THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS—Friday, August 26, 19 60-32 Schools Schedule Fall Registration UHS, Affiliates and Others Plan Extensive Educational Program Registration for the fall sem- ester is announced by a num- ber of local religious and nursery schools, including the nine branches of the United He- brew Schools. The United Hebrew Schools will hold classes immediately after Labor Day in the follow- ing branches and affiliates: Adas Shalom, 1045 Curtis, UN 4-9210; Beth Aaron, 18000 Wyom- ing,• UN 1-1745; Beth Abraham, 8110 W. Seven Mile, UN 2-1830; Bnai Moshe, 14300 W. Ten Mile, Oak Park, LI 8-4747; Borman. 21355 W. Seven Mile, KE 3.9898; Esther Berman, 18977 Schaefer, DI 1-3407; Livonia, 19515 Lathers, Livonia, DI 1-3407; Oak Park, 15100 W. Ten Mile, Oak Park, LI 8-4747; Rose Sittig Cohen, 4059 Davison, WE 3-978; Sholem Alei- chem, 19350 Greenfield, VE 8-7440; Abraham Reisen, Jewish School, 18340 W. Seven Mile, KE 7-5440; and Temple Emanuel, 14450 W. Ten Mile, Oak Park, LI 8-4747. . Continuing Bar Mitzvah prep- aration classes, most branches are now offering a special girls' curriculum emphasizing train- ing for Jewish living in the home. Also, classes for six and seven year olds will meet twice weekly, teaching Hebrew con- vc.rsation, songs and playlets and holiday celebrations. Chil- dren living in the northwest section between Southfield and Beech Rd. may be enrolled in the newest branch, the Borman school, located in the Evergreen area. The UHS nursery in the Oak Park branch has enroll- ment information for parents with children from age 31/2. Transportation will be provided to all branches and affiliates. For further information, call the main branch, DI. 1-3407. Hayim Greenberg - Hebrew Yiddish School, 19161 Schaefer, under the auspices of the De- troit Labor Zionist Organiza- tion, offers a curriculum in He- brew and Yiddish, history, Bible, singing and holiday celebra- tions, besides Bar Mitzvah and Bas Mitzvah preparation. Door- to-door transportation is pro- vided. For further information, call the office, UN 4-6319. Cong. Mishkan Israel Reli- gious School, 14000 W. Nine Mile, will hold Hebrew and Sunday school r!lasses for chil- dren aged four and older, be- ginning from 10 a.m. to noon Sept. 11. Members and non- members are asked to call for further information Mesdames Greenwald, LI 7-1833, Lichtig, UN 4-5530, or Wargon, LI 6- 7532. Simcha Melody Nurser y, 18716 Schaefer, will be open to the public at an orientation day and open house for children, accompanied by parents, from 10 a.m. to noon, Sept. 1. Those who plan to attend are asked to call Mrs. David Holtzman, di; rector, at LI 3-4688. In addition to the regular nursery program, a special program in music ap- preciation and rhythm band is taught to pre-school children, aged 21 to 6. Foreign language, baking, and holiday songs and stories are also offered. Trans- portation from suburban areas will be available on request. New members of the staff in- clude Mesdames Anita Grey and Millie Winston and Miss Stephanie Katz: Cong. Beth Shalom Religious School, 14601 W. Lincoln, Oak Park, will continue its Hebrew reading-readiness program for primary Sunday School students in the first and second grades, announces Leonard Servetter, educational director. The cur- riculum offers a basic sight-oral Hebrew vocabulary of several hundred Hebrew words and phrases. For information, call the office, LI 7-7970. Hillel Day School of Detroit, 18 9 7 7 Schaefer, comprising three grades and a kindergar- ten, will begin classes Sept. 7, in the Kasle Building of the United Hebrew Schools. Under principal Mrs. Naomi Foch, new additions to the staff include Miss Sime Zabel, Mrs. Lois Newmali, Mrs. Hannah Mishori and Mrs. Bessie Berris. PsyCho- logical testing establishes eligi- bility for registration in the school. Young Israel Center of Oak- Woods, 24061 Coolidge, Oak Park, will hold its registration week •through Wednesday for children from age three on, en- tering the Hebrew, Sunday and nursery schools. Special home training classes for girls and post-Bar Mitzvah classes are be- ing featured. Israel Rabbinical Body Charged With Falsification of Documents JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Gideon Hausner, Israel's Attor- ney General, charged at a hear- ing before the Israel Supreme Court that official documents of the Chief Rabbinate Council submitted to him in the dispute over elections of new Chief Rabbis had been falsified. Sephardic Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Nissim responded to the charge with a demand to the Attorney General for a retraction. The Supreme Court inter- rupted its summer recess to hear two complaints against the validity of nominations for the board which is to elect new Ashkenazic and Sephardic Chief Rabbis. Rabbi Nissim is a candi- date to succeed himself. The elections have been de- layed for months. due to con- flict between the Chief Rab- binate Council and Rabbi Yaacov Toledano, Israel's Minis- ter of Religious Affairs. The two cases were joined as one for the hearing because the arguments were identical. The Attorney General ap- peared on behalf of the Minis- try of Religious Affairs after the court had rejected a request from the Chief Rabbinate Coun- cil that Rabbi Toledano appear personally to answer the corn- (330 wrir4ri pnvi plaints of alleged irregularities in his efforts to constitute a nominations board. After Hausner made the charge - of falsification, Chief Justice Cohen interrupted to point out the "extreme gravity" of the accusation. The Attorney General replied that he had proof to back the charge. He cited what he termed evidence that an original hand- written protocol had noted that certain members of the Coun- cil had voted against revoking the accreditation of the Coun- cil's representative, Rabbi Amram Aburavia, but that in a typewritten copy submitted to him, changes allegedly had been made to record those members as abstaining. He also cited the record on Rabbi Obadia Hadayah as being listed in the handwritten cony with a negative vote and in the typewritten version as hav- ing abstained. In his letter de- manding a retraction, Rabbi Nissiin wrote that several type- written copies had been made of the protocol which was origi- nally taken down in longhand and that one of the typewrit- ten copies had been signed by Rabbi Hadayah. The post of Ashkenazic Chief Rabbi has been vacant since the death last year of Rabbi Isaac Halevi Herzog. -n,ttinn rrirrri tirttp trtgln 13 44t T C triv4n ,trtn4rIP ,trk;Pil nil ? .11.7 nt:W. ,?? 1.t. r]?; iptn tr-rTin rr Ti ?1x4 pztr? ntri tzr,i ."V7177:?;11711v/- :virii,7 rinT (r07?‘77V riny nn? rIttiriT) Itt-p nitrm minty ntpnt? tr4itzi Israel JERUSALEM—Minister of Agriculture Moshe Dayan asked U. S. Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson to withdraw American opposition to expansion of Israel's egg and poultry exports, after objections last year from American and European poultry farmers who asked for a limitation of Israel's exports in the field, contending that Israel was using American surplus fodder to compete in the market . . . Final agreement has been reached between the Joint National Construction Company of Sierra Leone and Solel Boneh, the construction arm of Histadrut (Israel's Federation of Labor), for the construction of the new Parliament building at Freetown, with an April, 1961 target date set for completion of the main building . . . The first number of the Arabic language newspaper "Al-Yawm,"s published jointly by the Arab workers' department of the Histadrut and the Al-Yawl society, appeared on August 15, Kol Israel reports. The chief editor of the newspaper is Nasim Ujwan. Europe FRANKFURT—A Mapai women's delegation, headed by Knesset member Genia Berger and including Knesset members • Rahel Zabari, Tzipora Sharett (wife of Moshe Sharett), Leah Barkin and Alisa Lewenberg, has arrived in West Germany at the invitation of the West German Socialist Party-Women's Chapter . . . The Hamburg Chamber of Commerce has protested the "undesirable snooping in which the Libyan government has been engaging in Germany to establish whether any firm there is owned by Jewish capital." LONDON—Prof. G. Cohen, a senior master teacher of English, represented Israel at the international Seminar in Bi- lingualism held recently in Aberystwyth, Wales .. . Israel will produce 60 jet planes this year and the country's diamland exports during the first six months of this year have totalled a value of $28,648,000, an increase of $6,220,000 over the com- parable period of 1959, it was disclosed here . In four months there will be ten television studios in the UAR, among them "some of the largest in the world," the Middle East News Agency reports, quoting Abd al-Qadir Hatim, who said that from this week on United Arab Republic reporters and photographers will be sent all over the world.... Samuel Bronfman, Canadian Jew- ish leader, announced the appointment of Dr. Moses Cyrus Weiler of Haifa as chairman of the administrative committee of "Beth Hatfut- zot" (House of Jewish Communities), a project soon to built in Israel.... Reports from Bonn indicated that the Social Democratic Party will urge the Federal Republic of Germany to investigate charges made here by Lord Russell of Liverpool who has stated that a former German general belittled the Nazi atrocities at Dachau con- centration camp, which Russell visited this summer. BONN—The West German Federal Republic has accepted liabil- ity of 21 billion marks ($5,000,000,000), for the wrongs done by the Nazi regime, according to a study published by the information service of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's Christian Democratic Party ... West Germany is now Israel's third largest customer, bowing only to Great Britain and the United States as an importer from Israel, the Israel Trade Mission told a press conference here. United States NEW YORK—The American Jewish Congress has urged the New York City Board of Elections to extend. the voters' registration period, in view of the fact that the four days set by the State Legislature coincided with the last days of the Sukkot holidays and the Sabbath. . . . Vice President Nixon's head- quarters issued instructions to "all persons connected" with the Republican Presidential campaign to keep the "religious issue" completely out of the campaign. WASHINGTON—Israel was among the 32 countries repre- sented at the Third International Congress of Physical Medicine, the largest international gathering to date of specialists in the treatment and rehabilitation of handicapped persons, which began Sunday and ended today at the Mayflower Hotel here . . Senator Jacob Javits (R-New York) took the floor in a warning to the American people not to inject the religious issue into the presidential campaign. Hebrew Corner CINCINNATI—Agencies of the Jewish community here announced formation of a technical advisory committee to review the types of care needed by elderly members of the community who are served by • its health and welfare agencies. SAN FRANCISCO—Temple Beth El, Redwood City, com- pleted its building program with the dedication of its new sanctuary, constructed at a cost of $225,000. The congregation Translation of Hebrew Column Published by Brit Ivrit Olamit was established in 1927 and has a membership of nearly We live in western Jerusalem in 300 families. a housing project of two story BUFFALO—A history of the Jewish community of Buffalo, houses. Opposite our housing project a new housing project of large "From Ararat to Suburbia," written by Dr. Selig Adler, pro- buildings has been built—each one fessor of history at the University of Buffalo, and Associate containing 16 flats. We asked our- selves: Who will live in them? Who Professor Thomas E. Connolly, will be published in mid-October, will be our neighbor? the United Jewish Federation announced this week. The book Then one day the new tenants began to arrive—most of them new will be issued by the Jewish Publication Society of America. immigrants who had come from PHILADELPHIA—Temple Adath Israel, of Marion, has Eastern Europe—doctors, engineers, teachers and other professionals. In produced a recording of the morning Shachris service, complete this way the new housing project with instructions, to train men to lead the service, it was an- was given the name: "Experts Hous- nounced. The service is chanted by Cantor Marshall Wolkenstein. ing Project." In the shops and buses we heard foreign languages. The LOS ANGELES—Hollywood Temple Beth El will erect a children looked different in their new youth and educational center at a cost of $500,000, to be European dress. Two years have passed. The name one of the most modern on the West COast. . . . The recent action of "Experts Housing Project" has not the boards of directors of Cedars of Lebanon and Mt. Sinai hospitals changed. But the tenants have changed. Today the mother speaks and clinics in approving in principle the developing of a program of Hebrew to her children. It is im- coordination of their services into a community medical center has possible to distinguish between old- timers and the newcomers. The been approved by the Jewish Federation Council board of directors, tenants of the housing project buy it was reported here. Hebrew papers and listen to the STARLIGHT, Pa. — An overwhelming majority of the 180 Hebrew broadcasts of "Kol Yisrael." The name "Experts Housing Proj- teenage delegates attending the 37th annual convention of Aleph ect" is not official, of course, and Zadik Aleph — boys division of the Bnai Brith Youth Organiza- nil: certainly remain in use for many years. But who were the first tion — said that they would favor courses in high school curriculum t e n.a n t s? Where did they come on history of religion, comparative religion and other aspects of from? Today it is already impossible to know, for they are alike in religion with emphasis on moral and ethical teachings of various everything to the local born faiths. "sabras." The more the merrier! nnvnn n4. 1wti Israeli Experts' nrr .rtFrO rte '131-.1747 '17V n'r.)4 '7V Ilv4 Housing Project .riinip ;- laL.Ftg .iarit0 1:11.4zrri — n4L?i-p rz, r7 ,4n t7tp tern 1117) 17 t3 r)711 ?? nlps?- ttitp in V! -rip:t r4 ty, rry)ri 1 7; :14417 nx laLmy 1: 11 .trtriirin ?nr. )4 trIns, w4insr tr4ip iintp ntri ;1:5.;:r trrI;Prri D'Ilitt/L7 L 2tp rq.11 171717? l'771r);:i mcgri round the Tr6rld... Digest of World Jewish Happenings, from Dispatches of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency and Other News-Gathering Media. A