The first lecturer presented by the department of Near Eastern studies at the Univer- sity of Michigan, under the endowment of the Zwerdling Fund for Old Testament Studies, will be Prof. George Ernest Wright, of McCormick Theological Seminary, Chicago, who has recently accepted an appointment for next year at Harvard University. The lectures will take place at 4:15 p.m., Tuesday and Wed- nesday afternoon, in Audito- rium A of Angell Hall on the campus. Prof. Wright also will speak under joint sponsorship of the Beth Israel Community Center and Hillel Foundation at the Hillel-Center building, 1429 Hill, at 8:15 p.m., Tuesday. His topics at the University will be "Palestinian Archaeol- ogy Today: Current Practices and Procedures," and "0 1 d Testament Studies in an Achae- ological Perspective." At the evening lecture he will discuss his excavations at Shechem with slides and films. The topic is "Excavations at Shechem." Prof. Wright is being brought to the campus by the gift of the sons of Hannah and Osias Zwerdling, of Ann Arbor, who endowed the lectureship on the occasion of their parents 50th wedding anniversary. An eminent scholar in the THE GRAND SLAM BRIDGE CLUB Sponsoring Duplicate Bridge At 8 P.M., Each Wednesday Bridge Classes being formed for beginners and semi-ad- vanced students by Louis J. Cohen. Duplicate Bridge directed by Jack Gordon. Danny Raskin's field, he has written "The Old Testament Against Its Environ- ment," "Biblical Archaeology," "God Who Acts" and he is the co-editor of the Westminster Historical Atlas of the Bible. The public is invited to at- tend. LISTENING Cubs Announce Activity Plans, Award Winners Cub Scout Pack 537 has an- now-iced the following activi- ties: On May 17, boys,. 101/2_ years old who have earned their Lion badges are invited to at- tend a Webelo's Den day at Howell, Mich., accompanied by their dads. On June 6, 7 and 8 they will participate in a Scout exposi- tion at the Fair Grounds, and on June 25 they will attend a Tiger ball-game. The season's activities will conclude with the annual pow-wow. The Pack also announced that the following members have re- cently received scouting awards: Gary Docks, Mitchell Karman, Norman Berman, Paul Miller, Stu- art Rapport, David Warner, Melvin Berg, Michael Halem, Larry Gold- stein, Michael Berg, Harold Sher- man. Jack Stahl, Barry Nemon, Neil Shaw, Charles Shapiro, Rich- ard Garlick, Mark Cooperman, Stephen Sm'ilove, Sheldon Miller, Chuck Shapiro, Leslie Aaronoff. Norman Berman, Kenneth Shnitzer. Norman Apel, Ira Revich. Harry Shapiro and Allan Anchell. Applications for boys 8 to 10 can be placed by calling Mrs. Nathan Cohen UN 2-4647. or Mrs. Emanuel Schwartz, UN 3-6774. Young Adults to Present Jewish Music Night Temple Beth El Young Adult Group will present an evening of Jewish .Music, both new and old, at a special program at 8 p.m., Thursday at the Temple. Jason H. Tickton, choir direc- tor and organist of the temple, and John Redfield, soloist, will be featured. A social hour and refreshments will follow the program. For tickets or further information, call the Temple, TR. 5-8530. • Heads Religious Agency IT'LL BE 16 years, Sept. 20, since the dive bomber piloted by Marine Captain Ruben Iden crashed into the Pacific near Guadalcanal. . . . He was the first Jewish boy from Detroit to die in World War II . . . 1942 is quite a while ago . . . Our column in the Jewish News was only six months old at the time, but we can still remember being at the type- writer when the news came . . . It sort of stiffened our fingers and moistened our eyes with boyhood memories . . . Being the first one to go, Rube gave us a little harder jolt, but started the realization that a lot more of the guys we knew so well would never be coming back .. . A portrait of Rube in his impressive dress whites of the Marines will be dedicated and hung this Sun- day, May 4, at the Jewish War Veterans Memorial Home on Davison . . . It'll be the first portrait to be hung since the original decoration of the building, when it was decided that only paintings of the standard bearers of posts would hang there. * * * BEST BET of weekend . . . "Flaming Youth" revue by South Oakland County Chapter of Hadassah . . . Saturday and Sunday nights . . . at Ford Auditorium . . . FOR TEEN- AGERS ONLY, it's Dick Mason's "Rock 'n Rollerama" at the Pontiac High School auditorium . . . tonight and tomorrow night. * * * Speakers Trained in Middle East Affairs The first class in a newly launched speaker training course on Middle East affairs has completed formal in- doctrination session, and the first participants will appear before community groups with- in the next two weeks. Each of the participants in the first class was selected by the planning committee of the Zionist and Community Coun- cils on the base of participation in community activities and potential speaking qualifica- tions. Those who participated in the first class include: Dr. Ted Winshall, Mrs. David Fried, Mrs. Avner Naggar, Mrs. Irving Posner, Mrs. Robert Coggan, Mrs. Lewis Grossman, Al Col- man, Mrs. Lawrence Aronsson, Mrs. Betrand Sandweiss, Mrs. Ben Harold, Sandford Goldberg, Mrs. Leopold' Snyder, Gerald Goldberg, Judge Victor Baum, Morris Lifshay, Louis Rosen- zweig, Frank Rosenbaum, Nor- man Naimark, Mrs. Norman Naimark, Louis Cohen, Leonard Baron arid- Mrs. A. Padover. I MUSIC! ENTERTAINMENT! Sammy Woolf And His Orchestra UN 4-3174 UN 3-8982 UN 3-6501 Detroit Doctor Named to Represent City of Hope Dr. Henry Chapnick, a resi- dent of Detroit for 38 years and a member of the staffs of Sinai and Receiving Hospitals, has been appointed the first repre- sentative from this area for the City of Hope. Recently returned from the Duarte, Calif., institution, Dr. Chapnick addressed a meeting of the Detroit Businessmen's Group on new medical programs at the hospital. Post-Graduate School At Weizmann Institute The opening of a Post- Graduate School at the Weiz- mann Institute of Science was announced by Dewey D. Stone, chairman of the board of gov- ernors, and chairman of the board of the American Corn- mittee for the Weizmann In- stitute of Science. WEDNESDAY MOST RIMS E,. d-2660 PARK OPEN 7 P.M. BOESKY'S Delightfully Air-Conditioned Delicatessen • Restaurant • Cocktail Lounge Famous for Fine Food DINNERS 4:30 to 9:30 • AFTER THEATER SNACKS Businessmen's Lunch 11:30 A.M. to 3 P.M. TRAY CATERING A SPECIALTY 12th at Hazelwood TR. 2-4375 WIIEHE TO DINE AL GREEN'S CARL'S 15301 E. Jefferson at Beaconsfield VA 2-4118 Luncheons 11 to 3 — Dinners 5:00 to 10:30. Suppers 10:30 to 2 a.m. 3020 GRAND RIVER. Free Parking. TE 2-8600. Pri- vate Banquet Rooms for wedding parties. Serving Lillian R. Block, acting edi- the World's Finest Steaks, Chops and Sea Foods for EVERY YEAR about this more than 26 years. All Beef aged in our cellars. tor of Religious. News Service, time, 19350 Greenfield, N. of 7 Mile one of the top dinner- has been named the agency's dances in the community rolls CHOP HOUSE Call UN 4-7378 managing editor. around . . . and tickets become ROBIN HOOD'S serving the finest and most delicious of foods, Steaks, as scarce as hair on Yul Brun- Chops, Chicken Club Sandwiches. Short Orders. Delicious Hamburgers. ner's head . .. It's -affair num- "Served as you like it." ber six for the City of Hope 20176 LIVERNOIS AVE., 1 7 /2 blks. S. 8 Mile Rd. Open 24 Hours Cancer Fighters, May 10, and as always, another capacity MARIA'S PIZZERIA SPECIAL OF THE WEEK crowd is expected with folks Specializing in Pizza Pie and Famous Italian Foods veritably breaking down the Friday, Saturday, Sunday Only Air-Conditioned . . . Parking Facilities . . . Carry-Out Service doors at Holiday Manor to get Kosher Zion in . . . If the past five shin- 7107 PURITAN — Open 11 a.m. to 3 a.m. — UN 1-3929 digs are an example, this year's chairman, Jean Eizelman, and TR 2-8800 her Cancer Fighters had better CLAM SHOP and BAR (Picnic Size) come up with something to Serving: Oysters, Clams, LOBSTERS, Steaks and Assorted Sec Foods get the people to leave after Music by Muzak 2675 E. GRAND BLVD. SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF it's all over — nobody wants to go home! . . . From start DELICATESSEN and SMOKED FISH PRODUCTS. 16622 JAS. COUZENS UN 1-9507 to finish, the affair is a fun- Open 7:30 A.M.-8 P.M.—Mon. thru Sat. Business Men's For Your Sunday Morning Convenience: fest of gala festivity . . . Ac- DINING Luncheons. Hungarian Style Dinners. Catering to cording to our snoopers, there private parties evenings and Sundays. ROOM are s,till tickets left, so get in •. touch with reservation chair- Prime Beef at its Very' Best! Pies baked on prem- • Bagels & Rolls • Lox ises. Special Luncheons and Dinners. Menus changed man Rhoda Benadaret, DI. daily. Open 11 a.m.-8 p.m. • Cream Chese 1-2964. or her co-chairmen, Lil I • Sturgeon & Sable BEEF BUFFET Kozloff and Freda Pantzer. 19371 W. 8 Mile, 1 Blk. E. of Evergreen Call Us For Your WE * * * Tray Catering Needs DELIVER Northwest Detroit's Newest Dining & Dancing Party Club THINKING IT WAS high time she gave her four-year- old grandson, Beryl Abrams, Serving the Finest Steaks, Chops and Sea Food. some religious instruction, Rose Business , Men's Luncheons — Eve. and Sunday Family Dinners Benderman began by reading the story of the Creation . . . FULL COURSE DINNERS—From $2.50 "And the Lord formed man of Dancing — Thursday, Friday and Saturday Evenings the dust of the ground and DINERS CLUB • COCKTAILS breathed into his nostrils the Open Daily and Sunday 6:30 A.M. to 1:30 A.M. Cor. Fenkell & Telegraph • Redford • KE 7-7377 Saturday 'Till 3 A.M. breath of life." . . At this Your Host—GEORGE FINK point, little Beryl became in- terested and cried out ex- citedly, "Oh, grandma! Super- 9840 DEXTER Open 7 a.m.-9 p.m. Mon., Sat. Closed Sundays AT Daily —TY 4-9667 man!" Sunday—LI 7-0954 COMPLETE TRAY CATERING—PROMPT DELIVERY - WYOMING Sholem Aleichem Institute VISIT OUR CARRY-OUT SERVICE SALAMI 89 BETTY'S lir 1 STOP and SHOP 111E1 IC S New KENWOOD RESTAURANT DELICATESSEN 9-12°)41245-- 1 and TRAY CATERING 8926 W. SEVEN MILE Ample Free Parking Mary's Restaurant & Delicatessen DI 1-9608 Additional Free Parkinethru the Courtesy of LANDSTROM'S GULF SERVICE CENTER Directly across -the street on W. 7 Mile Rd. Named UJA Loan Chairman Albert A. Levin, communal leader of Cleveland, has been named chairman of the nation- wide United Jewish Appeal's community renewal loan pro- gram. Anatole's French Restaurant LOOK FOR THE RED and WHITE AWNING 18455 LIVERNOIS UN 3-4500 Businessmen's Lunches — 11 to 3 — $1 up; Dinners — $2.50 up Late Snacks -- Friday ont Saturday to 1:30 a.m. — Open Sundays 27 -T HE DET ROIT JEWISH NEW S—Frid ay, May 2, Prof. Wright Opens Zwerdling Series on Old Testament at Aim Arbor