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April 10, 1981 - Image 46

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1981-04-10

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

46

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, April 10, 1981

HIAS Resettled 28,000 Refugees

NEW YORK — During
1980, its centennial year,
HIAS helped almost 28,000
refugees find new homes in
free nations.
This figure represents the
second largest number of

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people helped by the Jewish
migration agency in any
single year since World War
II, and includes 18,631
Soviet Jews.
The agency spent
$18,587,793, which in-
cludes funds furnished by
the U.S. for the resettle-
ment of 5,157 Indochinese
refugees, 2,781 Cubans and
smaller numbers of other
HIAS-assisted non-Jewish
emigrants:

THE HUMANIST FORUM

Presents

DANIEL SCHORR

Internationally Known Journalist

Discussing

THE MEDIA IN A
DE OCRACY

8:30 P.M. Monday, April 20, 1981

at

THE BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE

28611 W. 12 Mile Road, Farmington Hills

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one of the few good national reporters on television."

(Chicago Sun-Times)

".. . the toughest and best reporter in television news."
(Washington Post)
"... maybe the best television newsman in the field today."
(New York Times)

Ticket Inf Inf ormation on Contact:
oo
Admission: For
Mary Lewis 645-9039 or

$5 00

The Birmingham Temple 411-1410

Bnai Moshe Annual Concert
to Feature Sherwood Goffin

Preparations are under
way for Cong. Bnai Moshe's
annual concert which will
include a variety of canto-
rial, Yiddish and Israeli
music. The concert will be
held 8 p.m. May 3 at the
synagogue.
Guest artist will be Can-
tor Sherwood Goffin of New
York, who will accompany
himself on guitar. Addi-
tional accompaniment Will
be provided by Jonathan
and Martin Liebman, on the
electric piano and bass.

Passover Products Listed

The following products
are being made kosher for
Passover this year under
the supervision of the Met-
ropolitan Kashruth Coun-
cil. Kosher products are
designated on the package:
Farm Maid cottage
cheese, sour cream and two
percent low-fat milk;
Michigan Beverage Co.
orange juice and grapefruit
juice; egg products from
Country Queen Foods,
Grand Rapids; chocolate
and vanilla ice cream from
Wesley's Quaker Maid Ice
Cream Co.
The council is also super-
vising several firms that are
making kosher for Passover

PassoVer Milk

The Council of Orthodox
Rabbis of Greater Detroit is
supervising the production
of kosher for Passover milk
by Daily Creamery of Ham-
tramck.

KosherGram

A PROJECT OF THE MERK AZ—THE LAYMAN'S ASSOCIATION OF THE
VAAD HORABONIM OF GREATER DETROIT

CONSUMERS INFORMATION:





















Bnai Moshe's Cantor
Louis Klein and the Bnai
Moshe Sisterhood choral
group will participate. Do-
reen Raskin is the piano ac-
companist, and Daniel
Braude, guest conductor.
Rena Tobes is chair-
man of the Bnai Moshe
Cultural Commission
and Dr. Morton Demak is
chairman of the concert
committee.
For tickets or informa-
tion, call the synagogue,
548-9000.

IN RESPONSE TO THE INFLATED PRICES CHARGED FOR PASSOVER SUGAR
LAST YEAR, THE COUNCIL OF ORTHODOX RABBIS OF GREATER DETROIT AS A
COMMUNITY SERVICE HAS INSPECTED

BIG CHIEF SUGAR

PRODUCED BY MONITOR SUGAR COMPANY
OF BAY CITY, MICHIGAN

AND HAS DETERMINED THAT THE

WHITE GRANULATED SUGAR

PRODUCED THERE IS SUITABLE FOR PASSOVER USE WITHOUT ANY SPECIFIC
KOSHER MARKINGS OR SYMBOLS.































BIG CHIEF SUGAR IS AVAILABLE AT REGULAR LOW PRICES AT MOST AREA
SUPERMARKETS.

COUNCIL OF ORTHODOX RABBIS OF GREATER DETROIT

INFORMATION SUPPLIED BY VAAD HORABONIM OF
GREATER DETROIT PHONE: 559-5005











products for the food indus-
try. Included are Defiance
Milk Co., Vern-Dale Prod-
ucts, Inc. and Ramsey
Laboratories of Cleveland.

Intellectuals Cite
2 French Jews

PARIS (JTA) — Two
Jews, an anthropologist and
a political philosopher, have
been named by France's in-
tellectuals the two main
"trend setters" in the fields
of science, letters, art and
philosophy.
Six hundred prominent
intellectuals, university
professors, writers, politi-
cians and artists, named an-
thropologist Claude Levi-
Strauss, 72, and
philosopher Raymond Aron,
68, as the country's top
thinkers "who exert the
strongest influence in the
evolution of ideas and mod-
em thinking." '
Levi-Strauss, who is a
member of the French
Academy, has written ex-
tensively on primitive
man and his influence on
contemporary life but
also on the history of reli-
gion and theology. Aron,
who teaches political sci-
ence at the Sorbonne,
also writes a weekly col-
umn in the French
weekly "L' Express."
Among the follow ups in
the list, published in the
French monthly "Book," are
Simone de Beauvoir, Ber-
nard Henri-Levy and Mar-
guerite Yourcenar.

Immigfant Party Formed in ,Israel

JERUSALEM (JNI) — A
new political party which
wants to eliminate special
immigrant rights in order to
encourage aliya has been
formed by a group of immig-
rants from the Soviet
Union.
Party organizer Dr. Yuli
Nudelman said that the
"Elena" party — a Hebrew
acronym for "aliya ema'an
hamedina" (immigration

Federation Gifts
to Colleges Up

Caricatures

NEW YORK — Federa-
tion allocations to college
and university campuses
throughout North America
increased by 36 percent
from 1975-1979, according
to a recently published sur-
vey and analysis conducted
by the Council of Jewish
Federations (CJF).
The CJF report, "Federa-
tion Allocations to Campus
Services," indicates that a
total of $4,971,400 was allo-
cated by 112 federations to
campus services in 1979.

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Likud Cutting
Labor's Lead •

TEL AVIV (JTA) —. A
public opinion poll pub-
lished in the Jerusalem Post
indicates the Labor Party
still in the lead though
showing a steady decline for
the past three months and
an increase in the popular-
ity of the Likud.
The poll, conducted by the
Modi in Ezrahi Applied Re-
search Center, showed 33
seats of the Knesset's 120
places for the Likud (20 in
February and January), 45
for Labor (as against 45 in
February and 58 in
January.)
The poll indicated that a
list headed by Moshe Dayan
would receive nine seats
(down from a peak of 19 in
February). The National
Religious Party was declin-
ing to nine, from 10 in Feb-
ruary and 11 in January.

for the country's sake) —
hopes to attract the mem-
bership and votes of all new
Israelis, from whatever
countries of origin.
Nudelman said that spe-
cial privileges for immig-
rants must be stopped, since
"if immigrants are made to
feel that they're taking
something away from sab-
ras, or from anyone else,
then why should they
come?"

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