— THE DETROIT JEW ISH NEWS- 8 Friday, May JWB Division Leader to Address World Physicists Gather in Israel at Nuclear Parley Center's 25th Annual Meeting "The Challenge of the Future for the Jewish Community Center" will be the topic of group work and education ex- pert Sanford Solender, who will address the 25th • annual meet- ing of Detroit's Jewish Center. The program will take place at 8:15 p.m., June 2, at the Davison branch. Solender is di- rector of the Jewish Community Center division of the National Jewish Welfare Board. Another feature of the eve- ning will be the presentation to Mrs. I. Irving Bittker of the United Community Service com- munity service pin in recogni- tion of her work as chairman of the canteen committee of the local JWB armed services com- mittee, for which she was n a in e d "Volunteer of the Week." The pin to Mrs. Bittker will be made on UCS's behalf by Samuel H. Rubiner, a - vice- president of both UCS • and •JWB. Rubiner also will present honor awards to the Center's corps of volunteer workers. Jacob L. Keidan, Center president, will preside at the election meeting and deliver his annual report. Nominated for the Center's board of directors, for re-elec- tion to three-year terms are Theodore Bargrnan, Dr. Norman Drachler, Bernard Isaacs, Jack Kellman, Dr. David H. Lynn, Joe Magidsohn, Mrs. Leo it BASEMENT FLO() with an FLOOD CONTROL VALVE Hundreds of testimonials from home owners who had dry basements during past floods. wee (019513 WE 3-2000 FLOOD CONTROL VALVE CO DETROIT. MICH TEL AVIV—A brilliant ga- laxy of world famous physicists and nuclear scientists attended the opening Tuesday of the New Nuclear Research Insti- tute at the Weizmann Institute of Science at Rehovoth. The guest of honor at the festivities was Prof. Niels Bohr, Nobel Prize winning physicist and one of the early propounders of the theory of structure of the atom. • Among the speakers were Premier Ben-Gurion of Israel and Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, director of the Institute for Ad- vanced Study at Princeton. The American guests included Dr. SANFORD SOLENDER Mellen, Maurice Schiller and Samuel Simmer. Up for election are Irwin Green, Harry D. Hirsch, Jules 1VIehler, Nathan Silverman, Max Smitt and Leon S. Wayburn, three-year terms; Prof. Leon Lucas, twoI. ear term; and Mrs. A. J. Alper, Martin E. Citrin and Lewis H. Manning ; one-year terms. A musical interlude featuring a solo by Rita Sloan, 14-year- old piano pupil of Julius Chajes, Center music director, will be heard. A reception will follow the meeting. All members of the commu- nity are invited to attend. Religious Delegation Goes to Moscow for Discussions NEW YORK (JTA)—For the first time an interfaith team of five American religious leaders will enter the Soviet Union and other countries in Europe and the Middle East to hold conversations with religious and political leaders on prob- lems relating to the role of all religious groups in the world today. Sponsored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews as part of the cultural , ex- change program the group will leave New York on May 27. Included in the group is Dr. Irving Lehrman, Rabbi of Tem- ple Emanu-El of Miami Beach, as the representative of Jewish religion. Let Your Heating System COOL YOUR HOUSE Did you know that your house can be fully air conditioned— every room comfortably cool all summer long—just by add- ing one American-Standard cooling unit? No need to settle for half-way comfort, and no need to spend all the money it would take to do the job with individual room units. 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He added that "We know that the nations of the world must unite, must lose the power to make wars as some have even now have largely lost the incentive." The American scientist ex- pressed the "confident hope that Israel will play a very spe- cial part in this situation." He committee. Serving with her spoke of Israel's stirring exam- were Mrs. Theodore Bargman, ple in welcoming people of var- A. Joseph Seltzer, Mrs. Reuben ied cultures and customs and Shapiro and Herbert SQtt. traditions to her land. Harold Urey of the Chicago In- stitute for Nuclear Studies, Prof. Felix Bloch of Stanford University, Dr. Boris Pregel, president of the New York Academy of Sciences, and Dr. George Herzberg of the Cana- dian National Research Soci- ety of Ottawa. In his address, Ben-Gurion told the assembled scientists that he was not "one of those who despair of the future of the human race" on account of the destructive uses latent in atomic discoveries. He based his optimism on Biblical prophecies which forecast a "great future" for the human race. The Premier asserted that the State of Israel aspires to JFCS, Resettlement Service Elect Officers, Boards at Annual Meeting "Social problems increase as civilization develops," Arthur H. Kruse, general secretary of the Family Service Association of Cleveland, stated last Sun- day in addressing the annual meeting of the Jewish Family and Children's Service and Re- settlement Service. Speaking on "What Is Hap- pening to the Family Today," the Cleveland social work ex- ecutive s a i d, "Along with greater economic security and a higher material standard of living has come greater strain on all of us in managing human behavior." Kruse paid tribute to the work done by family agencies, and pointed out that thousands of families in Detroit have been helped to achieve more success- ful and productive lives because of the efforts of agencies such as the JFCS. M i l f or d Pregerson, JFCS president, in his annual report indicated that recent policy changes governing the relation- ships between the United Com- munity Services and Jewish agencies, including JFCS, will be handled directly by the Jewish Welfare Federation. Most important of the policies to be arranged between Fed- eration and UCS will be the budget of JFCS and other agen- cies which previously dealt di- rectly with the UCS. Other agency developments also were outlined by Preger- son in his annual report, in- cluding a statement that the new JFCS office building, ad- joining the new Jewish Corn- munity Center now under con- struction, will be ready at Curtis and Meyers next spring. Reporting on activities of Re- settlement Service, David I. Rosin, president, said that the agency was able to assist 394 former Nazi victims, now living in Detroit, to file 526 claims. As of May 1, he declared, awards of $183,650 have been received by 105 claimants. Rosin was re-elected as presi- dent of Resettlement Service, while Nathan_ L. Milstein was chosen as vice-president; Walter Herz, treasurer; and Mrs. Lewis Manning, secretary. Elected to the board were Herz, Milstein, Rosin, Mrs. Julian H. Krolik, Mrs. Harold Schakne, Jack Stattman, Albert Colman, Mrs. Raymond Sokolov, Mrs. Irving Steinman and Mrs. Samuel Caplan. Serving on the nominating committee, together with Sid- ney J. Karbel, chairman, were Avern Cohn, Mrs. Philip Mar- cuse and David Wilkus. Elected to the board of the JFCS for second terms of three years were Mrs. Eugene Arn- feld, Mrs. Benjamin E. Jaffe, Harry H. Platt, Pregerson and Mrs. Victor Shiffman. Newly- elected were Martin Citrin, Robert Kasle, William Schumer and Mrs. Jack Wainger. Mrs. Bernard . Osnos was chairman of the nominating this year see ...but see American Express first! Join in the inspiring ceremonies commemorating the 10th AnniverSary of the founding of the State of Israel in Tel Aviv. 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