▪ I People Make News Martin Panzer, assistant to the Vice president of the Israel Bond Organization, has been named ex- ecutive vice president of American Friends of Tel Aviv University, it was announced by Dr. George S. Wise, president of t h e univer- sity. Founded in 2956, Tel Aviv University has a current enroll- ment of more than 3,000 stu- dents. Its new Panzer campus, which was dedicated-last November by President Zalman Shozar and Prime Minister Levi Eshkol of Israel, is located in the Ramat Aviv section of Israel's largest city and is designed to Serve a population of 750,000 in Tel Aviv and the surrounding area, Dr. Wise said. * * MILTON SCHLOSS, staff scien- tist of Bendix Systems Division, Ann Arbor, addressed a dinner meeting of the Southeastern Michi- gan branch of the American Society of Civil Engineers Thurs- day. Schloss is a pioneer in the new field of lunar geology. He has explored and photographed lava flows and meteor craters in the western states in his study to sim- ulate the lunar surface for a soft landing of equipment and travel of manned and unmanned vehicles being designed by Bendix for lunar exploration. Schloss is also directing a study, "Mineral Sta- bility in the Lunar Environment," which is under contract to the NASA-manner spacecraft center in Houston. He is a doctoral candi- date in geology at Penn State. Schloss, his wife Mimi, and three sons • reside at 14421 Oak Park Blvd., Oak Park. They are mem- bers of the Young Israels of Greenfield and Oak Woods. * * * The National Conference of Christians and Jews elected Dr. Sterling W. Brown, executive vice president since 1953, to be- t 0 m e president effective July 1. He succeeds Dr. Lewis Webster Jones, president since 1958, who announced last summer that he would retire June 30. Educa- tor, minister and former govern- ment consultant, Dr. Brown has held several ex- ecutive posts Dr. Brown with NCCJ since he joined the civic organization in 1943. He is the third president since NCCJ was founded in 1928. * * * A testimonial to the extraordi- nary contributions which MIRIAM R. EPHRAIM has made to social welfare in America and to the Jewish Community Center move- ment in particular will be held April 26, at the 92nd Street YM- YWHA in New York. Miss Ephraim will retire in June as director of program services of the National Jewish Welfare Board after a dis- tinguished career which has in- eluded communal service in volun- teer and professional capacities on the local, national and international level. She has headed JWB's pro- gram services since 1945. * * * PAUL TOMEY has been appoint- ed sales manager and director of display for Robinson Furniture Co., it was announced by Harold Robin- son, executive vice president. Fur- ther appointments included C. GIL- BERT and MILTON SPERBEN as co-managers - of Robinson's East- land Store. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, April 9,1965-21 Marvin B. Dubin, of 21800 Gard- ner, Oak Park, has been appoint- ed Metropolitan insurance con- sultant manager of Metropolitan Life Insurance Company's Gra- tiot district of- fice at 15300 East Seven Mile Road; it has been announced by Manager Alex Speyer. Du- bin, a native De- troiter, is a grad- uate of Mninford High School. He Dubin attended Wayne State University and joined Metropolitan as an agent in December 1961. He is married to the former Lynn Benigsohn. They have one son. * * Dr. Jacob I. Hartstein, a mem- ber of the first graduating class of Yeshiva Col- lege and former Dean of Yeshiva University's Grad- uate School, has been inaugurated a s president o f the Kinsborough Community Col- lege of the City University of New Dr. Hartstein York. _ I MENU BY HENRY LEONARD . DR. HERBERT GOLDSTEIN, chairman of the departments of special education and curriculum and instruction at Yeshiva Univer- sity's Ferkauf Graduate School of Education, addressed a colloquium on special education at the Uni- versity of Michigan's Horace Rack- man School of Graduate Studies, Thursday. A leading specialist in the education of mentally retarded children, Dr. Goldstein has recent- ly been awarded almost $500,000 in grants from various agencies of the federal government to conduct re- search and institute programs for the mentally retarded. * * * DR. CURT D. WORMANN, di- rector of the Jewish National and University Library at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, arrived in this country to assume the post of Visiting professor at Columbia University's School of Library Service. Dr. Wormann is the first non-American to hold this profes- sorship at Columbia. ROBERT A. STEINBERG, execu- tive vice president of Blumberg Brothers Co., has been appointed to the board of directors of the Detroit Association of Insurance Agents. This association is com- posed of independent insurance agents in the Greater Metropolitan Detroit Area, which currently . has a membership of over 325 insur- ance agencies. Steinberg has been S I And it shall come t o pass in the end of days Oh Daughters of Moab — that among all the animals of the field, thou shalt choose the lowly mink." • & I 1•01110111111‘ an instructor in general insurance in the association's educational pro- gram and is currently a member of their agency-company liaison committee, program committee and educational committee. He serves as a member of the board of Sha- arey Zedek and is chairman of the synagogue's membership commit- tee. He is associate chairman of the services division of the Allied Jewish Campaign and a member of the board of the University of Michigan Club of Detroit. Freedom Of Conscience Though Moses Michael Hays is best known as the founder of the Scottish Rite of Masonry in America, perhaps more important, he was one in the long line of patriots who struck a blow for freedom of conscience. Born in New York in 1739, Hays moved to Newport, Rhode Island, shortly before the Revolution. In 1776, Hays' loyalty to the American cause was impugned, and he was asked to sign a loyalty oath. With a courage rare for the times, when hys- teria and suspicion ran wild, Hays de- panded to be confronted by his accusers. In an eloquent petition to the Rhode Island General Assembly, Hays refused to sign the oath. It was unconstitutional, he held. Furthermore, he pointed out, since Jews could not vote, the oath was discriminatory. He prevailed; no one After the Revolution, Hays settled in Boston, where he soon made his mark in business, chiefly as a maritime insurance broker. He helped found Boston's first bank, today known as the First National Bank of Boston. To his home came many of the notables of the day, including Senator Harrison Otis and Ezra Styles, President of Yale. Hays, a Federalist, sought public office but was swamped by the rising tide of Jeffersonian Republicanism. However, as deputy inspector-general of Masonry for North America, Hays achieved the eminence he missed in pub- lic life. For four years he was grand master of the Grand Lodge of Massa- chusetts. Paul Revere was his deputy. Moses Michael Hays died in 1805. He is buried in the famous Colonial cemetery ever again doubted his loyalty. in Newport, Rhode Island. P. LORILLARD COMPANY ESTABLISHED 1760 First with the Finest Cigarettes through Lorillard research