * RELIGION IN THE NEWS: 6:30 a.m. Sunday, CKWW (680). * * * SPECIAL: 7 a.m. Sun- day, Channel 2, "Israel." * * * ETERNAL LIGHT: 8:25 a.m. Sunday, WJR-FM (96.3), a topic of interest to the Jewish community. * * * COFFEE WITH HY: 9 a.m. Tuesday, WIID (1090), interviews and features- of Jewish in- terest, with Hy Schenkman. * * * SHEDORY ISRAEL BE-DETROIT: 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, WIID (1090), an all-Hebrew program of Israeli music, news and features from Israel, with Eli Ben-Rey. * * * 'YIDDISHE SHTUNDE: 9 a.m. Wednesday and Friday, WIID (1090), an all-Yiddish program of music, news, interviews and other features, with Lou Levine. * * * ISRAEL PHILHAR- MONIC: 8 p.m., Wednes- day, WQRS-FM (105.1), Part VIII of a 13-week series featuring perfor- mances by the Israel Philharomonic Or- chestra. • This Gideon Oberson ensemble is one of many Israel-made fashions to be shown at the Women's Divi- sion of Israel Bonds all-Israel fashion show to take place Oct. 28 at Cong. Shaarey Zedek. Among the collections will be items from Israel's major fashion houses: Beged Or, Gottex, Maskit, Niba, Rikma and from noted Israel designers, including Finy Litersdorf, Gideon Oberson, Rifka Shafir and Stephan Braun. Fashions by Ivor Adler, Kav Le Kav, Nirkam and Papco, also will be fea- Community Council tured. There is an admission charge. For information, call the Israel Bond office, 968-0200. HIGHLIGHTS: 9:45 a.m. Sunday, Channel 2, Prof. David L. Lewis 'of the University of Michi- gan will speak on his book, "The Public Image of Henry Ford, - in the second of a two-part Seminar Planned series. Members of the Jewish * * * Council THE SHALOM SHOW: 5 Community Executive Committee p.m. Sunday, CJOM-FM and chairmen of its stand- (88.7) Hebrew and Yid- ing committees and sub- dish music, features, in- -committees will attend an terviews, comedy and all-day executive com- community calendar, mittee seminar to be held - with Steve Cheifetz. Oct. 31 at the Labor * * * Zionist Institute. LUBAVITCH JEWISH The seminar is de- HOUR: 10:30 p.m. Sun- day, WNIC (1300) and signed to acquaint new WNIC-FM (100), rabbini- members of the executive cal, remarks, Jewish committee with the structure, function and music. * * * activities of the Jewish INTERVIEW IM- Community Council. PROMPTU: 11 p.m. Sun- Albert D. Chernin, day, WDEE (1500), and executive vice-chairman 12:15 p.m. Wednesday, of the National Jewish WQRS-FM (105.1), an in- Community Relations terview with Nazi-hunter Advisory Council, will de- Simon Wiesenthal, con- liver the key-note address ducted by. Eileen Berris. on "The Democratic Pro- * * * cess in the Jewish Com- ROZHINKEg-. MIT munity and the MANDLEN: 9 a.m. Mon- Decision-Making Pro- day and Thursday, WIID , cess." An afternoon ses- (1090), Israeli and Yid- sion will consist of work- dish music, news inter- shops on various aspects views, recipes and other of Council activity. features, with Jules Ab- Attendance is by invi- rams. tation .only. • * IF NOT. NOW:: .7;30' p.m. Correction 'Monday, WDET-FM (101.9), Dr. Jay Stern, The new year greeting superintendent of the for Mr. and Mrs. Henry United Hebrew Schools, (Frieda) Faigin should will discuss "Current have listed Mrs. Faigin's Problems Facing Jewish first name as Frieda. The Education in Detroit and. Jewish News regrets the in the U.S." error. Aliyah Refused by Soviet Jews JERUSALEM (ZINS) — An internal document of the Aliya Department of the Jewish Agency re- ports that 40 per cent of the Soviet Jewish immi- grants who left the USSR in July preferred to re- main in Vienna and re- fused to continue on to Is- rael. From the same source it is learned that 1,595 new immigrants arrived during July 1976, com- pared with 1,895 in July of the previous year. The decline in immigra- tion is particularly strik- ing with respect to new- comers from the Soviet Union and North America. At the same time, however, there has been increased immigra- tion from West Europe, especially from France and England. Since January, 1976, a total of 10,687 olim have arrived compared with 10,764 in the same time span a year ago; and 19,786 in the same period two years ago, in 1974. The same report also notes that during July of this year 167 families who had left Israel expressed their intention of return- ing home. Brooklyn Hasidim Argue Voting Right WASHINGTON — Brooklyn's Hasidic com- munity sought in United States Supreme Court to shoW that its voting rights had been uncon- stitutionally abridged by a 1974 NeW York State reapportionment plan designed to assure the voting rights of blacks and Puerto Ricans. The redistrictinc, redistricting effec- tively moved the community to different State Senate and St Assembly districts , put portions of it into two Senate and two Assembly districts. The Justice Depart- ment, New York State and the NAACP all sought to refute the community's arguments and to show that if the Hasidim won, the effect would be to diminish the voting strength of non- whites. In an unusually long session, the Court heard attorney Nathan Lewin, representing the Hasidim, also assert that the reapportionment hat - the effect of undercutting efforts to achieve an in- tegrated society, en- couraging voting on the basis of race: