• • People Make News CLEVELAND, (JTA) — The board of trustees of the Jewish Welfare Federation here an flounced the appointment of HENRY L. ZUCKER as acting executive director of the Federa- tion- He succeeds Samuel Gold- hamer, who has served as ex- ecutive director for the past 43 years of the Federation's 46 years. Goldhamer was granted a leave of absence last July and has been named honorary trus- tee for life of the Federation. * • * LmONARD PERNICK of 2025 W. Euclid was appointed editor of the Wayne Engineer, Wayne University College of Engineer- ing publication for 1949-50- HER- BERT LEVITT of 3300 W. Chi- cago. was named editor of the Griffin, Wa:c,'ne's yearbobk. * * * Three years ago Rebecca Kapelsohn, a field worker for the National Council of Jewish Women, died while serving the needs of the Displaced Persons in German. Today, through a scholarship established in her memory by the Council, Miss Use Flatow, of Israel, is pre- paring herself to carry on Miss Kapelsohn's work. When she completes t h e ourse at the Mith College chool of Social Miss Flatow Work, Noith- hampton, Mass., Miss .Flatow will return to Israel, where Miss Kapelsohn had hoped to make her home, and will work among the Displaced Persons for whom Miss Kapelsohn gave her life. * * NEW YORK—Plans are under- way for a World Hebrew Con- gress which will convene in Israel. Some six hundred Jewish educators, scholars and writers from fifty countries will be invited. SAMUEL J. • BOR- O W S K I, president of His- tadruth Ivrith (Hebrew Lan- guage and Cultural Association of America) announced prior to his departure by air to Israel. Mr. Borowsky announced that Judge Louis E. Levinthal of Philadelphia had been named chairman of a scope and plan- ning committee to evaluate the Histadrut Ivrith program. - * * * .ROME, (JTA) — SCHLOMO GINOSSAR, first Israeli diplo- matic representative to Italy, who is expected to present his credentials to Itlian President Luigi Einaudi within a few days, Via ,' tendered a reception by leaders of the Jewish communi- ty in this country. Jewish lead- ers who attended the function included Dr. Rafaelo Cantoni, president of the Union of Italian Jewish Communities, and Rai- l:An Chief Rabbi Prof. David 'Prato. • * SAMUEL D. IEDERSDORF, 1 treasurer of the American Jew- ish Committee, was awarded an honorary doctorate of humane letters by New York Universi- ty. • * • J. W. Head, president and founder of Detroit's Electronic Institute, Inc., television a n d radio training school, received an honorary L.L.D. degree from President Walter of Pied- m o n t College, Demorest, Ga., Head at recent com- mencement exercises. RABBI ABR AHAM B. SHOUL- SON, of Erie, Pa., has been ap- pointed head of a new depart- ment of Hebrew and Middle East studies, at Gannon College here, a Catholic institution. The de- partment was inaugurated, ac- cording to a college announce- ment, because "the state of Is- rael is now a fact and more and more emphasis must be given to Hebrew as a modern language." * * * DR. ASHER HANANEL, Rabbi, has been appointed Chief Rabbi of Bulgaria to replace Rabbi Daniel Zion who left for Israel. DANIEL FRISCH, ZOA Presi- dent announced the appoint- ment of BENJAMIN G. BROW- DY, a vice president of the Zion- ist Organization of America and vice chairman of its inner com- mittee, as acting ZOA president during this absence. , * * WILLIAM H. FINESHRIBER, Jr., director of operations for Columbia Broadcasting System, has been appointed vice presi- dent in charge of programs of the Mutual Broadcasting Sys- tem, Frank White, MBS Presi- dent, announced. * * * DR. IRWIN A. EPSTEIN, St. Paul, and ALBERT P. MITNICK, Chicago, general convention chairman, announce that SAM. BEBER of Omaha; Neb., will be honored as the founder of Aleph Zadik Aleph, Bnai Brith's Junior Order at a special silver jubilee celebration during the 81st an- n u a 1 convention of • District Grand Lodge No. 6, Bnai Brith, in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. * LEO PAPP, attorney, address- ed the graduating class of East- ern High on the subject "Free- dom of Speech, Religion and Press." The address, delivered on behalf of .the Detroit Bar As- sociation, made it a point to awaken our young people to the fact that our basic liberties are protected by our courts. * Dr. Franz Landsberger, since 1939 research professor and.lec- turer •in Jewish art at Hebrew ••••••.'"' Union College- Jewish Institute of Religious in ,:-.Cincinnati, has been named Curator of the •:Museum at the Seminary. Dr. Landsberger, a hative of Ger- many, was edu- Landsberger c a t e d at the Universities of Berlin, Geneva, Munich and Breslau, where he received his Ph.D. degree. He taught at Breslau, served as di- rector of the Jewish Museum in Berlin and lectured at the Uni- versity of London before joining the faculty of the College in Cincinnati. MYRON B. BLANCHARD, for the past four years field secre- tary for the New York Metro- politan Section of JWB, has been appointed director of JWB's department of community studies, according to an an- nouncement by S. D. Gershovitz, JWB executive director. Mr. Blanchard succeeds Eli Picheny, who has been named associate director of the program section of JWB's Jewish Center Division. * * ANNA CENTER SCHNEIDER- MAN, just elected chairman of the Conference Committee of National Jewish Women's Or- ganizatiOn which includes Ha- dassah, Mizrachi Women's Or- ganization of America; National Council of Jewish Women, Pio- neer Women's Organization and many other prominent national women's groups, succeeding Mrs. Albert J: May, left for Europe to attend the Congress of the World ORT Union scheduled to begin on July 10 in Paris. While abroad, Mrs. Schneiderman will inspect ORT installations. Holiday in Israel 52-DAY ALL. EXPENSE TOUR On the Luxury Liner ILE DE FRANCE $1450.00 up Rosh Hashana in Tel Aviv Yom Kippur in Jerusalem 16—THE JEWISH NEWS Friday, June 24, 1949 Bernadotte Plan Still Considered, Lourie Declares —(Direct JTA Teletype Wires to The Jewish News) NEW YORK — Arthur Lourie, Counsul-General of Israel, told the opening session of the first National Assembly for Labor Is- rael, that enemies of Israel who failed last year in Paris to per- suade the general assembly of the United Nations to accept the Bernadotte Plan have not given up. Lourie spoke before 750 dele- gates to the Assembly at the Hotel New Yorker. "The offense on behalf of the mutilation of Israel by cutting the Negev out of our small ter- ritory is once again under way, t h o u g h, at present, covertly and without fanfare," Lourie as- serted. "In the game of power politics, the fact that the Arabs already have more deserts than they know what to do with, and that the Negev will be develop- ed, if developed at all, by the Jews, is irrelevant." He said that "for the mo- ment," these plans are matur- ing behind an attack on an- other front, in which the case of the Arab refugees is being made a political pawn. Annual Selfhelp Cruise Scheduled for July 10 Sunday, July 10, at 10 a.m., Selfhelp, Detroit Chapter, will be host to all newly-arrived members of the Detroit Jewish community at its annual Bob-Lo cruise.' Entertainment, games and prizes will be featured. Coffee and cake will be served. Tickets for the cruise may be obtained at Water Herz, 10250 Dexter, TO. 8-6146,, and from Mrs. Selma Bonheim, 7738 Mc- Nichols - Rd., UN.. 1-3938. - Several hundred friends of Dr. and Mrs. Noah E. Aronstam of 79 Eason, Highland Park, hon- ored them Sunday on their 50th wedding anniversary. Among t h e testimonials in their honor was the planting of 20 trees in Israel through the Jewish National Fund by the past presidents of Hadassah. Mrs. Aronstam was one of the first presidents of Detroit Ha- dassah. Dr. Moses Benmosche of New York, formerly of Detroit, like Dr. Aronstam, a noted physician and poet, wrote the following poem in their honor: You may reckon your days and your years that have passed By your efforts and deeds as your measuring rod; While the good you have done are the dies you have cast, And your service to man was devotion to G6d. We who know you and love you throughout the short years— All too short for achievement, too long by the clock— All too long by the time that needs hair-springs and gears, We have leaned on your council, Gibraltar-like rock; And Gibraltar-like, also, you stand at the gates And refuse to give passage where evil might pass. It is here that we greet you both, dear loving mates, On this good, golden year since when ladie and lass, Were united in wedlock forever and aye. Thus we pray, may God bless you! What more can we say? In a recent discussion of long ball hitters Hank Greenberg modestly stated that he didn't rate with the likes of Ruth, Fox, Gehrig and a few others, "My homer8 were short .flys - Com- pared to. Ruth's," .Hank main- tained..... •" Jewish Agency expenditures in the week of May 23-29, reached $1,517,988, which represented a total of $1,257,942 more than it received in income. As of May 29, the Jewish Agency had a current indebtedness of $7,818,- 825, while liabilities coming due during the week of May 29 to June 5, total $324,000. 1****************** ♦ ****- INSURED SAVINGS ACCOUNTS JEWISH PICTURES CURRENT RATE Big Variety Low Prices Correct Framing to Order American Savings & Loan Association JULIAN ART GALLERIES 124 Penobscot Bldg. Your Neighborhood Savings Institution Dexter Blvd. at Cortland TO. 9-6611 -4 ■ ••••••••••094044. *****\ 4* KEAC H BORSCHT ...SCHAV DELICIOUS HOT OR CHILLED • - Surnm,er Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Haggai and daughter, Tikvah, who left Detroit on Wednesday for New York, to sail next Tuesday for Israel, were honored by many of their friends. Mr. Haggai's fellow-teachers in the United Hebrew Schools pre- sented them with a scroll signed by all teachers, in addition to a gift. Gifts were brought to the Haggais by children in his class- es and by alumni. Their destination IS Ein Ha- shophet where the Haggais' son, Jeremiah, night • editor of Al Hamishmar, resides with his family. Mr. Haggai, a pioneer Detroit Zionist and one of the leaders in the labor movement, was a dele- gate to the World Zionist Con- gress in Lucerne in 1937. He is a former editor of the Detroit edition of The Day. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Milin- sky of Detroit will sail for Is- rael on the same boat with the Haggais. The Much!), Wanted RABBI SAMUEL * SANDMEL, director of the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation at Yale University, has been named the first pro- fessor of Jewish Literature and Thought at Vanderbilt Univer- sity, Nashville, Tenn. * * HERBERT BAYARD SWOPE, prominent publicist and former editor of the New York World, has accepted membership on the board of directors of the Amer- ican Memorial to 6,000,000 Jews who were slain in Europe during the war, it was announced at the memorial office, 165 W. 46th St., New York. i`.1:• ■ •'. • ~ ,1 Joseph Haggais Feted! By Friends As They Leave to Live in Israel Hadassah Presidents Honor Aronstams on Golden Anniversary Special! Chair & Seta i tt Cleaned in lour Carpets Nome Cleaned In Your Horne By Experts ■ ■ Tacked Down Also Visiting France and Switzerland Rugs Cleaned in Our Modern Plant Po ne for fast Service Other Roundtrip Steamship Fares $350.00 up Leader Limited Number of Hotel Rooms— $12 to $15, American Plan. Roundtrip by Air $1087.20 ' The Bes t at PASSPORTS AND VISA ARRANGED FOR O'LOAN-SLATTERY Travel Agents 2029 NATIONAL BANK BLDG. WO. 2-6227 Carpet Cleaning Co. Extra Cost Plant and Officer 8700 LINWOOD' TY 5-8400