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February 05, 1982 - Image 26

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1982-02-05

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

7,•1



4

26

Friday, February 5, 1982



THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Germans Ban Neo-Nazi Party

LARRY FREEDMAN

BONN (JTA) — West
German authorities banned
a neo-Nazi party last week
because it aimed in "con-
scious and desired effort" to

Orchestra and Entertainment

647-2367

BUCKLES iiiIIIMITED

BUY 3 BUCKLES
SAVE $1.00

4.50-5.00 or 6.00 ONLY

BUY 2 BELTS
SAVE '1.00

_ .
PEARL SCISSORS

ANY 11.00 or 12.00 BELT ONLY

THE BUCKLE LADY"

BERKLEY

FARMINGTON

2240 COOLIDGE

35171 GRAND RIVER

1/2 Blk. E. Drake Rd.
Drakeshire
Shopping Center
474-0055

5 Blks. N. of 11 Mile
Mon.-Sat. 10-6
545-6885

revive Hitler's program.
The crackdown on the
People's Socialist Move-
ment of Germany-Labor
Party and its youth section,
the Young Front, came in a
series of raids in West Be-
rlin, Bavaria, Baden-
Wuerttemberg, Hesse and

SZ Observes
Shabat Shira

The Shaarey Zedek
Choir, under the direction
of Harry Siegel, will join
with Cantor Chaim Najman
in a special service Satur-
day for "Shabbat Shira."
Liturgical selections writ-
ten by American Jewish
composers will be featured.
The special renditions for
this service will consist of
compositions by Low, Roit-
man, Rumshinsky,
Frohman and Vladowsky.

HABONIM CAMP TAVOR
3 Rivers Michigan
A KIBBUTZ INSPIRED SUMMER

the
Saxony,
Lower
authorities said.
Hundreds of rounds of
ammunition, Nazi-like
flags, swastikas, portraits of
Hitler and neo-Nazi mate-
rial were seized. Some of the
literature was thought to
have been sent from
America by neo-Nazi Gary
Lauck, who operates from
Lincoln, Neb..
A ban on the group, esti-
mated to have about 100
members, the largest of 22
known neo-Nazi groups in
the country, was ordered by
the Interior Ministry. The
banned organization,
founded in 1971, has had a
history, of violence. Its
leader, Ffiedhelm Busse,
52, was arrested last Oc-
tober after a gun battle with
Munich police in which two
members of the group were
killed.

Najman to Appear
in SZ Concert

Kashruth Observed

Coed Grades 5-9

All regular camp activities plus Israeli Songs & Dances
Call For Slide Show In Your Home
Shula Fleischer 478-2032 or Marie Berlin 851-5091

1. To encourage religious pluralism
in Israel.

4 reasons why
you should
join MERCAZ
The Movement
to Reaffirm
Conservative
Zionism

N

2. To strive for equality of treatment
for each of the alternative
expressions of Judaism within the
Zionist Movement.

3. To oppose every effort to amend
Israel's definition of a Jew in the
"Law of Return."

$15.00 per family unit

4. To strengthen Conservative
Judaism in Israel.

Mail your check, payable • Name(s)
to MERCAZ, to
Address
Rabbi David A. Nelson
Chairman, Midwest
City and State
Region of MERCAZ
14601 W. Lincoln
Zip Code
Oak Park, MI 48237

(Dues and contributions to MERCAZ are tax deductible)

FRIENDS OF THE ISRAEL CANCER FOUNDATION

cordially invites you to attend its

PRE-PURIM DANCE PARTY

Saturday, February 13, 1982, 8:00 p.m.

CONGREGATION B'NAI DAVID

24350 Southfield Road — Southfield, Michigan

A very enjoyable evening, has been planned for you.
Music by: Eric Rosenow Orchestra
A variety of tasty dairy food will be served.
Donation: $6.50 per person
Door prizes.

GIVE YOURSELVES A TREAT!

For tickets please call:
Ann Eisenberg 968-0214
Mary Papo 967-4414
Rose Katz 559-0736

CANTOR CHAIM NAJMAN

Cantor Chaim Najman of
Cong. Shaarey Zedek will
appear in concert with the
Beth Abraham Youth
Chorale of Dayton 8 p.m.
Feb. 13 at Shaarey Zedek.
Admission to the concert
is free, but tickets are re-
quired. For tickets, call the
synagogue, 357-5544.

Tourette Body
Plans to Gather

Metropolitan Detroit
Chapter, Tourette Syn-
drome Association,. will
meet 8 p.m. Feb. 12 at the.
First United Methodist
Church, 22331 Woodward,
Ferndale.
The film, "The Sudden In-
truder," will be shown and
the program will feature a
nutritionist.
For details, call Evelyn
Tichik, 398-6621.

Wine to Review
`Ragtime' Film

Rabbi Sherwin Wine will
review the film, "Ragtime,"
based on the novel by E. L.
Doctorow at 8:30 p.m. Mon-
day in the Birmingham
Temple. There is a charge,
and the public is invited.

Temple Rap
Group Meets

Temple Beth Jacob's
Jewish Generation Gap-
Rap will meet 11:15 a.m.
Sunday in the temple.
Stanley Frankel will give
an illustrated talk on his re-
cent trip to Romania.

Synagogue

Services

ADAT SHALOM SYNAGOGUE: Services 5:45 p.m.
today and 9 a.m. Saturday. Anthony Silber, Bar
Mitzva.
CONG. BETH ACHIM: Services 5:30 p.m. today and 8:45
a.m. Saturday. Barbra Cheiman, Bat Chayil.
TEMPLE BETH EL: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi
Schwartz will speak on "A Jewish Look at Pornog-
raphy." Services 11 a.m. Saturday. Rabbi Hertz will
speak on "Discovering Your Roots." Neil Plotkin, Bar
Mitzva.
TEMPLE BETH JACOB: Services 8 p.m. today, cc
ducted by students of the religious school in honor of Tu
b'Shevat.
BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE: Services 7:30 p.m. today (Is-
rael Day family service).
CONG. BNAI MOSHE: Services 5:20 p.m. today and 8:45
a.m. Saturday. Dr. Jerome P. Horwitz will recite the
Maftir.
DOWNTOWN SYNAGOGUE: Services 8 a.m. Saturday.
Rabbi Gamze will speak on "Tu b'Shevat — A Symbol
of Hope."
TEMPLE EMANU-EL: Services 8:15 p.m. today. The
Michigan State Temple Youth Conclave will join the
service whose theme is "Changing Values: Can Moral-
ity Be Legislated?" Services 9 a.m. Saturday.
TEMPLE ISRAEL: . Services 8 p.m. today. Rabbi Loss will
deliver a story sermon on "An American Patriot."
David Sills, Bar Mitzva. Services 11 a.m. Saturday.
Martin Cohen and Alan Rautbort, Bnai Mitzva.
TEMPLE KOL AMI: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Con-
rad will speak on "The New Right: Current Concerns."
Services 10:30 a.m. Saturday. Jeffrey Zonder, Bar
Mitzva.
LIVONIA JEWISH CONGREGATION: Services 8 p.m.
today. Rabbi Gordon will speak on "The Ingredients of
Song." Services 9 a.m. Saturday.
CONG. T'CHIYAH: Services 7:45-p.m. today. Judyiand
Ira Harris will conduct a Tu b'Shevat service.
Regular services will be held at Cong. Bais Chabad of
Farmington Hills, Cong. Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield,
Cong. Beth Abraham Hillel Moses, Cong. Beth Isaac of
Trenton, Cong. Beth Shalom, Cong. Beth Tefilo Emanuel
Tikvah, Cong. Beth Tephilath Moses of Mt. Clemens, Cong.
Bnai David, Cong. Bnai Israel of West Bloomfield, Cong.
Bnai Israel-Beth Yehuda, Cong. Bnai Jacob, Cong. Bnai
Zion, Cong. Dovid Ben Nuchim, Cong. Mishkan Israel
Nusach H'Ari, Sephardic Community of Greater Detroit,
Cong. Shaarey Shomayim (Jewish Center Jimmy Prentis
Morris Branch), Cong. Shaarey Zedek, Cong. Shomrey Is-
rael (18995 Schaefer), Cong. Solel, Young Israel of Green-
field, Young Israel of Oak-Woods and Young Israel of
Southfield.

Rep. Lantos Gives Reagan
Mixed Report Card' on M.E •

NEW YORK (JTA) — A
Democratic Party Con-
gressman from California
gives President Reagan "a
mixed report card" on Mid-
dle East policy during his
first year in office.
Rep. Tom Lantos, the only
member of Congress who is
a Holocaust survivor, be-
lieves "the single worst
episode" was the sale of
AWACS reconnaissance
aircraft to Saudi Arabia.
On the other hand, Lan-
tos observed, "It's probably
fair to say- that had it not
been for the President's
strong support of economic
and military aid (to Israel)
in this year of economic
stringency, it would have
been very easy to cut that
aid substantially — or even
drastically. And there is no
doubt in my mind that the
President would have suc-
ceeded in pushing such a
policy through in Con-
gress."
The Hungarian-born
Lantos, who led the cam-
paign in Congress to have
the U.S. confer honorary
citizenship on Raoul Wal-
lenberg, the Swedish dip-
lomat who saved the lives of
at least 20,000 Jews during

the Nazi occupation of Hun-
gary, was interviewed on a
New York radio show.
The California lawmaker
said the Administration's
"final record" on the Middle
East "is yet to be written."
He was inclined to withhold
judgment now because of
"the enormous array of
pressures working on an
American President."
In general, Lantos said,
"it is probably safe to say
that the American Jewish
community, in terms of its
deep commitment to Israel,
is likely to be disappointed
in every American
president for the balance
this century."
He noted in that tonne,
tion that it was important
for "particularly strong par-
tisans of Israel" to "realize
. . . that the United States
foreign policy operates in a
global context. And the
world looks very different
from Washington than it
does from Jerusalem."
Lantos said he found "the
Western European attitude
toward Israel far more dis-
turbing than the American
attitude.

Courage is the firm re-
solve of virtue and reason.

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