"There is none that bath ever
made an end of learning it
ere is none
(the Bible), and t h ere
that will ever find out all its
mysteries. For its wisdom is
country of whose civilization richer than any sea, and its
and way of life they have be- word deeper than any abyss."—
EOclesiasticus
come an integral part."
Prof. Kohn's analyses add
immeasurably to the searching
for rational and realistic ap-
proaches to the present-day
Master of Ceremonies
crises involving the East-West
and His Orchestra
conflicts and guide the reader
Detroit's Leader in Entertainment
to a better understanding of
TO. 8-2067
TO 6-5016
American nationalism.
by Dr. Kohn
Miss Schreiber to Tamedl American Nationalism Evaluated.
Dr. Hans Kohn, professor of tionalism faces a continuing the creation of independent
states will induce few
Dr. Seymour Fligman history at New Yorl City Col- difficult orientation." He calls African
American Negroes to leave the
attention to the vision of
Woodrow Wilson who, in 1901,
"called upon the United States
and Britain . to cooperate in
securing for the newly awak-
ened peoples their full and
equal partnership in the world
of free intercourse which the
North Atlantic civilization had
created." He urges "a return to
common roots," and states that
"in this return, American na-
tionalism fulfills itself in the
broader community of its North
Atlantic origins."
• Describing America's posi-
tion as "a nation of many
nations," he speaks of the
United States as having "had to
shift -from the comfortable se-
curity of isolation to the in-
securities of respohsibilities of
a world power," and points out,
in his analysis _of the attitudes
of various groups of differing
nationality backgrounds:
"In spite of the call from
Israel, few American Jew_s left
their country to ,settle in a land
where their ancestors probably
lived two thousand years ago;
lege, in his interpretive essay,
"American Nationalism" (Mac-
millan) outlines the ideological
origins and the development of
our nation.
His book is
especially valu-
able for its
comparison of
American and
Western Euro-
pean national-
isms.
He traces'
present - day
American as-
pirations to the
heritage of
Prof. Kohn
English politi-
cal, cultural and constitutional
principles.
SHIRLEY ANN SCHREIBER
Before new expanding hori-
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schreiber, zons, he states, "American na-
of 18481 Northlawn, announce
the engagement of their daugh- 400 Childen Leave
ter, Shirley Ann, to Dr. Sey-
mour L. Fligman, son of Mr. for Fresh Air Camps
and Mrs. Louis Fligman.
Four hundred children have
The bride-to-be received her left the city to attend camps
bachelor's degree at Wayne
sponsored by the Fresh Air
State University, where she
was affiliated with Iota Alpha Society, according to Dr. Irving
Pi sorority. She took graduate Posner, society president. Two
work at the University of hundred children have left for
Michigan and presently is Camp Tamarack, while the
teaching in the Detroit school
other 200 went to Fresh Air
system.
Dr. Fligman is an alumnus of Camp.
Other youngsters will attend
the Chicago College of Op-
tometry, where he was named the camps during a second
to Beta Sigma Kappa, interna- period, which begins July 17,
tional honorary fraternity. He and a third period which opens
is practicing optometry in asso- Aug. 6.
Resident director of Camp
ciation with Dr. A. M. Gilbar,
Tamarack is Sam Skolnick.
in Detroit.
The engaged couple plans to Mort Levitsky is resident direc-
tor of Fresh Air Camp. Execu-
wed in the fall.
tive director of the Fresh Air
Society is Sam-Marcus.
U.S. Jewish Farmers
Had Bad Year in '56
NEW YORK (JTA)—The dif-
ficulties affecting poultry farm-
ers generally during 1956 also
made it a poor year for Jewish
farmers in the United States,
who are largely concentrated in
poultry and egg farming, the
Jewish Agricultural Society
announced in its annual report.
Adverse conditions in the in-
dustry also caused a decrease
in new farm settlement made
by the Society last year for
new immigrants. '
Dr. Theodore Norman, gen-
eral manager, said that many
of the affected farmers are
former Displaced Persons aided
by the Society in the past. He
reported that most of the loans
granted by the Society in 1956
went to established Jewish
farmers to help them meet the
adverse conditions of the in-
dustry.
Most Jewish farmers, he
noted, are concentrated in the
northeastern region and in
California. Jewish farmers in
the Los Angeles area suffered a
problem created by the steady
expansion of suburban areas.
The expansion is engulfing
farms and forcing Jewish • and
non-Jewish farmers to. trans-
plant to new locations often
hundreds of miles away.
The Society during 1956, for
the first time, - provided three
scholarships to advanced Israeli
students of agronomy to study
in the United States, in co-
operation with the Israeli Min-
istry of Education. Dr. Norman
said the first recipients were
expected to start their studies
here in the fall.
Israeli Beauty Wins
Institute Scholarship
NEW YORK, (AJP)—Twenty-
year-old Miriam Hiller, a for-
mer sergeant in the Israeli Air
Force in charge of radar and a
student of law, has won a schol-
arship to the summer seminar
of the Institute of World Af-
fairs at Twin Lakes, Salisbury,
COnn.
Miss Hiller was recently
chosen as the Beauty Queen of
the City College of New York
where she has been studying
law. A native of Jerusalem,
Miss Hiller is an accomplished
pianist. Her ambition, however,
is to excel in Law and the Po-
litical sciences.
4
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