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November 12, 1982 - Image 70

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1982-11-12

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

10 Friday, November 12, 1982

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Detroiter Plants Israel Grove Holocaust Topic of Interfaith J. Edward Sieff Dies at 76
LONDON (JTA) — J. movement in Britain.
Sybil Taitelbaum Bodzin
High School Symposium
He was chairman of
Edward Sieff, eldest surviv-
recently purchased a

1,000-tree grove in the
American Independence
Park located outside the
city of Jerusalem. The Jay
S. Bodzin and Taitelman

ONE-HALF
THE BABIES
BORN
MENTALLY
RETARDED
NEEDN'T BE!

SYBIL BODZIN

Family Grove is planted in
memory of her husband, Jay
S. Bodzin, and the Taitel-
man Family, her parents
and brother, Max.
Mrs. Bodzin is an officer
of the Women's Division of
JNF.

You can help!

Support

Jewish Association for
Retarded Citizens

24525 Southfield Rd., Suite 107
Southfield, Mi. 48075
557-7650

A Public Service
Contribution

Between 1968 and 1978,
exports to Jordan via the
open bridges rosé from
about IL 54 million (about
$1.25 million) a year to
more than IL 1.6 billion (ab-
out $372 million) a year.
Dramatic increases also
were reported in trade be-
tween Israel and the occu-
pied territories.

The fourth annual Inter-
faith High School Sym-
posium on the Holocaust
will be held 8:30 a.m. Dec. 7
at the Student Center
Building at Wayne State
University.
Theme for the conference
is "The Holocaust: Can It
Happen Again?" The con-
ference was planned by the
Archdiocese of Detroit
schools office, Bishop Foley
High School, Shaarit Hap-
laytah - Survivors of 1945,
Bnai Brith Einstein Lodge
and Bnai Brith Youth, and
coordinated by the Greater
Detroit Round Table of the
National Conference of
Christians and Jews and
the Jewish Community
Council.
All interested high school
students and their teachers
are invited free of charge.
The symposium will
feature a film, small
group sessions with sur-
vivors and a presentation
on this year's theme.
In conjunction with the
symposium, there will be a
creative arts competition
relating to the Holocaust.
Students who wish to com-
pete may enter in three

■■■■••■■



So you tried a
few different ways
to spend your advertising
money and now your sales curve
has dropped completely off the chart.

* * *

Interfaith Body
Honoree Told

Robert M. Surdam, retir-
ing chairman of the board
and chief executive officer of
National Bank of Detroit,
will receive the 1982 Na-
tional Human Relations
Award from the Greater De-
troit Round Table of the
National Conference of
Christians and Jews Dec. 16
at Cobo Hall. Wendell W.
Anderson, chairman of
Bundy Corp. is chairman of
the 1982 Brotherhood
Dinner at which Surdam
will be honored.
Surdam was cited for his
work with Detroit Renais-
sance, New Detroit, Inc. and
the United Foundation.
Proceeds support the local
and national programs of
NCCJ, which include the
interfaith clergy dialogues
of religious leadership on
community concerns; the
police and community rela-
tions programs; the Rearing
Children of Good Will Con-
ference; "After Breakfast"
dialogues for labor, man-
agement and community
representatives on equal
employment opportunity;
the intergroup dialogue of
the women's division of the
Round Table and other ac-
tivities that promote inter-
religious and inter-racial
understanding.

ing male member of Brit-
ain's leading Zionist family,
and honorary president of
the Zionist Federation, died
Nov. 3, three weeks short of
his 77th birthday.
"Teddy" Sieff, as he was
popularly known, was the
younger brother of the late
Israel Sieff, and uncle of the
present Lord Marcus Sieff.
Like the rest of the Sieff
family he was deeply de-
voted to the Zionist cause.
At the end of 1974 he nar-
rowly escaped death when
an Arab terrorist forced his
way into his London house
and shot him through the
jaw. He later said that he
owed his survival to his very
strong teeth.
He was active in the
Joint Israel Appeal,
serving as chairman from
1961 to 1965 when he be-
came president. He took
particular interest in the
Israel office of the Zionist
Federation as well as its
Hebrew day school

‘r

still deliver the customers and
lots of them for a lot less than
most of the others. Newspaper
advertising still provides the
kind of good, basic selling that
really gets the job done. Go
with the winner ...newspaper
advertising!

Call 424-8833
THE JEWISH NEWS

Marks Spencer, one of Brit-
ain's leading retail chains,
from 1967 to 1972, and
president until 1979 when
he became honorary
president, having served
the company nearly 50
years.
Born Joseph Edward Sieff
in Manchester, it was there
that he first came into con-
tact with Dr. Chaim Weiz-
mann, the first president of
Israel. .

Historic Cave

The Patriarchs and their
wives are buried in the Cave
of Machpelah.

The best things are
nearest: light in your eyes,
flowers at your feet, duties
at your hand, the path of
God just before you. Then do
not grasp at the stars, but do
life's common work as it
comes, certain that daily
duties and daily bread are
the sweetest things of life.

To: The Jewish News

175 15 W. 9 Mile Rd.

.

Suite 865

Southfield, Mich. 48075

WEI JUST

from:

Hyman Karp

ISN'T IT ABOUT TIME YOU STARTED
USING THE MOST EFFECTIVE ONE . . .
THE JEWISH NEWS?

There are a lot of ways you
can spend your hard-earned
advertising dollars and some
of them can be very glamor-
ous and quite exotic. But
that's not what your business
needs! You need results .
and The Jewish News can

fields: creative writing,
music or art. Entries should
be sponsored by a teacher or
school administrator. Stu-
dents in public, private and
parochial schools are eligi-
ble.
Registration deadline is
Wednesday. For informa-
tion, call Allan Gale at the
Jewish Community Coun-
cil, 962-1880.

Hyman Karp, retired
owner of Dix Poultry, died
Nov. 9 at age 82.
- Born in Russia, Mr. Karp,
of Royal Oak, lived 61 years
in Detroit. He was the foun-
der and president of the
former Cong. Beth Joseph
on Wyoming Ave.
He was the past president
of the Ruzhiner Aid Society
and a board member for
many years of the Hebrew
Benevolent Society.
Mr. Karp is survived by a
son, Dr. Martin A.; three
daughters, Mrs. Harold
(Molly) Haas, Mrs. David
(Esther) Gussin and Mrs.
Avery (Bette) Shapiro; 12
grandchildren and eight
great-grandchildren.

Paste in old label

T o:

NAME

It is a long road from the
inception of a thing to its
realization.
—Moliere

L

Effective Date

"Over 65 years of traditional service in the' Jewish community with dignity and understanding."

HEBREW MEMORIAL CHAPEL

543.1622

SERVING ALL CEMETERIES

26640 GREENFIELD ROAD
OAK PARK, MICHIGAN 48237

Alan H. Dorfman
Funeral Director & Mgr.

Rabbi Israel 1. Rockove
Executive Director

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