100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

March 01, 1985 - Image 38

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1985-03-01

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

38

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, March 1, 1985

WOOLF
ROOFING
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL

24-HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE
ASK FOR ROY, SCOTT OR SAMMY WOOLF

Southfield

1

646-2452 I

1
18161
W. 13 Mile Rd. I

West Bloomfield

682-7336

SAVE UP TO 60%
ON DIAMONDS

GF. We bring
good things

to life.

SPACE SAVER

Continued from preceding page

FM/AM Electronic
Digital Clock Radio

• We Sell Diamonds Only
• By Appointment Only

SEIKO 40% OFF I

Call Jerry Turken at

355-2300

QUARTZ WATCHES s:Z

I CROSS PENS 40% OFF

The New York
Diamond Cutting Co.

`The Diamond Cutters"

OSCAR BRAUN'S



3000 Town Center, Southfield, Michigan

15075 W. LINCOLN

In Michigan Call Toll Free

I

KODAK

DISC FILM

OAK PARK 968-5858

.st

355-2300

88 1

©1985, NYDC Co

1-800-346-1900

JEWEL KOSHER CATERING

The Finest Catering In Michigan I GLATT
KOSHER
Complete Chicken Dinners

ti •

0%-...-,,,,,

.''...°'..
..„,:.•••''
:
:.

- <-••••°"'
. .
4,..:

It. i•• ■ ••••••-- . . 1 . - •

--1111W—
' lli

Supervised by the Council of Orthodox Rabbis
$ 000

.....1,/

Call Phillip Tewel

661-4050 or 855-3886

We are now accepting orders for

PASSOVER TAKE-OUT FOOD

FOR
SENIOR MEN ONLY

The Executive Athletic Club Proudly
Announces Our New

SENIOR CITIZEN'S MEMBERSHIP

Come join us and fill your days with...
Healthy activity, relaxing facilities, warm
companionship, steambaths, whirlpool and
much, much more.

ALL FOR LESS THAN $1.00 A DAY

Don't wait... Call our Director of Senior Citizen Activities
now and arrange a day you'll look forward to again and again.

CALL
354-8080

THIS IS A LIMITED OFFER

EXECUTIVE

PURELY COMMENTARY

BIG
DISCOUNTS

ATHLETIC CLUB 103 TRAVELERS TOWER • 26555 EVERGREEN • SOUTHFIELD, MI 48076 • (313) 354-8080

in!

I

lieved to be hiding somewhere
in South America.
Over the weekend, a London
newspaper reported Mengele
is alive and shuttles between
two places in Paraguay. Last
week, the U.S. Justice De-
partment announced that its
Office of Special Investiga-
tions would begin looking for
Mengele.
Some people say we
shouldn't even bother. They
argue that the Nazi war crimi-
nals are all very old and will
die soon anyway. They say
federal resources are scarce,
and the money could be better
spent on other prosecutions,
like drugs. Forget about
Mengele — let time do the pro-
secutor's work, they say.
Tell that to Auschwitz sur-
vivor Ruth Eliaz, who was
forced to watch as Mengele
starved her baby to death to
see how long it could live with-
out food. Tell it to Eva Kor of
Terre Haute, Ind., who with
her twin sister was forced to
undergo grotesque genetic ex-
periments to indulge
Mengele's fiendish fascination
with twins.
Tell it to the thousands of
survivors who remember

Mengele, the elusive "death
angel," who coldly calculated
which of their relatives would
live — and which would be lost
forever as the smoke rose from
the crematoriums.
No, we must never forget.
Mengele and other Nazi war
criminals must answer for
their crimes. Our government
must do all it can to find them
and bring them to justice.
The perpetrators must be
punished because we know
that the horrors of the
Holocaust were not unique to
Nazi Germany. The seeds of its
inhumanity lie in every gener-
ation. So the lesson of that sad
chapter of human history must
be learned over and over
again, to make certain that it
will never happen again.

Civilized society is based on
a respect for the rule of law —
the certainty that, in the end,
crime will be punished. Nazi
war criminals must never be
allowed to beat justice by
merely beating the clock.
There are many lessons to be
learned anew. There is a need for
a renewed militancy against prej-
udice, in the fight against anti-
Semitism.

YOUTH

BETH ABRAHAM HILLEL
MOSES elementary aged youth
group announces that Brian
Herschfus is its new adviser.
B.A.H.M. United Synagogue
Youth (high school) and Kadima
(middle school) will have an Oneg
Shabbat at 8 p.m. today. A
speaker will follow services. On
March 16, the groups will see the
play Fantasticks at Oakland
Community College and then go
to Swenson's for an afterglow

party.
On March 29-31 regional con-
vention will take place in Cincin-
nati.
A sledding party is planned for
Kadima at 2 p.m. Sunday. On
March 17 at 1 p.m. Kadima will
join other Kadima and MSTY
groups at a teen nightclub for
video games, a D.J. and more.
Anyone interested should call
Beth Abraham Hillel Moses,
851-6880, for details.

Youth Awards Presented

The League of Jewish Women's
Organizations of Greater Detroit
will hold its 40th annual youth
awards program March 24 at 1
p.m. at Cong. Beth Shalom.(JTA)
— The guest speaker will be
Rabbi David A. Nelson of Beth
Shalom. A reception will follow
the program with refreshments
served by the sisterhood of the
congregation. The invocation will
be given by Naomi Zeitz,
president of the sisterhood.
This year's nominees, Jewish
high school seniors who excel
scholastically, demonstrate lead-
ership ability, participate in
community or service organiza-
tions, and have a formal religious
education, were required to sub-
mit an essay on the topic, "Survi-
val of the Jewish Family."
The 26 students being honored
are: Lisa Askenazy, Laurel
Bachman, Deborah Beres, Alan
G. Blatnikoff, Marcey Borsand,
Julie Ann Callton, Jeffrey M.
Frank, Lisa Friedman, Gael
Grossman, Abigail Guyer, Stacey

Hart, Susan Jaffee, Andrea Ja-
ron, Melissa Lumberg, Dina Naj-
man, Stavit Ben Ozer, Jennifer
Ruby, Jonathon Samuels, Ellen
Schoenfeld, Helen Schuraytz,
Susan Sherman, Deborah L. Sin-
gal, Andrea Stearn, Louis
Sugarman, Rachel Tessler and
Deborah Traurig.
The judges are Marvin Kasoff,
director of education — youth at
Cong. Shaarey Zedek; Joseph
Poisson, educational director of
Temple Israel; and Marilyn
Schakne, past president of League
of Jewish Women's Organiza-
tions.

A special awards presentation
will be made by Betty Silverfarb.
Youth awards Chairman is
Dorothy Cole, vice president of
the league. Her committee is
comprised of Irene Phillips and
Mrs. Silverfarb.
President of League of Jewish
Women's Organizations is Mar-
jorie Saulson. The public wel-
come. There is no charge.

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan