Fannie Hurst Gives Einstein College of Medicine $360,000 A Digest of World Jewish Happenings, from Dis- Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News patches of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency and Other News Gathering Media. NEW YORK — Novelist Fan- nie Hurst has made gift of $360,000 to the Albert Einstein College of Medicine for a lab- oratory unit f o r cardiovas- cular research, Dr. Samuel Belkin, presi- dent of Yeshi-. va University, announce d Tuesday. D r . Belkin said that the laboratory unit Fannie Hurst would be ded- icated at a dinner April 1 at which Miss Hurst would be hon- hored for her contributions to literary, civic and communal en- deavors in America. Mrs. Elea- nor Roosevelt and Benjamin A. Cohen, under-secretary general of the United Nations, will be principal speakers. NEW YORK — A total of $1,000 in prizes was awarded to 28 winners of the ninth international literary competition for the blind at a dinner sponsored by the Jewish Braille Institute of America. . . . The UN Commission on Human Rights was warned here not to relax its efforts, by Moses Moskowitz of the Consultative Council of Jewish Organizations, who said "the UN has not made such progress on human rights that it can relax its vigilance now.". . . Legal circles in the United Nations inter- preted a statement by the United Arab Republic to mean that although Syria has merged with Egypt, the Syrian-Israel armis- tice commission will continue to function as a separate body as will the Egyptian-Israel armistice commission. NEWARK — Rabbi S. Joshua Kohn, American Jewish Con- gress leader, appeared at a public hearing before the New Jersey State Assembly on bills to amend the state Sunday laws, and vigorously opposed any law requiring the observance of Sunday as a religious day of rest. TALLAHASSEE — Gov. LeRoy Collins instructed Florida's sheriffs to ban as far as lawfully possible any demonstrations by the Ku Klux Klan this week. The KKK in Florida has recently made violent expressions against Negroes and .Jews. New Housing Project Delayed in Hasidic Section in Brooklyn , Around the World... NEW YORK (JTA) — The New York City Board of Esti- mate postponed a decision to go ahead with two small housing projects in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn after mem- bers of a Hasidic sect warned that the projects would destroy the Orthodox Jewish stronghold in the section. Speaking for a group of rab- bis, Rabbi Pincus M. Titz said it would be a "sad day" in Jewish history "if this section is de- stroyed." The Board heard 18 persons speaking in opposition and 12 in favor before adjourn- ing the public hearing until March 27. The two projects, one a 750- apartment costing about $13,000,000 and the other • a 100-unit apartment building costing about $9,000,000, would be state-aided low-rent develop- ments. Foes of the project said an important center of Jewish religious life would be lost if the Hasidic residents were dispersed or dislocated. Golda Meir Ends Successful Ten-Day Tour of Ghana ACCRA, Ghana (JTA) — Isr a el Foreign Minister Mrs. Golda Meir left Ghana for the French Ivory Coast and Nigeria after a 10-day visit here which turned into a triumphal man- ifestation of Israeli - Ghanian friendship. She was feted by officialdom and cheered con- tinuously on her frequent public appearances. If You Turned the • IT•0411 i Jpside Down You Won't Find a Finer Wine Than United States Traditional for Passover Israel JERUSALEM — A warning to Israel youth against ignoring the Jews outside of Israel "lest they disappear as a community, an irreparable loss to Israel," was voiced by Dr. Nahum Gold- mann in an address to Hebrew University students. Africa ACCRA, Ghana — Mrs. Golda Meir, Israel's Foreign Minister, went on record publicly as pledging further technical aid for the new African republic. Her promise was made after a second meeting with Premier Nkrumah and a tour of a number of im- portant Ghana rural and urban centers. . . . The government of Ghana is still awaiting reply to a query addressed to the Jordan government through diplomatic channels about a report that Amman had blacklisted the Black Star Line, a Ghanian shipping line, because of Israeli participation in the company, it was revealed by the Minister of Information. Kaddish Provision in Benefactor's Will Set Aside by New York Judge NEW YORK (JTA)—A Jew- ish Judge, Maximillian Moss, issued a tentative ruling in support of arguments of 59 Jewish institutions that they could recite the Kaddish, the Jewish prayer for the dead, for the late Philip Schoenfeld, even if they received his estate in bulk rather than in perpetual payments from a trust fund. The real estate operator, who died last April 16 in his Brook- lyn home, at 71, left the bulk of his $1,750,000 estate to the religious, charitable and educa- tional institutions as a trust on condition that the institutions arrange for the recitation of Kaddish for him in perpetuity. The will provided that the principal sum of his estate be invested in banks or in U. S. Treasury notes with the inter- est paid in perpetuity. This meant that each beneficiary would receive a comparatively small sum annually forever, ranging from $50 a year mini- mum to $600 a year maximum. Attorneys for the institutions contested the will and asked for lump sum payments. They testi- fied that the fund would disap- pear in 600 years and that there was no inconsistency between lump sum payments and per- petual recitation of the Kaddish. The tentative settlement also provided that for not contesting the will further, 31 relatives of Mr. Schoenfeld will di v i d e $340,700 instead of $264,000 as provided in the will. C-0-N-F-1-D-E-N-C-E We sell at Manufacturers Suggested Prices! For the Beautiful Airborne 'B-58' BUICK for 1958 SEE or CALL CHARLES WEINSTOCK at Buick Factory Branch 6164 CASS AVE. Near G. M. Bldg. TR 5-9700 30th Year with Buick 1-3 tt Cri 1-3 z C11 cn sv su o L - co c.$1 ao Europe BONN — An estimated 1,300,000 deutschemarks has been earmarked for compensation to Nazi victims in the West German Federal budget being prepared for the coming fiscal year. . . . PARIS — One of the largest Jewish community centers in Western Europe is scheduled to be opened at Strasbourg. Con- struction was made possible through funds donated by the French government, Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany and local Jewish contributors. . . . Belgian police raided a meeting of former Nazis held at Jand, a small Belgian town on the German border, and broke up a meeting where anti- Semitic slogans and speeches were the order of the evening. . . . French capital will soon assist Israel with new economic projects, including construction of a sewage disposal unit for the Haifa region and a new chemical plant, Abba 'Hushi, Mayor of Haifa, told a press conference. LONDON — Methods of combatting Arab propaganda at German universities will be discussed at the forthcoming meet- ing of the German section of the World Union of Jewish Stu- dents, a World Jewish Congress affiliate. . . . Jewish teenagers repatriated from the Soviet Union to Poland do not take too well to lengthy Marxist-Leninists speeches in youth clubs organ- ized for them by Polish Jewish Communist leaders, the Warsaw Yiddish language daily "folkstimme" reported this week. The latest issue to arrive here from Warsaw notes that the young people prefer social activities such as dancing in clubrooms to what their Communist "instructors" offer in the way of political lectures. toi 0"' BART,p,NS Kosher for Passover Delicacies nn'? 112)n© Passover Bartonettes (Illustrated above)—ancient art combines with contemporary design to bring you a Passover box of lasting beauty. Tiny 84 pieces in each pound, 14 luscious centers. Continental chocolates 1 lb. $1.95; 2 lb. $3.90 Chocolate Matzos — Matzo- shaped and matzo-size — a taste thrill that comes from the perfect blending of Continental chocolate with freshly toasted nut meats. 13 oz. $1.55 Chocolate Matzo Balls — Mod- elled after a Passover favorite. A variety of 3 flavors: nut-truffel, almond crush and cocoanut — all blended with chocolate and topped off with toasted nuts. Box of 18 pieces $1.45 Nut Sponge Cake — Old-fash- ioned light and fluffy Passover sponge cake with a generous amount of fresh ground nuts. In an attractive tin decorated with Passover motif. 1 lb. $1.55 Model Seder—Let the children make their own miniature Seder. The egg, shank bone, bitter herbs, parsley and charoseth — all in candy form. PLUS : Matzo Tasch in milk chocolate, golden kiddush cup, Haggadah, yarmelka, and a heap of tasty hard candies. $1.49 These are only five of the more than 100 Barton's Kosher for Passover Chocolates and baked delicacies available. Some see them all. ASK FOR BARTON'S FREE PASSOVER PAGE, "MOSES AND THE BURNING BUSH — THE STORY OF PASSOVER BEGINS HERE" ILLUSTRATED BY THE EMINENT ARTIST, BEN SHAHN 0 Famous For Continental Chocolates All Barton stores and factory ore closed on the Sabbath, and on all Jewish holidays. At BARTON'S DETROIT SHOPS: 13210 DEXTER near Davison 7541 W. McNICHOLS near San Juan 18309 WYOMING—In Wyoming Curtis Shopping Center OPEN SUNDAYS and EVENINGS •