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October 30, 1959 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1959-10-30

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

.$7,000,000 Bequest
by Swope to Technion

NEW YORK, (JTA). —
The estate of approximately
$7,000,000 bequeathed by in-
dustrialist Gerard Swope to
the Israel Institute of Tech-
nology, will now be avail-
able in full to the Technion
following the filing yester-
day of a transfer tax ap-
praisal with New York
State tax authorities.
The bequests of Swope,
who died Nov. 20, 1957,
came from his personal
estate and a trust left by
his wife, who died Oct. 28,
1955. The industrialist left
$691,909 from his own
estate to the Technion So-
ciety for its loan fund and
to provide advanced study
for Technion graduates at
the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology.

Work of Art Houses Works of Art 1st Arab-Jewish Israel Bank to Open
JERUSALEM, ( JTA) —Isra el's
Hamdan last year established
pct New York's Guggenheim Museum first
joint Arab-Jewish bank was an Arab-Jewish canning factory



which was the first major joint
Jewish-Arab industrial enter-
prise in Israel.

Africans, Asian Students
in Israel Will Be Doubled
JERUSALEM, (JTA) — The
Israel Foreign Affairs Ministry
reported that the number of
Asian and African students and
experts training in Israel will
be .doubled next year to a total
of about 350.

The Hebrew Voice

Educational and Cultural Hebrew. Broadcasting

Conference to Probe
Role of Science
in the Middle East

• The role which science can
play, in bringing about a higher
standard of living in all coun-
tries of the Middle East, and
with it a more secure political
atmosphere, will be reviewed at
the second annual Conference
on Science and Technology in
Israel and the Middle East, be-
ing held Saturday and Sunday
at the Statler--Hilton Hotel, New
York.
• Sponsored by the American
Technion Society, the meeting
will be attended by nearly 750
delegates from all parts of the
country. Leon Kay heads a De-
. troit delegation.
Among the speakers who will
address the various sessions of
the two-day meeting will be Dr.
Carroll V. Newsom, president
of New York University; Dr.
William G. Welk, Export-Import
_Bank, Washington, D.C.; Dr.
William Martin, chief of the
University of Minnesota's De-
partment of Soils; Max Ratner,
outstanding Cleveland industri-
alist and president of one of
Israel's largest chemical compa-
nies; Jacob R. Sensibar, con-
struction engineer from Chicago,
who is noted for having reclaim-
ed 30,000 acres of marshland in
Israel; and David Rose, presi-
dent of the American Technion
Society.

formally established with the
signing of an agreement by
Faris Hamdan, an Arab member
of the Knesset, and representa-
tives of the Israel Foreign'Trade
Bank, a Swiss-Israel concern.
Seventy-five percent of the
1,000,000-pound initial capital
was supplied by Arab. investors
headed by the Arab Knesset
member, and the remainder by
the Israel Foreign Trade Bank,
which will provide training for
the new bank's personnel.

Radio Station WJLB -- Dial 1400

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Looking for an Aggressive

Advertising Salesman

Excellent Opportunity for the Right Man

For Information Call:

MR. RAPHAEL COHEN — DI 1-3513

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A spiraling showcase for modern art is the newly com-
pleted Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (top) on Fifth
Avenue, New York. The ultra modern museum was designed
by the late Frank Lloyd Wright. • It has one-third of a mile
of ramp, which rises gently six stories around the windowless
interior, whose walls are covered with paintings. At bottom,
a nainter (non-artistic) finishes off a first-floor window,
looking into a room of sculpture. The Guggenheim art collec-
tion, which emphasizes non-objective painting, will be on
display in its entirety for the first time in its new home.

0

0

By HAROLD U. RIBALOW

130. He wasn't strong or good
enough to make the first team
at the beginning, but he kept
at it. One of his team-mates
was Barry Latman, the Chi-
cago White Sox pitcher who,
ironically, didn't even get into
the Series. Larry was an in-
fielder, a good hitter, but his
foot problem was too much
for him in the infield. Mean-
while, he had grown into a
tall boy, 6 feet 1, and his
coach converted him into a
pitcher. He had • a fast ball and
a curve, but he soon discovered
they weren't enough - for the
Big League. Last winter, play-
ing ball in• :.Venezuela, Larry
started to play around with a
slider. His brother. Norm man-
aged the. club, and encouraged'
him,. Today; it is the 'slider
that._ gets them out.
When Larry was recalled
from- St. Paul in mid-1959, his
record there wasn't very good,
only 6 wins and 7 losses. This
past season, he ended up with
7 and 2. But the last few
weeks made him a star, as he
won a crucial game against
the Cubs and another in the
playoffs. And then, of course,
his spectacular World Series
performance topped them all.
Larry Sherry, on the face
of it, will be in the majors a
long, long time.

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SUITS

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PLAIN
After the 1959 World Series
It is better to suffer wrong ended, Larry Sherry, the 24-
than to do it, and happier to be year-old fast-balling Jewish
sometimes cheated than not to pitcher, was acclaimed the star
of the Series, and no wonder.
trust.—Johnson
PLAIN
He won two games, saved an-
qther two (all you need is
four!) and gave up only one
run in nearly 13 innings of
El
relief when he was constantly
on the hot seat.
Larry Sherry, at 24, is not
a flash in the pan. After the
Series, he announced that he
Cleaned & Pressed
wants to be a starting pitcher,
Guaranteed
• Insured
not a reliever. He appears to
. . . don't settle for less
be ready for a spectacular
than Leader Quality!
career. And when you hear
BUSINESS
Loose rugs cleaned on
about his past, you'll wonder
that he has any career at all.
both sides in our mod-
For
Norm Sherry, who is the
ern plant. Famous
El
third-string
catcher
on
the
Bigelow Karpet Kare
Deluxe Finish • Cellophane Wrapped
Dodgers, is Larry's older broth-
Makes your wall - to-
er,
and
these
days
he
spends
w a 11 carpeting stay
his - time talking about the kid
cleaner, brighter long-
DRAPES AND OTHER ITEMS
brother. "My mother fell just
er. Also, Leader - Dri
before she gave birth to
AT COMPARABLE PRICES
method for wall-to-
Larry," he told reporters,
w a 1 1. Workmanship
"and the was born with two
FREE PARKING
guaranteed—
club feet. He had to undergo
surgery
for
six
weeks
and,
Economical prices.
after that, he still had to wear
9
The LEADER FAMILY special orthopedic -.shoes." He
wears orthopedic appli-
takes a PERSONAL INTEREST still
ances in his shoes, both off
in TOUR CARPET CLEANING the field and on it. Larry him-
self told it this way: "I re-
member all the trouble I had
when I went out for my high ZAC Sets Geneva Meeting
school baseball team. I had
JERUSALEM, (JTA) — The
10300 W. McNichols cor. Griggs, UN 2-4196
to get special baseball shoes Zionist Actions Committee will
with a built-up' arch."
meet in Geneva during the
12803 W. 7 Mile cor. Appoline, UN 4-415C
Larry attended Fairfax High latter half of December, follow-
clooD
School in the Jewish section ing the plenary session of the I 18287 Livernios
UN 4-6363
(Between Curtis and Pkkford)
of Los Angeles. He was small Jewish• Agency executive, it E1
and thin, and weighed about was announced here this weep.

Rugs & Carpets
PERFECTLY
CLEANED

TY. 5-8400

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Larry Sherry—World Series Hero

(Copyright, 1959, Jewish Telegraphic
Agency, Inc.)

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