Works by 26 Israeli Artists and Sculptors in Exhibit Opening Here on Wednesday C> "Art Israel," the first major ex- hibition of contemporary Israeli art to be shown in the United States, will open at the Detroit Institute of Arts next Wednesday, and remain through Oct. 3. The exhibition includes the work of 26 painters and sculptors and introduces the latest national school of art, since the State of Israel was founded in 1948. "Art Israel" was organized by the Museum of Modern Art, New York, under the joint auspices of the American-Israel Cultural Foun- dation, Inc., and the International Council of the Museum of Modern Art. William C. Seitz, curator of the department of painting and sculpture exhibitions at the Muse- um of Modern Art, made the selec- tions. Some 85 works of art were chosen by Seitz, who viewed the work of more than 700 Israeli artists in central locations — New York, Paris, London and Israel. Seitz points out two recurrent themes which pervade Israeli art: "The tragic, and intensely felt identification with Jewish tradi- tion and its recent trials; and the lyrical, the expression of a light- hearted love of country, which takes its form in the celebration of nature." Artists included in the exhibi- tion are Yaacov Agam, Aika, Mor- decai Ardon, Avigdor Arikha, Naphtali Bezem, Moshe Castel, Itzhak Danziger, Fima, Michael Gross, Shamai Haber, Kosso, Ye- hiel Krize, David Lan-Bar, Raffi Lavie, Zvi Mairovich, Lea Nikel, Avshalom Okashi, Ezra Orion, Yehiel Shemi, Avigdor Stematsky, Yeheskiel Streichman, Moshe Tamil., Anna Ticho, Yiga el Tumar- kin, Yaacov Wexler and Yosef Zaritsky. Two of Israel's most influential teachers are represented: Morde- cai Ardon, the leading master of figurative symbolism, and Yosef Zaritsky, leader of the New Hori- IF YOU TURN THE irS'il UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON'T FIND A FINER WINE THAN I L Milan Wineries, Detroit, Mich.. 4 zons Group of militant abstrac- tionists. Of special interest is the sculpture in the exhibition. Sculpture has developed slowly in Israel, in part because sculp- ture in the round was formerly forbidden by rabbinical law, and partly because it presents great- er technical problems than paint- ing. "Art Israel" will be previewed by members of the Detroit Insti- tute of Arts' Founders Society from 8 to 10 p.m. Tuesday. The champagne reception will be ar- ranged by the women's committee of the Founders Society. Chair- man of the reception is Mrs. Law- rence A. Fleischman and cochair- man is Mrs. Carl B. Grawn of Grosse Pointe. sul general of Israel, and Mrs. Bannore. The exhibition will be open to the public without charge. Museum hours are 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday through Friday; 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sun- day. The Detroit Institute of Arts is closed Mondays and holidays. An 88-page catalog, with 80 black-and-white illustrations, has been published by the Museum of Modern Art and will be available at the Detroit Institute of Arts Museum Shop. It contains an intro- duction to the exhibition by Wil- liam C. Seitz, biographies of the artists, statements on their work, and a check list of the works in the exhibition. JERUSALEM (JTA)— The seri- ous shortage of engineers and architects in Israel's Civil Service led the government Monday to de- cide to give scholarships for the study of engineering and architec- ture to promising students at the Technion-Israel Institute of Tech- nology, Haifa. The scholarships, however, will go only to students willing to sign up for a minimum of two years' government service at the conclu- sion of their studies. A committee comprised of rep- resentatives of government minis- tries and consultants drawn from the Technion staff will decide on scholarship applications. Recipients of the study grants will serve in the housing, interior and labor LONDON (JTA)—Jewish com- munity leaders in Moscow have expressed surprise at reports that Dr. Zvi Harkavy, a rabbi who is director of the Israel Chief Rab- binate Library in Jerusalem, had been approached by the Soviet authorities on the possibility that he serve as chief rabbi of the USSR, a post that etas never ex- isted before, even in Czarist times, it was reported in dispatches from the Soviet capital. Dr. Harkavy said Sunday in a meeting between a leading So- viet diplomat and Rabbi Isser Ye- huda Unterman, now Ashkenazi chief rabbi of Israel, and was again raised In subsequent meet- ings with Soviet diplomats. Among those who expressed surprise at the reports was Moscow's Chief Rabbi Yehuda Leib Levin who re- called meeting Dr. Harkavy sev- eral years ago but said that he did not remember discussing any such appointment with him. (The New York Herald Tribune reported from Jerusalem that Is- rael's foreign ministry denied any knowledge of the offer, describing it as "sheer nonsense." Chief Rabbi Unterman also denied ever having heard anything about it. Despite the denials, Dr. Harkavy was reported to have stood firmly by his story.) U.S. Rabbi Urges Soviet Union to Guarantee Rights to Jews NEW YORK (JTA)—The Soviet Union was urged by an American "THE SOURCE" By James A. 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The rabbi had just returned from a two-month world tour which included the Soviet Union, as chairman of the board of the new International Synagogue at Kennedy Airport, and as chair- man of the Interreligious Coopera- tion Committee of the ADL. Rabbi Mowshowitz clearly dis- tinguished between an official policy of anti-Semitism—which he said is not followed by the So- viet Union, although there are many anti-Semites in the country —and a general practice by "an atheistic, materialistic nation" of religious and cultural discrimina- tion which "falls heaviest upon the Jew" because of his close identity with his religion and his cultural heritage. He pointed out that the Soviet Jewish religious community is seeking "no more but no less than other religious groups, - : its con- stitutional rights to worship with- out fear. This means, he said, the right to publish and distribute prayer books, establish more syna- gogues and religious schools, in- cluding yeshivoth (seminaries), and to join and meet with inter- national religious bodies of one's faith. He indicated that Christian and Moslem groups in the Soviet Union do engage in such interna- tional relationships, but that the Jews do not. Prosecution Appeals Light Terms for Nazis FRANKFURT ( J TA ) — Appeals were filed by the prosecution against light sentences given seven of the defendants at the conclu- sion of the 21-month-long trial of Auschwitz personnel. A separate appeal was filed against the ac- quital of one of the three accused Nazis found not guilty. The eight appeals, all filed in the German Supreme Court, con- cerned the Auschwitz camp dentist, who was one of three defendants set free, and two deputy command- ants of the death camp, one of whom was sentenced to four years, another to 14 years. The prosecution had requested life imprisonment—the maximum sentence possible under German law—for all eight. Only six of the 20 men on trial for 21 months had been given life terms. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, September 3, 1965-5 ministries after graduation. The re- cruiting of qualified professional workers has been used for some years by the Israel defense forces. ...... .......... We now add Photography to our many / I \ services, Murry Koblin J . dvext5 I\r. l-6 is 01.0ng ii Melvin Weisz Creation of Soviet Chief Rabbinate Denied in Dispatches from Moscow LABOR DAY SPECIALS! 1st ON THE BEST SELLER LIST! ti A special guest at the recep- tion will be Jacob Barmore, con- Israel Offers Scholarships to Enginers, Architects Man of the Month IT IS A PLEASURE TO ANNOUNCE THAT MELVIN WEISZ HAS received the man-of-the-month award as the most outstand- ing Representative of our Detroit-Gold agency for the month of August. 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