New Welfare Board Chaplaincy Chairman LETTER BOX Israel Bonds Medallion for Anti-Nazi Marlene Attorney Irving B. Ackerman was elected vice president of the Old Newsboys Goodfellow Fund at the recent meeting. Ackerman, 55, who has offices in the Penobscot Building, has been a member of the Old News- boys 20 years. He sold papers on the northeast corner of Grand River and Griswold while attend- ing Central High and night school at Detroit College of Law. An- other beat was in front of the old Orpheum Theater at Lafayette and Shelby. For 52 years, the Goodfellow Fund has provided assistance to the needy children of Detroit, and among them this year are some of Jewish faith, Ackerman said. Funds are raised with the sale of special Goodfellow newspapers published by the two metropolitan dailies, and all needy children are provided for, regardless of race or creed. Rabbi Kapus tin Criticizes Report of Convention Speech RABBI SELWYN RUSLANDER Rabbi Selwyn D. Ruslander of Temple Israel, Dayton, 0., was in- stalled as chairman of the National Jewish Welfare Board (JWB) Commission on Jewish Chaplaincy at a plenary meeting of the com- mission at JWB headquarters in New York. A number of the com- mission at JWB headquarters in New York. A member of the commission for many years and its vice chair- man since 1962, Rabbi Ruslander succeeds Rabbi Israel Miller of the Kingsbridge Heights Jewish Center, Bronx, N.Y. Rabbi Edward T. Sandrow of Temple Beth El Cedar- hurst, L.I., N.Y., was installed as vice chairman of the commission. Amsterdam Orthodox Jew Decorated by Queen AMSTERDAM (JTA) — Queen Juliana has confered the officer- ship of the Order of Orange Nas- sau on Jacob Passer, president of the Amsterdam Jewelers Club on the 75th anniversary of the club. Passer. an Orthodox Jew, is a well known Jewish social worker and a member of the executive of the Ashkenazi Jewish community of Amsterdam. As you live and breathe: Holi- day Seals help the fight for cleaner air, against the dangers of cigar- ette smoking. RESERVE THE DATE A K V A HEBREW DAY SCHOOL Nzspr 1-111V4 ANNUAL BANQUET Tues., Jan. 18, 1966 Rotenberg Hall B'nai David Synagogue Southfield celebrating 2nd Anniversary of Founding For Reservations Call 342-9119 Editor, The Jewish News: I have read with dismay your report (?) on my talk before the opening session of the annual Mid- western convention of Young Is- rael in Detroit Nov. 26. Here we have a frightful example of what can happen if you try to condense a 40-minute presentation into two sentences. The subject assigned to me was "The Relationship of Hillel, Young Israel and Yavneh on the College Campus." (You speak erroneously of "Young Israel's Yavneh Col- legiate Organization" when in fact they are two completely separate organizations). After giving a concise history of the Hillel movement, analyzing its purposes, achievements and problems, I commended both Young Israel's collegiate or- ganization and Yavneh for their efforts to help the traditional student on the campus, although I deplored the duplication in- volved in having two organiza- tions of this type. Young Israel has pioneered with Kashrut facilities at 11 (soon 12) universities and colleges. Yavneh, I said, can play a real role in bringing depth of Jewish learning and a closer relationship to the sources to the Hillel Foundation, which frequently, due to the lack of a solid Jewish background in most of our students, has to gear its program to the least common denominator. I stressed Hillel's role as the over-all agency for Jewish student work into which other special interest groups should be integrated. I warned against the danger of growing denomi- nationalism on the campus, which merely reflects certain ominous trends in the general Jewish com- munity. Yavneh, with all its good inten- tions and potential value for the over-all Jewish campus picture, might well run the risk of closing to the Orthodox Jewish student the wider horizons of academic life and Jewish involvement. Hillel, I emphasized, is the most import- ant Klal Yisrael institution in American Jewish life today and must maintain and develop this role on the campus for the com- monweal of the American Jewish community. RABBI MAX KAPUSTIN Director Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation Wayne State University * * * (Editor's Note: The Jewish News regrets that its own re- porters were not present at the convention and that it was mis- informed in a publicity release.) Teen KKK Ring Nabbed in Detroit A Detroit junior branch of the Ku Klux Klan, which leveled its malicious destruction at Jews, NegroeS and "anyone they didn't like" was arrested by police last weekend. The gang, comprised of seven teen-agers, headed by a 15-year-old "imperial wizard," was charged with 29 specific crimes. Its bylaws, confiscated from the leader, spec- ificially mentioned Jews as one of its targets. Activity began in the Grand River-Oakman section in August. Among the crimes charged against the group were arson, armed robbery, burglary, malicious destruction of property and cruelty to animals. They always wore hoods — pillow cases taken from their homes — when committing a crime. Members were obligated to burn "at least one garage" every month. Irvinffz7, Ackerman VP of Old Newsboys A Medallion of Honor of the State of Israel is held in Los Angeles by German-born actress Marlene Dietrich at a Salute to Israel dinner sponsored by the Jewish Club of 1933 in behalf of Israel Bonds. Never presented to a woman before, the award was conferred "in recognition of her courageous adherence to principle and long friendship for the people of Israel." German- born Miss Dietrich was a worker in the tasks of repudiating Nazism. Communities in Brazil Complain on Deferment RIO DE JANEIRO (JTA) — West Germany's plan to defer payments from a special compensa- tion fund for a group of victims of Nazism was protested by the Confederation of Jewish Commu- nities of Brazil. * * * THE 17TH DEMOCRATIC CON- GRESSIONAL DISTRICT will hold, a thank-you party for all distriet workers 8 p.m. today at 'Workman's Circle Center. Notables from the 17th District, Detroit's municipal government, county and state gov- ernment are expected. Party co- chairmen are Ruth aliphint and Estelle Gubow. MUSIC! ENTERTAINMENT! SAMMY WOOLF AND HIS ORCHESTRA UN 3-6501 If No Answer Call DI 1-6847 CANDID ART photography of distinction by HERMAN JAFFEE LI 2-6373 Weddings • Bar Mitzvahs • Home Portraits WE RENT NEW CONTINENTAL MOHAIR Tony Martin Dress Suits ALSO FEATURING A FINE SELECTION OF at Men's Clothing Discount Prices HANDELSMAN CLOTHING 7651 W. McNICHOLS at Santa Barbara UNiversity 4-7408 ZIM to Withdraw in '67 From Ghanaian Ship Line ACRE — ZIM, Israel National Shipping Lines, and the Black Star Shipping Co. of Ghana have reached an agreement whereby ZIM will withdraw from the man- agement of the Ghanaian shipping company in 1967. This will terminate an agree- ment signed in 1952 by which Is- raeli shipping experts and mer- chant seamen were loaned to Ghana to assist that country in establishing a national shipping company. In 1957 the agreement was extended for another 10 years. Under its terms, ZIM personnel were on the board of manage- ment of the Black Star and cap- tained its ships. Until 1967, Ghana- ian seamen will continue to be trained by Israelis for senior mari- time positions. N. J. Standard Age 35 JERSEY CITY, N.J. (JTA) — The Jewish Standard ,local week- ly, is currently celebrating the 35th anniversary of continuous publica- tion, serving the Jewish communi- ties of Hudson and Bergen coun- ties. Morris Janoff, editor-publish- er of the Jewish Standard, an- nounced that, in the near future, a special, 35th anniversary edition of the weekly will be issued. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, December 10, 1965-27 I A special art exhibit will be held at Northland Art Gallery ]4 p.m. Sunday, introducing prords ing young Michigan artists from the SOCIETY OF ARTS AND CRAFTS, many of whom are scholarship students. Fine art at moderate prices will be available, according to coordinator Mrs. Hal Eisenberg. Among the exhibitorz are Marsha Berkowitz, Ann Fines, Brenda Goodman, Sandra Kowal and Sue Stecker. Many of these artists are already well represented in private collections. When you care enough to remember . 1st Thai Student Gets PhD From Weizmann Institute REHOVOT — The first Thai na- tional ever to be awarded a doc- toral degree by an Israel institution of higher learning has received his PhD from the Weizmann Institute of Science. He was Puttipongse Varavudhi, 32, of Bangkok, Thailand, who had been working as a research stu- dent in the field of endocrine and reproduction physiology in the Biodynamics Institute headed by Prof. M.C. Shelesnyak. Dr. Varavudhi returned some months ago to the department of biology at Chulolongkorn Univer- sity in Bangkok from which he was on leave. He was among 23 research students whose PhD awards were announced at the opening of the Weizmann Institute's academic year. Of the others, 20 were Israelis and one each came from South Africa and Poland. Brevities Large selection of china in many designs and colors. SAVE 25% This is our Everyday Discount on Sterling Silver Al Beigler, Your Most