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August 14, 1981 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1981-08-14

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

18 Friday, August 14, 1981

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Audrey Lorber

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A memory you will have forever .. .

VIDEO TAPING SERVICES

Legal Taping
Business Mcietings
Weddings

Advertising
Social Events
Bar Mitzvahs

Do not believe the as-
trologers . . . our Torah
bolds that a man's conduct
is in his own hands, that no
external compulsion pre-
vents a man from being vir-
tuous or vicious — except
as he may be so constituted,
by nature, and finds it easy
or hard to do a certain thing.
But that a man must do, or
refrain from doing some-
thing because of the stars is
entirely untrue. Astrology
is a disease, not a science.
—Maimonides

HAMILTON PLAC
A YEAR ROUN
VACATION!

Hamilton Place, the complete social

and fitness club in Southfield, is the
perfect place to spend your vaca-
tion, every day all year round.

• Relax in our indoor or outdoor
pools,
• Jog around our parcourse track,
• Play tennis,
• Improve your golf game,
• Dine in our outdoor Cafe Rouge,
(now under the direction of
Golden Mushroom Chef Milos)
• You can do it all at Hamilton
Place.
Join now and have the best vaca-
tion of your life, all year round.

Red Cross Statement

(Continued from Page 17)
Adorn. Misunderstandings
are somewhat fostered by
continued emphasis on
membership in the League
of Red Cross Societies.
"Accordingly, the Ameri-
can Red Cross limits its
reference to League mem-
bership in its publications
and emphasizes, instead, its
direct association with
other national societies in-
cluding the Magen David
Adorn of Israel. American
Red Cross chapters are
encouraged to use but a
single emblem in their lit-
erature and in their dis-
plays — the Red Cross itself
— and not to display the
Crescent in their publica-
tions, banners or flags.
"In the event that a
chapter wishes to use
multiple flags or
emblems, then all three
emblems must be dis-
played. These are: the
Cross, the Crescent, and
the - Shield of David.
"14. At the XXIII Inter-
national Conference of the
Red Cross held in Bucharest

in October 1977, consider-
ing that the question of
emblems called for its
thorough examination by
the national societies, the
International Committee of
the Red Cross and the
League of Red Cross
Societies constituted a
working group to study all
questions relating to
emblems.
"The American Red Cross
recommended the estab-
lishment of such a group in
October 1976 and has been
named a member of this
working group, which will
present its report to the
XXIVth International Con-
ference in November 1981
in Manila. It should be
noted that notwithstanding
whatever action may be
taken by the International
Red Cross bodies on the re-
port of this working group,
any final decision concern-
ing the granting of interna-
tional recognition to the
emblem used by the Magen
David Adorn could only be
made by a diplomatic con-
ference of governments."

UJA Reaches Hungary Jews

Dr. Alexander Scheiber, right, head of the Rab-
binic Seminary of Budapest, Hungary, is consulted on
an article on Hungarian Jewry which appeared in the
fall 1980 issue of the United Jewish Appeal Women's
Division Record, as rabbinic students look on. The
article appeared after an agreement had been
reached in February 1980, between the American
Jewish Joint Distribution Committee and the gov-
ernment and Jewish community of Hungary to pros-
vide programs and services for Hungarian Jewry.

Educators Tour Germany

CAL
646-8990
FOR' NO
ouR

drop in anytime between
9:00 A.M. and 8:00 P.M.
30333 Southfield
(between 1 2 & 13)

SPECIAL
AT LETIC CLLB . CIFFE

HAMILTON PLACE

JERUSALEM — A group
of 24 Israeli adult educators
and public figures, includ-
ing Jews, Arabs, Druze and
Armenians, recently re-
turned from a month-long
tour of the Federal Republic
of Germany.
The study tour was or-
ganized by the Hebrew
University's Martin Buber
Center for Adult Education
in cooperation with the
Federal and Lower Saxony
state departments for polit-
ical education.
The visitors were predo-
minantly members of the
teaching staff of the Buber
Center, while others were
mainly from the Arab-
Jewish community centers
Bet Kedem in Acre and Bet
Hagefen in Haifa.
Among the partici-
pants were Haj Yehya
Mussa Abu Ghosh, leader
of the Abu Ghosh village
near Jerusalem, and two
Druze educators from the
Golan Heights who re-

cently became Israeli
citizens.
The participants met cen-
tral figures on the Federal
and local levels, including
members of the parliament,
several Berlin senators and
lord mayors.
The main concern of the
Germans was the German-
Israeli relationship today
and the political events in
the Middle East. The main
interest of the Israeli group
was the German adult edu-
cation system and insti-
tutes, and German atti-
tudes towards Israel.

I am not afraid of those
tender and scrupulous con-
sciences who are ever cau-
tious of professing and be-
lieving too much; if they are
sincerely wrong, I forgive
their errors and respect
their integrity. The men I
am afraid of are those who
believe everything, sub-
scribe to everything, and
vote for everything.

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