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June 08, 1979 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1979-06-08

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

16 Friday, June 8, 1919

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

B, German Group Establish

Diamond Setting
to the Trade

Human Relations Internship

Specialist in
brightcut work

ing to atone for the
Holocaust.
Nat Kameny, chairman
of ADL's program commit-
David WINSEN Co.
tee, announced that an
322 Michigan Bldg.
agreement had been en-
962-5220
tered into with Action Re-
conciliation Service for
Peace, "a German-based
group of idealistic young
people who volunteer their
services for social projects in
many countries in expiation
for the sins of Nazism."
He said that Albrecht
Thiemann, a 21-year-old
WILSON-CRISSMAN CADILLAC
minister's son, is already in
CALL BUS. MI 4-1930
RES. 642-6836
this country to begin a
I e
year's internship under the
XXXXXXXXXXXXXX X XXXXXXX XXXXX>O9C auspices of the league's
Center for Studies on the
X
Holocaust.
_ X
X Now at
In addition to learning
the skills and techniques of
X
X human relations by work-
X
ing - in the field with ADL
Zero Neckband Shirts
practitioners, Thiemann
X
100% Cotton
will be providing Ameri-
Solid & Stripes from $27.50
cans with "insights into the
Long Sleeves
31455 Southfield Road,
awareness and attitudes of
(between 13 & 14 Mile)
contemporary German
Phone: 645-5560
youth toward their nation's
Open 9-6 daily, Thurs. til 9
X Nazi past, as well as toward
and Sat. til 5:30 p.m.
current issues and prob-
lems,"-- according to
Kameny.
Thiemann, who is now in
)(
ample parking/credit cards accepted
New York City, will visit a
X
number of cities in the
5000600(XX )000<XXXX XXX)<XYXXXXXX United States to talk with
young: people, particularly
in the churches and schools,
about their responsibility
for promoting understand-
ing, friendship and peace
among all peoples.
For Thiemann, the ADL

NEW YORK — An in-
ternship program in huinan
relations has been estab-
lished by the Anti-
Defamation League (ADL)
of Bnai Brith in cooperation
with a German group seek-

Daily messenger service

1919 CADILLAC

ANDY BLAU

"Best Deal In Town"

StiAe?

(

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CJ F. Assists
Jackson Jews
With. Flood Aid

• custom made just for you
• laminates, glass, lucite, etc.
• tables, wall units, credenzas, etc.
• delightfully fine workmanship
• delightfully low prices

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JACISON, Miss. — The .
assessment of flood dam-
ages sustained by the
Jewish community of
Jackson, Miss., and the as-
sistance required has been
made by the Council of
Jewish Federations
through on-site inspection
by its staff and by leaders
and staff of the Memphis
Jewish Federation.
A total of 22 Jewish
families suffered major
damage to their homes, and
four offices of Jewish profes-
sionals and two business
sites were devastated, it
was reported.
Drawing on experience
gained assisting the Jewish
communities of Wilkes-
Barre and Johnstown, Pa.,
during severe flooding, CJF
arranged meetings between
Jackson's Jewish leader-
ship and the coordinator of
disaster relief of the Federal
Disaster Administration
Agency. At those sessions
the community was ap-
prised of the full range of
Federal assistance avail-
able to them, and the proce-
dures for obtaining it.
service
family
A
caseworker from the Mem-
phis Jewish Federation who
worked with the Jackson
community directly follow-
ing the flood has been re-
quested by council to return"
and provide further coun-
seling.

internship program is an
opportunity at expiation for
crimes committed long be-
fore he was born.
He joined Action Recon-
ciliation, he said, "not be-
cause we young Germans
born after the war are
`guilty,' but because Nazi
fascism and the Holocaust
are events in Germany's
history we cannot overlook
and which indeed com-
mands us,to work for peace."
"The rise • of new Nazi
groups in West Germany
reveals how much we still
have to accomplish,"
Thiemann said.
Action Reconciliation
Setvice for. Peace was
founded in 1958 by mem-
bers of the Confessing
Church of Germany, a seg-
ment of the Protestant
Church which rejected the
Nazi ideology and state con-
trol.
Among the first projects
were the rebuilding of
churches destroyed by the
Nazis in The Netherlands,
Norway and France. Later
the group undertook
humanitarian projects in
Great Britain, Israel, Po-
land, and the United States.

Arab Jerusalem?

CAIRO (ZINS) —
President Anwar Sadat of
Egypt recently -told Cairo
University students that
Arab claims to "Arab'
Jerusalem" are historic and
the Arabs will never give up
those claims.
Sadat criticized his oppo-
nents, saying a stubborn
Arab posture in 1948 and
1967 led to Israeli "expan-
sionism." He says this ex-
pansionism has been ended
by the Israeli-Egyptian
treaty.

Elderly Studies

NEW YORK (JTA) "-
Yeshiva University's
Gerontological Institute is
studying why medical stu-
dents avoid specialties
which bring them into con-
stant - contact with older
patients and is doing re-
search into the causes of
senile dementia.
Undergraduates engage
in frank dialogues with el-
derly students in a sociology
program and several elderly
are being trained as
museum guides.

Israel Denies Naval, Air
Attacks on Refugee Camps

TEL AVIV (JTA) — A
military spokesman
branded as totally false a
report from Beirut that Is-
raeli naval units aided by
helicopters attacked Tyre
and the nearby Rashidiyeh
refugee camp, killing 15
people.
The spokesman said no
naval or air units were in
action against targets in
Lebanon. Israeli artillery
fired on terrorist positions
in south Lebanon after sev-
eral Katyusha rockets were
fired at settlements in
Upper Galilee. It was re
ported that an Israeli army
patrol discovered a large
terrorist arms cache on the
western slopes of Mt. Her-
mon.
Meanwhile, the Security
Council met on a complaint
by Lebanon alleging an es-
calation of Israeli attacks,
but adjourned without
reaching a conclusion.
Council President
Vasco Futscher Pereire
announced that private
consultation among
members would con-
tinue.
Addressing the Council
earlier, Israel's Ambas-
sador Yehuda Blum said his
country recently received
information "based on reli-
able sources" that the
Palestine Liberation
Organization has decided to,
step up violence in south
bae ncona
h .
LeH
rged the terrorist-
groups under the leadership
of the PLO with responsibil-
ity for the chaos in southern
Lebanon. "There are some
2000 armed PLO terrorists
south of the Litani River,"
Blum said, who constitute a
threat to the citizens of Is-
rael, to the villagers in
south Lebanon and to the
troops of the United Nations
Interim For& in south
Lebanon (UNIFIL).
Blum also said that there

No power is strong
enough to be lasting if it
labors under the weight of
fear.
— Cicero

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Unpopular War

NEW YORK (ZINS) —
The American Jewish
Committee has released a
poll showing that Israel
would be supported by ,37
percent of the American
public if a new war broke
out' between Israel and
Egypt.
Some 14 percent would
back Egypt, 24 percent said
neither country and 25 per-
cent were not sure.

are 10,000-12,000 terrorists
north of the Litani River. Is-
rael's actions "are specifi-
cally directed against con-
centrations of terrorists in
Lebanon," he stated.
Ambassador Ghassan
Theni of Lebanon ac-
cused Israel of escalating
its attacks against targets
in south Lebanon and ID
violating Lebanon's sov-
ereignty. He said the Se-
curity Council should put
an end to Israeli "viola-
tions of Lebanese sover-
eignty."
The Sedurity Council
voted 14-0 to extend
the mandate of the United
Naticm-s Disengagement
Observer Force (UNDOF)
on the Golan Heights for
another six months, until
Nov. 10. China did not par-
ticipate in the vote. There
were no abstentions.
In Washington, the State
Department expressed deep
concern over "the continu-
ing violence in southern
Lebanon" and specifically
condemned the Christian
"militia forces in the border
area" for shelling Palesti-
nians. It called "urgently"
for a cease-fire.

1

©

FREE ALTERATIONS

4

0
BLUE JEANS
0
ARMY PANTS
PAINTER PANTS
0
OVERALLS
0
T-SHIRTS
SWIM TRUNKS
UNDERWEAR
FLANNEL PAJAMAS 8
SOCKS
0
HIKING BOOTS
0
SNEAKERS
o
RAIN BOOTE
0
0
PONCHOS
HOODED, ZIPPERED
SWEAT SHIRTS
NAME TAPES
*********************

SLEEPING BAGS
DUFFEL BAGS
DITTY BAGS
SEA BAGS
MUSSETTE BAGS
RUCK SACKS
BACK SACKS
ARMY BLANKETS
CANTEENS
FLASHLIGHTS
CAMP KNIVES
DRINKING CUPS
TOOTH BRUSH HLDRS.
FOOT LOCKERS

8

8 0

*
WE ALSO CARRY
*
CAMP TAMARACK
*
*T-SHIRTS AND SWEATSHIRTS *
g *********************
v,
0000000000000000000000000000

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