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October 15, 1965 - Image 25

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1965-10-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Barbara Gorevitz Wed
to David Solovich

a

• • • • .
ctivities in Oociety

Atomic Energy Discussed by Eshkol, Congressmen

JERUSALEM (JTA)—Rep. Chet
H o 1 i f i e 1 d, California Democrat,
chairman of the Congressional
Joint Atomic Energy Commission
in Washington, and Rep. John B.
Anderson, Illinois Republican, a
member of that commission, con-
ferred here last weekend with
Prime Minister Levi Eshkol, who
is also minister of defense.
Stopping in Israel on their way
home from an atoms-for-peace con-
ference in Tokyo, they discussed
with Eshkol Israel's energy re-

A number of Michigan people will be among the 215 Jewish
leaders from the U.S. who will convene in Europe and Israel this
month to participate in the United Jewish Appeal's 11th official
study mission. Led by Mr. and Mrs. Max M. Fisher, the Detroit
delegation will include Charles Grosberg, Mrs. Abraham Srere, Phillip
Stollman and Messrs. and Mesdames Louis C. Blumberg, Irwin I. Cohn,
Sol Eisenberg, Louis M. Elliman, Meyer M. Fishman, Harry Goldman,
Irwin Green, Louis Hamburger, Samuel Hechtman, Samuel D. Jacobs,
David M. Miro, Nate S. Shapero, Abe Shiffman and Max Stoilman.
Also attending will be Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Catsman and Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Megdell of Flint and Dr. and Mrs. Robert Lurie of
Saginaw.
A meeting of the Bodzin Family Club was held recently at the *THE NEW
home of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Kowalsky of Westhampton Ave., Oak
Park. Members bade "bon voyage" to Melvin Duchan of Northlawn
Ave., who left for a year's work in the psychology department of
Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel. The next meeting of the
club will be held Oct. 23 at the home of Miss Yetta Bodzin, 17170
Meyers. Election of officers will be held.
Mrs. Charles H. Gershenson of 14741 Hamilton was elected a
member of the board of the Society of Friends of the Touro Syna-
gogue, at the annual meeting of the society held in Newport, R. I.
Out-of-town guests here for the marriage of Susan Elizabeth
Mullin to Sheldon Segel included the Bernard Howards with their
daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Theo-Klis of Westwood, Calif., and Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Mayers of Miami.
Jay Carr, music critic of the Detroit News, will address a meeting
of the student group of Music Study Club, at the home of Dr. and Mrs.
Manuel Feldman, 4485 West Outer Drive, tonight at 8 o'clock. Prospec-
tive members are welcome.

Juliet

Suburban

MRS. DAVID SOLOVICH

A honeymoon in the West Indies
followed the recent marriage of
Barbara Reva Gorevitz and David
Miles Solovich at Imperial Cater-
ers. Rabbi M. Robert Syme and
Cantor Harold Orbach officiated.
Parents of the newlyweds are
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Gorevitz of
Manor Ave. and Mrs. Charles Solo-
vich of Potomac Ave., Southfield,
and the late Mr. Solovich.
The bride wore a gown of peau
de soie with an Empire bodice and
cap sleeves. Pearls and lace ac-
cented the long train. She carried
an orchid on her Bible.
Joann Collins Schaefer was
matron of honor, and Eileen Rose
Cole of Downsview, Ont., was
maid of honor. Bridesmaids were
Barbara Finn, Rhoda Elias of
Park Forest, Ill., Claudia Solo-
vich, the bridegroom's sister, and
Ruth Lipsitz.
Stanford Solovich served his
brother as best man; and ushers
were Jerry Cohen, Charles Gore-
vitz, brother of the bride, Barry
Roberts, Jerome Magid and
Michael Alpert.
Ann Lori Cohen was flower girl,
Ronnie Schwedel serving as ring
bearer.
The couple lives on Woodbine
Ave. following their wedding trip.

sources, and reviewed the im-
portance of the joint U.S.-Israel
project to use atomic energy here
for desalination of seawater.
They also visited the experimen-
tal atomic reactor at Nahal Sorek,
near Tel Aviv. That reactor had
been built and fueled under the
nuclear cooperation agreement be-
tween Israel and the United States.

There are three faithful friends
—an old wife, an old dog and
ready money. —Amer. proverb.

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Dr. Lowdermilk, Conservation Expert,
to Address Technion, Dinner Oct. 31

Robert Brody, president of the
Detroit Chapter of the American
Society for Technion, announced
this week that the annual dinner
for the society, to be held at the
Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel, Oct. 31,
will be addressed by Dr. Walter
Clay Lowdermilk, author of the
Jordan River Authority plan and
world famous expert on soil con-

Lazarus Article
Placed in Record
by Rep. Griffiths

Congresswoman Martha Griffiths
on Oct. 8 inserted in the Congres-
sional Record The Jewish News
editor's article on Emma Lazarus.
DR. WALTER LOWDERMILK
The article, with an introductory
comment by Rep. Griffiths, was servation. Maurice M. Rosen, na-
headed "Statue of Liberty and tional president of the American
Emma Lazarus."
Technion Society, also will be
guest speaker.
Dr. Lowdermilk recently com-
pleted a tour of duty in Israel
where he served as a special UN
Food and Agriculture Organization
representative directing the de-
partment of agricultural engineer-
ing of the Technion — Israel In-
stitute of Technology in Haifa.
When he left the Technion, Dr.
Lowermilk was named a professor
emeritus of the agricultural
OCT. 21-24 — 12-10:30 P.M. engineering department. The school
Last eve., 9 p.m. of agricultural engineering bears
$1 Adm.
his name.
Masonic Temple

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Dr. Lowdermilk has returned to
Israel seven times since his initial
visit in 1939 as assistant chief of
the soil conservation service of
the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Stirred by what he had seen there,
he wrote a best-selling book,
"Palestine — Land of Promise,"
which provided the first draft of
his proposal for a Jordan Valley
Authority, also known as the
"Lowdermilk Plan." Parts of this
plan have been put into effect by
the Israeli government.
Under Dr. Lowdermilk's direc-
tion, the new Technion department
has grown and now offers advanced
scientific instruction in agricultural
engineering, encompassing farm
power and machinery, rural electri-
fication, soil and water conserva-
tion, flood control and rural
structures and settlement plan-
ning.
A graduate of the University of
Arizona, the North Carolina-born
scientist helped organize and direct
the national program of soil con-
servation, authorized by President
Franklin Roosevelt in 1933.

* * *

Technion Scientific
Conference Oct. 23-24

NEW YORK—The eighth annual
conference on science and tech-
nology in Israel and the Middle
East will be held during the Oct.
23-24 weekend at the New York
Hilton, it was announced by the
conference. chairman, Dr. I. M.
Levitt.
Speakers at the Conference will
include Dr. V. K. Zworykin, vice-
president of Radio Corporation of
America; Dr. Aaron M. Altschul,
U.S. Department of Agriculture;
Dr. Walter C. Lowdermilk, world-
famous soil conservationist; Mrs.
Zena Harman, chairman of the ex-
ecutive board of UNICEF; Paul R.
Screvane, president of the City
Council of New York; Alexander
Goldberg, the new president of the
Institute; Maurice M. Rosen, presi-
dent of the American Technion
S o c i e t y, a n d Profs. Stephen
Stricker, Chaim Mannheim, Alberto
Wachs and William Resnick.

Arlazaroff to Hear Talk

Arlazaroff Branch, Farband, will
hear a talk by dramatist and lec-
turer Jacob Katz 8:30 p.m. Oct. 29
at the Labor Zionist Institute. Re-
freshments will be served. Guests
invited.

A woman convinced against her
will is of the same opinion still.
—Amer. proverb.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, October 15, 1965-25

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