Southfield Boy Captures Advanced Degree Sought by 70% of Brandeis Class Goldie and Morris Adler Describe Israel's U.S. Chess Tournament Unusual Attainments ; Extol U.S. Friendship Rabbi and Mrs. Morris Adler returned last week from a seven-month stay in Israel. In a joint statement made at the request of The Jewish News, Rabbi and Mrs. Adler described their im- pressions as follows: We shall be lastingly grateful for the oppor- tunity of living in Israel for a period of seven months. We felt ourselves part of the life about us, as tourists during their briefer and more hurried visit cannot. We acquired an apartment in Jerusa- lem and emulated in our daily and customary routine the life of an Israeli family. Thus we were able to experience and observe aspects of the customary and normal as against the dramatic and spectacular which are usually shown to the visitor. Yet in summing up our impressions, we find that they transcend the daily and habitual. All through our stay we could not free ourselves from the sense that we were witnesses to a miracle. Shopping in the grocery store, supermarket or butcher-shop, prosaic pursuits though they were, they could not obscure the recognition that the frame in which these humdrum activities were set was nonetheless unusual and unique. There is a larger-than-life quality about Israel, with which everything in it and of it is touched. One is realistic enough to know that Israelis, like all other people, are human and imperfect; that their coun- try has immediate and long-range problems in the areas of its economy, security, education and re- ligion; that crime and delinquency occur here and that in few countries do people drive their auto- mobiles as poorly as they do here. Yet when all this is said, the feeling continues to persist that present in Israeli life are dimensions not found in many other places. For one thing here is a land that was not colon- ized by a mother-country. Those who came here, who built the land, cleared its wastes and fought for it, had no government behind them, no source of support and protection given them by the land from which they came. World-forces and circum- stances, to be sure, helped shape its destiny. Jewries of other countries contributed material aid most generously. Yet politics and money of them- selves could not build a state. Needed were people; needed was a compelling and overwhelming ideal; needed was a deep faith. That these conditions were met and these these elements were present is no minor miracle. For another, a people unskilled and untrained in government built a stable, free state. One does not have to elaborate the democratic structure of the State of Israel with its elected officials freely chosen by a completely enfranchised citizenry. This is well known. However, two circumstances vividly point up the inner discipline which underlies freedom here and without which democracy can break down -into anarchy or erupt into totalitar- ianism. First is the complete and thorough-going cessa- tion of terrorism as soon as the State was pro- claimed. In other lands where an underground movement had formed to liberate the country, ter- rorism persisted and was not easily put down. In Israel despite the fact that the Resistance Move- ment was highly organized and widespread and despite the ferocity and desperation which fired it, and despite a membership that had been trained in violence — the acceptance of the rule of the new state was universal. The formerly desperate young men entered the army, took jobs, raised families and became exemplary law-abiding citizens. The second manifestation of unusual restraint is in the civilian nature of the political structure of Israel. The Army is undoubtedly the country's most powerful single institution, claiming the largest part of the national buget. Every Israeli under 40 is a trained soldier and older men are in the reserve and subject to call. The army is not only the mil- itary arm of the government, it also embraces its largest education system. Yet not even the most extreme opposition can charge that the government is under the thumb of the army. There is not the slightest symptom of military rule in the conduct of the political life of the State. Since this statement is to be brief, we limit ourselves to one additional extraordinary facet. The nearest and most profitable markets of the Middle East are closed to Israel. The flow of immigration has often assumed tidal proportions and many of the newcomers could not be expected to be pro- ducers. Despite these monumental economic handi- caps, Israel's economy is stable and the land shows many signs of prosperity. We cite the above unusual accomplishments not to glorify Israel but to caution the visitor and observer to adjust themselves in judging the country to the heroic dimensions and large perspectives which are demanded. One should see the very difficult challenges which still face the state and the vast scope of unfinished business before it, realistically and frankly. But one should never forget that one is dealing with a people accustomed to defy unfavorable circumstances, to assume stag- gering responsibilities and to live unafraid in the midst of crisis. We return the better acquainted with the in- numberable difficulties which lie in the path of the State of Israel, yet deepened in our conviction that it possesses the intelligence, the spirit and the skill to overcome them. Above all we return with the intensified pride in our membership in an old people which has not lost its youth. We rejoice in the partnership that exists between Israel and the American Jewish community — a partnership which should be extended and deepened to the mutual enrichment of both great Jewish centers. In competition with over 200 top chess players from all over the world, Ben Crane, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Murry Koblin of Birch Ridge Dr., Southfield, tied fOr first place in Class A at the recent U.S. Chess Open at San Juan, P.R. Other local youths who par ticipated in the meet were Crane Charles Bassin, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Bassin of Kentucky Ave., and Al- lan Kaufman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kaufman of Glenmora Ave., Southfield. When Nearly 70 per cent of Brandeis University's 1965 graduates are con- tinning their studies at graduate and professional schools throughout the world, according to a recent survey by Brandeis' office of car- eer planning. Of the 279 June graduates who responded to the survey (307 re- ceived degrees) 87 per cent of the men and 53 per cent of the women indicated immediate plans to pur- sue advanced degree programs. FOR THE BEST IN MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT SAM EMMER And His Orchestra DI 1-1609 you care enough to remember . CANDID ART photography of distinction c by HERMAN JAFFEE LI 2-6373 Weddings • Bar Mitzvahs • Home Portraits For Your Fine Diamonds and Jewelry "Buy With Confidence" Norman Allan Co. EI S 11 4 Gemologists Diomontologists AA 17540 WYOMING OPEN THURS., FRI. DI 1.1330 ,TIL 9 P.M. BAR MITZVAHS • WEDDINGS CRESTWOOD MOTEL 16221 W. 8 MILE ROAD 4 Blocks W. of Jos Couzens Let us assist you in arranging accomodations for the enjoy- ment of your out-of-town guests. Ask about our Hospitality Room breakfast special. BR 2-1404 Goldie and Morris Adler Dinner Sept. 15 to Honor Max Ostrow Escorts Fashions, Max Ostrow, chairman of the Bnai David Chevra Kadisha for 10 years and member of the synago- gue's borad of trustees for 30 years, will be honored as Bnai David Man of the Year at the congrega- tion's "Salute to Israel" d i n ner, Sept. 15, in the Julius Rotenberg Hall. The affair is on behalf of Israel Bonds. Guest star at this affair, which Ostrow has become an annual event at Bnai David, will be Henny Young- man, favorite TV and night club comedian. For tickets, call the Bond office, DI 1-5707. Ostrow, who has been a member of Bnai David for 43 years, has lived in Detroit since 1913, coming from Russia. He served in the First World War, first in France and then with the Poplar Bear Divi- sion in Archangelsk, Russia. He was wounded in the battle against the Bolsheviks. While in Walter Reed Hospital he was visited by Presi- dent Woodrow Wilson. After his discharge in 1921, he brought over to this country his THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 24—Friday, August 20, 1965 parents, four sisters and a brother, but his father died in Ellis Island. Ostrow has been in the hard- ware and crockery business for 40 years. He has devoted his life to communal causes, has been active in veterans' circles, in Mizrachi, Yeshiva University. and Bar-Ilan but his main interest has been with Cong. Bnai David. Last spring a monument to the six million vic- tims of the Nazi holocaust was erected at the Bnai David ceme- tery, to honor him on his 70th birthday. A leadership reception in ad- vance of the Bnai David pre-High Holy Day appeal dinner will be hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lieb- erman. 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, in their home, 5234 W. Outer Drive. Guest speaker will be Robert Lurie. Ostrow will be the guest of honor. 2nd Annual Family Picnic Sponsored by Akiva PTA The PTA of Akiva Hebrew Day School will sponsor its 2nd annual family picnic 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Sun- day at the Totem Pole Day Camp, 12 Mile Rd. and Beck Rd. Refresh- ments will be served. Guests are invited at a nominal admission charge. For further information, please call Marshall Goldman, DI 1-9909, or Marvin Engel, LI 6-2425. OSS Models on El Al et .. i. .... 1 "IT'S MY NEW CARPETING THAT MAKES IT LOOK LUXURIOUS!" Flying officers aren't supposed to get lightheaded as they maneu- ver runways. But El Al Israel Air- lines' Gershon Stschik has good reason for giddiness — this par- ticular runway is built for fashions, not for jets. Stschik is only part of the special treatment El Al de- vised for a special collection of Israeli haute couture fashions. Not only did Officer Stschik safely escort the designs from Israel, he also escorts them and their lovely models across America's fashion runways. 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