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June 27, 1980 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1980-06-27

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

Friday, June 21, 1980 7

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Israeli Agricultural School 1st Father-Daughter Rabbis
Celebrates 50th Anniversary

NEW YORK — Ayanot
has seen many changes dur-
ing the past 50 years.
Ayanot, an agricultural
high school run by Pioneer
Women and near Ness
Ziona, Israel, once served as
a refuge for thousands of
homeless immigrant youths
rescued from the Holocaust.
The school is celebrating its
50th anniversary this
month.
Today, Ayanot offers ex-
e from other dangers;
ose which accompany
poverty, overcrowding, and
broken homes. Most of the
students are young Israelis
from economically deprived
urban backgrounds, who
require a boarding school
environment to help them
develop into productive citi-
zens.
Because of the .altered
composition of the student -
body, the curriculum has
been restructured. In 1976,
Hagai Yehudai, himself a
graduate of Ayanot, was
appointed director.
In addition to a mas-
ter's degree from Hebrew
University, and an im-
pressive background in
education and adminis-
tration, Hagai, as he is
called by the students, -
brings to his position a
warmth, and a relaxed
manner which makes it
easy for the teenagers to
relate to him.

ar
d

CJF Selects
FEREP Trainees

NEW YORK (JTA) —
'Seven . recent college
graduates have been
selected by the Council of
Jewish Federations to par-
ticipate in the CJF Federa-
tion Executive Recruitment
and Education Program
(FEREP).
_ The FEREP scholarship-
loan program provides a na-
tional process of recruiting,
educating, training and
placing young men and
women in professional posi-
tions in the Jewish federa-
tion field.

Walk-A-Thon.
Sets Records
Across Country

NEW YORK — The
United Jewish Appeal's
fourth annual Walk-a-Thon
broke all previous records
for the event, drawing more
than 2.5 million partici-
ants and raising almost $5
illion, according to UJA
-
officials.
Some of the highlights of
he various local events in-
- eluded:
A "Walk-a-Thon Plus" in
New York that included
5,000 participants; dance,
basketball and volleyball
marathons; an art exhibit;
and a special Mother's Day
jogging event. Camel rides
were offered at the walk in
Boston and a baby carriage
parade in Baltimore, and an
1,800-participant walk in
Hartford that raised
$50,000 including a 90-
year-old man who attracted
$8,000 in sponsors honoring
his birthday.

Ai

Today the school offers a
number of different four-
year programs in addition
to courses in agriculture,
including one which trains
students to become child
care assistants in day care
centers and nursery schools.
Facilities include a swim-
ming pool, basketball
courts, cowshed, chicken
runs, pecan and orange
groves, and vegetable gar-
dens.

Tapper's does
APPRAISALS

Jewelry Appraisals Done While You Wait
$15 for the first item
$5 for every other item

.

We purchase your unwanted precious Gems,
Antiques and Gold Jewelry for immediate
cash.

Judaism's first father-datighter rabbinic team,
Debra R. Hachen of Worcester, Mass. and her father,
Rabbi David S. Hachen of Cleveland, right, are shown
Zoology Center
with Dr. Alfred Gottschalk, president of Hebrew
at Tel Aviv U.
Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion after De-
TEL AVIV — The new bra's ordination this month. David Hachen is Midwest
Canadian Center for director of the Union of American Hebrew Congrega-
Ecological Zoology was in- tions.
augurated at Tel Aviv Uni-
versity recently.
The research and teach-
ing zoo houses some 4,000
c 1980 R.J. REV NOLDS TOBACCO CO.
animals, including 40 spe-
cies of mammals, 120 spe-
cies of birds; 80 species of
reptiles, and 6 species of
arnRhibians.

Anita Mentzel: Gem Appraisal Consultant

Tapper 's, the source.

26400 West Twelve Mile Road
in Southfield's Racquetime Mall

1.1

Northeast corner 12 Mile 6 Northwestern Hwy.
357 - 5578
Mon., Tues., Wed.. Fri.. Sat., 10-6, Thurs., 10-9

Anti-Israelism
Religious Zeal
Seen in Egypt

TEL AVIV (ZINS) -= Op-
position to the peace treaty
with Israel and increased
Moslem religious zeal are
predominant in Egypt, re-
ports Israeli author Amos
Alon.
In a series of articles in
the Israeli daily Haaretz,
Alon reported that pro-
Khomeinism is on the rise
in Egypt. He said that there
is renewed cry for "jihad"
(holy war) in the country's
mosques.
Meanwhile, the Egyptian
press has been attacking Is-
rael's Prime Minister Be-
gin, saying that he is
sabotaging the autonomy
talks.



Einstein Theory
Found in NY
Jewish Center

NEW YORK — A box of
documents by the late Al-
bert Einstein was dis-
covered recently, locked in a
safe in the basement of the
Brooklyn Jewish Center.
The papers included a copy
of "The Unified Field
Theory," published in 1930
in Berlin.
The manuscript was ex-
pected to bring between
$15,000 and $25,000 when
auctioned on June 25. -

Katzir Heads
Center at TAU

TEL AVIV — A new cen-
ter for biotechnology,
headed by former President
of Israel Prof. Ephraim Kat-
zir,- was inaugurated re-
cently at Tel Aviv Univer-
sity.
for
Center
The
Biotechnology is designed
to combine the expertise,
knowledge and skills of
biologists, biochemists, bac-
teriologists, and geneticists,
with those of engineers
towards achieving new
industrial processes and
products.

Lively
t Menth

^ urm



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