Kinneret Becomes Detroit's First Hebrew-Speaking Camp A movement to establish a Hebrew speaking camp on the site of Camp Kinneret was launched at a luncheon meeting Tuesday at Old Wayne Club. Kinneret will be the first He- brew-speaking summer camp in the Detroit region. Hebrew will be the language of instruction in all camp activities. Initiators of the project and sponsors include: Rabbi M. Ad- ler, Dr. N. Drachler, A. Elazar, M. Ginsberg, B. Isaacs, B. Laiken, L. LaMed, M. Lieberman, J. Mal- amud, I. Pokempner, Dr. A. Sanders, H. Schumer, J. Schreier, M. Schaver, S. Shevitz, H. Silver, D. Sislin, and P. Slomovitz. Kinneret is sponsored and supported by the United He- brew Schools, • United Jewish Folk Schools and Labor Zion- ist Youth Commission. A six-week season is planned beginning July 8, extending to Aug. 19. Only campers • who reg- ister for the entire six week season will be accepted. The campers will devote 12 hours weekly to formal Hebrew studies. Yosef Haggai and Avraham Lachover, well-known Detroit Hebrew educators, will serve as instructors. The remainder of the camp program will follow along the traditional Kinneret program: swimming, boating, volleyball, baseball, soccer, dramatics, arts and crafts, choir, gardening, etc. Counselors and activity direc- tors will all be Israeli or Ameri- can educators, and graduates of the Habonim Leadership Train- ing Program at the Katznelson Institute in Israel. Packaged Seders Provided for GIs NEW YORK:—"Packaged sed- ers" for hundreds of Jewish GIs and hospitalized veterans at six of the largest military posts and one veteran's hospital in this country have been made avail- able for the first time by the National Jewish Welfare Board —government-authorized agen- cy for meeting the religious and recreational needs of Jews in the armed forces. The Passover seder food pack- ages, consisting of individual frozen packages of fish, chicken, vegetables and dessert, as well as dishes and flatware, will be sent to Camp Lejeune and Ft. Bragg, N. C., Ft. Sam Houston and Lackland Air Force Base, Tex., Ft. Knox, Ky., Ft. Meade, Md., and F.D.R. Veterans Hos- pital, Montrose, N. Y. Jewish chaplains will officiate at these and other, seders in this country and overseas—arrangement and organization of which have been a JWB r e s p o n s i bility since World War I. Shipment of wine, matzos, kosher foods and religious sup- plies to these installations is in addition to supplies sent over- seas by JWB to Korea, Japan, the Philippines, Guam, Okinawa, Alaska, Austria, Germany and the Caribbean area. Mrs. Werbe's Paintings Exhibited in New York The paintings of Anna L. Werbe of Detroit were placed on exhibit at the Arthur U. Newton Galleries, 11 E. 57th St., New York, on April 2, at a reception in her honor. The exhibition will continue through April 16. Edgar P. Richardson, director of the Detroit Art Institute, in a statement printed in the pro- gram, declares. that the exhibi- tion is of interest to Detroiters because of her energetic efforts in art circles in Detroit. Mrs. Werbe's works chosen for the exhibition include 38 oil paintings, watercolors, and min- iatures in ivory. Council Arbitration Brochure Available at Its Offices A brochure explaining the work of the arbitration and Con- ciliation committee of the Jew- ish Community Council is avail- able at the Council office. The committee is headed by A. C. Lappin. Philip Marcuse is co- chairman. All campers, to be screened by a committee of local Hebrew educators, will have to pass minimal entrance requirements in Hebrew. Standards have been drawn up by the educational committee, A. Elazar, chairman, I. Elpern, M. Goldoftas, J. Mathis, M. Michlin and M. Noble. Campers will be accepted from the ages of 12 to 18. Tui- tion will be $180 for 14 to 18 year olds and $220 for 12 to 14 year olds. I. Pokempner, chairman of the Labor Zionist Youth Com- mission, announces that the labor Zionist movement is pre- paring to. erect a new sanitation building at Kinneret, to rede- sign the dining hall and estab- lish a Hebrew library. Sam Linden and Dr. N. Drachler are camp consultants. Sponsors of the project hope to raise $5,000 for investments and scholarship purposes. All checks for contributions are to be sent to Morris Ginsburg, 7725 Mack. Information regarding en- trance requirements can be secured by calling Rena Silver, 16219 Normandy, UN. 4-2066. Kinneret is jointly sponsored by the Pioneer Women, Far- band, and Labor Zionist Organ- ization of Windsor, Akron, Cin- cinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Dayton, Grand Rapids and Pittsburg. 6—THE JEWISH NEWS Friday, April 6, 1951 AJC 'Gifts and Dolls' Luncheon Wednesday Leaders and workers in special gifts and pre-campaigning of Allied Jewish Campaign will launch their phase of the drive at the "Gifts and Dolls" lunch- eon, 12:30 p.m., Wedneday, at the Book Cadillac Hotel. Mrs. Kurt Laemmle of Holly- wood, national vice-chairman of the United Jewish Appeal Wom- en's Division, will be guest speaker. Mrs. Abraham Srere and Mrs. Melville S. Welt are co-chair- men of the Gifts and Dolls luncheon. Haroset, the brownish- paste of nuts, apples a n d cinnamons which at the Seder is symbolic of the bricks the Israelites made in Egyptian bondage, is the main dish at the Seder meal of the Caucasian Jews. Zionists Form Special Body To Enforce Primacy of UJA NEW YORK, (JTA) — More than 3,000 delegates represent- ing all Zionist groups in New York on Sunday adopted a res- olution urging the immediate formation of a special United Jewish Appeal city-wide council which will seek to achieve over- all co-ordination of timing and activities to assure the success of the UJA campaign. The res- olution emphasized that prim- acy will be given to the UJA functions and needs during the duration of the campaign. The resolution was adopted at a "Zionist mobilization confer- ence" addressed by Edward M. M. Warburg, UJA general chair- man, who emphasized that a minimum sum of $25,000,000 must be provided to UJA agen- cies to bring 100,000 Jews to Israel from "danger and dead- line areas" in Eastern Europe and Moslem countries within the next four months. Ambas- sador Abba Eban of Israel, ad- dressing the rally, said that the major effort continues to come from the Israel community it- self, but to supplement its own efforts the government of Israel is now seeking aid from Ameri- can Jewry as well as from the U. S. Government. Rudolf G. Sonneborn, nation- al chairman of the United Pal- estine Appeal, told the audience that the United Jewish Appeal is not a philanthropy, but a democratic movement of volun- tary self-taxation created by the desperate needs of hundreds of thousands of Jews through- out the world. , The conference also was ad- dressed by Dr. Nahum Gold- mann, Louis Lipsky, Baruch Zuckerman and other Zionist leaders. A special Hagadah printed in Israel and symbolizing the ex- odus of the Jews from bondage in Egypt 3,500 years ago, was presented to Mr. Warburg in be- half of the people of Israel and the Zionists of the United States by Ambassador Eban. The citation hailed Mr. Warburg for his UJA leadership. Teach History of Atom In Yeshivah's Studies NEW YORK (AJP) —Hi gh school science students at the Yeshivah of Flatbush are learn- ing about the use of the atom bomb and the peaceful use of atomic energy, Joseph Hey- month, instructor of the class disclosed. An enlarged model of the hydrogen atom, constructed by one of the students, Herbert Stier, is being used in a number of experiments. The Yeshiva's program in- cludes the history of the atom, its structure, how it is split, and how the energy may be con- structively used.