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

February 04, 1977 - Image 13

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1977-02-04

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

Friday, February 4, 1977 13

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Flint Area News

Plan
COMMUNITY I Israeli Youth
to Visit in Flint
CALENDAR
The Flint Jewish Com-

I

Sunday — Temple Beth
El Family Education Bar
Mitzva Session, .6 p.m.,
temple. Monday—Hadas-
sah board meeting, 12:30
p.m.; and Community
Education Committee
meeting, 8 p.m., Cong.
Beth Israel.
Temple
Tuesday
Beth El Sisterhood meet-
ing, noon, temple; FJCC
Israel Teens Planning
mmittee, 10 a.m.;
until office; and FJCC
eadership Development
Committee meeting, 8
p.m., home of Mrs. and
Mrs. Leonard Shulman,
1809 Lynbrook.
Wednesday — FJCC
Jewish Family-Service
Committee meeting,
noon, Council office; and
Camp Ramah parents
meeting, 7:15 p.m., home
of Frank Kasle.
Thursday — Women's
America/4 ORT board
meeting, noon.

.

Guitarist Appears
at Services, Oneg

Temple Beth El, Flint,
will host Debbie Fried,
man, guitarist and folk
singer, at services 7:30
p.m. Feb. 11 and at the
oneg Shabat afterward.
The community is in-
vited.

I

Flint Obituaries

SARAH BECKER, 65,
5103 Calkins Rd., died
Jan. 21. Survived by a
sister-in-law, Regina -
Smith; a niece, Doreen;
and a nephew, Phillip
Smith.

U.S. Students
Study in Israel

NEW YORK— A group
of 40 high school juniors
and seniors from corn-
munities throughout the
United States will leave
for Israel Tuesday for a
six-week cultural and
educational exchange.
They will visit schools
in different localities and
live with Israeli families.
They will travel and meet
with Israeli youth, tell
them about American
Jewish life and learn
about life in Israel, it was
announced by Dr. Ab-
raham dP. Gannes, direc-
tor of the Department of
ducation and Culture of
Zionist
World
e
rganization-American
Section, and Don Adel-
man, director of the
American Zionist Youth
Foundation.

Amin Ranks
Number Two

LONDON — The two
million annual visitors to
Madame Tussaud's wax-
works chose President Idi
Amin of Uganda as the
second most hated man in
the world, living or dead;
Adolph Hitler was

n u m

her one.

munity Council will host
two members of the Is-
raeli high school delega-
tion March 6-13. The
committee to plan for this
program will meet 10 a.ni.
Tuesday in the Council of-_
fice.
The visitors will be
guests of Flint families,
and will visit high
schools, youth groups and
community organiza-
tions during their stay.
The program is coordi-
nated by the Consulate
General of Israel.

Hadassah to Meet

Keren Or Group,
Hadassah, will hold its
monthly meeting 8 p.m.
Tuesday in the home of
Florence Berner, G-6212
W. Court St. The guest
speaker will be Shirley
Humphreys, an interior
decorator.

Flint People
Make News

Louis D. Sill will per-
form in the Flint. Com-
munity Players produc-
tion of "The Sunshine
Boys" through Saturday.

UJA Event Planned

Flint UJA Campaign
workers will "Give a Day
to UJA" on Sunday be-
ginning with breakfast at
9:30 a.m. at the Council
office, followed by solici-
tations.

Photomontage ,
Topic of Volume

The tragic and revo-
lutionary second through
munist. Revolution and
tury, the Nazi era and the
Hitler role, the Com-
munist Revolution and
the USSR are among the
reconstructed photo-
graphic gems in "Photo-
montage," a collection of
174 artworks representa-
tive of the art form
founded by the anti-art
and anti-bourgeois Berlin
Dadaists including John
Heartfield, Hannah
Hoch, Raoul Hausmann
and George Grosz.
Photomontage, the
manipulated photograph,
is created by breaking up
images and using odd
juxtapositions of frag-
mented photographs and
other materials to pro-
, duce artwork which was
used to adorn posters,
book jackets, .magazine
covers and stage sets.
Edited by Dawn Ades,
the Pantheon Books-
published volume offers
commentaries on some of
the works contained the-
rein and an annotated list
of illustrations.
An art history teacher
at the University of
Essex and at various art
schools, Dawn Ades has
contributed essays to var-
ious books and is the au-
thor of "Dada and Sur-
realism."

Adviser for Vance
Former Detroiter Named Russian
serve d as president of gineering, having been

WASHINGTON (JTA)
— Marshall D. Shulman,
director of the Russian
Institute at Columbia
University in New York
City, has been named
special consultant on
Soviet affairs to Secret-
ary of State Cyrus R.
Vance.
Shulman. is a consul-
tant to the U.S. Arms
Control and Disarma-
ment Agency and an ad-
visor both to the Depart-
ment of Commerce on
east-west trade and the
U.S.-USSR Trade and
Economic Council. The
latter body has been
campaigning to eliminate
the Jackson-Vanik pro-
viso in the U.S. Trade Act
and opposes legislation to
cause an easing of Soviet
policy toward Jews and
other Soviet minorities
wishing to emigrate or
practice their cultural
principles.
Shulman, who served
as special assistant to the
late Secretary of State
Dean Acheson in 1950-53,
was born in Jersey City,
NJ in 1916 and studied at
Michigan, Chicago, Har-
vard and Columbia Uni-
versities. He came to De-
troit with his parents at
the age of 20.
Upon his graduation
from the University of
Michigan Dr. Shulman
briefly served on the re-
portorial staff of the De-
troit News. He was the
speech writer for Presi-
dent Truman while serv-
ing on Acheson's staff and
was believed to be one of
Truman's favorites on the
White House staff.
He is the son of Mrs.
Harry Shulman who was
an organizer and active

Cong. Shaarey Zedek and chief engineer for Ham-
was nationally prominent mond Standish Co. here
as a refrigeration en- for more than 30 years.

WATCH REPARING
JEWELRY REPAIRING
ENGRAVING
IMMEDIATE REPAIR SERVICE
ON PREMISES

.

0

• )-

111111.11

LARGEST STOCK OF WATCH BANDS

ce

cg

Established 49 years

MARSHALL SHULMAN

at The Evergreen Plaza, Evergreen .& 12 Mile

leader in the Home Relief
Society. His father, the
late Harry Shulman,

559-9630

Daily 10 to 6, Thurs. & Fri. 10 to 9

BINGO

NOW THAT I HAVE YOUR ATTENTION

ON THE FIRST ON YOUR
BLOCK TO GET A GREAT

ART MO RAN DEAL

"Perk up' yo
coffee ma yvm
•with MAXIM

Maxim tastes so close to
ground you'd swear
it

perks! Maxim tastes like fresh perked coffee
because it starts with fresh perked coffee—then freeze-dried
into big dark chunks of real perked coffee. That's the
magic of Maxim—tastes so close to ground you'd
swear it was fresh perked.

Certified
Kosher

M H O,

411 ,411.

GENERAL FOODS

AL STEINBERG

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan