Detroiters Plan New Israel City The Theological Seminary Yeshi- vath Chachmey Lublin, which plans re - establishment in Detroit, an- nounces the formation of Kiryat Lublin Israel Development Co., an investment project the purpose Of which is the development of a new city in Israel, to be called ‘.`Kiryat Lublin," Rabbi Moses Rothenberg, dean of the Seminary, announced. The new city will be located on the outskirts of Haifa and will be a memorial to the hundreds of thousands of Jewish citizens of Lublin, Poland, who perished dur- ing the Nazi holocaust. The new city will contain an Israeli campus for the seminary, elementary and secondary schools, a synagogue-center and other corn- munity buildings in addition to a network of modern single resi- dence dwellings, duplexes and apartment houses. The Kiryat Lublin project, back- ed by the Rassco-Israel Corp., will see its initial stages completed in •the spring of 1966. Rabbi Jack Goldman of Detroit was named director of develop- ment for the Kiryat Lublin Israel Development Co. Rabbi Samuel H. Prero was named chairman of the board of directors pro tempore. Jewish Dorm Established BUENOS AIRES ( J T A ) — The Jewish Community of Buenos Aires announced that it has purchased a large building which will serve as a dormitory for 150 Jewish students from the provinces studying at Buenos Aires University. The home will be provided with special facili- ties that will provide a Jewish atmosphere for the students. GOING BACK TO SCHOOL! Elegantly new Vinyl . . . the "never wear vinyl that with- stands all the trails and tribulations of modern day living." Scuff-resistant, with locked in color that won't scratch, wear or fade away. Cleans with a damp cloth. Luxurious lining. WORLD TRAVELER'S DELIGHT . . . TOTABLES, in 2 Styles Where- everyday accessories at her cosmetics, jewelry, personal and everyday__ accessories at her fingertips. Reg. $1 095 0 $15.85-$18.95 SHOEBAGS — plaid luggage, roomy pockets, 4 to 8 pair of shoes. $495 Reg. $7.95 ROBINSON'S LEATHER SHOP 6338 W. McNICHOLS at Livernois UN 2-5611 N.Y. Students Permitted to Observe the Sabbath ctivities in Society Phyllis Waller and Marlene Cern, a junior and sophomore, respec- tively, at Wayne State University, are two of 235 Jewish college stu- dents who will attend the annual summer institute conducted by the Bnai Hillel Foundations at Camp Bnai Brith at Starlight, Pa. Miss Wal- ler, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allan L. Waller of Wildemere Avenue, and Miss Cern, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Cern of Pinehurst Ave., were chosen as Hillel–representatives from Wayne State to the institute. Miss Waller is president and Miss Cern secretary of the school's Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation. Detroit alumnae of Phi Sigma Sigma Sorority and the Wayne State University Chapter, Beta Lambda, held a joint installation, with Mrs. Ned Weitzman as president of the alumnae and Susan Benson heading the student chapter. Other officers in the alumnae group are Mesdames Robert Pasman, vice president; Harvey Nussbaum, treasurer; Edwin L. Acker, secretary; and Don Kelter, publicity. Beta Lambda officers are Marallyn Pasikov and Cheryl Asner, vice presidents; Marsha Kahn, treasurer; Karen Shanfield and Arlen Levine, secretaries; and Linda Golden, pledge mother. Harold L. Weiss, 20058 Stansbury, flew to Van Nuys, Calif., to visit his aunt and uncle, former Detroiters Marion and Jack Silver. Other former Detroiters he plans to see are Sarah and Jack Prujan and his niece, Vickey Lynn Shapiro, daughter of Harry Shapiro of Freeland Ave. The Gerald Steins of Pearson Ave., Oak Park, and the Harold Deans of Addison Ave., Southfield, were guests recently on a weekend cruise to Sarnia and Port Huron. While in Port Huron, the party stayed at the Gratiot Inn, where Mr. Stein took part in a swimming exhibition. Howard Alan Lax, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lax, of Park Ave., Oak Park, was honored on his Bar Mitzvah at a luncheon at Young Israel Center of Oak-Woods. There were out-oft-own guests from Washington, Pittsbugh, Lancing and Milwaukee. Mr. and Mrs. Barry Wolman of Boston are visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allan Wolman of Huntington Rd. The younger Wolmans (she is the former Elaine Pearlstein), were married recently in Boston, where he received his master's degree from M.I.T. in June. Dr. and Mrs. Daniel Malamud recently visited their parents, the Sol Disners and the Jack Malamuds. The couple is en route to the U.S. Marine Biological Laboratories at Cape Cod, where Dr. Malamud will continue his research in cell biology. He recently earned his PhD in zoology from the University of Cincinnati for his work in cancer research. Capt. Harold T. Eisenman, M.D., has returned to Detroit after serving 14 months in Korea. He is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Irving Eisenman, 40005 W. Outer Dr.; his brother, Dr. Arnold Eisenman; and his sister, Mrs. Edward (Rosalyn) Horwitz, who is visiting her parents with her children. Capt. Eisenman will be stationed at Ft. Hamilton, N.Y. Mrs. Philip Imber and her son, Sheldon, left Aug. 9 on the S.S. Shalom for a two-month visit with Mrs. Imber's brother, Joseph Malachi (Michalowsky), a member of the first Habonim group to settle in Israel in 1930. Out-of-towners visiting for the Sept. 4 Bar Mitzvah of Daniel Schlyfestone, son of the Irving Schlyfestones of Pontiac, are former Detroiters Dr. and Mrs. Jack Warner of Los Angeles and their daughter, Elizabeth Ann, and the boy's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Redler of New York. The Bar Mitzvah will take place at Cong. Bnai Israel, Pontiac. Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Letzer of Beverly Hills Ave., Royal Oak, have just completed a month tour of Europe, visiting Paris, London, Norway, Sweden and Denmark. Melvyn Erman, daughter of the Jack Ermans of Borgman Rd., Huntington Woods, has just returned from a trip to Europe. Mrs. Marguerite Kozenn-Chajes, who has attended some 60 per- formances of the Prague, Munich, Vienna and Salzburg music festivals, reports that the highlight of the current Salzburg program was the presentation of Moussorgsky's opera "Boris Gudonov" in Russian, with singers brought from Eastern countries especially for the performance. Mrs. Kozenn-Chajes presented her students in a recent recital, and she will present a program of American music in Bucharest, Romania, with illustrations by her protegee, Maria Roumell. Albert Portnoy, 18010 Roselawn, sailed last week on the SS Shalom to study for a year in Israel at the Yeshiva Kerem b'Yavneh. S. Miller Weisman and Maurice A. Betman, of the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co., attended the 16th annual seminar in advanced life underwriting at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. Dr. Herbert Bean of San Juan Dr. recently returned from the 53rd annual meeting of the American Podiatry Association in St. Louis. Dedicate Sinai Hospital's Srere Center for Radiotherapy This Morning In a simple ground-breaking ceremony today Mrs. Abraham will have turned the first spade of earth for construction of the Abraham and Anna Srere Radio- therapy Center at Sinai Hospital Accompanied by her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Mal- colm Lowenstein, her grandchil- dren, and other members of the family, Mrs. Srere will accept the congratulations of Morris Garvett, vice president of the Sinai board of trustees; hospital administrator Sydney C. Peimer; and Chief of Staff Dr. I. Jerome Hauser. Rabbi Morris Adler will conduct a brief religious service. When completed, the structure will honor Mrs. Srere's name and the memory of her late husband, Abraham, past president of both Sinai Hospital and the Jewish Wel- fare Federation. The Center will contain equip- ment for the treatment of malig- nant and other diseases and will adjoin the present building com- plex to the south-southeast facing Six Mile Rd. Erection of the edifice, which will be begun immediately, was made possible through a gift from Mrs. Srere and Mr. and Mrs. Low- enstein and through funds from the Jewish Welfare Federation. The building was designed by Albert Kahn Associated Architects and Engineers, Inc., and will be constructed by Walter Couse & Co. at a total cost of $500,000. Completion is scheduled for late 1966. Newspapers are the world's mir- rors. — James Ellis. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, August 27, 1965-23 NEW YORK (JTA) — High school students and teachers whose Sabbath observance begins Friday afternoon will be allowed to have their schedules adjusted where possible to eliminate any conflict with their beliefs, accord- ing to a memorandum sent to high school principals by Dr. Bernard E. Donovan, acting superintendent of New York Schools. The memorandum resulted from THE NEW a i U a , discussions held at the Board of education in reference to late ses- sions held in the high schools and their effect on after-school relig- ious instruction and Sabbath and holy day observance of Jewish children and teachers. The Nation- al Council of Young Israel urged Jewish parents to take advantage of the new ruling to request early sessions for their children on Fri- day. Green-8 Center Only I ~ Greenfield/8 Mile Rd. Suburban Open Sunday 12 to 5 p.m. tops a skirt of dreamy chiffon. Wear it now and through the coming social season. Delightful in lime green, shocking pink. Sizes 8 to 14, and priced at just . . .