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September 01, 1961 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1961-09-01

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



Sanderson Is Named
El Al Israel Airlines
Manager for Americas

NEW YORK, (JTA) — The
appointment of Hahn Sander-
son as manager for the Ameri-
cas for El Al Israel Airlines
was announced.
Sanderson
was formerly
the company's
managing di-
rector of fi-
nance and ad-
ministration
with head-
quarters at
the company's
home offices
Sanderson
in Israel.
Sanderson, who will now
make his headquarters in New
York, succeeds Dror Galezer,
who will take o'er the finance
post in Israel. The airline has
nine offices in the United
States and Canada and has re-
cently opened a new office in
Buenos Aires, Argentina. El Al
this year carried more than 50
percent of the air traffic into
and out of Israel, the company
announcement said.

Argentine President
Receives Hias Envoys

Jerusalem Museum of Art Given Epstein's Original Plaster Models

EDINBURGH, Scotland—Lady
Epstein, widow of the great
English sculptor, announced the
gift of over 200 original plaster
models by Sir Jacob Epstein to
the Jerusalem Museum of Art.
The gift was accepted by Billy
Rose, famous American impre-
sario, who came to Edinburgh
in his capacity as Chairman of
the Art Committee of the Israel
museum.
The original Epstein plasters,
from which all of his bronz
sculptures have been cast, wi
be housed in a special pavilio
to be erected by the museum
a cost of $420,000.
The America-Israel Cultura
Foundation announced in New
York that it will raise the $420,-
000 to build the pavilion. The
announcement was made by
Samuel Rubin, president of the
Foundation, in a statement that
paid tribute to Lady Epstein
for her generous gift and to
Billy Rose for the role he played
in arranging the gift. He said:
"The announcement of the
gift of the 200 original Ep-
stein plasters to the Jerusa-
lem Museum of Art, following
the announcement last week
of the similar gift to the
Foundation by Jacques Lip-
chitz, gives Jerusalem the fin-
est and most comprehensive
collection of modern scul
ture in the world. Tw .
ions will house
and Lipchitz ecti
"We are • eply debted to
s generous
Lady Epst: for
lly Rose fo
gift, and so to
making the gift po
his part
sible.
1
dtion to • the
In
of or nal plas
nounced
stein
givin the Jeru
two o er works by S•
bronz•ortrait o
me
Smuts, former
Christ
and
Ministe f South Afgr*
e of stone ultpure
a large
entitled "i
Lady Epste , explaining the
gift of virtually her husband's
entire life work, said: "My heart
tells me that this is what Sir
Jacob would have wanted."
At the time of Epstein's
death in London in 1959 at
the age of 78, Sir John Roth-
enstein, director of the Tate
National Gallery of Modern
Art, said: "He was by far the
greatest portrait sculptor of
his time.' Dr. Fritz Novodny
of the Belvedere Museum of

BUENOS AIRES, (JTA) —
Argentina will continue welcom-
ing Jewish refugees settling in
this country, President Arturo
Frondizi assured a delegation of
top leaders of United Hias
Service from Argentina, other
Latin American countries, and
the United States.
Dr. Hector. Ciapuscio, govern-
ment director of immigration,
declared the Argentine govern-
ment will encourage the work
of Hias and expansion of its
services. The governent, said
Ciapuscio, will not only aid the
settlement of more refugees
here, but will also consider
the Hias activities as a demon-
stration of a successful resettle-
ment project.
Among the members of the
Hias delegation meeting with
President Frondizi were Dr.
Isaac Tolohinsky, head of Hias
work in Argentina; the Hias
directors in Uruguay and Para-
guay; James P. Rice, of New
York, executive director of
United Hias Service, Inc.; Israel
Jacobs o n, until now Latin
American representative for
Hias, stationed at Rio de
Janeiro; and Harold Trobe, un-
til now Hias director for Ed-
rope and North Africa.
Ex-Nazi Storm Troop
Next week; Trobe will take
over the directorship of the Chief Denied Pension
HANNOVER, (JTA) — The
Hias American office, while
Jacobson will assume Trobe's former staff chief of the Nazi
former post, with headquarters storm troops, Wilhelm Schep-
mann, was ordered dropped
in Paris.
from the pension rolls in a deci-
sion here by the Lower Saxony
Institute Announces
Administrative Court.
Adult Education Classes
Schepmann recently resigned
The Sholem Aleichem Insti- as Deputy Mayor of Gifhorn, a
tute, which comprises groups of Lower Saxony town, after Social
all ages, as in will have classes Democrats had protested against
his holding that office, estab-
for adult
mg in 0. •ber, the foi- lishing that he had become the
B
l. , incs lasses will • -n: Yiddish, chief of staff of the S.A., the
ugh by Mrs. of e Haar; a Hitler storm troops, in 1943.
Now the court has ruled that,
isto seminar, by Irving
• ce group although he had 'not committed
f
Zeitlin; and
acts against humanity" while
e. in.
t
taught by
lei. •-m Choral serving in the Hitler forces, he
The hol
o meet on was, nevertheless; guilty of
Group wi • c
der the di- violating the principles of the
enings
Monda
ing Zetilin. The legal state" and was therefore
rection
11 ;Ain be under ineligible to pension benefits.
Teen Grou
Esther Zeitlin.
the leaders
-• informatio , call VE 8-7440. Tucson Police Warn

Against Vandalism

• MICHIGAN

ALi i• i

WI*

Fair

PK A.

SEPTEMBER 1-10
DETROIT

TUCSON, Ariz. (JTA)—The
Police Chief of Tucson issued a
strong warning that the city
would not tolerate acts of van-
dalism against religious insti-
tutions.
Last week, a two-foot swastika
was painted on the west wall of
Congregation Anshei Israel and
a hole was shot in a stained
glass window. A swastika was
also painted on a station wagon
parked in front of Temple
Emanu-El.

Currently, the largest and at Waverly Market as one of
Vienna, called him "one of the
greatest figures in the history most definitive exhibition of Sir the features of the annual Edin-
Jacob's work is being held here burgh Festival.
of sculpture."
erpt
Included in t
m Mu-
destined for
-r and Child,"
seum are
athleen," "Ele-
"Visita •n,"
on these BRAND NEW CARS
men , ' "E- her," "Duke of
Ma °rough' . and "Maternity."
Full Size 1961
mong the portrait • culp-
.uch
res are the bus
ton
orid nota
Churchill,
bert Einste
hudi Menu
ell,
arlal Nehr
AS LOW AS $1,790
orge
Emperor H
Big
Allowance
On Your Car
Barney Teal
Weiz-
Bernard Sh and C
Gen.
Mgr.
mann.
Sir Jacob Ep n was born
York's lower
880 in T
Authorized Imperial, Chrysler, Plymouth & Valiant
the son of poor
Eas
OUR NEW LOCATION-18500 LIVERNOIS
Russian-Jewish immigrants.
Below 7 Mile
He studied at the Art Stu-
dents League in Manhattan,
and in 1902 enrolled at the
Ecole des Beaux Arts in
Paris.
In 1906, he moved to London
and became a British citizen.
He was only 27 when he re-
ceived his first important com-
driving to
mission: 18 heroic figures to
adorn the British Medical Asso-
WHITCOMB.Sulphur rings
ciation Building in London.
After one of the stormiest
T via
careers in the annals of modern
rt, he was finally hailed by
Route 94
critics as "England's
r• est living sculptor." In
ALLTHIS .
954 t e was knighted by Queen
and MORE
Eliza th.
from

End of Models Sale

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