Firing Upheld_ . for Refusal to Work on Sab th TRENTON, N.J., (JT —Dis- missal of an empl e who wanted time off wit t pay to observe Passover an he Jewish Sabbath does not stitute 're- ligious discrimina , the Ap- pellate Division . the_ New Jersey Superior C t ruled. The case is expected t be taken -to the New Jersey S reme Court. The plaintiff wa harma Tern- melman of Flemin n, N.J., who refused to work on turdays or after sundowns on idays dur- ing the winter mont She was fired April 11 by Ortho Pharmaceutical Corpora of Raritan. The 18-year-old dox Jewess asked $55,000 dam- ages but did not seek reinstate- ment. In the letter of dismissal, the company said that Miss Temmel- man's demands for permission to leave early • on Fridays during the winter and to be absent on Saturdays "and certain other days" would "materially affect your ability to complete your work assignments." The Appellate Court decision affirmed a ruling by Superior Court Judge Frank L. Kingfield, who declared: "It is a somewhat sad commentary upon our mod- ern civilization that a person' has to lose her employment be- cause of a desire to participate in a religious ceremony. How- ever, an employer today likewise has a problem. Industries can ill afford to have any of the cogs of their machinery slowed up." The Appellate Division decision was confined to the issue of religious discrimination. •• V :rp e r ••• •• by Time Magazine among 15 American scientists named as "Men of the Year." They ian- Isidore Isaac Rabi, born son of Jewish igrants, brought up on N ork's low- er East Side; ward Teller, Hungarian-bo physicist; Josh- ua Lederbe son of New Jer- sey Rabbi wi H. Lederberg; Donald G1 er, son of a Jewish storekeep in Cleveland; and Emilio S e, 55. Dr. -Le berg, 35, and Dr. Glaser, 3 re the you among all o ists picked by Time as 1960 "Men of the Year." Each is a Nobel Prizewinner, as is Dr. Rabi. Dr. Teller, who is 53, is the man called "father of the hydrogen bomb." While many other scien- tists collaborated in the devel- opment of the H-bomb, this work is credited, according to - Time, "with the basic and original . 1 •.. DR. SAMUEL SANDMEL Report Fewer Offspring from Mixed Marriage NEW YORK, (JTA)—Ameri- can Jews were found, in a re- search study reported here, to share with American Christians a pattern of maximum fertility in common faith marriages and lower fertility in mixed mar- riages. The findings were reported to a session of the 'American Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Science convention by Prof. Jack C. Bresler of Brown University. Prof. Bresler studied 1,000 Brown University and Pembroke College alumni. He traced the origins and religions of their parents and grandparents. He also found that marriages of men and women of the same faith but with different national origins, even it generations re- moved, also produce fewer chil- dren. He reported that Catholic- Catholic marriages produce: the greatest number of children. Next come Protest marriages an Protes Catholic ages. La fer- tility arria which the ma are of.. same-faith but which one partner was the cld of _parents of different faiths. In reporting that Jewish mar- riages iollowed the same gen, eral trends; -Dr. BregleY,Said he had studied fewer Jewish sub- jects and wa efore less cer- tain of the ew- ish group. his investigat . ity when crossed .et - enlrlPrates Service of Cologne Annivers Synagogue Desecration • COLOGNE, (JTA) — Serv . commemorative of the 195 as- tika desecration of th syna- gogue here, reca the offen- sive acts tha ed a series of anifestations of anti- Semitism, were held here at the synagogue and at the monument to victims of Nazism.in the center of Cologne. Participating in the services were representatives of the Jew- ish community here as well as officers and members of the So- ciety of Christians and Jews. All of the speakers condemned the anti-Semitic manifestations. One of the participants, Paul Schallueck, a German author, de- clared that the fears of resurgent anti-Semitism expressed univer- sally during the height of the manifestations of last year were "exaggerated." "D e v elop- ments during recent months," he stated, "have shown that the Ger- man people as a whole do not condone anti-Semitism." The payroll savings plan where you work is a painless savings plan for buying U.S. Savings Bonds on partial pay- ments. . el Dr. Ra Prize ' is in molecular physics, hich were vital to American atomic research. He is now on the facult of Columbia U d versity. D Led rberg, c his 19 the Nobe d discover of with c ain y suffer eredi c ges. is at e School of M 21 Y Prize only this month, s ring *th another American cien- eveloped the s alled tis . photo- ber" fo "bubble-c graphing at is part* s. He is y of Cali- ow at the niv Italian-born fornia, Berke s a Nobel Prize Dr. Segre help perfect the winner utron process basic to slo development of the atomic bomb. SELLING AMERICA'S CHOICE— "CHEVROLET" For the very best deal on a new car — plus . .. extra good service, prompt delivery — please call me — I'm as near to you as your phone! Is Faber - Is FABER HANLEY DAWSON CHEVROLET Bus. UN 4-2300, Res. 4-9039 14501 W. 7 MILE RD. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Friday, January The next in the series of Bor- man Near Eastern and Semitics ' Lectures will be delivered next Thursday by Dr. Samuel Sandmel, Provost of Hebrew Union College- Jewish Institute of Religion. Dr. Sandmel will speak in Hall L of McGregor Memorial Confer- ence Center at 8:30 p.m. on the subject "Judaisrn and Christianity in the First Christian Century." That afternoon, at 2:30, Dr. Sandmel will lecture in the Kresge Science Auditorium on the subject "The Judaism Into. Which Christianity Was Born." Dr. Sandmel is a specialist in New Testament and its relation to Judaism. A graduate of Hebrew Union College, where he was ordained in 1937, Dr. Sandmel was ap- pointed to the faculty of his alma mater in 1952. He was named Provost in 1957. He served as Hillel Professor of Jewish Literature and Thought of Vanderbilt University, 1949- 1952, after serving from 1946 to 1949 as director of the Hillel Foundation at Yale University. Earlier, he was for four years a Navy and Marine Corps chaplain in World War H. A native of Dayton, Ohio, he at- tended public schools in St. Louis and received his B.A. from the University of Missouri in 1932. He received his Ph.D. degree from Yale, Dr. Sandmel was awarded the President's Fellowship by Brown University and prepared a book on the New Testament. Published in the spring of 1956 and re- printed in 1957, Dr. Sandmel's book, "A Jewish' Understanding of the New Testament," is one of the most significant publications of recent times in the field of re- ligion. His book, "Philo's Place in Judaism," appeared in 1956. His "The Genius of Paul" was pub- lished by Farrar, Straus and Cu- dahy in 1958. He is preparing an 'Introduction to Bible (Old testa- ment)" for Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Dr. Sandmel was recently elected President of the Society of Biblical Literature and Exe- gesis, composed of Jewish, Prot- estant and Catholic scholars. - Dr. Samuel Sandmel to Give Next Five Jews Among 15 U.S. Scientists Named b 'Time' of Leland Stanf or • • ersity. NEW YORK, (JTA) — Five insight that made th -WSU Borman Lecture on Thursday Jewish obel Dr. Glaser received hi scientists were picked product possib '