THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
26 Friday, June 29, 1919
Walter Sh apero Is Elected Temple Beth El on President
the boards of Planned
Walter Shapero was J.
elected president of Temple
Beth El at the 129th annual
meeting of the congrega-
tion. Other officers are:
Marvin H. Goldman,
Josephine Bloom and Paul
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no sabbath calls
Dizik, vice presidents;
Milton H. -Dresner, trea-
surer; and Flora Winton,
secretary.
The following were
elected to the board of trus-
tees for a three-year term:
Stanley J. Clamage, Irving
L. Goldman, Arnold Kauf-
man, Alfred Lindenbaum,
Barbara Marcuse, Leslie
Rose, Robert E. Schwartz,
Deborah Schmier, Merton
J. Segal and Frederick R.
Winkelman.
Gerald Rowin was elected
to the board for a two-year
term; Dr. Lawrence E. Lee
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WALTER SHAPERO
was elected to the board for
a one-year term.
Shapero is a lifelong
member of Temple Beth
El. He was confirmed at
the religious school of the
temple and was
graduated from its high
school. He has held var-
ious positions as a trustee
and officer of the congre-
gation.
Shapero was graduated
from the University of
Michigan and received his
LLB degree from the Uni-
versity of Virginia Law
School, where he was
elected to the editorial
board of the Virginia Law
Review and managing
editor of the Virginia Law
Weekly. He was a law clerk
to Judge Henry M. Butzel
and an adjunct professor at
the University of Detroit
Law School. He is chairman
of the Detroit Bar Associa-
tion Library Committee.
A past president of the
Detroit Chapter of the
American Jewish Commit-
tee, Shapero is on the na-
tional AJCommittee board
of governors. He also serves
S ynagogue
fl;rIL‘
VI
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VIII III
IV
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Services
ADAT SHALOM SYNAGOGUE: Services 6 p.m. today
and 9 a.m. Saturday. Melissa Okun and Michelle Ol-
Karbal to Study
son, Bnot Mitzva. (Brian Benderoff, Gregg Leshman
and Jonathan Warren became Bnai Mitzva at June 23
Computer Role
Shabat services.)
in Jewish Life
CONG. BETH ABRAHAM HILLEL MOSES: Services
7:15 and 8:15 p.m. today. Audra Gendelnaan, Bat
Albert E. Karbal, director.
Mitzva at late services. Services 9 a.m. Saturday.
of the Learning Resource
Richard Berlinberg and Martin Manheimer, Bnai
Center at Cong. Shaarey
Zedek and nationally-
Mitzva.
known Jewish media spe- CONG. BETH ACHIM: Services 6 p.m. today and 8:45
a.m. Saturday. Brian Kraft, Bar Mitzva. Amy Mindell,
cialist, will go on sabbati-
Bat Chayil.
cal after 25 years of service
to the congregation. He also TEMPLE BETH EL: Services 5:30 p.m. today and 11 a.m.
Saturday. Rabbi Hertz will speak on "Franz
has received a fellowship at
Rosenzweig — German-Jewish Philosopher," the first
the Institute for Computers
sermon in a series entitled, "Five Who Turned to
in Jewish Life, a de-
Judaism." Howard Bisgier, Bar Mitzva.
partment of the Skokie
Yeshiva and the University BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE: Services 8:30 p.m. today.
Rabbi Wine will speak on "Young and American."
of America in Skokie, Ill.
Julie Lynn, Bat Mitzva.
Karbal will spend the
CONG. BNAI MOSHE: Services 7 and 8:15 p.m. today.
1979-1980 school year at
Rhonda Strauss, Bat Mitzva at late services. Services
the institute studying the
8:45 a.m. Saturday.
applications for computer-, DOWNTOWN SYNAGOGUE: Services 8 a.m. Saturday.
assisted instruction,
Rabbi Gamze will speak on "Are We Losing the Art of
computer-managed instruc-
Respect?"
tion and computer- TEMPLE EMANU-EL: Services 8:15 p.m. today. Rabbi
supported learning aids.
Rosenbaum will speak on "Who Is Chosen?" Gilbert
Colvin, Bar Mitzva.
ISRAEL: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Loss
Dinner, Auction TEMPLE
will speak on "Reflections on Leaving for Israel." Jodi
at YI Greenfield
Mangen, Bat Mitzva. Services 11 a.m. Saturday. Alan
Starr, Bar Mitzva.
-,Young Israel of Green-
field will sponsor its annual TEMPLE KOL AMI: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Nancy
Hecker, Bat Mitzva.
auction and a dinner 5 p.m.
LIVONIA JEWISH CONGREGATION: Services 8 p.m.
July 8 at the synagogue.
today. Rabbi Gordon will speak on "Korach, Wealth
At 6:30 p.m. movies and
and Ancestry." Services 9 a.m. Saturday. Michael
cartoons will be shown in
Engel, Bar Mitzva.
the youth lounge for chil- CONG. MISHKAN ISRAEL NUSACH H'ARI: Services
dren.
9 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Gottlieb will
speak on "A Mezuza on the Door."
kitchen
Cameras,
appliances, watches, tools CONG. SHAAREY ZEDEK: Services 6 p.m. today and
8:45 a.m. Saturday. Paige Wedgle and Lawrence
and all types of merchan-
Shulman, Bnai Mitzva.
dise and gift certificates will
be auctioned off. There is a CONG. T'CHIYAH: Services 10 a.m. Saturday, conducted
by Milton Glick.
charge. Ruvi Singal is
YOUNG ISRAEL OF OAK-WOODS: Services 7:25 p.m.
chairman.
today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Steven Katz, Bar Mitzva.
Regular services will be held at Cong. Bais Chabad of
Farmington Hills, Cong. Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield,
Cong. Beth Isaac of Trenton, Temple Beth Jacob, Cong.
Beth Shalom, Cong. Beth Tefilo Emanuel Tikvah, Cong.
has suggested reading Beth Tephilath Moses of Mt, Clemens, Cong. Bnai David,
for students; only one re- Cong. Bnai Israel of Pontiac, Cong. Bnai Israel-Beth
fers to resistance; (one Yehudah, Cong. Bnai Jacob, Cong. Bnai Zion, Cong. Dovid
uses the term, 'genocide,' Ben Nuchim, Cong. Shaarey Shomayim (10 Mile Jewish
and one the term, Center), Cong. Shomer Israel (18995 Schaefer), Cong.
`Holocaust'); three do not Shomrey Emunah, Young Israel of Greenfield and Young
mention the Nuremberg
trials, and none refers to Israel of Southfield.
ADL Says Textbooks Lack
in Coverage of Holocaust
NEW YORK (JTA)— Not
a single textbook in current
use by high schools in the
United States adequately
covers the subject of the
Nazi Holocaust, according
to a report released by the
Anti-Defamation League of
Bnai Brith, which spon-
sored an "analytical exam-
ination" of 43 such texts.
"The failure is quantita-
tive as well as qualitative,"
said Theodore Freedman,
ADL's program director, in
presenting the study to the
ADL's 66th National Corn-
mission meeting in New
York. The study was con-
ducted during the past year
by Glen S. Pate, an assis-
tant professor in the de-
partment of secondary edu-
cation at the University of
Arizona.
Pointing out that even
the five boOks with the most
extensive coverage on the
subject were found wanting,
Freedman declared that
"this woeful deficiency
spurs us to raise serious
questions about the kind of
education our children are
receiving."
He went on to say that
"even among these five —
the best of the lot — none
deals satisfactorily with
the causes of the
Holocaust or the role of
the United States; none
the survivors."
The study by Pate was
made under the auspices of
ADL's Center for Studies on
the Holocaust.
In Amsterdam, a Gallup
Poll on the viewing of
"Holocaust" on TV in Hol-
land has shown that over
half of all Dutch persons of
12 years and over saw one or
more installments.
The frequency was
strongest among teenagers
from 12 to 19 years and
smallest among those of 55
years and older. Also, those
between 20 and 24 watched
little of the series.
In a related develop-
ment, several baseball
bat-wielding members of
an anti-Nazi organization
broke up a "secret meet-
ing" of American Nazi
Party members Sunday
at a suburban Cleveland
hotel.
A group calling itself the
Anti-Nazi Terrorist Organ-
ization called a Cleveland
television station through-
out the day to take credit for
the attack.
Temple Beth El Obtains Flag
Flown Over Maalot School
Rabbi Dannel Schwartz of Temple Beth El, left,
accepts the flag flown over the school at Maalot dur-
ing the Palestinian terrorist raid on the school in 1974.
The Maalot City Council donated the flag to the high
school department of the temple earlier this year to
demonstrate the solidarity between the children of
Maalot and the children of America. The inscription
beneath the flag reads: "This flag flew over the Maalot
school on May 5, 1974. On this date, the school was the
scene of the murder of 20 youngsters by Arab ter-
rorists." Pictured with Rabbi Schwartz is Ami Spek-
tor, Michigan district manager of El Al Airlines, who
delivered the flag to the temple.
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June 29, 1979 - Image 26
- Resource type:
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- Publication:
- The Detroit Jewish News, 1979-06-29
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