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July 13, 1979 - Image 45

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1979-07-13

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

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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Israeli Air Cadets Due Here

Eight Israeli air cadets
will be hosted by the Michi-
gan Wing, Civil Air Patrol,
this summer as part of the
International Air Cadet Ex-
change program. CAP
Major Rebecca Leib has
been selected as the project
officer to coordinate their
visit.
The young men are mem-

bers of the Gadna-Avir, an
air training part of the sec-
ondary school curriculum in
Israel available by special
request. They study a basic
military course, which in-
cludes hand-to-hand corn-
bat, with an emphasis on air
power and practical
technology. They were
selected on a competitive

Windsorite Aids Hebrew U.

Jake Geller, Windsor
Chapter chairman of the
Canadian Friends of the
New University, re-
ct.. , ed a donation from Joe
Flagg, a retired Windsor
businessman.
A native of Poland, Flagg
founded Essco Stamping
Products, Ltd. in Wondsor,
in 1950, and the Lustro
Steel Products Co. in
Brampton, Ont. Both firms
are suppliers of metal
stampings and assemblies
to the automotive and ag-
ricultural industries in
Canada and the United
States.
He retired in 1973 and is a
member of Bnai Brith
Lodge 1011, a charter

Penalties Urged
for Vandals

GELLER, FLAGG
member of Temple Beth El
in Windsor and has served
on its board in various
capacities.

Divorced, Young Widowed
Focus of SPACE Discussion

SPACE, a service for
widowed, separated and di-
vorced persons, will hold its
weekly drop-in discussion
group 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the National Council of
- Jewish Women offices,

Syme to Head
Education Unit

L

NEW YORK — Former
Detroiter Rabbi Daniel B.
Syme, director of education
for the Union of American
Hebrew Congregations, has
been named national
chairman of the Coalition
for Alternatives in Jewish
Education.
The coalition, composed
of more than 1,100 Jewish
laypersons and professional
educators from the Conser-
vative, Orthodox, Recon-
structionist and Reform
movements, was founded in
1975.
The 1979 annual confer-
ence, to be held on the cam-
pus of Rutgers University in
New Brunswick, N.J., Aug.
23-28, will be co-sponsored
by the Board ofJewish Edu-
cation of Greater New York.
Some 1,000 persons are ex-
pected to participate.
information, write
t, ,,Coalition for Alterna-
tives in Jewish Education,
250 W. 57th St., Suite 216,
New York 10019.

Envoy's Grove

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
1 _ The Jewish National Fund
has planted a 1,000-tree
grove in honor of the out-
going Venezuelan Ambas-
sador to Israel, Napoleon
Gimenez, who is winding up
a 10-year tour of duty in
Jerusalem.
The grove, donated by the
Sherover family of
Jerusalem, is near the
moshav of Messilat Zion in
> the Jerusalem corridor.

basis for the exchange pro-
gram.
While in Michigan, the
cadets and their two escorts
are scheduled to visit Mac-
kinac Island, Sault Ste.
Marie, Greenfield Village
and other. points of interest.
They'll be staying with host
families in the area to gain a
closer look at U.S. culture
and habits.
The group also will visit
Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base in Ohio.

16400 W. 12 Mile, South-
field. There is a charge.
A panel discussion for the
young widowed will be held
8 p.m. ThursdaY at the
NCJW offices.
Panelists include a
young widow with chil-
dren, a childless widow
and a widower with small
children. Topic for dis-
cussion will be "Where
Do I Go From Here With
My Life?"
The're is a charge. For in-
formation about the young
widowed group, call Ilene
Rosin, 557-9604.

Randee Zeitlin
Plans to Marry

MISS ZEITLIN

Mrs. Barbara Zeitlin of
Farmington Hills an-
nounces the engagement of
her daughter, Randee
Gayle, to Mark C.
Goldsmith, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Morris Goldsmith of
Southfield.
Miss Zeitlin, daughter of
the late Mr. Allen T. Zeitlin,
was graduated from Michi-
gan State University. Her
fiance attended Eastern
Michigan University.
A November wedding is
planned.

NEW YORK (JTA) —
The Queens District Attor-
ney has been urged to im-
pose maximum penalties on
youths charged with van-
dalism against religious in-
stitutions and order them to
remove racist or anti-
religious graffiti from pub-
lic areas.
These were among the
recommendations the
Queens Jewish Community
Council called for in its
meeting several days ago
with officers of the police
department.
The meeting followed the
attack late last month by a
number of baseball bat-
wielding youths on the
Rabbinical Seminary of
America.
During the rampage, the
teenagers attacked Rabbi
Abraham Ginzberg, semi-
nary students and ripped
' religious books and
smashed windows. One stu-
dent was hospitalized with a
broken nose and eight
others suffered lesser in-
juries.

L. A. Community
Aids Boat People

LOS ANGELES (JTA) —
Forty-five Indochinese
families, some 200 "boat
people" refugees, are seek-
ing adoption by Southern
California synagogues in an
effort coordinated by the
Jewish Federation-Council
of Greater Los Angeles. The
emergency resettlement
program is being assisted by
the Lutheran Immigration
and Refugee Service.
Funds for housing, food,
clothing and medical care,
approximately $500-$600
per family of four per
month, will be provided for
a six-month period after
which the family is expected
to become self-sufficient.
Assistance in locating
housing and employment,
as well as other basics such
as schooling, will be super-
vised by the Lutheran
agency and the Jewish
Family Service of Greater
Los Angeles.

Record Set
at Bar Ilan

TEL AVIV (JTA) — A re-
cord number of PhD and
master's degrees were
awarded by the Bar Ilan
University at recent
graduation ceremonies.
There were 30 PhD awar-
dees, 130 master's and 1,095
bachelor's degrees, includ-
ing 692 who received their
degrees in social sciences.

Friday, July 13, 1919

Denver Lectures

Jewish Women's Agency
Offers Aid to Boat People

NEW YORK (JTA) —
Shirley Leviton, president
of the National Council of
Jewish Women has written
to President Carter and
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance offering the services
of NCJW members in 200
cities across the country to
help in the resettlement of
Indochinese "boat people"
who will be coming into the
U.S. in growing numbers.
This actiop came on the
heels of an alert sent out by
the International Council of
Jewish Women — of which
NCJW is the largest af-
filiate — during that all 32
member groups encourage
their governments to help
ease the plight of these ref-
ugees.
NCJW has been involved
in resettlement for its entire
85-year history, and has re-
cently geared up its pro-
grams due to the large in-
flux of Soviet Jews.
In Dallas, Texas, for
example, the NCJW Eve-
ning Branch developed a
guidebook to the city in
Russian and about a year
ago, at the request of the
mayor,. had it translated
into Vietnamese, the
spokesperson noted.
In Worcester, Mass.,
where NCJW runs its own

DENVER (JTA) — The
University of Denver's-
Judaic Studies Center has
established an information
bureau with 30 speakers.
The lecturers cover 80
topics ofJewish interest and
are offered to groups in the
Denver area free of charge.

Office of Immigration and
Naturalization, the services
of the offices have been
heavily used by other im-
migrant groups, as well as
by the Soviet Jews.
Meanwhile, the Ameri-
can Jewish Congress said it
would join the Committee
Against Genocide in Viet-
nam, a Chinese-American
coalition of some 20 organ-
izations, in sponsoring a
rally for the rescue of the
boat people on Sunday.
New York Sens. Jacob
Javits and Daniel Patrick
Moynihan, New York
Mayor Edward Koch and
New York Gov. Hugh Carey
will address the rally.

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MONTREAL (JTA)— An
Egyptian- student has been
accepted by the Hebrew
University in Jerusalem for
the first time since the es-
tablishment of the state of
Israel 31 years ago, the
Canadian Friends of the
Hebrew University re-
ported here.
He is Kamal Abdel-
Malek, a 26-year-old native
of Alexandria, who has been
in Canada for the past two
years studying at a
Montreal university.

ARTISTIC
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SHABOT SHALOM

FROM GREAT SCOTT

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