Rep. Farnum, Israeli Singer Due at Pioneer Women's Reception Congressman Billie S. Farnum of the 19th Congressional District and Tova Ronni, Israeli folksinger, will head the program at the Pio- neer Women's leadership recep- tion to be hosted by Mrs. Jack Weinbaum at her home 12909 Na- dine, Huntington F' Woods, March 14, 12:30 P.M. The function is in advance of the annual Pio- neer Worn e n' Israel Bond award luncheon. Rep. Farnum, a native of Mich- igan, vras raised in the farm com- Rep. Farnum munity of Watrousville. He worked for the Pontiac Motor Co. and held various offices in the UAW. He was appointed a Michigan State Fair commissioner by Gov. G. Mennen Williams in 1951, served as administrative aide to the late Senator Blair Moody and then was appointed assistant secretary of state in 1955 and deputy secretary of state in 1957. Governor Swain- son appointed Farnum state audi- tor-general in 1961 and Farnum was re-elected in 1962. He was elected to Congress in 1964. Miss Ronni, young and vivacious interpreter of the songs of Israel, is a Sabra — a native born Israeli. She has been on concert tours of the Middle East, Western Europe, South America, Canada and the United States. She has starred on leading TV and radio programs. She sings in English, Hebrew and Yiddish. The annual Pioneer Women's award luncheon will be held at the Shaarey Zedek, March 24, and will feature Jacob Roden, star of the New York Metropolitan Opera Company and of the Israel .Na- tional Opera Company, and Dr. Aryeh Plotin, an expert on the Middle East. For reservations call DI 1-5707. MAP Campaign Wins; Project to Help Strengthen Program at Mumford Nearly 200 parents, teachers and principals of the Mumford school area who promoted a state-fi- nanced project to maintain quality integrated education packed the Mumford High School Library last week for an official launching of the project. Project I was awarded $1,000,000 by the state and is experimental in nature, servicing 50,000 students in three school areas — Mumford, Pershing and Mackenzie. Among the guest speakers was Robert Alpern, chairman of the Mumford Action Pr o g r a m, the group which campaigned for im- mediate action to preserve non- tr ans cient neighborhoods by strenthening the excellence of the school system. As part of project improve- Men's Clubs BETH ABRAHAM MEN'S CLUB will present its next Breakfast Forum 10 a.m. Sunday in the so- cial hall. Harold Schachern, reli- gious editor of the Detroit News, will discuss "Interesting Sidelights in Religious Activities." The sweetest grapes hang high- est. —Amer. proverb. ments, schools in the area will au- thorize teacher aides and assist- ants to take over non-instructional teachers' duties. Additional counselors will in- crease personal contact with each student, and school-com- munity agents will serve as vital links between school administra- tors and parents. Project I will offer strengthening courses for both educationally de- prived and gifted students in the t egr ated neighborhood and school system. tri-school area. He cited the integration project In addition to counselors, the project offers services of trained as a "ground-breaking experi- psychologists, remedial reading ment, the results of which will be experts, extended library services, viewed by the entire community." mathematics • tutors, speech cor- rection services, special courses including great books, elementary and secondary language training, 2SEROVFE UYSOTUOI contemporary affairs and other classes not always possible in the standard curriculum. Many teachers, parents, and stu- dents will be attending workshops to be held between now and Aug. 31 to learn new ways to improve the schools. Alpern said . a majority of the community living in the Mum- V ford area accept and welcome the opportunity to learn the in- Now HANK NEWMA • /I The Project I "kickoff" at Mumford High School included among its guest speakers (from left) Robert Alpern, chairman of the Mumford Action Program; Helen J. Delbridge, Mumford principal; and Roy Paul, co-chair- man of MAP and Detroit PTA Council representative to the board of education. Not pictured is Dr. Alfred Meyers, project chairman. WE'RE THE DODGE BOYS THAT SAVE YOU CASH! PAUL NEWMAN'S SPARTAN Dodge 855 Oakland, Pontiac — LI 9-6161 Manufacturers Bank New Special Time Accounts... LETTER BOX Levin and Capote: Fiction, Non-Fiction Writing Contrasted by Reader Editor, The Jewish News: Ironic is the situation of author Meyer Levin, of "The Stronghold," vis-a-vis author Truman Capote. Increasingly, critics and readers of Capote's "In Cold Blood" have been reminded of Levin's "Com- pulsion." While Levin • called his book a "documentary novel" and classified it as fiction, Capote classifies "In Cold Blood" as a non-fiction novel. Readers find lit- tle difference in the two methods. But the law still does. "Compulsion" is the subject of a long drawn-out lawsuit by Na- than Leopold, which is now sched- uled for trial in Chicago on April 18. The law seems to assume that he who writes fiction writes only for profit, while he who writes non-fiction aims to instruct. Thus, Nathan Leopold's lawsuit for the profits from "Compulsion" could not have been originated had the book been presented as non-fiction. The irony in the situation is, of course, that Levin's "fiction" did not remotely approach the profits already earned by Capote's "non- fiction," and that while the liter- ary borderline between, fiction and non-fiction has virtuallly dis- appeared, the legalistic distinction continues in force. A further irony is the generally accepted belief that "Compulsion" changed the public attitude toward Leopold and made it possible for him to be released from prison, whereupon he sued the author, publisher, and others connected with "Compulsion" for "invasion of privacy." JUDITH PRESSMAN New York, N. Y. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, March 4, 1966-15 Effective March 1, 1966 earn 4 1/2% on initial deposits of $1,000 or more, on de- posit for one year in a new passbook Special Time Account at any of the 63 convenient offices of Manufacturers National Bank of Detroit. Subsequent deposits in minimums of $100 may be added to the passbook account at any time, and will earn a full 41/2% interest PAUL NEWMAN after being on deposit for one year. 41/2% passbook Special Time Accounts are automatically renewed at maturity un• less-prior notice is given. All regular savings accounts at Manu- facturers Bank will continue to earn 4% interest, paid and compounded quar- terly. MANUFACTURERS ATOOMAL. DA,IM Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Detroit, Michigan