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January 01, 1982 - Image 20

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1982-01-01

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

20

Friday, January 1, 1982

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Farewell Luncheon for Evron

WASHINGTON (JTA) —
About 70 people attended
the farewell - luncheon last
week honoring Israeli Am-
bassador Ephraim Evron
and his wife Rivka, who is
retiring and returning to Is-
rael. He is being succeeded
by Moshe Arens, who is pre-
sently the chairman of the
Knesset's Foreign Affairs
and Security Committee.
In a statement from Sec-
retary of State Alexander
Haig, who was unable to at-

A fun idea for your

• Bar Mitzva
• Wedding
• Business Guests
etc.

Call

To All The Clients Of

THE SCHWARTZ FURNITURE CO.

Mr. Nathan Schwartz Proudly Announces That
he is now associated with the

KAUFMAN

FURNITURE & UPHOLSTERING CO.

a firm which has been in the custom furniture
business for almost 60 years , and whose up-
holstery department is one of the finest in the area.

I would like all my friends to come see me at

2801 N. Woodward at 12 1/2 Mile or
call me at 288-6400

KAUFMAN

FURNITURE & UPHOLSTERING CO.

STOREWIDE SALE

20-50%0FF

Complete Inventory, including
Kaufman's
Custom Built Furniture

2801 N. Woodward Ave. at 121/2 Mile

Royal Oak, Mi. 288-6400

Mon., Thurs., Fri. til 9; Tues., Wed., Sat. til 6

Sale ends Feb. 6, 1982

Eyron said, "I believe
with all my heart that the
destinies of Israel and the
United States are inter-
locked. Despite the great
discrepancies in size,
numbers, power and in-
fluence, we have much
more than these things
. We all should do ev-
erything within our
power to nurture and
care for relations bet-
ween our two countries."

The Republican National
Committee, who jointly
sponsored the event with
the National Republican
Jewish Coalition, presented

NEW YORK — Incidents
of international terrorism
are increasing annually, ac-
cording to four experts on
terrorism who took part in a
recent panel discussion
sponsored by the Institute
for Studies in International
Terrorism at the State Uni-
versity of New York.
Reports on international
terrorism, released by the
U.S. State Department, in-
clude the following statis-
tics:
• From 1968 through
1980, there were 6,700 in-
ternational terrorist inci-
dents, in which 3,700 people
were killed and about 7,500
wounded.

• During 1980 alone,
there were 760 such inci-
dents, killing 642 and
wounding 1,078.

• Of the 760 terrorist
acts committed in 1980,
278, or 38 percent, were di-
rected against Americans or
American property.
In addition, it was noted

at the Allanflouro College
ee:e'sn

M en
le in the.

E nroll o orr day or

courses

• Take liberal arts and/or Judaic studies

• Earn college credit toward an Allan/Touro
degree or for transfer purposes

Call 357 - 2968 now for your class schedule and
College bulletin.

Allan/Touro also offers liberal tuition Scholarships
at our convenient location:

THE ALLAN, TOURO COLLEGE

111(

21550 West Twelve Mile Road in Southfield.

VI

VI
I II
IX

II I

Services

IV

V

dowwwwsrailms•

ADAT SHALOM SYNAGOGUE: Services 5 p.m. today

and 9 a.m. Saturday. Steven Winkelman, Bar Mitzva.

CONG. BETH ABRAHAM HILLEL MOSES: Services

EPHRAIM EVRON

Evron with a Boehm
ceramic sculpture of a
young couple dancing. A
second gift was presented to
Mrs. Evron.

Among those attending
the luncheon were National
Security Adviser Richard
Allen who is on administra-
tion leave of absence, and
Jewish Republican leaders
from across the country.

Institute Panel Discusses
Rise of World Terrorism

YOU CisiOICe*
01016

*Courses availab

Synagogue

tend due to the crisis in Po-
land and read by his execu-
tive assistant Woody
Goldberg, Evron was lauded
for having "the highest pro-
fessional standards of-dip-
lomacy' . adding that "all of
us concerned with the sec-
urity of Israel and peace in
the Middle East are very
thankful that you rep-
resented Israel in these cru-
cial years."

That during the first 11
months of 1981, the total
number of all terrorist acts
throughout the world was
2,425.
The panel included Frank
H. Perez, acting director of
the Office for. Combatting
Terrorism, U.S. Depart-
ment of State; Sen.
Jeremiah Denton (R-Ala.),
chairman of the Subcom-
mittee on Security and Ter-
rorism; Dan Pattir, resident
fellow, American Enter-
prise Institute for Public
Policy Research; and Dr.
Yonah Alexander, professor
of international studies and
director of the Institute for
Studies in International
Terrorism.

.

Romania Jewry
Is Shrinking

TEL AVIV — Raphael
Kotlowitz, head of the
Jewish Agency's aliya de-
partment, 'told reporters
upon his return from a visit
to Romania that that coun-
try's Jewish community is
disappearing, with almost
no marriages or births and
more deaths every day.
He quoted Chief Rabbi
Moses Rosen as saying the
community now numbered
only 33,000 — less than
usually thought. Kotlowitz
said that most Romanian
Jews were now elderly and
many are living on welfare.
At one stop on his visit, at
Tamishra, he learned that
only two Jewish babies were
born this year while 65 el-
derly Jews had died, out of a
total Jewish population of
1,800.

NY Rabbis Hear
Nobel Winner

NEW YORK — Dr. Rosa-
lyn Yalow, Nobel Prize
winner for medicine, will be
the featured speaker at the
annual meeting of the New
York Board of Rabbis on
Wednesday in New York.

4:45 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Kenneth
Goldman, Bar Mitzva.
TEMPLE BETH EL: Services 5:30 p.m. today and 11 a.m.
Saturday. Rabbi Hertz will speak on "What's Ahead in
'82."
CONG. BETH SHALOM: Services 6 p.m. today and 9 a.m.
Saturday. Deborah Slovis, Bat Mitzva.
CONG. BNAI MOSHE: Services 4:45 p.m. today and
a.m. Saturday. Donald J. Sachs will recite the Maftir.
DOWNTOWN SYNAGOGUE: Services 8 a.m. Saturday.
Rabbi Gamze will speak on "Not Losing Hope."
TEMPLE EMANU-EL: Services 7:30 p.m. today. Rabbi
Steinger will speak on "New Year, Fresh Ideas." Ser-
vices 10:30 a.m. Saturday.
TEMPLE ISRAEL: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Fram
will speak on "A Prophecy for 1982." Deborah
Moretsky, Bat Mitzva. Services 11 a.m. Saturday.
Jason Halprin, Bar Mitzva.
TEMPLE KOL AMI: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Con-
rad will speak on "Some Important Anniversaries."
Regular services will be held at Cong. Bais Chabad of
Farmington Hills, Cong. Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield,
Cong. Beth Achim, Cong. Beth Isaac of Trenton, Temple
Beth Jacob, Cong. Beth Tefilo Emanuel Tikvah, Cong. Beth
Tephilath Moses of Mt. Clemens, Birmingham Temple,
Cong. Bnai David, Cong. Bnai Israel of West Bloomfield,
Cong. Bnai Israel-Beth Yehudah, Cong. Bnai Jacob, Cong.
Bnai Zion, Cong. Dovid Ben Nuchim, Livonia Jewish Con-
gregation, Cong. Mishkan Israel Nusach H'Ari, Sephardic
Community of Greater Detroit, Cong. Shaarey Shomayim
(Jewish Center Jimmy Prentis Morris Branch), Cong.
Shomrey Israel (18995 Schaefer), Cong. Solel, Young Israel
of Greenfield, Young Israel-of Oak-Woods and Young Israel
of Southfield.

Jewish Family Topic of Talk
Slated at Temple Israel

Psychiatrist Dr. Peter A.
Martin will be the opening
speaker in a series of five
programs planned by Tem-
ple Israel on the overall
theme of "Surviving as a
Jewish Family in the '80s."
Dr. Martin will speak on
"Making Modern Jewish
Marriage Better" 8 p.m.,
Thursday in the temple.
Other programs in the
series, sponsored by the
temple's adult education
committee under the
chairmanship of Dr. Bruce
Danto, will include:

"Raising Children
Jewishly," Feb. 4; "Aging
Jewishly in the Family,"
March 4; "Changing Wo-
men's Roles and the Fam-
ily," April 1; and "Three
Generations View the
Jewish Family," May 20.

Dr. Martin, a life fellow of
the American Psychiatric
Association and APA vice
president from 1979 to
1981, was graduated from
Wayne State University
and its medical school.
He is adjunct professor of
psychiatry at the WSU
School of Medicine and clin-
ical professor of psychiatry

Wine to Begin
Book Reviews

Rabbi Sherwin Wine will
begin a series of four re-
views entitled, "The Best of
the New," 8:30 p.m. Monday
in the Birmingham-Temple.
At Monday's session,
Rabbi Wine will review
"The French Lieutenant's
Woman," by John Fowles
and Harold Pinter.
The public is invited, and
there is a charge.

at the University of Michi-
gan Medical School.
Dr. Martin is on the staffs
of Sinai, Providence and
University Hospitals.
Dr. Martin holds both the
WSU and the WSU Medical
School Distinguished
Alumni Awards.

Synagogue Picks
Board Members

The
Downtown
Synagogue recently held its
election of members of the
board of directors.
Named to the board were:
A. Arnold Agree, Charles N.
Agree, George A. Agree,
Richard A. Agree, Alfred D.
Bricker, Donald Canvasser;
Charles Fink, Sidney
Fischer, Judge Nathan J.
Kaufman, Edward Miller,
Joseph Morrison, Norman
M. Newman, Stuart J.
Snider, Irving Roth, Harry
K. Rosen, Oscar Bank and
Ethel Palman.

Pope's Poetry
in Hebrew

TEL AVIV (JTA) — A
Hebrew translation of Pope
John Paul II's poetry will b(
published in Israel, accord- _/
ing to Al Hamishmar. The
paper reported that the
Pope agreed to the publica-
tion of his poems, written in
Polish, if he could review
the translations into Heb-
rew, which he studied in the
theological seminary of
Warsaw.
The poetry, according to
Al Hamishmar, is
scheduled to be published
by Eked Publishers of Tel
Aviv. No publication date
was announced.

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