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July 22, 1983 - Image 26

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1983-07-22

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

26 Friday, July 2Z 1983

The

West Bloomfield Plaza
6666 Orchard Lake Rd.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Kn itting Nook

851-8188

Hours:

Mon.-Fri. 10-5

EXPERT FINISHING CLASSES

by MAVIS

Given in August
Pre-registration required.
Call for details.

"a

Ut3C:VQ: b311(!)a

CREATES A LOVING
POSITIVE JEWISH ENVIRONMENT
IN WHICH PRE-SCHOOLERS
EXPLORE THEIR WORLDS

LEARNING CENTER APPROACH TO EDUCATION
FLEXIBLE SCHEDULING TO MEET
INDIVIDUAL PARENT-CHILD NEEDS

PROGRAM INCLUDES:
Full day and half day options as desired
Lunch - Program
Parent-Toddler groups

SPECIAL OFFER THROUGH JULY 31, 1983:
Enroll for 2 days per week
Receive one additional day free!
Enroll for 3 days per week
Receive two additional days free!
For enrollment information call 552-9690

Embassy Debate Began in 1953

WASHINGTON (JTA) —
The United States decision
not to move its embassy in
Israel into Jerusalem was
made as soon as the Israeli
government transferred its
Foreign Ministry to the Is-
raeli capital in 1953.
This is shown in Vol. V of
"The Foreign Relations of
the United States 1952-
1954" which the State De-
partment made public
Wednesday. While Vol. V
deals with Western Euro-
pean security, the discussion
on the U.S. Embassy comes
at the end of an account of a
meeting July 16, 1953, be-
tween Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles and
British Acting Foreign Sec-
retary Lord Salisbury.
Dulles noted that the
U.S. position was similar
to that of the British now
that the Israeli foreign
office had been moved to
Jerusalem from Tel Aviv.

BONN (JTA) — Chancel-
lor Helmut Kohl will visit
Israel from Aug. 31 through
Sept. 4, governnient sources
said.
Kohl, who just returned
from Moscow, is expected to
visit Arab -countries after
Israel. While in Jerusalem,
he will have several meet-
ings with Premier
Menahem Begin to discuss
bilateral relations and the
Arab-Israeli conflict, the
sources said.
They also are likely to

-Temple Emanu-E1-

IS A VIBRANT PROGRESSIVE
CONGREGATION WHICH IS
ACCEPTING MEMBERSHIP APPLICATIONS
FOR THE COMING YEAR — 1983-1984
Attend Our Prospective Member Shabbat Aug. 5, 1:45 p.m.

!WM=

11111111==

11•11111MMI

While the United States
continues to maintain its
embassy in Tel Aviv, U.S.
officials do go to Jerusalem
to meet with Israeli offi-
cials, but refuse to go to offi-
cial offices in East
Jerusalem.

Kohl to V isit Israel

l'A l 11111 1 1111111 1 1111 11 11111111111111 1 1111 1 11111111111111111111111111111111"

=MINED
g1•11111•1111

"We do not intend to
move our embassy to
Jerusalem and we will
probably wait for Israeli
officials to come to our
embassy rather than
send embassy represen-
tatives to Jerusalem for
the conduct of business,"
the State Department ac-
count reported. He (Dul-
les) said, "After all, we
are considerably more
important to them than
they to us." Lord Salis-
bury made no particular
comment except to indi-
cate that the British "also
did not plan to move their
embassy."

SYNAGOGUE COUNCIL
OPEN HOUSE SUN., AUG. 7, 2-5 pm

IIM111195

ONE DAY A WEEK INDEPENDENT HEBREW SCHOOL.
RELIGIOUS SCHOOL • ACADEMY FOR ADULTS • SPEAKERS
TORAH STUDY GROUPS • BOOK REVIEWS • CHOIR
YOUTH GROUP • JUNIOR YOUTH GROUP • YOUTH CHOIR
COUPLES CLUB • BROTHERHOOD • SISTERHOOD
OUTDOOR SUMMER SERVICES • NURSERY SCHOOL

discuss German plans to sell
advanced weaponry to
Saudi Arabia, notably the
Leopard II tank, which Is-
rael adamantly opposes.
Government circles here
hope that Isrraelis can be
persuaded to mute their ob-
jections. In that case, Bonn
will propose to sell Israel
the 120 mm. cannon that
goes with the Leopard II, a
weapon the Germans say
can be very useful to Israel
and save it the costs of de-
veloping a similar cannon,
estimated at over $1 billion.

Distance Record
Set in NY Race

NEW YORK (JTA) — Stu
Mittleman of New York
took second place in the re-
cently concluded six-day
"ultra-marathon." The
endurance run took place on
the quarter-mile track at
Downing Stadium on Ran-
dalls Island.
The first-place winner
was Siegfried Bauer, of New
Zealand who logged slightly
more than 511 miles in 144
hours. None of the runners
broke the record of 623
miles, which was estab-
lished in Great Britain in
1888.
Mittleman, a 32-year-old
college professor, set an
American record by cover-
ing more than 488 miles, in-
cluding close to 100 miles in
the final 24 hours of the run.
He became the first Ameri-
can to run more than 460
miles in this event.

Synagogue Cites
Fire Fighters

— CALL 967-4020 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION

TEMPLE EMANU-EL

14450 W. 10 Mile Rd., Oak Park, Mi.

-

---

Lane B. Steinger - Rabbi -
Norman Rose - Cantor
Dr. Milton Rosenbaum - Rabbi Emeritus
Dr. Abraham Aharoni - Director of Education & Youth Activities
Stanley Finkelstein - President

11,11=IM

Cong. Beth Abraham
Hillel Moses honored 33
West Bloomfield fire fight-
ers last week with a lunch-
eon at the fire station.
The men were lauded for
their efforts during the Jan.
18 fire at the synagogue
during which they rescued
many Sifrei Torah.
A traditional dairy
luncheon was served to the
men, whose chief Earl Be-
nson, retired last week.
Congregation President
Benjamin Kinzer paid trib-
ute to the firemen at the
luncheon.

Synagogue

VI

vni
ix

X

'I
I I I
I V

Services

V

ADAT SHALOM SYNAGOGUE: Services 6 p.m. today
and 9 a.m. Saturday. Eric Rosenthal, Bar Mitzva.
CONG. BETH ABRAHAM HILLEL MOSES: Services
7:15 p.m. today and 8:45 a.m. Saturday. Marc Todd
Waldman, Bar Mitzva.
CONG. BETH ACHIM: Services 6 p.m. today and 8:45
a.m. Saturday. Jeffrey Ian Bennet, Bar Mitzva, and
Jennifer Loberman, Bat Chayil.
CONG. BETH SHALOM: Services 6 p.m. today and 9 a.m.
Saturday. Joel Fealk, Bar Mitzva.
CONG. BNAI ISRAEL OF WEST BLOOMFIELD:
Services 9 a.m. Saturday. Scot Zola, Bar Mitzva.
CONG. BNAI MOSHE: Services 7 p.m. today and 8:45
a.m. Saturday. William/Norman Steingold, Bar
Mitzva.
DOWNTOWN SYNAGOGUE: Services 8 a.m. Saturday.
Rabbi Gamze will speak on "The Shema —The Jewish
Credo."
CONG. T'CHIYAH: Services 10 a.m. Saturday conducted
by Edward Wise.
TEMPLE EMANU-EL: Services 8 p.m. today in the West
Garden conducted by Susie and Rick Melamed.
TEMPLE ISRAEL: Services 8 p.m. today. Rabbi Syme
will speak on "Chapters in Jewish History II — When
the Torah was Read in Greek."_ Brian Charles Bass,
Bar Mitzva.
Regular services will be held at Cong. Bais Chabad of
Farmington Hills, Cong. Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield,
Temple Beth Jacob, Temple Beth El, Cong. Beth Tefilo
Emanuel Tikva, Cong. Beth Tephilath Moses of Mt. Cle-
mens, Birmingham Temple, Cong. Bnai David, Cong. Bnai
Israel-Beth Yehudah, Cong.-Bnai Jacob, Cong. Bnai Zion,
Cong. Dovid Ben Nuchim, Temple Kol Ami, Livonia Jewish
Congregation, 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 Israel (18995
Schafer), Troy Jewish Congregation, Young Israel of
Greenfield, Young Israel of Oak-Woods and Young Israel of
Southfield.

Group Urges Renewal
of Romania's MFN Status

WASHINGTON (JTA) —
The Conference of
Presidents of Major Ameri-
can Jewish Organizations
called on the United States
last week to continue most
favored nation trade status
for Romania.
Warren Eisenberg, direc-
tor of the International
Council of Bnai Brith Inter-
national, one of the groups
that comprise the
Presidents Conference, told
a hearing of the House
Ways and Means Subcom-
mittee on Trade that the
most favored nation (MFN)
status not only provides
leverage, tying Romanian
emigration to trade with the
U.S., but helps that Com-
munist country to maintain
some independence from
the Soviet Union and the
Warsaw Pact.
Eisenberg noted that the
Presidents Conference has
supported renewal of MFN
with Romania every year
since 1975, even though it
has sometimes been dis-
satisfied with the number of
Jews permitted to emigrate.
Conceding that the de-
crease over the last sev-
eral years can be partly
explained "by the aging
character of the Roma-
nian Jewish commu-
nity," he added that the
drop also reflected the
Romanian government's
policy of discouraging
emigration by limiting
the number of passports.
The Bnai Brith official
noted that Romania was
concerned about a "brain
drain" — the loss of skilled

and educated people — and
instituted an education tax
on emigrants to slow the
flow. But after the public
concern by both the
Presidents Conference and
the Reagan Administra-
tion, President Nicolae
Ceausescu of Romania re-
voked the tax and assured
the White House that he
would not place any further
economic or procedural bar-
riers to emigration.

Securities Lure
Israeli Investors

TEL AVIV (ZINS) —
Nearly 10 percent of all
available funds in Israel are
tied up in securities listed
on the Tel Aviv Securities
Exchange, an Israeli news-
paper has reported.
According to Yediot
Ahronot, speculators on the
exchange can make a
greater profit from trading
in securities than they can
from playing a trade or from
manufacturing.

More Orthodox
Nursing Students

NEW YORK (JTA) — Or-
thodox girls in both the
United States and Canada
planning to study to be
nurses are enrolling in
growing numbers in the
School of Nursing of Beth
Israel Medical Center here,
according to the dean of the
nursing school. Of the 190
nursing students currently
in the school, more than 40
are Orthodox.

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