Ory N. Mazar, president of Is r a e l i Publishing Institute, Ltd., of Jerusalem, will be here Monday to confer with educators and a number of rabbis regard- ing the important works already ORY N. IVIAZAR Columbia Law School to Honor Proskauer The Columbia Law School Alumni Association announced that Judge Joseph M. Proskauer will be the first recipient of a neWly-created Medal for Ex- cellence. Judge Proskauer, a graduate of Columbia College in 1896 and the Law School in 1899, is a senior member of Proskauer, Rose, Goetz and Mendelsohn, a New York City law firm. He served as a justice of the Su- preme Court of the State of New York from 1923 to 1930, the last four years in the Ap- pellate Division. A bronze medal bearing the profiles of the three Columbia alumni—John Jay, Charles Ev- ans Hughes and Harlan Fiske Stone—who served as Chief Jus- tices of the United States, will be presented to Judge Pros- kauer at the University's Corn- mencement Exercises in June. A native of Mobile, Ala., Judge Proskauer has practiced law in New York since his graduation from the Columbia Law School in 1899 with the exception of those years he herved on the bench. He is 86. He has held the offices of president and honor- ary president of the American Jewish Committee, president of . HA of New York, and the YM trustee and president of the Federation of Jewish Philan- thropies. Leader's experts profession- ally dean your carpets in your home with Bigelow's ex- clusive method. CASH & CARRY — SAVE 20% Judith Horton Wed to Allan Tushman produced by the Israeli publish- ing company and the organiza- tion's expansion plans. Mazar, a nephew of Israel's second President, Itzhak Ben- Zvi, is the son of Prof. Benja- min Mazar, former president of the Hebrew University. He was for a time a member of the Israel Knesset and is a coun- cillor-elect of the City of Jeru- salem. During Israel's War of Inde- pendence he was an officer in the Israel army intelligence service. Mazar seeks to interest in- vestors in his publishing house. Himself an author of several books in Hebrew, he has pro- moted the publishing of "Jeru- salem," a pictorial history of the Holy City, and "Illustrated History of the Jews" that was published here by arrangement \vith Harper & Row. The Israeli Publishing Insti- tute, Ltd., was founded six years ago in Jerusalem with the motto "Out of Zion shall go forth the taw and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem." It has close connections with the faculty of the Hebrew Uni- versity, Jerusalem, and its edi- torial board includes leading ex- perts in many fields such as Prof. Michael Avi-Yonah, head of the department of archaeol- ogy at the Hebrew University; Prof. Moshe Davis of the Jew- ish Theological Seminary in New York; Dr. Israel Goldstein, former president of the Ameri- can Jewish Congress; Col. Na- thaniel Lorch, former official military historian of the Israeli Army; Prof. Ben Zion Dinur, former Israeli Minister of Edu- cation and now head of Yad Vashem, Jerusalem. Local Teen Artist Illustrates Book, `6 White Horses' MRS. ALLAN TUSHMAN The marriage of Judith Merle Horton and Allan Harold Tush- man was solemnized recently in an evening ceremony at Temple Israel. Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Gerson Horton of War- rington Dr. The bridegroom is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Tushman. The couple will' make their home in Oak Park. `Intermarriage' Study by Gordon Off Press May 4 More than 5,000 students par- ticipated in Rabbi Albert I. Gordon's nationwide analysis of intermarriage. He has recorded 17 interviews with the inter- married themselves. Clergymen of the Protestant, Catholic and Jewish faiths have called his book the definitive study on the growing trend toward intermar- riage. On May 4 Beacon Press will publish "Intermarriage" by Rabbi Gordon. In the course of several years' work, Dr. Gordon read through an intimidating number of state and national laws, stud- ied official statements of our major religious denominations, and reviewed carefully the work of noted sociologists, psycholo- gists, priests and ministers. They all agree that the di- vorce rate among intermarried couples is high. What are the problems causing this that were not anticipated? How have par- ents adjusted to mixed marri- ages? What must intermarried couples face? The answers are given here by the intermarried themselves. Dr. Gordon is presently at Temple Emanuel in Newton Cen- tre, Mass. He was formerly ex- excutive director of the United Synagogues of America, has seen extensive service as a labor ar- bitrator, and is the author of a previous Beacon book, "Jews in Suburbia." A local teen-ager's pen and ink sketches so impressed a publishing house, that two pro- fessional artists and other stu- dents were bypassed as illus- trators for the book, "Six White Horses." The much-publicized book by 15-year-old Candy Geer, is a poem about little John Kennedy on the day of his father's burial. Leslie Bennett. a 17-year-old Cass Technical High School stu- dent specializing in art, drew a forlorn John-John watching six white horses carying the flag-covered casket. The deli- cate sketch is on the cover. and other drawings illustrate each couplet. The book is published by M&W Quill Co., Ann Arbor, and is being distributed throughout the country. Leslie, son of Max M. Ben- Scholarship Offered nett, 20050 Marlowe, and the late Mrs. Bennett, has attended to Child of Veteran Sgt. Morton A. Silverman Hebrew high school. He will use royalties from the sale of Post and Auxiliary, Jewish War the book for a trust fund for Veterans, announce a $250 scholarship grant to the son or his college education. daughter of a Michigan veteran. Great Lakes Antique Show According to Maurice Shep- A wonderful "new" world of herd, post commander, and antiques will open again to the Mrs. Samuel Wagner, auxiliary public April 8 with the arrival president, the award will be of the 40th semi-annual Great given on the basis of need and Lakes Antique Show at Ma- the scholastic aptitude of the sonic Temple for a four-day qualifying c a n d i d a t e. High stand through April 11. Sunday school graduates and pupils exhibits were discontinued last graduating this June may apply. fall. The committee reviewing ap- Friends and patrons of the plications is composed of Mrs. "old reliable show" will see Jack Schwartz, Max Hoffman scores of finds, large and small. and Dr. Frances Cousens. Let- Coins and guns, being what ter applications should be di- they are to collectors, will be rected to the Sgt. Morton A. shown, and there will be every Silverman Post and Auxiliary, sort of art glass imaginable, Jewish War Veterans' office, 19161 Schaefer, Detroit 35. including Haviland china. Deadline for filing is April 24. Want ads get quick results! Unit to Hear Talk on Silberschlag Poetry Eliezer Silverman of the ad- ministrative staff of the United Hebrew Schools will address the Kvutza Ivrit, Hebrew cul- tural group of Detroit, 9 p.m., April 11 in the Jewish Center. His topic will be "The Modern Jew's Quest for Jewish Iden- tification as Reflected in the Poetry of Eisig Silberschlag." Silberschlag, considered by many the outstanding Hebrew poet in America today, was first recipient of the LaMed Prize and won the Tchernihovsky Award for Hebrew poetry. He was Silverman's counselor at the Boston Hebrew Teachers College where Silberschlag is dean. Silverman graduated from Boston University, where he was. awarded the Creative Arts Scholarship, and the Boston Hebrew Teachers Col le g e. Working toward an advanced degree in Hebrew literature at Dropsie, he is a member of the National Council for Jewish Education and numerous other communal and academic organ- izations. Archbishop of Canterbury Selections from Silberschlag's Says Jews Not to Be poetry will be read by Mrs. Lea Blamed for Crucifixion •Beurer, a Midrasha student, (Direct JTA Teletype Wire who also took courses at the to The Jewish News) LONDON — The Archbishop Mizrachi Teachers Seminary in of Canterbury declared Tuesday Haifa. it was wrong to try to place the blame for the crucifixion of Mizrachi Women's Parley Jesus on the Jews alone. The 39th annual national con- The Archbishop Mich a e 1 vention of the Mirachi Women's Ramsey made the statement in Organization of America will a letter to the London Diocesan take place in New York Oct. Council for Jewish Christian 4-7, it was annuonced by Mrs. Understanding. The Council Eli Resnikoff, national presi- said it had received the letter dent. in response to a request. The archbishop wrote "The "In nature there are neither important fact is that the r e war d s nor punishments— crucifixion was the clash be- there are consequences."—In- tween the love of God and the gersoll. sinfulness and selfishness of the whole human race. Those who crucified Christ are in the true mind of the Christian church representa- tives of the whole human race, and it is not for anyone to point a finger of resentment at those who brought Jesus to his death and ENTERTAINMENT but rather to see the crucifixion BY as the divine judgment upon all humanity for choosing the ways of sin rather than the love of UN 3-5730 God." UN 3-8982 The archbishop added that "We all must see ourselves judged by the crucifixion." 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