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Reveal Jordan, Gaza Arabs Were
Treated at Hadassah Hospital

NEW YORK, N. Y. — Arabs
from Jordan and Gaza received
special treatment by the Hadas-
sah Medical Organization in Je-
rusalem last year, Mrs. Abraham
T u 1 i n, national chairman of
HMO in the United States, re-
vealed at a meeting of the na-
tional board of Hadassah.
Mrs. Tulin said that an Arab
child from Jordan had been
crossing the Jordan-Israel boun-
dary monthly—at the Mandel-
baum Gate between the Old and
New Cities of Jerusalem—to re-
ceive blood transfusions at the
Hadassah Hospital for relief of
chronic anemia. The child,
daughter of a prominent Jeru-
salem Arab family, first sought
aid from Hadassah on advice of
American physicians who had
treated her, Mrs. Tulin stated.
Discussing Arab patients from
Gaza, Mrs. Tulin said:
"While the Israeli forces were
in occupation of the Gaza Strip
in 1957, a number of Arab pa-
tients were brought into the
Rothschild-Hadassah - University
Hospital in Jerusalem for ur-
gent medical treatment.
"One was a notable sheikh,
who became an in-patient in the
chest department and later re-
turned over the border, after
having received the finest medi-
cal care available.
"Six patients from Gaza were
brought in to Hadassah's opthal-
mology department in Jerusa-
lem, suffering from various con-
ditions—from blindness due to
corneal opacity, and requiring
corneal grafting, to more ordi-
nary conditions such as retina
detachment and cataracts.
"One of these patients, a
young man of 30 who had been
blind in both eyes from early
childhood due to trachoma, was
examined at the Israel Govern-

Ask Rabbis to Join
in Safety Conference

ment Health Clinic in Gaza by
Prof. I. C. Micl-iaelson, chief of
Hadassah's ophthalmology de-
partment, and referred to Jeru-
salem for surgical treatment.
Prof. Michaelson, who was in
the United States on a Hadas-
sah Fellowship in 1954, per-
formed an operation on one eye,
which enabled the young man
to see and move about freely."
Mrs. Tulin observed that the
Gaza Arabs, who were operated
on in the Hadassah Hospital in
Jerusalem while the Israel
forces occupied the Gaza Strip
were later visited by Hadassah
physicians at Gaza Hospital or
in their homes for fur t her
check-ups.
Turning to treatment of Is-
raeli Arabs, Mrs. Tulin reported
that Arab patients are continu-
ally referred to Hadassah in Je-
rusalem by the Israel govern-
ment's TB Hospital in Nazareth.

GALLERY OF
GALLANTRY

Danny Raskin's

LISTENING

Jerusalem-Born Athlete, Isaac Berger, Rated
the World's Best Lifter of Weights

YORK, Pa., (JTA)—A Jerusa-
lem-born athlete, rated the best
feather - weight lifter in the
world, will be the principal at-
traction at a new $300,000 Hall
of Fame dedicated almost en-
tirely to the super-manly sport
scheduled to be opened here in
June.
Isaac Berger came to the
United States in 1949 to live
with his family, in Brooklyn. The
22-year-old, 132-pound Olympic
featherweight champion lifter
now maintains a home in Santa
Monica, Calif. He spends much
of his time in York, the Mecca
of the muscle men.-
The accolade for the diminu-
tive athlete's ability comes from
John Terpak, assistant coach of
the American weight-lifters at
the Melbourne Olympics and
himself a might man among
muscle men with 11 national
titles.

Berger scored for his Olympic
title with the "press," involving
lifting of a bar from toes to
shoulders while balanced on
bent legs and then lifting the
bar overhead; the "snatch,"
which requires one smooth lift
from toes to overhead with both
arms fully extended; and the
"clean and jerk," involving a
lift from toes to shoulders and
then a bending and jerking of
the legs to accomplish the final
overhead position.
According to Terpak, Berger's
Olympic performance for the
press was 240 pounds. He
snatched 230 pounds and in the
clean and jerk, he lifted 290
pounds, more than twice his
own body weight.

FOLKS OF THE industry at-
tending the 78th annual con-
vention of the Custom Tailors
and Designers, recently, in
Miami Beach, almost had their
eyes rolling out of their sockets
when Detroiter Steve Petix
pulled his big surprise . . . a
The Lord is nigh unto them
newly designed men's jacket
that are of a broken heart,
so simple that, like so many
and saveth such as be of a
other things, no one else
contrite spirit.—Psalm 34:18.
thought of doing it! . . . He calls
his award winner the "Motor
City" Sports Coat, an original
design by former top Chicago
Delightfully
Air-Conditioned
designer Phillip Formaro, now
working for Steve at his shop
Delicatessen • Restaurant • Cocktail Lounge
on Six Mile Rd. where the
jacket was created.
Famous for fine Food
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DINNERS 4:30 to 9:30 • AFTER THEATER SNACKS
THE RECENT LECTURE-
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•
DEMONSTRATION on hypnosis
TRAY CATERING A SPECIALTY
given by Dr. Jack Jackman and
12th at Hazelwood
TR. 2-4375
Sol Lewis was so well received
by the Young Adult Group of
Temple Beth El, that the 200
or so who. attended are still
talking about it . . . Many ques-
tions and animated discussions
BAR-B-Q RIB
lasted until the wee hours.
DINNER FOR 2
* *
2 5°
BY COMMON AGREEMENT,
FRIED CHICKEN
$2.00
the TV master of ceremonies
DINNER
FOR 2
Good
who should win this year's
award for the prize boner is the
Delivery
hapless soul who recently asked
a small boy three times, in in-
Service
creasingly urgent tones, to
name "the cereal you love to
to
eat every morning, sonny." .. .
Northwest
The youngster finally broke his
silence by pointing out to the
FREE DELIVERY
Section
emcee—and coast-to-coast TV
9050 Twelfth St. and Clairmount
audience, "You're hurting my
arm, mister."
* * *
FRED WEISS OF WXYZ
says it served the moderator
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BOESKY'S

SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK

Now

A

BEN KAUFMAN

On Oct. 4, 1918, with an
empty gun and a shattered - right
arm, Ben Kaufman single-hand-
edly charged a German machine
gun, taking one prisoner and
scattering the crew. For this
and other acts of heroism, he
was highly decorated by nine
governments, i n c l u di n g the
United States which gave him
the Congressional Medal of
Honor. The boxing champ of
his outfit, he was dubbed "best
top kick in the AEF" by men of
Company K, 308th Infantry.

Cam TR.2-8500
Buddy's Bar-B-Q

Two Detroit rabbis this week
received invitations from the
White House to attend a Mid-
west Citizen's Conference on
Traffic Safety, to be held April
1 and 2, in Chicago.
They are Rabbi Morris Adler,
of Cong. Shaarey Zedek, and
Rabbi Moses Lehrman, of Cong.
Bnai Moshe.
The conference is sponsored
by the President's Committee
for Traffic Safety and will
deal with the highway safety
Courtesy of "Roll of Living He-
roes," National Shrine for the Jew-
action program.
ish War Dead, Washington, D. C.
Rabbi Adler, because of
Chops, Chicken Club Sandwiches. Short Orders. Delicious Hamburgers.
prior committments, will not
"Served as you like it."
attend the conference. Rabbi Arab, Jew to Work Jointly on Planning
20176 LIVERNOIS AVE., 1 1 /2 blks. S. 8 Mile Rd.
Open 24 Hours
Lehrman may participate in
the deliberations. Both reli- for Arab Village as Technion Project
gious leaders are acting with
MARIA'S PIZZERIA
HAIFA—An Arab and a Jew- Yoram Segal, second-generation
other clergymen in stressing
Specializing in Pizza Pie and Famous Italian Foods
ish
student,
both
graduates
of
"sabra"
son
of
a
Haifa
lawyer,
the religious aspects of traffic
Air-Conditioned . .
Parking Facilities . . . Carry-Out Service
the faculty of architecture at are to plan a model Arab vil-
safety.
the Technion, Israel Institute of lage together, and will submit 7107 PURITAN — Open 11 a.m. to 3 a.m. — UN 1-3929
Technology, are to pursue a their work for their master's
I MUSIC! ENTERTAINMENT!
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And His Orchestra
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Israel.
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Rustum Bastuni, son of a graduate school reported.
16622 JAS. COUZENS
UN 1-9507
Moslem farmer and native of
UN 3-6501
Bastuni began his studies at
Tireh village near Haifa, and the Technion in 1944, and in-
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and in 1956 returned to the
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19371 W. 8 Mile, 1 Blk. E. of Evergreen
in, Architecture. He obtained
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The 23-year-old Segal is a
graduate of the Reali School in
Haifa, where he took special
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Arab language studies. During
Business Men's Luncheons — Eve. and Sunday Family Dinners
their senior year of studies at
FULL COURSE DINNERS—From $2.50
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formed .a friendship which led
DINERS CLUB • COCKTAILS
to their collaboration in a class
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