-

Interfaith Committee for Peace
in Holy Land Plans Pilgrimage

NEW YORK, (AJP)—Chris-
tian, Jewish and Moslem mem-
bers of the Interfaith Commit-
tee for Peace in the Holy Land
met at New York's Presbyte-
rian Labor Temple on 14th
Street on July 19, and an-
nounced plans for - a pilgrimage
in late August to Israel and the
Arab countries.
The Committee, under the
leadership of Dr. Richard E.
Evans, minister of the Presby-
terian Labor Temple, believes
that peace between Arabs and
Jews can be established on the
basis of a common heritage
going back to Abraham, Moses
and other prophets venerated
by both peoples.
The Pilgrimage of Peace, Dr.
Evans declared, may well ac-
complish. what politics and UN
judgments have so far failed to
accomplish. The dynamic La-
bor Temple leader announced
that the committee plans to
erect an Interfaith Monument
in the Galilee area in the Holy
Land to serve as an eternal
symbol testifying to the com-
mon Hebraic heritage of the
three groups, Jews Moslems
and Christians.
Speakers at the Znterfaith

Danny

meeting included Dr. Nasrollah
Fatemi, former member of the
UN delegation from Iran and
a direct descendant of Moham-
med; Ibrahim Chowdry, presi-
dent of the Pakistani League
of America and secretary of the
Islamic Council of New York;
Dr. Sholom Shakin; Benjamin
Leavin; Rabbi J. Neaumann;
Julius Salpeter, member of the
City Council of Tel Aviv; UN
Correspondent David Horowitz;
Supreme Court Justice Samuel
Di Falco; Rabbi Louis D. Gross
and Rabbi David Kahane. Miss
$arag E. Dickson, first ender in
the history of the Presbyterian
Church, is one of the founders
if the new peace movement.
Others in the Interfaith Com-
mittee for Peace in the Holy
Land include Dr. Abraham I.
Katsh of N. Y. University, au-
thor of "Judaism In Islam,"
Justice Sholem Kassan, Herman
Jaffee, Leo Lewisohn, Rev. Paul
Hostetter, Rabbi Maurice
Bloom, Rev, Joseph G. Spence,
Mohammed Eidus, Samuel
Trayman and Mrs. Helen Rot-
man.
A special feature of the Inter-
faith meeting was the presen-
tation of a dramatic excerpt
from "Nathan the Wise."

People Make News

Julius Fligelman has been
elected chairman of the board
of the TelAutograph Corpora-
tion. Companies with which Mr.
Fligelman is associated include
Electro - Chemi-
cal Corporation
of Haifa, Is-
rael, a n d the
Israel For
Trade Credit„
Corpo r ation. ,
He is chairman
of the board of
the California-
Israel Chamber
o f Commerce.
He is chairman Fligelman
of the board of Brandeis Camp
Institute, Santa Susana, Calif.,
and national vice president of
the Brandeis Youth Foundation
and of the National Association
of Jewish Education. He is a
member of the Board of Direc-
tori of the Reconstructionist
Foundation, American Technion
Society of New York City and
the University of Judaism of
Los Angeles.
-* * *
Formation of a Southern
Florida Council of Reform Con-
gregations, with an office in
Greater Miami, was announced
by . Dr. Maurice N. Eisendrath,
president of the Union of Am-
erican Hebrew Congregations.
Rabbi HERBERT M. BAUM-
GARD, formerly • of Elmont,
N.Y., will serve as director of
the council.

*

•

* *

DAVID M. LEVITT, president
of the Doughnut Corporation of
America, has been appointed
chairman of the national ad-
visory committee on public rela-
tions of the Union of American
Hebrew Congregations.
* * *
Dr. EDMUND B. FELDMAN
has been appointed associate
professor of art at the Carnegie
Institute of Technology in Pitts-
burgh. He will head the art edu-
cation program of the Institute's
College of Fine Arts.

*

* *

D r. MAURICE L. P E R-
LZWEIG, head of the interna-
tional affairs department of the
World Jewish Congress and the
permanent representative of the
Congress at the UN, left for
Europe to attend a meeting in
Geneva of leaders of the World
Jewish Congress under the
chairmanship of its president,
Dr. Nahum Goldmann.
* * *
SANFORD KAPLAN, of this
city, has been appointed execu-
tive assistant to general manu-
facturing manager, W. A. Fol-
som, at the Ford Division of the
Ford Motor -Co. - .

tm.le * Y El _ae.- *

e

am .7a

ag i

.

Weizmann Institute Plans Administrative Reforms

Raskin's

LISTENING

WHENEVER THE STARS
come to Detroit . . . stage,
screen or TV .. . . they never
get a chance to become lonely
. . . They either know builder
Hal Taines or are told to look
him up . . . Then he takes
over and a full session of fun
and get-together begins as long
as they're in town . . . Van
Heflin and wife, Frances call
him "The Detroit ambassador
of good times and what to
d o" . . . Keefe Brasselle,
starring at Northland Play-
house, became such buddy
buddy with Hal that the two
are now in the process of em-
barking on a new enterprise
for both of them . . . The
scripts are being read for a
new movie company they are
forming together ... One time,
Hal and Jackie Coogan were
laughing and talking on a
flight from Detroit to New
York's LaGuardia airport . . .
Jackie was talking and Hal
was laughing . . . Due to the
low ceiling over the field, the
plane couldn't land and kept
circling for more than an hour.
. . . Soon all that could be heard
was the steady drone of the-
motors . . . "My luck," Hal
blurted out to Jackie. "We'll
get killed and the papers will
give' you top billing." . Not
a sound, not a word, not even
a nod from Jackie . . . Hal-
didn't even think- he had heard
him . . .=Twenty minutes later
when they were safe on the
ground, Jackie laughed, "That
was very funny what you said
up there—about me getting
top billing."

BEN D. BURDICK, who re-
cently was elected one of Mich-
igan's delegates to the Repub-
lican National Convention, was
unanimously elected a member
of the credentials Committee,
at a meeting of Michigan's 92
delegates and alternates, held
Sunday at the Kellogg Health
Center in East Lansing.
* * *
Senator WAYNE MORSE, of
Oregon, will be the principal
speaker, Aug. 11, at the na-
tional commander's banquet, a
highlight of the 61st annual na-
tional convention _of the Jewish
War Veterans, in Milwaukee,
Aug. 7 - '12. Senator ALEX-
ANDER WILEY, of Wisconsin,
is scheduled to address the
* * - *
JWV luncheon, Aug. 8. Other
HARRY
FINEMAN
took the
speakers include Har v e y V.
phone at the Humane Society
Higley and Dore . Schary.
to answer a complaint, and
asked the woman on the other
Israel to Sign Contract
end of the line what the so-
For an Atomic Reactor
ciety could do for her. ._. She
JERUSALEM (JTA) — The demanded that an officer be
Israel . Atomic Energy Commis- sent immediately to her house
sion is preparing to sign a con- . . . Harry asked what the
tract for the construction of an trouble was, and the woman
atomic reactor for nuclear re- replied, "There's a mean fel-
search, it was announced by low from some company sitting
Prof. Ernst Bergmann, chairman on the top of a car out 'front
of the commission, a scientist teasing my poor boxer."
* * *
attached to the Weizmann Insti-
tute. Prof. • Bergmann has 1
AMONG H I S BIRTHDAY
achieved notable progress in the gifts, Sol Rader received a vol.
development of processes for the ume on Einstein's theory of
production of uranium and Relativity from a literate
heavy water.
friend in New York . . . "I
Israel has been advised to - found," said Sol in a somewhat
acquire a small electricity-pro- puzzled confession, "t hat I
ducing atomic reactor of a type could identify all the words
now being developed in the but when I started to read the
United States. The advice came books, r couldn't understand
from Prof J. Weil, dean of the. any of the sentences."
Engineering College of the Uni-
versity of Florida. He said that Dr. M. M. Rosenberg To Head
such a reactor is available at a Hawaii Agricultural Station
cost of $2,000,000 and would en- ,
HONOLULU, Hawaii. (JTA)
able Israel to start practical en-
gineering research at once. He —Dr. M. M. Rosenberg, profes
believes that sufficient uranium sor of agriculture and poultry
could be recovered from Negev husbandry at the University of
phosphates to operate such a Hawaii, has been appointed di-
rector of the Hawaii Agricul-
reactor in Israel.
tural Experiment St a t i o n.
Raised in Toms River, N. J., Dr.
Yeshiva University Given Rosenberg is a gra duat e. of
$136,000 for Health Plan Rutgers University and received
Yeshiva University, New his doctorate at the University
York, has been awarded a grant of Wisconsin.
of $136,296 by the National In-
.01■
■0■
stitute of Mental Health to de
We Serve Beer and Win
velop a curriculum for the
training of theological students
in the principals of mental
health, it was announced by
Dr. Samuel—Belkin, president.
Our Pizza is Crisp!.
The grant will be used over
1
Try Our Corned Beef Pizza
a
the next five years for pilot and
Fine
Italian
and
American
evaluation projects designed to
Food Carry-Outs
enable theological students to
utilize the resources of religion We Deliver, - UN 4-85531
more effectively in helping
10517 W. -SEVEN MILE RD.
People,-

LONDON, (JTA)—The three-
day meeting of the board of gov-
ernors of the Weizmann Insti-
tute of Science at Rehovoth
closed with the approval in
principle of proposals for ad-
ministrative reform offered by
Meyer Weisgal, chairman of the
Institute's executive council.
The suggested reforms included
the establishment of the office
of president, assisted by three
vice-presidents and a secretary
general.
The board agreed to the ex-
tension of graduate teaching in-
sofar as it was consistent with
the facilities and aims of the
institute. For this purpose the
board authorized the inclusion
of specific courses on radio-
chemistry, plastic chemistry,
electronic computing and num-
erical analysts, and others.

The board instructed the ex-
ecutive council to report by Dec.
1 with specific proposals to put
Mr. Weisgal's plans into opera-
tion and to be ready to imple:-
ment the plan next April. It
also heard a report from its
finance committee, together
with a plan for raising 26,500,-
000 pounds needed to operate
the institute between now and
1960.

The best lightning-rod for
your protection is your own
spine.—Emerson.

•
.•••••••••••••••••••••4
• "BLUE SUEDE SHOES": •

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Are Jumping
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ffab
iry s

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MMMY

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his orchestra

FOOD? THE BEST!

•

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TR 2-8800

Serving: Oysters, Clams, LOBSTERS, Steaks and Assorted Sea Foods

Music by Muzak

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