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January 21, 1966 - Image 27

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-01-21

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

People Make News

MAURICE A. BETMAN, of
Northwestern Mutual, was second
in sales throughout Southeastern
Michigan for the month of Decem-
ber with $357,000 sales on 17 lives.

The Rev. JOHN MASON COON-
EY, head of the Fairmount Presby-
terian Church of Califon, NJ, has
been appointed director of inter-
religious programming of the Na-
tional Conference of Christians
and Jews, it was announced by
NCCJ president, Dr. Sterling W.
Brown.
* *
DR. DUN CAN P. THOMAS, assis-
tant professor of medicine at Tufts
University School of Medicine, and
director of the Vascular Labora-
tory at Lemuel Shattuck Hospital,
Boston, was the visiting chief at
Sinai Hospital Thursday.
* * *
AMNON BARNESS, Israeli-born
vice president of the Brandeis In-
stitute here which is training lay
leaders for the American Jewish
community, w a s named com-
mander of merit of the Roman
Catholic Equestrian Order of the
Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, a
Catholic award rarely presented
to a Jew. Barness is known for his
activities on behalf of underprivi-
leged children, both Christian and
Jewish, in Jerusalem. In the
United States, he is an active par-
ticipant in President Johnson's
Job Corps.
* * *
Detroit area leaders elected to
the board of directors of the Com-
munity Health Association (CHA)
at the health plan's annual meet-
ing include RABBI MORRIS AD-
LER of Cong. Shaarey Zedek, and
DR. MEL RAVITZ, city council-
man.
* * *
The appointment of Dr. Mena-
hem Schmelczer to the post of Li-
brarian of the
Jewish Theolog-
ical Seminary of
America has
been announced
by Dr. Louis Fin-
kelstein, Semi-
nary Chancel-
lor. The library
in Dr. S chmelc-
zer's charge con-
tains more than
250,000 printed Dr. Schmelczer
works and 10,000 manuscripts dat-
ing from the 9th Century to the
present. It comprises the largest
collection of Judaica and Hebraica
ever assembled. With his new ap-
pointment, Dr. Schmelczer also be-
comes a member of the senior fac-
ulty of the Seminary's Rabbinical
Department.
* * *
A concert in honor of ARTUR
RUBINSTEIN, the pianist, at Car-
negie Hall, and a dinner in the
Grand Ballroom of the New York
Hilton Hotel, was held by the
America-Israel Cultural Founda-
tion Sunday. Proceeds from the
event are for the benefit of the
foundation's programs to further
Israel's cultural life. Rubinstein
received the foundation's annual
award for distinguished service to
Israel's cultural life. The founda-
tion ,of which Isaac Stern, the vio-
linist, is president, supports pro-
jects in some 50 Israeli cultural
institutions, fosters cultural ex-

change programs wth Israel and
grants some 300 scholarships an-
nually to gifted young Israelis in
all the arts. Sol Hurok, the im-
presario, was chairman of the din-
ner.
* * *
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Abe
Fortas will deliver the main ad-
dress at the dinner session of the
44th Annual National Conference
of the American
ORT Federation
next Sunday, it
as announced
y Dr. William
Haber, president
of the organiza-
tion. The confer-
ence will take
place at Hotel
Commodore.
More than 500
delegates repre-
senting 9 0, 0 0 0
ORT members
throughout t h e
country are ex-
pected to attend.
Dr. Meyer Coh-
Justice Fortas en, director of
the Bureau of Operations of the
United Nations Development Fund,
also will speak at the meeting.
* * *
WILLIE A. WILLIAMS has been
appointed assistant secretary at
Raimi's Curtains, Reddy Drapes,
Inc., and Reddy Wonderland, Inc.
*
*
Dr. Uriel Simon, young Israeli
educator, will arrive in this coun-
try Feb. 6 for an extended lecture
tour of Eastern
and Midwestern
universities, to
address student
and faculty
groups under the
auspices of the

United Jewish

To Set Up Scholarship
Honoring Labor Leader

tonishing ability to shrink hemor-
rhoids and to relieve pain — without
surgery. In case after case, while
gently relieving pain, actual reduc-
tion (shrinkage) took place. Most
amazing of all — results were so thor-
ough that sufferers made astonishing
statements like "Piles have ceased to
be a problem!" The secret is a new
healing substance (Bio-Dyne®)— dis-
covery of a world-famous research
institute. This substance is now avail-
able in suppository or ointment form
called Prepeeration R. At all drug

counters.

OP Jaycees Name
Allen Zemmol as
Man of the Year

among them the Michigan State
Bar Association and. Bnai Brith, as
ADL chairman of Keidan Lodge;
Oak Park Democratic Club as pres-
ident; 18th District Democratic
Organization; Oak Park Board of
Canvassers; Beth Shalom Syna-
gogue and the NAACP.

Crack Moscow Soccer
Team Guests of Histadrut

Stops Itch—Relieves Pain

For the first time science has found

A forest named in honor of Am-
bassador AVRAHAM HARMAN,
Israel's envoy to Washington, was
planted Sunday inside the John F.
Kennedy Forest, near Jerusalem.
The Avraham Harman Forest had
been contributed by the Bnai Zion,
a Zionist fraternal order in the
United States. Among the partici-
pants in the ceremonies were Wal-
worth Barbour, United States am-
bassador to Israel; Mrs. Golda
Meir, who had just retired from
her post as Israel's foreign minis-
ter; and David Harman, a son of
the ambassador, who thanked Bnai
Zion for the honor bestowed upon
his father.
* *
DR. MAX MARK, professor of
political science at Wayne State
University, will begin a series of
eight commentaries on world af-
fairs 1 p.m. Thursday over WQRS-
FM. Dr. Mark, a member of the
Political Science Association as
well as the American Society for
International Law, is a well-known
lecturer and analyst of European
and Asiatic affairs.

Appeal - Bnai
Brith Hillel
Attorney Allen Zemmol has been
Foundations. Dr.
named Outstanding Young Man
Simon, son of
of the Year by the Oak Park
Professor Ernst
Junior Chamber of Commerce.
A. Simon, one of
Israel's leading
Zemmol, married and the father
educators, is an
of three, lives on Joan Ave., Oak
assistant profes-
Park, and is a partner in the De-
Dr. Simon
sor of biblical
troit law firm of Dingell, Hylton
literature at Bar- Ilan University and Zemmol.
in Ramat - Gan. Born in Jerusalem
He will be honored by the Oak
in 1929, he spent a year on a kib-
butz before coming to the United Park Jaycees at dinner Tuesday,
States in 1947 as a student at the in recognition of his outstanding
College of the City of New York. contributions to community and
He returned to Israel for his mili- humanistic service. In 1964, he
tary service, then studied at the went to Mississippi as a volunteer
Hebrew University -where he took lawyer to assist indigent persons
his doctorate and in 1962 joined in obtaining and keeping their
the faculty of Bar-Ilan University. civil privileges and rights. This
past summer, Zemmol was instru-
* * *
mental in obtaining the effective
MRS. HARRY L. JONES has distribution of some 40,000 dis-
been named chairman of the wo- carded but still useable elemen-
men's communal services commit- tary textbooks among the needy
tee of the Council of Jewish Fed- Negro children of Selma, Ala.
erations and Welfare Funds to
Zemmol has been active in vari-
ous civic and service groups,

Shrinks Hemorrhoids
Without Surgery

a new healing substance with the as-

succeed Mrs. Hugo Dalsheimer of
Baltimore, who served for the past
two years. Mrs. Arnold Ruben-
stein, of St. Paul, is the new vice-
chairman of the committee, suc-
ceeding Mrs. Jones. Both appoint-
ments were announced by Lewis
N. Weinstein, CJFWF president.
Mrs. Jones is a member of the
board of governors of the Jewish
Welfare Federation of Detroit, a
board member of its Women's Di-
vision, and a national board mem-
ber of the United Jewish Appeal
Women's Division.

Luther E. Simmons, president
of United Distributive Workers
Council 30, AFL-CIO, presents a
$2,500 check to Gregory J. Bard-
acke, national executive director
of the American Trade Union
Council for Histadrut. The money
will be used to set up a perpetual
Histadrut Scholarship in Israel
bearing the name of Earl F.
Wolfman, business manager and
founder of United Distributive
Workers Council 30.

TEL AVIV — Recent visi-
tors to Israel were Spartak, cham-
pion Moscow soccer team. A re-
ception was given in their honor
by the Histadrut international de-
partment, and attended by mem-
bers of the `IlapoeP secretariat.
The Russian guests told of their

sports activities and in turn heard
a description of the workings of
Hapoel, the Histadrut Sports Or-
ganization.
During their stay, the Spartak
team twice played the Israel Sel-
ected in non-official games, scor-
ing 2-0 at Ramat Gan and 1-0 at
Haifa.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, January 21, 1966-27

Macmillan to Publish Jacobson's 'Beginners'

Jacobson was educated at the Uni-
versity of Witwatersand, Johan-
nesburg. Like one of the central
characters in his book, the author
emigrated to England where he
has lived since 1954. He spent
1965 as a visiting professor at Sy-
racuse University, New York. His
British literary honors include the
Llewellyn Rhys Award, 1958, and
"The Beginners," chosen by the the W. Somerset Maugham Award,
Literary Guild as its March sel- 1964.
ection, tells the . bitingly contem-
porary story of a sprawling, vital,
diverse family. The Glickmans are
a microcosm of the world around
them. Their lives expose and dra-
By Sid Shmarak
matize the dreams of the radical
intellectual Afrikaners. the Afri-
The correct telephone number
kaner victory of 1948, the boom for SAMPLE SHOWROOM, 18903
of the 1960s, the hunger for
W. 7 Mile, is KE 3-0219.
money, fast cars and sex.

"The Beginners" by Dan Jacob-
son, a novel of modern South Afri-
ca, will be published by Macmil-
lan Feb. 21. The fifth novel by the
noted young South African writer
is a 160,000-word epic that traces
the lives of four generations of the
Glickmans, a Jewish family who
immigrated to South Africa in the
early 1900s.

Business Briefs

Jacobson, 36, is the author of
four earlier novels: "The Trap,"
"A Dance in the Sun," "The Price
of Diamonds," and "An Evidence
of Love." Macmillan published his
book of essays, "No Further
West," in 1961. The title story of
his recent collection of short
stories, "The Zulu and the Zeide,"
was dramatized and is currently
a hit on Broadway.
Born in Johannesburg, Dan

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