O co cr3 r-4 1-4 ;. ■ a) z 0 ea cip z C.4 ti F-4 0 A LIMITED NUMBER OF SEATS AVAILABLE FOR THE EVENT OF T Y SATURDAY, NOV. 25 •••""'" Mizrachi Convention to Create Cultural Links Betmeen U.S.-, Israel- tions, undertake to supply funds to create agricultural, industrial and communal centers in un- inhabited sections of Arab host countries for resettlement of the refugees. A program to train Ameri- can Jewish yor th for commu- nity leadership and at the same time create a strong cul- tural link between the Jewish youth in this country and Is- rael was announced at the convention. . Samuel Spar, executive vice- president, reported that plans have been completed to launch a network of leadership train- rgman ap- ing summer institute camps in idential ad- Israel. Amer_nn youth will Kennedy "to spend the summer in Israel, estige and in- under the guidance of expert ng the United Israeli and American leaders, oncrete and posi- becoming better acquainted to resolve the ser- with the local scene and estab- refugee problem," lishing a basis for an inter- called "the foremost change of ideas and attitudes on to a permanent peace Jewish problems, to Israel and ment bet - veen the Arab the American Jewish commu- tes and Israel." He urged nity. - A resolution appealing to that the United States, in co- operation with the United • Na- Attorney General Robert Ken- ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (JTA) — The creation of additional Jewish day schools in the United States was urged last week at the 52nd annual conven- tion of the Religious Zionist of America by Rabbi Herschel Schachter, chairman of the con- vention. Rabbi Schachter told the 600 delegates that such schools would provide the reservoir for the lay and religious leaders of the future Jewish community "in cement- and woul e enduring ing a an Jewry ti Honored at Einstein College 'nedy to include the American Nazi party in the list of sub- versive organizations of the United States, was adopted here at the convention. Another resolution called on the State Department to term- inate any arrangement on for- eign soil "which discriminates against American personnel be- cause of their ethnic or reli- gious background." The conven- tion also denounced Egypt for her "interference with the pas- sage of Israel products through the Suez Canal" and demanded that the State Department and the United Nations pursue dra tic courses of action "to these illegal seizures and ruptions of trade and shipp The first in a series of e ca- tional institutes will be lo • ed 'in Givat Washington situ d near Tel Aviv. This youth \ lage was established at a cost of $250,000 by the Jewish com- munity of Washington, D.C. This project will provide oppor- tunity for summer study, camp- ing and travel for American youth during early adolescence: Rabbi Irving Miller, chairman of the American Zionist Coun- cil, predicted that "Israel will become self-sustaining and suf- ficient in the next decade. T creation of the State of Israel has resulted in a change in the image and status. of the Ameri- can Jew. Religion and culture rather than philanthropy will be the main bridge of contact in the future between American Jewry and Israel." Rabbi Mordechai Kirschblum, a member of the executive of the Jewish Agency for Israel, was unanimously elected pre 1- dent of the Religiou on. America tollman, of De- for • r national president I f Mizrachi, was elect d honor- ary national cha m . 0th n ntio • Detroiters a t an addition t rero, am were: R • Isidore Zvi Torn ie icz Sosnick. Hall for Rent Suitable for Bar Mitzvahs, Banquets, etc. Sholem Aleichem Institute 19350 Greenfield YE 8-7440 DI 1-3556 FORD AUDITORIUM Johnson JAN PEERCE Dubos Chain Recipients of honorary degrees at a special academic con- vocation at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University are Vice-President Lyndon Baines Johnson "in rec- ognition of his many years of devoted service to the nation"; Dr. Rene Jules Dubos, member and professor of the Rocke- feller Institute for. "his myriad contributions to medicine and the philosophy of health" • and to Nobel laureate Dr. Ernst Boris Chain, for his "pioneering work in the discovery of peni- cillin and his subsequent contributions to world health." The convocation Nov. 19, marks the 10th anniversary of the incep- tion of the Einstein College. Albert Parker is chairman of the anniversary observance. `Sefer Lutzk'—Thorough History of Community Destroyed by the Nazis PAUL PA RAY Conducting The Detroit Symphony of the 29th Annua Balfour Concert Call or Stop In TODAY! Zionist House 10424 W. McNichols DI 1-8540 In tribute to the memory of the community of Lutzk. in Poland, whose entire Jewish population was murdered by the Nazis, the United Lutzker Organization of America has is- sued an impressive, 610-page volume, in which are recalled the activities of individuals and organizations in Lutzk. The large book. in Hebrew and Yiddish texts. was pub- lished by Irgun Yotzey Lutzk Be'Israel in Tel Aviv, Israel. I. B. Finkel, of the JFD Elec- tronics Corp., 6101 16th Ave., Brooklyn 4, N. Y.. is chairman of the United Lutzker Organi- zation of America, the contri- butions of whose members, the relatives of the Lutzker sur- vivors, made it possible for the organization to produce this soul-stirring memorial. Only a handful of Lutzker people remain and these survivors now feel that they have paid a final and lasting tribute_ to their kinsmen, whose history of life and work in Lutzk dates back 600 years. Published under the title "Sefer Lutzk," "the Lutzk Vol- ume," this book is a collective work of more than 100 authors in Israel, the United States, Brazil, Poland, France, Canada and Mexico. Many of the authors are no longer among the living, some of them having perished dur- ing the bestial Nazi rule. The . editors are grateful that they were able to acquire their articles for perpetuation in "Sefer Lutzk." The organization has express- ed gratitude to I. B. Finkel for his generous gifts which made the publication of this book possible. In unfolding the history the Lutzk community, this contains memorial tr . well as historical Because archi and histori- cal records w destroyed, the editors wer ced by the pro- lem of au nticity. While r felt that t is too judge al e facts on - availabl value, t rial" accepte provide by resp le nesses. The ory of Lutz of- fered her.. aluable. Supplemente•evidence of the Nazi brutalities, by the ex- pulsion of the Lutzk Jews into extermination ghettoes, by pog-- roms and humiliations, this vol- ume supplements Lamentations in its spirit of mourning. Tracing the Nazi trek across the areas where millions of Jews lived in Eastern Europe, later to be led to the slaughter houses, "Sefer Lutzk" is an im- portant addition to the material that is accumulating as a col- lective indictment of Nazism. Creative efforts as they were pursued by the Lutzker also are enumerated, thus making this memorial volume a- thor- ough history of a perished community. Want ads get quick results! AR TO YOU AS YOUR PHONE! 3255 FORT ST., LINCOLN PARK 074e WA 8-6900 ucl-Jes Xislev Anner of the Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, Inc. will take place, please G—d unday, November 26, 6 p.m. at RTHWEST YOUNG ISRAEL guest speaker DR. IRVING BLOCH Graduate of Lubavitcher Yeshivah Professor of Philosophy at the University of Western Ontario, Middlesex College Report of Midwest Camp Gan Israel By CHARLES E. FEINBERG Chairman of Camping Comm. Isadore Starr Chairman Dinner Committee For reservations call: TO 9-7928 or WO 3-0050 Open to General Public, NO SOLICITATIONS I