Alullin-Segel Betrothal Is Announced Here MISS SUSAN MULLIN Mr. and Mrs. Sol Mullin of Stat- ford Rd. announce the engagement of their daughter Susan Elizabeth to Sheldon Segel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Segel of Patton Ave. Miss Mullin attended Michigan State University. Her fiance is a senior at the Detroit Institute of Technology. A January wedding is planned. Hebrew U. Ups Budget JERUSALEM (JTA) — A 50,000,- 000-pound ($16,666,666) regular budget for the next academic year, and a 20.000,000-pound development budget were approved by the board of governors of the Hebrew Uni- s-/-Thversity as the university celebrated / its 40th anniversary here. The reg- ular budget was 10,000,000 pounds above this year's expenditures. The board also recommended an increase in the number of stu- dents seeking science instruction, and urged in a resolution that the government continue its efforts to recover and use the university's Mount Scopus campus, which is now an Israeli enclave surrounded completely by territory under the jurisdiction of Jordan. CHARLES L. LEVIN, a partner in the law firm, Levin, Levin, Gar- vett & D i 1 1, and KENNETH M. WHEELER, vice president, City National Bank of Detroit, were elected to the board of directors of American Steel Corporation. Mr. Levin obtained his law degree from the University of Michigan in 1947 and joined the firm that bears his father's name four years later. 'Never Forget,' Consul Gen. Barmore Cautions at Uprising Observance "If we are to deserve the proud name we carry — Jew — we must never forget the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising . . . If the lesson is not learned, we are doomed." The re- marks were made, almost angrily, by Israel Consul General Jacob Barmore. The anger of his words was lev- eled at those who did not want to see, and those who do not want to remember, the murder of 6,000,000 Jews in Nazi Europe. Barmore was addressing the 22nd anniversary commemoration of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Sunday evening at Temple Israel. Barmore condemned the attitude of those who insist the "Jews should have known better than to trust the Germans," those who criticize the victims' "shortsight- edness" and those who have put the martyrs "in the dock, claim- ing they were submissive when they should have fought back." "On the contrary," said Bar- more, "there was very little the Jew could do except try to sur- vive in the face of the Nazis' re- lentless march." Yet, they did fight back, at Warsaw, at Treblinka, So- bibor, Maidanek. When a German commandant wrote that over 50,000 Jewish "bandits" had been wiped out in the revolt, "it showed us how Jews must live and, if necessary, how to die," said Barmore. Six survivors of the ghetto and concentration camps lit six candles, one for each million deaths, and Cantor Reuven Frankel chanted the El Mole Rachamim, the memorial pray- er, while the audience stood in silence. Despite thunder storms and tor- nado warnings, the temple was filled to capacity, the lightening outside providing an eerie back- drop for the solemn program. Cantors Frankel and Harold Or- bach were joined by a quartet in songs from the ghetto. Martin Rose, a survivor of the Uprising, delivered, in Yiddish, recollec- tions from the Nazi holocaust. A scene out of that ghetto life was presented in a dance sequence dedicated to the martyrs and sur- vivors, "The Last Sabbath." Chor- eographed by Harriet Berg, and with music by Charles Davidson, the drama-dance service featured solo chants by Cantor Orbach and narration by Mrs. Orbach. Sidney M. Shevitz, president of the Jewish Community Council, in welcoming the audience, urged them to note that the observance comes at a significant time on the calendar: "before Passover, the holiday of freedom and before the 17th anniversary of the State of Israel. It also comes during the Allied Jewish Campaign, when every Jew is reminded of his ob- ligation to his fellow Jews." - * * * World Tribute at Anniversary of Camps' Liberation - Gontcharov, who commanded the troops that liberated Auschwitz 20 years ago. In West Germany, former in- mates of the Dachau concentration camp joined representatives of the Judenring, the West German Jew- ish youth organization, at services in Dachau. In Bonn, it was an- nounced that, in ceremonies to be conducted next week at the site of the Bergen-Belsen murder camp, the princpial speaker will be West German President Heinrich Luebke. In Italy, the 20th anniversary of the liberation or Ravenna was cele- brated in that city. A large Israeli delegation participated in that demonstration. Among the Israelis were former members of the Jew- ish Brigade who had fought with the Allies in the liberation of Ravenna. In New York, 2,000 persons, many of them survivors of Nazi concentration camps, took part in observances marking the 20th anniversary of the liberation of the camps by the Allied armies in the spring of 1945. Sponsored by the Council of Organizations of the United Jewish Appeal of Greater New York, the gathering was addressed by U.S. LONDON (JTA) — A series of Senators Everett Dirksen of Illinois solemn rites marking the 20th an- and Jacob K. Javits of New York niversary of the liberation of war- and by Undersecretary of Com- time concentration camps by Allied armies, and commemorating the 22nd anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto rebellion, was being con- ducted this week in many places in Europe. At Cracow, Poland, a conference Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF T HE UNITED STATES continues to subject incoming Presidents to attacks of pneumonia and worse by insist- ing that they take the oath of ofECe outdoors in often foul midwinter weather i n Washington. Ed New- man, however, points out gradual evolutions in the inauguration ceremonies. It was James Madison, for instance, who first re- solved to wear o n 1 y American - made clothes at his inauguration. Mar- tin Van Buren introduced the ceremonial ride the length of Pennsylvania Avenue. William Henry Harrison spoke the long- est—a solid hour and forty minutes in sub-zero cold. It's a wonder the crowd didn't demand his impeachment then and there! McKinley's inaugural address, incidentally, was the first covered by motion picture cameras; Coolidge's the first broadcast on radio, and Truman's in 1949 the first flashed on a TV network. • * Maybe kids study physics too early in life these days. Repri- • manded by his mother for playing too close to the railing of the family's penthouse apartment, nine-year-old Mortimer reassured her, "Don't worry, mom! Mrs. Boyden told us in class last week that a man falling through the atmosphere near the earth never goes faster than 119 miles an hour!" * * • In a much quoted literary exchange, F. Scott Fitzgerald is - purported to have told Ernest Hemingway, "The very rich are different from you and me." To which Hemingway replied sourly, "Yes, they have more money." 1965, by Bennett Cert. Distributed by King Features Syndicate Larry Freedman Orchestra & Entertainment. merce Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr. President Johnson sent a mes- sage to the meeting, lauding the Featuring: Outstanding Yiddish and Popular Vocalist work of the UJA for its humani- tarian work and paying tribute to the martyrs of the holocaust. "The memory of those who had died in was opened by the International this century as•victims of prejudice tekr•""Lr-",rn"-1...r"..-Irsrwzr Underground Movements and the Auschwitz concentration camp, in when you core enough to remember . • . which 22,000 Jews and Poles par- ticipated. Addresses were delivered during that demonstration by Po- land's Prime Minister Joseph Cyrankewitz and Soviet General 641-2361 CANDID ART photography of distinction by HERMAN JAFFEE Twersky Gets Wolfson Chair A former Harvard student will succeed to the chair of his master. I s a d o r Twersky is replacing Harry A. Wolfson, with whom he studied for a decade, as Nathan Littauer Professor of Hebrew Literature and Philosophy. Wolf- son, appointed to the professorship when the chair was established in 1925, has been Littauer Professor, Emeritus, since 1958, and for seven years the chair has been vacant. and oppression," declared the President, "must be honored by us all through unceasing vigilance against bigotry and bias in our society, and unrelenting efforts to assure a world of peace, freedom and justice for all peoples without regard to creed, color or continent of their birth." The British Broadcasting Corp., in two separate broadcasts, marked the 20th anniversary of the liber- ation of the Bergen-Belsen death camp, which took place on April 15, 1945. The network presented a com- memorative television program which included an interview with General Glyn Hughes, who was a medical officer with the Second British Army at the end of the Second World War, and who made superhuman efforts to restore the health of as many of the concen- tration camp survivors as possible. The BBC Hebrew Service also presented a special program on the anniversary of the camp's lib- eration. Prof. Twersky, an authority on rabbinical literature and Jewish his- tory, is the author of "Rabad of Posquieres: A 12th Century Tal- mudist" published in 1962 by the Harvard University Press, and of "Judaism and World History" to be published this year by Prentice Hall in its Global History Series. He is at work on "A Study of Mai- monides," which will be published by Yale University Press as the introductory volume for the Mai- monides' "Mishneh Torah" transla- tion. Prof. Twersky, 34, a native of Boston, became a student of Prof. Wolfson as an undergraduate at Harvard, where he earned the A.B. (1952), A.M. (1953), and Ph.D. (1956) degrees. He also received the degree of M.H.L. (Master of Hebrew Literature) from the He- brew Teachers College in Brook- line. While an undergraduate, Prof. Twersky studied during 1949-50 on a fellowship at the Hebrew Uni- versity in Jerusalem. Since 1956 he has taught courses in Hebrew literature and Jewish history at Harvard, since 1962 as associate professor. The Littauer professorship was the gift of Lucius N. Littauer of the class of 1878, named in honor of his father. Prof. Twersky will be- come Littauer Professor on July 1. He is married to the former Atarah Soloveitchik who received her Ph.D in 1959 from Radcliffe Col- lege. They reside In Brookline with their three children. LI 2-6373 Weddings • Bar Mitzvahs • Home Portraits We wish to extend Passover Greetings to our many customers and friends. For Your Fine Diamonds and Jewelry "Buy With Confidence" Norman .4.1.e.....14 Allan Co. S- Gemologists 17540 WYOMING OPEN THURS., FRI. Diamontologists tY1 DI 1-1330 I 'TIL 9 P.M. . . • The Greatest for House parties, confirmations, weddings . artin Xosins Oavid Overton UN 3-5245 01 1-1702 We Make Our Own Glosses HEADQUARTERS FOR SAMUEL J. LEFRAK, prominent New York builder and philanthro- pist, will be the recipient of the John F. Kennedy Peace Award of the Jewish National Fund of America, Long Island Regional Council, according to an announce- ment by the Council's president, Rabbi I. Usher Kirshblum. The award, a gold medallion, will be presented to Lefrak at a dinner in his honor at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel June 17. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, April 16, 1965-35 • LATEST DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED FRAME FASHIONS • PRESCRIPTIONS FOR GLASSES ACCURATELY FILLED • Immediate Repair • Reasonably Priced ROSEN OPTICAL SERVICE 13720 W. 9 MILE nr. COOLIDGE OAK PARK, MICH. LI 7-5068 Hours: Daily and Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursdays to 9 p.m.