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September 22, 1995 - Image 106

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-09-22

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

\awn

raiz nitir7

111 1

111111

nlw`?

to- all

to all

otac
cficiends,

ofat,Veriek,

and

and iviatioas.

FLORENCE AND ARNOLD
MICHLIN

ROSE AND LEO NEUMAN
LAS VEGAS, NV

to
WELCOME
'Oil HOME

e'd like

11n]11

MILLIE SCHIFF AND "IRISK.LEVINE

nalz

anit1362

to- all

ith a loan from the

oalycliends.,

and i.etatioee.

N V'TPTEIT?

NATHAN AND SONIA
NOTHMAN

STUART, SHULA, ASHLEY AND DAVID LEVY.

967-1112

ay the coil1iv1 9
yeap. be filled
ith health cold
happihess fop.
all ow, family
ahcl frievxds.

A Very Happy and
Healthy New Year
to All Our
Friends and Family.

w

THE SLAIMS
JOHN, CHERYL, ERIC AND JENNIFER

'Co All Our
saelatires and cirienh,
:di fir a - 296(fr
with happiness;
ea-lth and trasperit29.

a9 All Our
aela-tires and ciriendc
wish fir a- ptea-r
with happiness,
ea-lth a-no tmsperit29.

(

ND JOE SCHNEIDER
BRYAN, BRAD AND BRANDON
HEATHER, BRETT, CAIDEY AND ZACK SCHNEIDER



LESTER AND RUTH ROSENBERG
AND FAMILY

Vo. A11 Our
Cela-tires and &riends;
*Vile a- pea-r
with happiness,
ealth a7la' prasperitv.

V° All Our
aelatires a-nal clriene,
:shfir a- pear
with happiness,
ea-1th .and prtzperip.

xed

THE SALLAN FAMILY
ANDY, LESLY, JILLIAN & SYDNEE

SONIA, ERIKA AND ALEXIS PONE



NEW CALVES page R11

animals," says Mr. Lin. "When
penned together, the stronger
ones could get the lion's share of
food from weaker animals. And,
diagnosis of illness in the early
stages was difficult. When a calf
contracted diarrhea, it was ini-
tially difficult to determine which
one was sick; thus critical time in
starting treatment was lost."
The idea of isolating new-born
calves in kennels is not new, but
was popular mainly in cold cli-
mates. In the past, most were
make-shift affairs that were hard
to clean. Ready-made kennels
from wood or fiberglass manu-
factured in Europe and the Unit-
ed States are closed, rather
clumsy to move and more difficult
to disinfect. Plastic kennels have
a number of advantages, says the
designer, Ruth Navon, calf man-
ager at Kibbutz Beit Keshet.
`They have completely smooth
surfaces without nooks and cran-
nies, easing sanitation and main-
tenance, which can be done with
something as simple as a pail of
water and a hand-held brush. I
can move them with ease, unaid-
ed, letting the sun disinfect the
kennels. Because they are light,
we were able to design them large
enough to house the animals
through the third month of life,"
she said.
The Moo-tels are equipped
with window flaps that can be
opened or closed to regulate ven-
tilation, making them suitable for
all climates and all seasons. ❑

The Grave
Keeps Secrets

CARL ALPERT

SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

Little Israel has more than its
share of heart-rending tragedies,
penetrating to the very depths of
human emotion — real life dra-
ma unequaled on any stage. One
such story, kept a secret for 46
years, was recently revealed to
the scrutinizing eye of the tele-
vision camera.
The Genizdovitz family — fa-
ther, mother, three children —
came from Poland to settle in
Palestine in 1931. They made
Haifa their home. The middle son
Dov was only 6.
Life was not easy for the fam-
ily. The father was a port worker
and the mother a construction la-
borer. Dov dropped out of high
school in the 11th grade to help
support the family.
At the age of 19 he enlisted in
the British army to help fight
Hitler, as did many young Jews
who in those days were known as
Palestinians. He saw action.
When the war was over, he joined
the Jewish underground elite
unit, the Palmach, and was based
at first in the Negev, then was
transferred to the north where he
faced the Syrian army which

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