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January 20, 1978 - Image 36

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1978-01-20

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

36 Friday, January 20, 1978

YOUNG ISRAEL TEENS
of the National Conference
of Synagogue Youth will
-sponsor a bowl-a-thon Sun
day, meeting 1:15 p.m. at
Young Israel of Greenfield.

LENNY.
LIEBERMAN

Orchestra
399-1301

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Jewry on the Air

Youth News

Proceeds will benefit the
Torah Fund. For informa-
tion, call Elyse Adler, 967-
3489.
"YIT Room" will meet 7
p.m. Tuesday in the Young
Israel of Oak-Woods youth
office. Refreshments will be
served. Admission is free.
The group will attend a
concert of The New York
School of Jewish Song Boys
Choir Jan. 29 at the Oak
Park High School audito-

Under Supervision of
The Council of Orthodox Rabbis

999 Glatt Kosher Delicatessen

STRICTLY KOSHER
MEAT MARKET

13831 W. 9 Mile Rd. , Oak Park

543-7092

69°pkg.
KISHKA
69 06 oz. pkg.
BOLOGNA
$1 1912 oz. pkg.
HOT DOGS
$1 49 1/2 lb.pkg.
BAKE 'N' FRY
55°Ib.
CHICKEN WINGS
79°Ib.
CHICKEN
$1 49 1b.
WHOLE BREAST OF BEEF

CONG. BETH ACHIM

presents

Thurs. Nite at the Movies

8:00 P.M. Jan. 26, 1978

- "HILL 24 DOESN'T ANSWER"

rium. For reservations, call
Cheryl Ginns, program
chairman, 559-1704.
Teens age 13-17 interested
in joining may call Janet
Fink, 967-3073.
* * *
BETH ABRAHAM HILL-
EL MOSES' Machor Youth
Group will hold a general
membership meeting noon
Sunday in the youth lounge.
Participants are requested
to bring a dairy lunch. The
group will go rollerskating
at the Ambassador Roller
Rink following the meeting.
There is a charge. Drivers
are needed. For information
and reservations, call the
Hebrew school, 851-6880, or
adviser Andrea Rogoff, 531-
1418.
The Dor Hadash Teens
Basketball team will play
the Adat Shalom Synagogue
team 5:15 p.m. Sunday at
the main Jewish Commu-
nity Center complex. The
team will play Beth Shalom
6:15 p.m. Jan. 29. Basket-
ball practice meets 5:45
p.m. Thursdays at Ealy Ele-
mentary School. For infor-
mation, call Danny Minkus,
851-2628.
Dor Hadash Teens will
hear a representative of the
Jewish Welfare Federation
10 a.m. Sunday, in the music
room. "Federation Serv-
ices" will be the topic of
discussion. Members of the
Judaica class are invited.
The group will hear a con-
cert Jan. 29 featuring the
Kol Yisroel group and the
New York School of Jewish
Song Boys Choir. Youth
Shabat will be marked by
services and luncheon Feb.
4. For information, call Ar-
lene Mainster, 851-9459. For
information on Beth Abra-

This motion picture is an accurate and
powerful expression of how Israel came
into being. Also conveys the necessity of
Israel being able to stand alone in pro-
tecting its existence.

Afterglow cafe style
• A Chance To Schmoos

\\W I,

WI ?

SAVE! " SAVE!
BUY DIRECT

Runaway Shelter
Seeks Volunteers

FROM THE

and Visit with your friends

IMPORTER

ADMISSION $1.00

SEYMOU:R.
KAPLAN
and Co.

George J. Rossman Chairman

Co Chairperson

IMPORTER AND CUTTERS
OF FINE DIAMONDS

Mrs. Bernard (Freda) Whiteman
Stewart Silverman

30555 Southfield,
Suite 100
645-9200

-

ham Hillel Moses youth ac-
tivities, call Denise Fru-
man, adviser, 354-6184, after
6 p.m.
* * *
BNAI DAVID Atid senior
youth group (for teens in
grades 9-12) will conduct its
second annual Tamarack
Winter Weekend today
through Sunday in Orton-
vine. Outdoor tobogganing
and hiking will be combined
with Shabat services. The
cultural theme is "Assimila-
tion of the Jew in America."
The bus will leave the syna-
gogue at 1:15 p.m. today
and return at 3:30 p.m. Sun-
day.
The Atid executive board
appointed Bonnie Gould cor-
responding secretary. The
group's basketball team will
play its next game in the
Intercongregational basket-
ball league Jan. 29, meeting
7:15 p.m. at the synagogue.
For information, contact ad-
viser Hartley Harris, 967-
0735.
Junior congregation will
hold weekly Shabat youth
services at 10 a.m. Saturday
during the Tamarack winter
weekend. Story Hour will
gather for youth age 4 to 7
with new leader Wendy
Greenspan. Children age 8-
10 will meet in the_ choir
room, while youth age 11-14
will conduct their services
in the chapel.
Talit and Tefilin Club will
not meet Sunday, but will
resume at 9 a.m. Jan. 29 for
young people, age 13-17.
Bowling follows services
and breakfast.
Registration is still avail-
able for seventh and eighth
grade youth who wish to
attend the Feb. 10-12 winter
weekend at Camp Tama-
rack. For information, con-
tact adviser Danny Kaplan,
398-7422.
For information on youth
activities at Bnai David,
call the synagogue youth
line, 557-8325, or library,
557-8211.

I

The Sanctuary, a feder-
ally funded runaway shelter
located at 249 W. 10 Mile,
Pleasant Ridge, is seeking
volunteers.
Prospective volunteers
are invited to a winter ori-
entation to take place 7 p.m..
Jan. 29 at the shelter. For
reservations by Jan. 27 or
information, call the shel-
ter, 547-2260.

JANUARY SAVINGS 20% to 35% OFF

STOREWIDE SALE

e jewelers

wideRbau

Mon. thru Sat.: 10-6
Thurs. to 9 pm

MasterCharge
Visa

thru 1 /31

Fine Jewelry

Designers a

356-2525

29173 Northwestern & 12 Mile
(Franklin Shoring Plaza)

Watch Repair

Established
1925

Expert Jewelry Repair
on Premises

MESSAGE OF ISRAEL:
6:30 a.m. Sunday, WXYZ
(1270) and WRIF-FM (101)
and 10:30 p.m. Sunday,
WDEE (1500), a message to
the Jewish community.
* -* *
RELIGION IN THE
NEWS: 6:30 a.m. Sunday,
CKWW (680).
* * *
JEWISH COMMUNITY
HIGHLIGHTS: 9:45 a.m.
Sunday, Channel 2, Dorothy
Harwood. head of the Nee-
dlethreaders, will describe
craft objects created by the
group.
* * *
LUBAVITCH JEWISH
HOUR: 11 p.m. Sunday
WNIC (1300), and WNIC-FM
(100), rabbinical remarks,
Jewish music.
*
YIDDISHE SHTUNDE: 9
a.m. Monday, WIID (1090),
an all Yiddish program of
music, news, interviews and
other features, with Lou Le-
vine. Diane Levine preents-
a Jewish community calen-
dar.

* * *

COFFEE WITH HY: 9
a.m. Tuesday, WIID (1090).
Interviews and features of
Jewish interest, with Hy
Shenkman.

* * *

SHIDUREI YISRAEL
BE-DETROIT: 9:30 a.m.
Tuesday. WIID (1090), an
all-Hebrew program of Is-
raeli music, news and fea-
tures from Israel, with
Joshua Tabak.

Ephraim Cross,
Defended Jewish
Students at CCNY

NEW YORK—Dr. Eph-
raim Cross, a professor
emeritus of Romance lan-
guages at City College of
New York, died Jan.- 15 at
age 84.
Dr. Cross was one of four
members of the Romance
language department who
accused the department's
chairman, Dr. William E.
Knickerbocker, of anti-Sem-
itism in 1945 in withholding
language-proficiency
awards - from Jewish stu-
dents. Dr. Knickerbocker
was cleared after three in-
vestigations, but stepped
Anwn as chairman in 1950.

AL NAFTAL'S- Jewish
Theatrical Program : 1 p.m.
Thursday, WMZK-FM (98),
entertainment.

MOTIF: 9 a.m. Friday,
WIID (1090), "Impressions
of a Journalist in Ismailia,"
Barbara Katchke interviews
Hy Shenkman.

As the length of a tree's
branches depend on its
roots, so right words depend
on a man's good sense.
— Ibn Gabirol

NBC Will Have
Holocaust Series

NEW YORK (JTA)—An
eight-hour drama on the
Holocaust will be televised
nationwide by NBC-TV in
April.
While the exact dates for
the four-part series have not
yet been 'announced, it is
tentatively scheduled for
the latter part of April,
around the Passover holi-
day.

Egypt Orders Six
Navy,, Missile Craft
From the British

LONDON (JTA)—The lat-
est order for six navy mis-
sile craft will bring Egypt's
arms purchases in Britain
to nearly one billion Pounds
Sterling in the past four
years.
The new order, worth 150
million Pounds Sterling, is
for advanced fast patrol
boats to be built by Vosper
Thornycroft. It was con-
firmed on the eve of Prime
Minister James Callaghan's
talks in Aswan with Presi-
dent Anwar Sadat at the end
of last week.
Callaghan was preceded
in Egypt last week by Brit-
ain's Defense Minister Fred-
Mulley who signed a memo-
randum of understanding
with the Arab military in-
dustries organization for
joint production in Egypt of
anti-tank rockets. The Arab
company is financed by
Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the
United Arab Emirates. -
Talks are slso well ad-
vanced on the supply and
manufacture in Egypt of
British Lynx helicopters.

Exhibit Shows Vienna History

VIENNA (JTA)—An exhi-
bition staged by the Vienng
Provincial Archives proves
that Jews had a highly re-
spectable and important po-
sition in medieval Vienna.
The exhibition, The Jews
of Vienna in the Middle
Ages, also shows that the
flourishing life of the Jewish
community was exti-
nguished by a pogrom or-
dered by Duke Albrecht V,
in which almost all Vienna
Jews were killed and the
rest banned from the city.
The first Vienna Jew who
is known by name of Shlom,
produced coins for Duke

Leopold V in the last decade
of the 12th Century. Anothe .
Jew, Teka, lent Duke Leop-
old VI money in 1725 to
conclude a peace treaty
with Hungary.
The--Vienna ghetto, in the
Middle Ages, included a
synagogue, a hospital and a
ritual bath. The Jewish
cemetery was outside the
city walls. The Jews were
not only traders, but also
financiers and local offi-
cials, the exhibition
They played an important
part in the medieval tax
policy, as they had to pay
special taxes on all loans
they granted.

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