. 1 8 Friday, July 29, 1977 it. 1 1 I. 3 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 1 CATERING SUPREME i Parent-Child Program Aiding Israeli Settlers i (Continued from Page 1) from STEAK SICILIANO to FISH WELLINGTON 41 ■4 )■$ . 1 =4■ 4011........... ■■ •■■■ ■•■■•••■.■ 414.04 1 ..... ■ 104.... GOURMET FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICES IN HOME OR HALL percent of the parents needed, to be persuaded to entrust their children to the program." Ilana, a 25-year-old Tel Avivian of Iraqi origin, ac- DANIEL WA RTEL — SUPREME CATERING ;341-3004 838-2233 PRETEND IT'S SEPTEMBER. BUY A 1978 CAR. We're now accepting orders for all 1978 U.S. cars. Call for information about our low-profit prices. D. A.B. DETROIT AUTO BROKERS, INC. 26400 W. 12 Mile Rd. at Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, Mi. 48034 Telephone (313) 358-2100 as, quired her skills at the Hebrew University in Je- rusalem where she received a BA in sociology and edu- cation. That was in 1975. That same -year Ilana was chosen to participate in the first class of the Dr. Jo- seph J. Schwartz Graduate Program for Training Direc- tors of Early Childhood Pro- grams for Children and their Parents in Community Centers. The Schwartz Pro- gram was created five years ago by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) in Israel and the Israel Association of_ Community Centers. It is jointly sponsored by the Paul Baerwald School of Social Work and the School of Education of the Hebrew University. JDC continued to support the pro- gram, together with UNI- CEF, the Ministry of Educa- tion, and the Israel Associ- ation of Community Cen- ters. MI I "Our biggest problem in Taanach," noted Ilana, "was to get the parents to realize the importance of our parent-child day care program. When they went out to work on the farms the mothers saw nothing wrong in leaving their in- fants and toddlers in the care of older children who usually had to be absent from school for this pur- pose, or even in leaving the youngster alone, in his crib or play pen. Working out of a village office with a secretary, Haim is responsible for the Center's social and cultural activities for "his" farm- ers. There are music groups and individual in- strument lessons,- theatre groups, sports teams in basal" ketball and soccer. There i "Today we care for 60 tod- a mobile library of somMir dlers in our three centers. •5,000 volumes which comes We plan to expand this serv- by once in two weeks; there are hobby groups like ice in the future." ceramics clubs, as well as help in English and math Every morning at 7 a.m., for schoolchildren. 60 boys and girls aged 11/2-3 arrive at the Taanach Cen- "In Taanach we have a ters in a strange proces- social gap in microcosm," sion: they are brought, and concludes Ilana. "People later picked up, in a convoy all started the same way of big clumsy-looking trac- here. They received the tors, as often as not driven same number of acres, the by the mother. - same houses, the same con- for work. But knowl- For six hours every day, ditions edge, education, and ability except-the Sabbath, the tod- vary. dlers romp among chairs and tables, listen to stories, "Today there are social play with puzzles and and economic gaps between blocks, "ride" trucks, settlements like Barak and "keep house," beat on pots Adirim: Through the par- and cymbals in their own ent-child programs for in- "orchestra," as they devel- fants and toddlers, in the op essential foundations for branches of the Community learning processes. Center, we can have infer- community cooperation, in- Many come from houses tergration and growth." where a toy never crossed the threshold. Each day an- JDC has stimulated ,and other parent, on a rotation supported the creation of basis, remains at the center twin parent-child day-care to watch the ,staff work centers in cooperation with with the children and the 'Corporation of Commu- under the supervision of the nity Centers and the Min- staff, begin to engage in istry of Welfare in other learning activities together,. parts-of Israel. Five more with the children.- are being planned, most of "About 60 percent of the them in development towns. 7 if •s A m erica nJewry Quiz Center Lit1C0111 50 Annual 4t, taikDOESS SOSO 1011 100 00 le I-ke Diddle Didd the fiddle • • • lump y cat and the your SAVINGS will tA00141 • to the Lincol0: Center at Greentie1d • Oak Park 101/2 adults, mostly women, in five of our villages are illit- erate," says Haim Sorrero, director of the Taanach Community Center. SALE HOUR S: P 7 MOO INIDNIGIO ter Lincoln Cen's JULY 29th FRIDP1 , 5 BIG hours during 5th Annual Midnight Madness Sale! Save tor 29 and ilddie thru July Candy•• Baskin Robbins Join 25 us great stoes! er •BaftOn'S a fil Checker Bar B-O • Carl's Kosher Meats &Poultry - •• Chatham Super Nlarket • Uncoln Big Boy Adler &Reese asia FUTS pplies •• Fan t Nosherie Sy Store Draft Otlice Su Cunningham's Drug Shop • Magic 'Touch Beauty Salon BriCker • Furs by Something New • Metropolitan Optical Modern Bakery • Peerless Clea4ers • Radio Shack Lincoln Shitrnan's • Sibley's Shoes • Winkeiman's ing Studios l Cover Richard's WO Boys & Girls Wear • Beth's Bath Shop Standard Pickles and Ice Cream Maternkty Wear This quiz was prepared from material offered in courses sponsored by the. American Jewish Committee's Academy for Jewish Studies Without Walk (Copyright 1977, JTA, Inc.) Match Numbered Names To Appropriate Lettered State- ments a) New York Police Chief who claimed that 50 percent of all criminals in New York were Jews. b) His rejection by a Saratoga Springs hotel provoked a nationwide debate over social anti-Semitism. 19 c13). He defended Leo Frank on a charge of murder in d) He was accused of a ritual murder in 1911. e) Author of "Foundations of the 19th Century," a philos- opher of "Aryanism." f) His public agitation led to the reopening of the Dreyfus investigation. g) This Orthodox rabbi led the fight against "Blue Laws" in New York State. h)- Author of "Judenstaat." i) This historian wrote extensively about the importance of "status insecurity" as a source of social anti-Semitism. j) This Populist leader wrote the infamous anti-utopian novel, "Caesar's Column." 1) Theodore Herzl 2) Ignatius Donnelly 3) John Higham 4) Bernard Drachman 5) Thofnas Bingham 6) Emile ZOla 7) Houston Stewart Chamberlain 8) Joseph Seligman 9) Louis Marshall 10)Mendel Beiliss ANSWERS g !S (q (2 !9 !/., (a !OI (P !6 (3 !8 (q !S . - • JEWISH NATIONAL FUND '. 4. ' lig" "Ti fii? -22100 Greenfield Rd. .. Oak Park, Mich. 48237. 968-0820 Z OFFICE HOURS: MON.-TOURS. 9 TO 5 r .,„ FRI. 9 TO 4 Closed Sun. July & Aug. """;''''''"°""