Israeli School to Honor Danes This is the artist's concept of the cultural and educational center to be constructed in Jerusalem in honor of the Danish people who courageously rescued their Jewish compatriots during the Nazi occu- pation. Ground was broken this week for the Denmark School, first unit of the complex, a project of the Israel Education Fund, a program of the United Jewish Appeal. * * * COPENHAGEN (JTA) — De- tailed plans for the construction in Israel of a $1,000,000 high school as a tribute to the Danish people for their rescue of almost all of this country's Jews from the Nazi holocaust in 1943 were announced here by the UJA-Israel Education Fund at a reception for the donors to the Fund given by Crown Princess Margareth, Regent of Denmark. She greeted the group, all Americans, at the the official royal r e s i d e n c e, Christianborg Palace. Heading the delegation, and in- forming Denmark's heir to the ,) throne of the plans for the erec- tion of a Denmark School in Israel, was Charles J. Bensley, president of the IEF. He presented the Crown Princess with a copy of a scroll to be placed in the new school's cornerstone, which was laid this week. The text of the scroll cites "the brave people of Denmark who embraced, at high (h uman cost, an additional national burden: The rescue of the Jews of that country during the Nazi holocaust." Ground-breaking ceremonies for the Denmark School were held Wednesda y, Bensley said, in the heavily-populated southern belt area of Jerusalem, at Katamon. The institution will be a com- prehensive high school and will have also a municipal library, a youth center, athletic field and a mother-child guidance clinic. The library is being sponsored by Joseph Meyerhoff, of Baltimore, chairman of the IEF. The Den- mark School, Bensley said, will bring the number of secondary schools activated in Israel during the IEF's first year of existence to 1 12. David Volkovich, 87; Scrap Metal Dealer David Volkovich, owner of the Cadillac Metal Refining Co., 14111 Schaefer, died Oct. 14 at age 87. Mr. Volkovich, 18481 Wooding- ham, leaves his wife, Pearl; four sons, Ralph, Samuel, Dr. Gerald and Charles Walker; a daughter, Mrs. Arnold (Dorothy) Horelick; a sister, Mrs. Ben Sternberg; 19 grandchildren and four great- grandchildren. Detroit's oldest active scrap metal dealer, Mr. Volkovich was a member of the Detroit Metal Deal- ers Association and the Scrap Iron and Steel Institute. Enrollment in Michigan colleges and universities, public and pri- vate, totals 233,525. This number represents 30.5 per cent of the col- lege-age population in the state. Ottawa UJA Chairman Asks New Giving Setup OTTAWA (JTA)—New methods of contributing to the local United Jewish Appeal and new standards of giving, have been suggested by Arnold Lithwick, general chairman of the 1965 UJA drive here. He reported that, whereas the 1965 goal had been $395,000, or 10 per cent above the amount achieved in 1964, the actual re- sults "will not exceed a total of $332,000, which is 7 per cent less" than the amount raised in 1964. One reason for the fall-off, he said, was "two major losses, totaling $25,000." He proposed that standards of giving be based on a percentage of each Jewish contributor's total income. He suggested the following ratios: Those earning up to $8,000 a year should give 3 per cent to charity, of which 2 per cent would be for Jewish causes, and 1 per cent for other causes; earners in the category of $8,000 to $15,000 would give 5 per cent, of which 3 per cent would be for Jewish causes; earners of between $15,000 and $20,000 would give a total of 6 per cent, with 4 per cent going to Jewish causes; "men in the $20,000-and-over bracket should be able to take advantage of their full 10 per cent allowable deduc- tion, 7 per cent to Jewish and 3 per cent to non-Jewish causes." OBITUARIES PEARL TELLER (WEISBLUM) of Indianapolis, formerly of De- troit, died Sept. 27. Wife of the late Harry Teller, who died Sept. 27, she leaves a daughter, Anita of Cincinnati; a brother, Joseph Weisblum; and four sisters, Mrs. Ethel Rosenthal, Mrs. Bertha Col- man, 14Irs. Max (Claire) Shipper and Mrs. John (Edith) Lurie, all of Detroit. * * ANNIE ATLAS, 19460 Prest, died Oct. 20. Survived by two sons, Reuben and Phillip; a daughter, Mrs. Joseph (Sara) Goldberg; six grandchildren and two great- grandchildren. Prof. Avraham Fraenkel, Mathematician, Dies JERUSALEM (JTA) — Dr. Avraham H. Fraenkel, a leading mathematician, educator and au- thor, died here last weekend at age 74. He was professor of mathematics at the Hebrew Uni- versity since 1929 and had also served as dean of the university's faculty of humanities and rector. Born in Munich, Dr. Fraenkel taught mathematics at a number of German universities before set- tling in Palestine in 1929, when he joined the faculty of the Hebrew University. He was also a Talmudic scholar and the author of a num- ber of textbooks in mathematics. He retired from fulltime teach- ing in 1959, when he was named professor emeritus, but continued to conduct classes both at the Hebrew University and at Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan. Isaac Barnett, 73; Owned Dress Shop Isaac Barnett, a retired Mount Clemens dress shop owner, died Oct. 13 at age 73. Mr. Barnett lived in Bay Harbor Island, having retired to Florida in 1958 after 20 years as owner of the Barnett Dress Shop. Detroit-born Mr. Barnett was a member of Temple Beth El and the Richmond, Mich., and Mount Clemens Masonic lodges and a life member of Mount Clemens Rotary. He leaves his wife, Doris; a son, Alan S.; and two grandchildren. Interment Detroit. Robert Jonas Dead Ex-Soviet Yiddish Editor, Former De t r o i t e r Robert J. Benjamin Meirovitch, Dies Jonas, a high school science teach- er in Huntington, Long Island, died Oct. 15 in New York after a long illness. He was 35. Mr. Jonas, a graduate of Cass Technical High School and the University of Michigan, was work- ing on his PhD degree in New York, where he had lived the past six years. He was assisting in a U. S. government research project at the University of Syracuse. Born in Detroit, Mr. Jonas was the son of Louis Jonas, prominent in Orthodox circles here. He was an Air Force veteran. Besides his parents, Mr. Jonas leaves his wife, Jean; a daughter, Robyn; a son, David; four brothers, Bernard L. of Detroit; Edward L. of Ann Arbor; Walter of Westbury, L. I., and Herbert of Levittown, N. Y.; and six sisters, Mrs. Arnold (Lillian) Glovinsky, Shirley, Mrs. Selden (Deanna) Tachna and Les- lee, all of the Detroit area, Nancy of New York and Mrs. Jacob (Judy) Traub of Duluth. Interment, Portland, Me. LONDON (JTA) — The Soviet Yiddish writer Benjamin Meiro- vitch has died in Czernowitz at age 66, according to reports received here from the Soviet Union. He was a former editor of the Yiddish daily newspaper Der Stern which was published in Charkov, Soviet Union, some 40 years ago. Der Stern was one of three daily newspapers which appeared in the Soviet Union in Yiddish prior to Stalin's liquidation of all Jewish cultural institutions. The other two newspapers were Der Emes, in Moscow, and Oktiabr which ap- peared in Minsk. Samuel Ginsburg, 78 JACOB (YONKEL) GOSEVITZ, 2945 W. Grand, died Oct. 17. He leaves his wife, Esther; a son, Harry; two daughters, Mrs. Theo- dore (Doris) Segall and Mrs. Ange (Sadie) Medora; three grandchil- dren and four great-grandchildren. * * * EVE BARACK, 25017 Rue Ver- sailles, Oak Park, died Oct. 17. She leaves her husband, Sidney; a daughter, Mrs. Richard (Lorraine) Herschelman; one brother and two grandchildren. * * * IDA ELSON, 791 E. Grand Blvd., died Oct. 15. She leaves a son, Bernard; a daughter, Mrs. Caro- line Weisberg; one brother, four sisters, one grandchild and three great-grandchildren. * * ROBERT R. REINHEIMER, 5033 Greensward Ct., Birmingham, died Oct. 16. He leaves his wife, Lillian; a son, Gregg; his mother, Mrs. Alice Reinheimer; and one sister. * * * ALBERT P. WAULDRON, 15887 Belden, died Oct. 16. He leaves his wife, Marie; four sons, Norman S., Milton A., Arthur L. and Ross B.; two brothers, three sisters and 12 grandchildren. MIRIAM PANETZ, 19479 Lauder, died Oct. 15. Survived by her hus- band, Samuel; a son, Michael; two daughters, Mrs. David (Gail) Ehr- lich and Priscilla; her mother, Mrs. Bella Shiovitz; three brothers and five sisters. * * * ISIDORE DAVID MASKARON, 3380 Collingwood, died Oct. 16. Survived by his wife, Ethel; a son, Harold; a daughter, Mrs. Julius (Annette) Spoon; and four grand- children. * * * CHARLES (CHAIM) RUBEL, 17185 Prairie, died Oct. 16. Sur- vived by his wife, Lea; a daughter, Mrs. Stephen (Isolde) Medow; and two grandchildren. * * * FANNIE Z E IF M AN, 19205 Greenlawn, died Oct. 17. Survived by her husband, Morris; three daughters, Mrs. Harold (Ida) Sher, Mrs. Albert (Mary) Greenblatt and Mrs. Henry (Lillian) Channen; three sisters, eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. * * * CLARA ALTMAN, 20185 Votro- beck Ct., died Oct. 15. She leaves her husband, Herman; a son, Sey- mour; a daughter, Mrs. Herbert * * * (Mildred) Gross; one brother and SAUL ROTHENBERG, 19319 four grandchildren. Rosemont, died Oct. 18. He leaves his wife, Mildred; a son, Bernard; a daughter, Mrs. Avery (Betty) Fisher; one brother, two sisters and 10 grandchildren. * * * During the coming BERTHA MINTZ, Belcrest week Yeshiva Beth Hotel, died Oct. 18. She leaves a Yehuda will observe son, Dr. Edward I.; a daughter, the Yahrzeit of the Mrs. Max (Eva) Blaine; three sis- following deported ters, three grandchildren and four friends, with the great-grandchildren. traditional Memorial WE REMEMBER 71- arx 711 7N * ANN SHWEDEL, 23501 Wild- wood, Oak Park, died Oct. 18. She leaves her husband, Ben; two sons, Paul and Robert; her father, Max Seltzer; and one sister. • * MAE M. FLORMAN, 15419 North- gate, Oak Park, died Oct. 17. She leaves two daughters, Mrs. Charles (Eleanor) Shere and Mrs. Aaron (Dorothy) Surgal; five grandchil- dren and five great-grandchildren. Interment Chicago. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, October 22, 1965-39 Hebrew Civil Tishri Oct. 24 28 Israel Grossman Ethel Deutch Chanan Bereb Mair Hakohen Dinah Superstine Menachem Hertz Vita Levine 29 25 29 29 29 29 25 25 25 25 Freda Sachs Sam Rosenberg Herman Kessler Ida Bronstein Maurice Steingold Hirsch Saperstein Ida Freedman 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 Cheshvan 1 1 1 1 Henry Hubert Noah Bushkin Ida Gastic Dora Kramer Sid Wolfson's MONUMENT CENTER, INC. 661 E. B MILE, FERNDALE 11/2 Blocks E. of Woodward 6 Blks. from 3 Jewish Cemeteries on Woodward LI 2-8266 JO 4-5557 ■ •111 ■ 11, MONUMENTS See SAM GORLICK at the old and reliable SHELDON GRANITE CO. 19800 Woodward Ave. Detroit, Mich. — TO 8-1724 Prayers, recitation of Kaddish and study- ing of Mishnayes. Serving The Jewish Community For Over 60 Years 27 27 27 27 Simon Berman Samuel Paul Louis Sheftel 2 2 2 28 28 28 Louis Aaron Eugene Friedman Jacob Herschberg Fannie Steingold 3 3 3 3 29 29 29 29 Sarina Rothbard Sosha Bella Hootner Gertrude Leibovitz Bessie Radin Isaac Katchke 4 4 4 4 4 30 30 30 30 30 Yeshiva Beth Yehuda 18029 Wyoming UN 2-6668 The Monument Should be Made in on Unhurried and Careful Manner Give Us the Opportunity to Serve You Better . . . ORDER NOW MONUMENTS by BERG & URBACH Samuel Ginsburg, owner of Formerly Karl Berg Memorials - and Manuel Urbach & Son Sam's Cut-Rate, a hardware store 13405 Capital at Cooldige, Oak Park LI 4-2212 on E. Davison, died Wednesday at age 78. Mr. Ginsburg, 18476 Kent- ucky, lived in Detroit 55 years. Sidney A. Deitch He was born in Russia. He leaves his wife, Jennie; a son, Harold; four daughters, Mrs. Serving Detroit's Jewish Community from the Some Location Jack (Lillian) Patt, Mrs. Bernard for 30 Years . . . 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