Win 5O—BUSINESS CARDS PERFECT Wall Washing Co. Estab- lished 30 years. One day service. TO 8-7749. WALL WASHING, experienced. work guaranteed. Radiant Wall Washing Co. TO 8-2460. W. WILLIAMS. Special rate given on paper removing and wall washing . TE 4-0195 or TY 5-9103. TILE DO YOU NEED TILE WORK? New and Repair Special U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO. UN 1-5075 DI 1-0568 FOR BETTER wall washing call James Russell. One day service. TO 6-4005. 526 Belmont. FURNITURE repaired and refinished. Free estimates. WE 3-2110. FOR YOUR Worldbook Encyclopedia, Call WE 3-2239. M & S CEMENT CONTRACTORS Commercial, Residential VE 7-2404 UN 3-4823 BONDED AND INSURED ALL WORK GUARANTEED $2.50 ASH and Rubbish Drums 21 Gal. Galvanized Garbage Can $4.00 Heavy Wire Burning Baskets .$2.50 Free Delivery—Matt Dean. Phone KE 3-4870—KE 1-1593. .55 — MISCELLANEOUS 2 HIGH STYLE sheared beaver coats. Like new. $500 each. Will fit sizes 8-10, 12-14. VE 8-3994. 57—FOR SALE, HOUSEHOLD GOODS & FURNITURE FOLDING BED for sale, very cheap. UN 3-5280. Call at 2 p.m. SMALL BABY GRAND for sale. Excel- lent condition, TO 8-6711. Evenings. Carpeting, and padding, Rose Carved, approximately 91 yds., in- cluding stairs and upper landing. 4 solid maple dinette -chairs and table. Crystal dining ream fixture, stair landing drapery and covered cornice. UN. 3-8833 Cushing Dedicates Catholic Chapel at Brandeis WALTHAM, Mass. (JTA) — 'Archbishop Richard J. Cushing of Boston dedicated a Catholic chapel this week end on the cam- pus of Brandeis University, Jew- ish sponsored non-sectarian col- lege here. The university has built three chapels, one each for Jewish, Protestant and Catholic students. . After consecrating the building and naming it Bethlehem, Arch- bishop Cushing lauded .Brandeis, insisting that it "deserves the praise of all men of good will" for making religious instruction and devotions available to all students. Noting that three chapels had been built, he said that Brandeis had "gone all the way" in the direction of bringing religion into the lives of its stu- dents. InallalMNIMMIninnall1.11111111111111” 56 Students Enroll Conservative Movement Launches for First Session Drive for $65,000,000 in Ten Years NEW YORK — Plans for de- In Jerusalem, a Center of Ethi- of Einstein College veloping the Jewish Theological cal Studies and Residence Halls NEW YORK (JTA) — The Al- bert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University opened Monday with an entering class of 56 students. The epening lec- ture was delivered by Dr. Marcus D. Kogel, dean of the college, who formerly served as Commis- sioner of Hospitals for the City of New York. The college, co-educational and non-sectarian in the selection of faculty and students, is the first medical school under Jewish auspices established in America. The Albert Einstein Medical College is the core of a $100,000,- 000 "Medical City," which in- cludes the $40,000,000 Municipal Hospital Center constructed by the City of New York and the $45,000,000 Psychiatric Hospital to be constructed by the State of New York. The medical college itself is the initial unit of a $25,000,000 project which will eventually in- clude schools of dentistry, pub- lic health and post-graduate study. The combined facilities of the `Medical City" wil cover over 200 acres and have a combined bed capacity of 5,400, constitut- ing one of the most comprehen- sive centers of medical education, care and research in the country. The 1,400-bed Municipal Health Center is adjacent to the college and serves as its clinical teach- ing center. The faculty of the medical college serves as the pro- fessional staff of the hospital center. The hospital center comprises the 511-bed Nathan B. Van Etten Hospital for chronic diseases, which opened ,early this year, and the 898-bed Abraham Jacobi Hospital, a general hospital, which is scheduled to be ready for use by the end of this year. The Einstein Medical College is America's 83rd medical school, with a faculty of 200, both full- time and non-paid clinical per- sonnel. It was named for Pro- fessor Albert Einstein on his 74th birthday. The renowned scientist maintained an active interest in the progress of the college until his death this year. Seminary, at Broadway and 122nd St., as a Center of Human Brotherhood which would in- volve expenditures tot a 1 1 i n g $32,600,000 for new buildings, improvements and expanded ed- ucational and scholarship facili- ties were announced by Dr. Louis Finkelstein, chancellor of the Seminary, at a conference on en- dowment needs, held in conjunc- tion with the meeting of the Seminary's National Planning Committee. This committee is comprised of 700 civic leaders who represent the Seminary, the United Synagogue, and the Rab- binical Assembly. A nation-wide campaign to raise $65,000,000 in the next decade to support the programs of the three organs of the Conservative move- ment — the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, United Synagogue and Rabbinical As- sembly of America—was opened here this week at the conclusion of the ninth annual meeting of the National Planning Committee of the Seminary. The sum includes $32,600,000 for the expansion of the Semi- nary into a "Center of Human Brotherhood" in New York, with branches in Los Angeles and Jerusalem, and $32,500,000 for support of the programs of the Conservative movement over the ten-year period. Joseph N. Gor- son of Philadelphia was named chairman of the fund effort. Award Brandeis President High Bnai Btith Medal "A campaign of murder and terror had been organized by Egypt, as was clearly seen from the evidence. The Egyptian press and radio heaped praise on the perpetrators (of attacks on Israel lives and property) gleefully re- porting every attack against Is- rael, the Egyptian authorities openly claimed credit for them. We therefore believe that . any free country would reply to such attacks as Israel replied. STARLIGHT, Pa. (JTA)—Dr. Abram L. Sachar was awarded the Bnai Brith President's Medal for Humanitarianism at the 31st annual meeting of the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundations Commission held at Camp Bnai Brith here. Philip Klutznick, world president of Bnai Brith, presented the medal to Dr. Sachar on his re tirement as chairman of the Com- mission. Dr. Sachar is president Israel Envoy Tells Burns of Brandeis University at Wal- Of Readiness to Negotiate tham, Mass. JERUSALEM (JTA) — Maj. As its new chairman, the Bnai Gen. E. L. M. Burns, Chief of Brith Hillel Commission elected Staff of the United Nations Truce Dry William Haber, professor of Supervision Organization, met economics at the University of with Israel delegate Joseph Te- Michigan. The other officers koa to work out with him plans elected are Joseph L. Paradise, for resuming the general Israel- vice chairman; William Rabkin, Egyptian Gaza pacification talks treasurer; Maurice Bisgyer, sec- which Egypt broke off late last retary. Rabbi Arthur J. Lelyveld month. was re-named national Hillel di- The Burns-Tekoa meeting took rector of the Bnai Brith Hillel place in the wake of Israel's in- Foundations. forming Gen. Burns this week- end that it was ready to resume the talks in any form set by the truce supervisor. The Israel let- (Dedicated to the Israel ter, sent after the UN Security Bond Drive) Council last Thursday threw its support behind Gen. Burns' ef- By N. E. ARONSTAM forts to maintain a cease-fire and "And all ?lotions shall call ye resume the border talks, was happy, signed by Arthur Lourie, acting For ye shall be a delightsome director general of the Israel land." —Malachi3:12 Foreign Ministry. Bring Ye the Tithes "Bring ye the whole tithes into Dedicate Village in Israel the store-house!" TEL AVIV (JTA)—Canadian Thus spoke the Lord of Hosts- Hadassah-WIZO has dedicated a to Malachi. village adopted by them, the first Double your tithes and treble in a chain of such settlements your gifts, which are to be established in More bountifully shall they re- the hills of Western Galilee in a turn to thee. short period of time. Speakers joy—doubly blessed is at the dedication ceremony were Give with he who giveth, Edward E. Gelber, president of the Canadian Zionist Organiza- For he giveth to himself. tion, and Mrs. D. P. Gotlieb, And in giving thus he liveth. president of t h e Canadian Then the nations will awaken, women's organization. The latter Call ye, happy, call ye great, said Canadian women ha v e Hates and feuds shall be for- saken,— pledged $200,000 for the settle- Toil with fervor—strong in Faith, ment of the area. The hour is near, the day is 90—DETROIT JEWISH NEWS nigh— Am -.Yisrael Heti! Friday, September 16, 1955 would be built for students and other visitors to the Holy City at a cost of $2,750,000. The uni- versity of Judaism in Los An- geles, in operation since 1948, would get a new building at a cost of $1,500,000. The sum of $1,000,000 Dr. Fin- kelstein said, has been earmark- ed for setting up an endowed country place for scholarly con- ferences (national and interna- tional) to pursue common studies in the ethics of our time. Envisioned in the Human Brotherhood Center plan is the establishment at the Seminary of a Jewish School of Social Work. Dr. Finkelstein reported that this project would cost $2,500,000. The plan also calls for the en- dowment of chairs in Biblical and Talmudic studies, in. religious education, philosophy, and men- tal health at a cost totalling $1,750,000. Endowment of ten re- search fellowships and forty scholarships will account for $1,860,000. Other major aspects of the plan include endowments for: Jewish Museum, $1,000,000; Seminary li- brary, $2,000,000; American Jew- ish History Center, $1,000,000; Institute for Religious and Social Studies, $1,500,000; University of Judaism, $2,000,000; Institute Of Sacred Music, $750,000, and ex- pansion funds for several de- partments. World Zionist Leaders Pledge Their Support to Israel's Security Efforts JERUSALEM (JTA) — Sup- port for Israel's efforts to protect its security along the Egyptian border were voiced here by a group of Zionist leaders on the eve of their departure after at- tending a meeting of the Zionist Actions Committee here. Noting that they had a "grim opportun- ity" to see the situation for them- selves, a party of seven leaders from the United States, Canada, Britain, South Africa and Latin America issued the following statement.: "We believe in the overriding importance of the - armistice agreements, which we witnessed Egypt undermining. Any . inter- ational_ examination of the situ- ation created must stein from the fundamental facts of Egypt's as- sault on the armistice not on Is- rael's reaction to that assault. Any other attitude would be lacking in moral validity and practical relevance to reality." peace in the Middle East and should be concerned with the root cause of the present dan- gerous instability there. The Zionist leaders reported that at the request of the Actions Corn- mittee the government of Israel had "generously" agreed to admit a larger flow of immigrants to the Jewish State. "As we leave Israel," they concluded, "we ex- tend to its people the assurance of our full understanding and de- termination to rally around the justice of her cause." The seven who issued the statements are: Mrs. Rose Hal- prin, member of the Jewish Agency in New York; Mrs. Re- becca Schulman, president of Hadassah; Edward E. Gelber, head of the Zionist Organization of Canada; Dr. S. Levenberg, head of the Jewish Agency in London; I. Dunsky of South Africa; J. Yaguspky of Argen- tina, and Leib Dultzin of Mexico. Nazi Producer's Son Praises Ghefto Uprising FRANKFURT (JTA)—Thomas Christoph Harlan, 25-year-old son of the notorious nazi film producer, Veit Harlan, has writ- ten a stage play, "Bluma from Warsaw," that extols the War- saw ghetto uprising. Young Harlan, who in revul- sion against his father's unre- pentant attitude has become ex- The group also stressed that tremely pro-Jewish, declared that the world is concerned with he was stirred to his dramatic effort when -he encountered, on Swedish Parliament Hosts a visit to Israel two years ago, 140 kibbutz members who sur- Israel Knesset Delegation vived the Warsaw ghetto revolt. Veit Harlan, the Nazis' fav- STOCKHOLM (JTA)—Israel's Knesset delegation to the Parlia- orite moviemaker, was director ment here was entertained at a and producer of "Jew Suess," the dinner given by the Swedish anti-Semitic film ordered by Nazi Parliament. The Israelis were Propaganda Minister Goebbels to welcomed by Johannes Nilsson, sell the concept that Jews have Speaker of the Upper House. always be en innately criminal Pinchas Lavon, leader of the and that it is therefore a meas- Israel group, expressed the ure of self-defense to exterminate them. Shown at the time when thanks of the delegation. the deportation of Germany's "Y o u n g countries," he said, Jews to the gas chambers of Po- "seldom want to learn, but Israel land got under way, "Jew Suess" has much to learn from Sweden, was to have smothered any lin- particularly in the field of social gering German compunctions welfare and the workings of about the deportations and about democracy." Others present at the vast butchering operations in the dinner included former Gov- Eastern Europe. ernor Rickard Sandler, Liberal After the war, Harlan's come- Party leader Bertil Ohlin, Trade back was a stormy center of con- Union Federation chairman Axel , troversy, with clashes in Berlin, Strand, and Albin Johnson, direc- Frankfurt, Freiburg and other tor of the Cooperatives Union. places between German demo- Later, the Israelis toured vari- crats, notably students, and Har- ous institutions of social welfare lan sympathizers. For the past two or three years, however, his in the Stockholm area and were films have been shown every- , honored at a luncheon tendered { where without , untoward inei- •• by the SwediSh 'government. dent. r Report No Damage In Israel Quakes TEL AVIV (JTA) — Israel was rocked by two minor land shocks, apparently connected with the violent earthquake which hit Egypt's Nile delta killing at least 11 persons. Haifa was the hardest hit area in Israel, but there, as elsewhere in the country, no one was hurt and there was no property damage. Bond Conference Hears Appeals for Renewed Effort (ContMued from Page 5) is blown up, two wells; for every yard of pipeline destroyed a mile of new pipeline; for every settle- ment bombed two new settle- ments. Only in this way can we establish our defense and insure our security," Mr. Eshkol stated. Israel's Testing Period In an address stressing the im- portance of economic aid for Is- rael, Dr. Joseph J. Schwartz, ex- ecutive head of the Bond Organi- zation, reported that "the situa- tion in Morocco and other parts of North Africa is certainly in the category of an emergency" He asked: "Who of us can forget those tragic years not so long ago when there was no Israel to save Jewish lives?" He announc- ed that a total of $198,391,150 had been raised since May, 1951, through the sale of Israel bonds. More than 750,000 persons in the United States, Canada, Latin America and Western Europe had subscribed to the bonds, he stated. William Rosenwald, general chairman of the United Jewish Appeal, reported to the confer- ence that the American Jewish community has played a vital role in aiding the people of Israel through both the bond campaign and the United . Jewish Appeal. He warned, however, that despite all that has been accomplished, Israel must have American sup- port as fully as in the past. Abraham Feinberg, president of the Israel Bond Organization, reported that in the four fiscal years extending from April 1, 1951 to March 31, 1955, a total of $156,155,000 in Israel bond pro- ceeds was invested in the devel- opment of Israel's economy. Of this sum, $71,910,000 was allocat- ed to agriculture and irrigation. $46,108,000 to industry and elec- tric power, and the rest for other purposes. Leon H. Keyserling, former chairman of President Truman's, Council of Economic Advisers, told the conference that no coun- try, large or small, has attained so quickly the economic progress "which has lifted Israel in- seven short years" to a functioning economy. Dr. Keyserling, who re- cently returned from Israel, said Israel's survival is "a condition for the .security of the United States." A call for a spirit of optimism in the Israel bond drive and rec- ognition of the distinctive char- acter of Israel bonds was made here in an address by Julian Free- man of Indianapolis, president of the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds. Morris W. Berinstein, national campaign chairman of the Israel Bond Or- ganization, said that success of the conference can be measured only by one yardstick: "The devo- tion and the effort for Israel bonds which it inspires in us dur- ing the next four months." Detroiters who attended the conference included Philip Stoll- man, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Holtz- man, David Safran, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Katchke, Sidney Shevitz, Mr. and Mrs. Morris L. Schaver, Mrs. Rachel Kurtzman and Peter Goldstein. 40,000 See Maimonides Exhibit Just Ended JERUSALEM (JTA)—An ex- hibition on the works of Maimon- ides, the medieval Jewish philos- opher-scientist, closed here after nearly 40,000 persons, including many tourists, had visited it. During the same period, which marked, the 750 anniversary of the death of the Jewish sage and religious codifier, several hun- dred lectures on the Rambam were delivered in schools , at learned societies and . at public meetings. •