Stollman Gift to Establish High School in Israel
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(Continued from Page 1)
problem of educational shortcom-
ings in Israel.
Matitiahu Adler, director of ad-
ministration of Bar-Ilan University,
who was in this country last week
to complete the arrangements for
the establishment of the new high
school system, commended the
Stollmans for their gift and de-
clared on the eve of his return to
Israel:
"This school, bearing the Stoll-
mans' family name, will be the
pride of the religious education
system in this country and the
Diaspora as well."
He said that it is Bar-Ilan's idea
to make the new system "a model
high school which will accept stu-
dents from all over the country and
be a 'laboratory' for our educa-
tional department."
The Stollmans' gift is the second
step by Detroiters to assist in
solving Israel's secondary educa-
tion problem. A high school also
is being established in Jerusalem
in memory of Morris Schaver by
Mrs. Schaver.
The Stollman High School will
be located, like its parent institu-
anl °27'"W
tion, Bar-Ilan University, in Ramat
Gan, within a mile of the univer-
sity.
In a statement to Dr. Z. Wahr-
haftig, Israel's minister of reli-
gions, the Bar-Ilan authorities in-
formed him:
The school will have the follow-
ing aims:
1) To serve as an auxiliary insti-
tution for the Department of
Education in the training of
students in practical work, and
to prepare them for filling
teaching positions in secondary
schools.
2) To serve as a center for ex-
periments in the field of ed-
ucation and teaching.
3) To serve as an instrument for
the training of able students,
making it possible for them to
become integrated into the va-
rious branches of university
education.
General direction and nature of
the institution:
1) The institution will be desig-
nated as a "Model Torah High
School."
2) The number of years of study
therein will be 5 or 6 (corn-
Israeli Envoys Propose Way to Raise
Exports; Expect $50-Million Increase
AMSTERDAM (JTA)—A confer-
ence of Israeli economic and com-
mercial envoys concluded here with
a series of proposals to inrease Is-
raeli exports to European coun-
tries both within and outside the
European Common Market.
The envoys envisaged a further
increase of exports amounting to at
least $50,000,000 during the pres-
ent year. Akiva Govrin, minister
of state in charge of trade and
industry, said he was "very much
impressed" by the "very real and
practical ideas of the enthusiastic
and knowledgeable economic and
commercial envoys of Israel in
Europe."
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, June 26, 1964
32
One proposal was to seek great-
er use of the free ports, such as
Copenhagen and Rotterdam, to ac-
celerate and facilitate the distri-
bution of agricultural or restricted
consumption in Israel of products
for which markets could be opened
abroad.
The envoys also suggested en-
couragement of manufacture in Is-
rael of products not now made
there for which there was demand
overseas. They also urged a more
careful study of markets and visits
by Israeli exporters to customer
countries. •
Govrin said that he was deter-
mined to bring about "concrete ac-
tion by the Israel government on
the policies" discussed at the par-
ley.
a 'C
a 19' C:7 1 621n3
mencing with grade '7 or 8 or
the public school).
3) The institution aims at the
complete integration of sacred
studies which will be given
within a wide framework with
general curricular studies
Stress will be laid upon the
devaluation of the "realistic"
category.
4) Qualified students from all
parts of the country will be
accepted by the institution
and, at a later stage, also from
abroad.
At ceremonies in New York last
week, the American Committee for
Bar-Ilan University, of which Phil-
ip Stollman is national chairman,
marked the granting of a charter
to the university by the Board of
Regents of the State of New York,
establishing Bar-Ilan University as
the first and only American char-
tered institution of higher learn-
ing in Israel.
It was announced that the Bar-
Ilan budget for next year will be
4,677,000 Israeli pounds. The uni-
versity was established at Ramat
Gan 10 years ago. Dr. Joseph H.
Lookstein of New York is acting
president of the university.
History of Negev
Leaving the gates of Beer-Sheba south-
ward you find a country where the
winds blow a lot with little rain, wells
with only little water and few trees.
It is a wonder that in this wilderness
and such difficult conditions as with the
Negev existed six cities.
Research work on the basis of exist-
ence of life in the Negev has been going
on for three generations. Archaeological
diggings in the Negev are also meant to
answer this problem.
The first settling in the Negev goes
back to very earliest days. Already by
the end of the stone age there were
many prehistoric stations in the heights
of the Negev, while in the beginning of
history the Beer-Sheba area was a center
Of settlement. However the Negev was
not fairly densely settled till the times
of the Patriarchs and the kings of Judah.
The peak of development in the Negev
was reached in Helenistic period —
which lasted for a thousand years.
The Negev was first settled by shep-
herds who lived in small villages. How-
ever since the Negev was taken by the
Kingdom of Judah in the days of David
and Solomon we find signs of extensive
development: the port of Eilat, Copper
mines in Etsyon Gover and fortresses
on the roads between Beer-Sheba and
Egypt. Shepherds and farmers settled
around the fortifications.
In the days of David and Solomon
the Negev was ruled by them.
Translation of Hebrew column, Pub-
lished by Brit Ivrit Olamit, Jerusalem.
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Hebrew Corner
It has been announced that the
annual Bar-Ilan University dinner
sponsored by the Detroit Friends
of Bar-Ilan will be held at Cong.
Shaarey Zedek Nov. 18.
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