100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

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

December 31, 1976 - Image 17

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1976-12-31

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

I

ill

Youth News

BNAI MOSHE Talit
and Tefilin Club (ages
13-18) will meet 8:30 a.m.
Sunday in the chapel. The
regular program will be
followed by a special open
board meeting at 1 p.m. in
the youth lounge. New
group advisor is Paul
Levine. For information
contact group president,
Rick Behar, 557-8551, or
the youth lounge, 548-
3123.
* *
BNAI * DAVID youth
will go on their annual
Camp Tamarack winter
weekend retreats in
January. Youth in grades
7-12 will go to Camp
Tamarack in Ortonville
Jan. 21-23, while children
in grades 3-6 will hold
their camping weekend
Jan. 28-30. Tobogganing,
hiking and cultural and
religious activities will
highlight the weekend.
For information, call the
synagogue youth-line,
557-8325.
Atid senior group

MOVIE
GUIDE

Americana Complex

I, 2, 3, 4

Greenfield N. of 9 Mile 559-2734

4 THEATERS IN ONE BUILDING

Wed. MATINEES ALL
THEATERS-1 Show only
at IA-41

(grades 9-12) will go to a
pin-ball arcade Sunday,
meeting 2:30 p.m. in the
youth lounge. Refresh-
ments will be served. The
group basketball team
will play in the inter-
congregational basket-
ball league at the Jewish
Community Center that
evening, leaving the
synagogue at 7 p.m. For
reservations, contact ad-
viser Hartley Harris,
968-3563.
Masada (grades 7-8) is
planning a special meet-
ing for members and their
friends who are in-
terested in attending the
group's Tamarack winter
weekend Jan. 21-23. In-
formation on the
weekend will be given
out, and plans will be
made for activities. For
information, contact ad-
viser Danny Kaplan,
398-7422 (evenings).

Ha-Or (5-6th graders)
will meet 1:30 p.m. Jan. 9
for a short Tamarack
meeting, for all young-
sters who plan to attend
the weekend retreat Jan.
28-30. Immediately fol-
lowing, the group will go
to a pin-ball arcade. Re-
freshments will be
served. For information,
contact adviser Steve
Kideckel, 968-1765.
For information on
youth activities at Bnai
David, contact the
synagogue youth-line.

"A STAR IS BORN"

"NICKELODEON"

"THE ENFORCER"

"7 PERCENT SOLUTION"

BERKLEY

12 Mile-Coolidge
LI 2-0330

BARGAIN NIGHTS SW NM FRI. ALL SEATS
$1.00. No cargoes. Cargoes good Sat cagy with
regular adriassios price.

Held Over 2nd Week
WEEKDAYS, INCLUDING SAT.

OPEN 7:00

Happy New Year

Charlton Heston &
David Janssen in
"TWO MINUTE WARNING" (R)
at 7:20 & 9:25

Sun. Open at 1 pm
"TWO MINUTE WARNING"
at 1:20 3:20 5:20 7:20 & 9:25.

Township Defers
Jan, 1 Swear-In

LAKEWOOD,
N.J.
(JTA) — For the first
time, the Township
Committee will hold its
annual Jan. 1 swearing-in
ceremony at night.
Traditionally, the
ceremony is held New
Year's morning but be-
cause it falls on a Satur-
day this year the commit-
tee agreed to hold the
ceremony after the con-
clusion of the Shabat in
deference to the Jewish
residents here.
About 10-15 percent of
Lakewood's 40,000' resi-
dents are Jewish.

ALL SEATS $1.25 AT ALL TIMES

PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS

AN ALBERT S.RUDDY PRODUCTION

S TARRING

BURT REYNOLDS
"THE LONGEST
YARD"

CO S TARRING

PLUS VaircT oTRAD

PRODUCED BY ALBERT S. RUDDY

ROBERT ALDRICH
SCREENPLAY BY TRACY -KEENAN WYNN
STORY BY ALBERT S. RUDDY
MUSIC SCORED BY FRANK DEYOL
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER ALAN P HOROWITZ

DIRECTED BY

a paramount picture
In Color

ea))

COLOR By TECHNICOLOR

RESTRICTED

Id nx a P4W ■ Ca la. dqn

WASHINGTON THEATRE

426 S. Washington, Royal Oak - 541-0082

4 sr

• •

Friday, December 31, 1976 17

German Jewish Body Urges Curbs on Neo-Nazi Groups

BONN (JTA) — The
Central Council for Jews
in Germany has urged
federal and state au-
thorities to tighten the
laws relating to public
gatherings in order to
prevent abuses 14 neo-
Nazi groups.
The Council's state-
ment last week referred
to the recent right-wing
rally in a Munich beer
hall where anti-Nazi ac-
tivist Serge Klarsfeld was
severely beaten and he
and his wife, Beate, were
forcibly removed.
Dr. Gerhard Frey,
chairman of the right-
wing Deutsche Volksun-
ion which staged the
Munich rally, has
brought charges against
the Klarsfelds.
He accuses them "and
other gang members" of

"forming a criminal group,
provoking and resisting
the leadership of the meet-
ing and causing public dis-
order and assault."
The Central Council
also protested against a
decision by the Hamburg
Senate to grant convicted
war criminal Wilhelm
Rosenbaum a six-month
leave from prison for
medical reasons.
Meanwhile, Jewish
demonstractors against
the resurgence of Nazism
in Western Europe were
manhandled by neo-
Nazis in the small Bel-
gian town of Braine-le-
Comte last week.
Several Jewish demon-
strators were slightly
wounded when members
of the neo-Nazi Flemish
organization, "Vlaamse

Militante Order,'" at-
tacked them with \iron
bars and sticks.
The Jewish demon-
strators, who came to pro-
test against the publica-
tion of Nazi literature by
one of the village printing
presses, had marched
through the city first and
laid a wreath on the Tomb
of the Unknown Soldier.
In West Germany, a re-
cent decision by the city
council of Altenkirchen to
erect a memorial to a
World War II SS tank di-
vision has raised a storm
of protest from Jewish
and other anti-Nazi
groups. The council is ex-
pected to reconsider the
plan.
It had voted unanim-
ously in November to
honor the

"Hohenstaufen" tank di-
vision. Members of the
ruling Social Democratic
Party (SPD) claimed later
that they were not aware
that the "Hohenstaufen"
was an SS outfit until
they read about it in a
magazine published for
SS veterans.
But the division was
locally recruited and its
SS affiliation was widely
known in the Altenkir-
chen area, the protestors
said.
They said it was uncon-
scionable that Altenkir-
chen has yet to erect a
memorial on the site of
the local synagogue de-
stroyed by the Nazis on
"Kristalnacht" in 1938
but is ready to provide
public land to honor an SS
division.

Palestine Rights
Committee in UN
Expansion Sought

UNITED NATIONS
(JTA) — In a last minute
move before the General
Assembly adjourned,
Yugoslavia introduced a
draft resolution calling
for the enlargment of the
20-member Committee on
the Exercise of the Ina-
lienable Rights of the
Palestinian People by
adding three non-aligned
countries to the commit-
tee — Nigeria, Mali and
Guyana.
These three and 16
other members of the
committee have no dip-
lomatic relations with Is-
rael.
Israel protested to the
UN Secretariat about the
Yugoslavian move, which
involves reintroducing
Item 27 — Question of
Palestine — as contrary
to the UN Charter. As-
sording to diplomats
here, the Yugoslavian
draft is inspired by the
Palestine Liberation Or-
ganization which seeks to
enhance the credibility of
the committee by widen-
ing its base.

SOMERSET MALL

Where the Unusual is the Usual
Big Beaver Road at Coolidge, Troy

OM. • 4•11•11111

4■11

■ 11,

011:01) 1!5 ■ 1 S

Since

1905

I

VIallcovering Si. Decorating

MONTREAL (JTA) —
Mrs. Charles Balinsky,
national president of the
Canadian Hadassah-
WIZO, announced that
the "Canadian Hadas-
sah-WIZO (Montreal)
Zimriya Choir" will par-
ticipate in the World Fes-
tival of Choirs in Israel.
July 3-16.
The 45-voice choir will
join with 30 choirs from
all parts of the world in
sharing their cultural
and musical achieve-
ments. The Zimriya —
World Festival of Choris
is held every three years.
This is the first time in
25 years that a choir has
been sent from the east-
ern region of Canada.
Leading the Canadian
choir are Marian
Schauber
and
co-
conductor Joseph Milo.

I

SPECIA L
At.t.CO
AND ■ IV I OE,
TREATI

SPLES

Canada Hadassah
Joins Choir Fest.

Two are better than
three. Woe to the one who
disappears and never re-
turns. •
—The Talmud

11

TO



I

1 1 0

Off 011. SO. RV. PROS Plus,

31111111161%.

.

. • • . • 40% *
ny
3 NO • seen
30%
• • • . • . •
30°Io•
wEill sh 1" Verticals • • • . . . • . . . • . . . • . .

011

S
25°I's•
01.311
1.0111B
Imperial Woven Blinds
Woods. . . • • . ••. • • " . . . . . . . . 25% *
. W • • ds • • • . . . . . . . 25 %*
Mal l DO Woods
• • • • . . . . . available.
Woven
lmar
in
oo
De
height
Macrame
lob We will be added. lestallgot
In

0 HER 5TOCK VIEMS
AN
EXTRA
LOW
PRICES

M O ST

2506 O

I

OFF OUR EV ER AR E NOT INCtUDEO C O M E
ill ROIL
SPEC\ MS
0Di ViTst quality

010 EXPIRE5
WO C00011
SA.% SAO VIOL

1•• ■ •• • ■■■•

41.01•0

■allo ••■••

mason amnia

10010% West 01
Values
to Va. A
owe
00 low Oa.
Vasstiott
now
A one
FA
3206 GEtP1111
01'000 Vette ftg. 471-1991.
HAtEI PARK
. JOHN1 ft.. WO North
t4100.,I1111..V11. S'10 -010
241 1 '2 Mlle, 398-7036.
-5. Itte.WeA.,Sat. 910-510
of 9'.

at% stalk1S12.

•■ •

da■

a

.

-MI

- a. aim!. *MO

-S

ammi1 amp.

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan