16 Friday, October 21, 1918
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
BETH YEHUDAH SCHOOLS
64TH
ANNIVERSARY DINNER
to be held at
THE FAIRLANE MANOR
19000 Hubbard Drive, Dearborn
(across from the Fairlane Town Center)
.
Co-Chairmen
SUNDAY EVENING,
NOVEMBER 19, 1978
Golden Torah
Award Recipient
Re-issued as a paperback,
after its re-appearance in
four editions since 1965,
"One Generation After" by
Elie Wiesel (Simon and
Schuster Pocket Books) re-
constructs the author's es-
says dealing with experi-
ences after the Holocaust
and his appeals to the gen-
eration after for an identifi-
cation that strengthens
Jewish values.
By means of dialogues, in
an appeal to the youth, con-
fronting an East German
leftist in another definitive
letter, Wiesel relates to a
new generation in his pre-
sentations of the factual re-
Guest Speaker
Senator Lowell Weicker
Cocktails at 6:00 p.m. Dinner at 7:00 p.m.
For Reservations, Please call: 557 - 6750
FOUNDERS
David B. Holtzman
Marvin Berlin
Harold Beznos
Max Biber
Ivan Bloch
Stuart Bloch
Jack J. Carmen
Ernest L. Citron
Irwin I. Cohn-
Dr. Arnold Eisenman
Dr. Elmer Ellias
Dr. Joseph Goodstein
George Hill
David B. Holtzman
Arnold Joseff
Mrs. Morris Karbal
Abe Maltzberg
Joseph Nusbaum
Jack Peitz
Alvin Reifman
Alex Saltsman
Robert A. Schwartz
I. William Sherr
The Stewart Family
In Memory of
Dorothy Stewart
Max Stollman
Phillip Stollman
Marvin Tamaroff
Mrs. Morris Yassky
Dr. Arnold Zuroff
SPONSORS
Peter Heiman
David Hermelin
Honigman Foundation
In Memory of
Sarah Honigman
Alex Joseph
Frank W. Kerr Company
Eugene Kraus
Daniel A. Laven
Midwest Clayman
Company, Inc.
government. They met with
former Foreign Minister
Yigal Allon at his home in
Ginossar on the Sea of
Galilee. Allon said his con-
cern that the U.S. might see
the Camp David accord be-
tween Israel and Egypt as a
model for total Israeli with-
drawal from other occupied
territories prompted him to
abstain in last month's
Knesset vote to ratify the
Camp David agreements.
The Byrnes arrived in Is-
rael Thursday accompanied
by Frank Lautenberg, na-
tional president of the
United Jewish Appeal, and
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Fox,
Jewish community leaders
in New Jersey.
Sunday Special
Opens Campaign
garding the challenges to
Jews after an era of tragedy.
Included in his essays are
descriptive afterthoughts
regarding Israeli experi-
ences after the wars of 1948,
for independence, and 1967.
Wiesel's effective
means of tackling the is-
sues of the world war and
the Israeli conflicts lends
impressive timeliness to
his essays.
A generation after the
Holocaust the Nazi crimi-
nals, the guilty, pose as if
they were saints, as if they
knew nothing about the
brutalities. This, too, is ex-
posed in the reprinted
paperback, giving the vol-
ume its added value.
Social Workers
NEW YORK (JTA) —
More than 40 stars and Discuss Aliya
celebrities, appearing in a•
NEW YORK — The Is-
four-hour television spec- rael Association of Social
tacular Sunday will Workers will hold a
spearhead some 8,000 vol- regional conference on "So-
unteers expected to partici- cial Work in Israel" Nov.
pate in a four-day "Mobili- 11-12 at the Lincoln Square
zation '78" in support of the Synagogue in New York.
United Jewish Appeal- Social service professionals
Federation of Jewish considering career reloca-
Philanthropies Joint Cam- tion in Israel have been in-
paign.
vited to attend.
The volunteers, working
Representatives of the
in shifts until Wednesday at Isreal Association of Social
six telephone centers in Workers will provide indi-
New York City, Westches- vidualized employment
ter and Long Island, aim to counselling for social work-
complete over a quarter of a ers with MSW and BSW de-
million phone calls asking grees who are interested in
for contributions to the an- pursuing social service
nual UJA-Federation drive. career opportunities in Is-
Bess Myerson, consumer rael.
advocate and television per-
For information, call the
sonality, and Hal Linden,
Israel Association of Social
star of the top-rated "Bar- Workers, (212) 752-0600.
ney Miller" series, will be
the hosts on the Sunday Jewish Archive
evening special to be shown
BUDAPEST (JTA) — A
in New York.
Jewish archive established
5 Killed, 11 Hurt recently in the north Hun-
town of Eger, has be-
in Bus Accident garian
come an attraction for vis-
JERUSALEM (JTA) — itors, especially tourists
Five persons were killed from the West. The archive
and 11 severely injured in a was organized by the Hun-
traffic accident in the Negev garian Chief Rabbi Sandor
over the Sukkot weekend. Scheiber who unearthed
Police said a truck carrying birth registers and an or-
about 50 passengers from namental "Chevra" —
Ramat Gan on a sightseeing Jewish community book —
trip lost its brakes on a steep dating from 1843.
grade and careened into a
The "Chevra," written in
deep gully at Maale Ak- Hebrew, establishes the
rabim on a lonely stretch of basic rules of conduct for the
community.
desert.
•
GUARDIANS
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Allan
Norman Adelsberg
Beckwith-Evans
In Memory of
Meyer Weingarden
Henry Dorfman
Kenneth Fischer
Sidney Fischer
Nathan I. Goldin
Martin Goldman
Samuel Hechtman
JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Gov. Brendan Byrne of New
Jersey, on an eight-day visit
to Israel, heard two leaders
of the Labor opposition ex-
press misgivings over what
they viewed as possible
negative developments for
Israel emerging from the
Camp David accords.
Byrne met Friday with
former Premier Yitzhak
Rabin, who cited the
"spotty" record of Egypt in
honoring treaty commit-
ments in the past and
seemed to imply that the
U.S. was leaning too heav-
ily on the Israeli 'and Egyp-
tian negotiators.
The governor and his
wife, Jean, were visiting Is-
rael as guests of the Israeli
`One Generation After' Now
a Simon-Schuster Paperback
I. William Sherr
Alvin Reifman
NJ Governor Hears Labor
Opposition to Camp David
Irving I. Palman
Dr. Lloyd J. Paul
Julius Rotenberg
Solomon Rothenberg
Alvin Spector
Lawrence J. Traison
Mel Wallace
Harold Warren
Irving Weiss
Eugene M. Zack
Samuel N. Zack
.
'41.AZA
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