Chabad Dinner May 16 to Honor Five Detroiters; Aid for Hassidic Movement Noted Here, in Israel Mrs. Hordes Mrs. Kurtzman The Chabad Lubavitch silver anniversary dinner, May 16, at the L-atin Quarter will honor five lead- ing Detroiters for their dedicated services locally and in Israel to the Lubavitcher movement. They are: Charles E. Feinberg, chairman of the campaign corn- Mrs. Schaver mittee of Camp Gan Israel in Fen- ton, Mich.; Harry L. Schumer, chairman of the vocational schools committee of Kfar Chabad in Isra- el; Mrs. William Hordes, devoted supporter of Camp Gan Israel; Mrs. Rachel Kurtzman of the De- troit Committee for the Medical Israeli is Among 15 Jews Elected to the National Academy of Sciences (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) WASHINGTON (JTA)—A noted Israeli physicist is among the 15 Jewish scientists chosen by the National Academy of Sciences in electing 42 new members Tuesday in recognition of accomplishment in a wide range of scientific fields. The Israeli member is Dr. Eph- raim Katchalski, head of the de- partment of biophysics at Weiz- mann Institute of Science and winner of many awards for his work in that field. The new American Jewish mem- bers include: Dr. Paul. Berg of the Stanford University School of Medicine; Dr. Jacob Bigeleisen of the Brookhaven National Laboratory; Dr. Bernard B. Brodie of the National Heart Institute; Norman Henry Giles of Yale Uni- versity; Clifford Grobstein of the Univer- sity of California at San Diego; Jacob. George Harrar of the Rockefeller Foundation; Arthur Kantrowitz of the AVCO Corporation; Dr. Irving Kaplansky of the Uni- versity of Chicago; Torahs Destroyed.. in Seminary Fire NEW YORK (JTA) — Officials of the Jewish Theological Semin- ary, the educational arm of Con- servative Judaism, estimated last weekend that restoration and re- placeinent of losses suffered in the disastrous April 18 fire in the Seminary library will cost ' , about $2,000,000 and take a year and a half to complete. Chancellor Louis Finkelstein told a press conference that the Ford Foundation had granted the JTS 5100,000 for the repair and salvage program. He estimated that about 60,000 books — about one third of the Seminary's collection — had been .destroyed and about 30,000 others were damaged beyond re- pair. Forty Torahs, including some from Poland, were also destroyed. Although the New York City Fire Marshall's office said that after four days of investigation it had not found evidence of arson, Dr. Finkel- stein said he thought the blaze was incendiary. He said the fire had been preceded by three earlier ones in recent weeks, the first fires since 1929. Aided by Christian students from the nearby Union Theologi- cal Seminary, 800 of the Jewish Seminary students formed a human chain to pass down by hand from the library tower to the basement gymnasium, many thousands of books, some charred, some water-logged and soggy. The books were taken then to a special laboratory for careful treatment and drying. Rare books and manuscripts, housed in vaults, escaped damage. Philip Levine of the Ortho Re- _ search Foundation; Nathan M. Newmark of the Uni- versity of Illinois; Ephraim Ranker of the Public Health Research Institute of the City of New York.. Harold A. Scheraga of Cornell University; Samuel I. Weissman of Washing- ton University. Charles Yanofsky of Stanford University. Outline Features in Jewish Agency Reorganization NEW YORK (JTA)—Details of the reorganization of the basic structure of the Jewish Agency for Israel in line with decisibns adopt- ed at the last World Zionist Con- gress in Jerusalem, were disclosed at a press conference here April 20 by Aryeh L. Pincus, chairman of the agency executive. Pincus, on a three-week visit to this country, said that the initial changes already in the first stages of implementation, are aimed at solving the • problems of "over- centralization" and "duplication" in the day-to-day work of the agency. Under the new system which is already functioning in Israel and which will shortly be implemented in the American section, each of the five executive committees, which will be working bodies rather than advisory units, will bear responsibility for the areas formerly under the direction of department heads which were found to be related in function and purpose. Stressing the urgency of the reorganization in the fields of immigration and absorption, the agency head noted that, over the next four to five years, a total of some 250,000 Jewish immi- grants are expected to come to Israel from "areas of distress." He said the problem was par- ticularly acute in the case of the absorption of large numbers of newcomers from Moslem lands where the cultural lag was greatest. The new structural changes in the agency setup, Pincus said, are a result of the current effort at "self examination" by the organ- ization, of its functions and activi- ties. Another aim of the agency re- view and reorganization program, he said, was the achievement of a greater degree of unity among Zionist organizations throughout the world. While these groups "do an enormous amount of work," Pincus stressed that it was im- portant to minimize "fragmen- tation" in the movement. In this area, he declared, "we are seeking ways of cooperation so that the concept of Jewish peoplehood might mean something." Center in Kfar Chabad, and Mrs. Morris L. Schaver, chairman of the women's Chabad Lubavitch com- mittee. Feinberg, together with the late William Hordes, initiated the pur- chase of Camp Gan Israel from the Boy Scout movement. He is especially interested in this proj- ect because has long been in- terested in the welfare of youth and is a leader in the Boy Scout movement. Feinberg also dedi- cated the first cabin at Camp Gan Israel in memory of Fred M. But- zel. Mr. and Mrs. Hordes were in- strumental in helping to finance the purchase of the camp and last year $55,000 was raised through the William Hordes Memorial Fund to remodel the camp facili- ties and the main building was named in memory of Mr. Hordes. Mrs. Hordes and the family are continuing the work. Mrs. Schaver's parents, Jacob and Anna Lazaroff, who were fol- lowers of the Chabad Lubavitch movement, left a bequest to build a dormitory in Kfar Chabad, Isra- el. The children, including the Schaver, Lazaroff and Tenenbaum families, completed -the building of a student dormitory costing $250,000, bearing the name Beth Lazaroff. Last year a new sanctu- ary was dedicated at Kfar Chabad in memory of Anna Lazaroff, mother of Mrs. Schaver and 20 members of the three families were at the dedication ceremonies. The family recently also dedi- cated a Hasidic library, in memo- ry of their parents, at Cong. Mish- kan Israel Nusach H'Ari-Lubavit- cher Center. Their father, the late Jacob Lazaroff, was a member for many years at this synagogue and served as its secretary. Mrs. Kurtzmann, who is a de- scendant of Hassidim, has been active in the Chabad movement for many years. A room at Beth Laz- aroff has been dedicated in her parents' name. Now she is working to help complete the new medical center building at Kfar Chabad. Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, the educational arm of the Lubavit- cher movement, began its activities in the United States 25 years ago. It was initiated by the late Rabbi Joseph I. Schneersohn, world lead- er of the Lubavitcher. The aim of Merkos has been "to promote Jewish religious education among the younger generation in the spir- it of authentic Torah-true Juda- - ism." Avern Cohen will be the dinner chairman. A committee meeting of the volunteer workers will be held Tuesday, 8 p.m., at the home of the chairman. Senator Wayne Morse of Oregon will be the guest speaker at the dinner. For reservations, call the Lubavitch regional office, 14000 W. Nine Mile Rd., Oak Park, 544- 7168. Arab Plot Fails Withillr.Than,t BY SAUL CARSON JTA Correspondent at the UN (Copyright, 1966, JTA, Inc.) UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — Arab delegations here have kicked up a storm about the Arab refugee question by inviting Secretary-Gen- eral U Thant to visit the refugee camps. The 12 Arab ambassadors who extended that invitation in writing warned about the deficit facing the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, and spoke ominously about the "deteriorating conditions of the refugees and the prevailing dangerous situation" in the area where the refugees live (Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and the Gaza Strip). Well, the storm blew up a lot of sand — right back into the Arab faces. Mr. Thant has rejected the invitation. He left open a crack in the door, noting that "whenever it -may_ become clearly apparent to me that a visit to the area and to the refugee camps would produce some specific, positive and bene- Israel Population Leaps to 2,600,000 in 1966 TEL AVIV (ZINS) — The population of Israel now has reached a total of 2,600,000, an increase of 75,000, over the pre- vious year. The number of Jewish residents is 2,300,000, or 60,000 more than the previous year. In 1948, when the state was established, the number of Jewish inhabitants of the coun- try totaled only 650,000. Employment is now at a peak of 910,000 as compared with 586,000 in 1955—the number of unemployed persons is only 3 per cent of the labor -force, as compared with 7 per cent in 1955. In 1956 297,090 tourists who visited the country brought in $55,000,000, whereas in 1949 Israel attracted only 22,000 tourists. ficial results, I will not hesitate to make such a visit." But that's not what the Arab states wanted. They had been in- structed by the last Arab summit meeting in Cairo to raise the refu- gee question now, as a matter of immediate urgency. Mr. Thant didn't see things that way. Neither, for that matter, did Israel. Israel's Ambassador Michael S. Comay had gone to see Mr. Thant after the Arab invitation had been sent to the UN chief. Later, Mr. Comay wrote a formal letter on the issue, characterizing the Arab move as one motivated by propa- ganda reasons. The Secretary-General noted in his reply to the Arabs that the refugee issue is under annual re- view by the Genera _ l Assembly. Mr. Comay had done the same thing.. The -Arab ploy has not paid off. Mr. Thant replied in effect: "Thank you; not now—if ever." He said in his letter declining the in- vitation that the assembly had not asked him to go to the Middle East. Of course that's true. But it is also true that the secretary-general needs no such specific request if he chooses to go. He has made many trips around the world without be- ing requested or instructed to do so by any UN organ. His predeces- sor, the late Dag Hammarskjold, went to the Middle East many times without specific authoriza- tion. But Mr. Thant -has evidently - felt that he does not care to choose such a course at this time. The Arabs here were very un- happy. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 10—Friday, April 29, 1966 MIZRACHI TOURS T© 75RAEL:, and EUROPE Spring and Summer 1966 round trip Jet from New York $5350 0 At Mid-America's fabulous resort ... a playtime paradise whereyou'll enjoy: • Terrific food • Beautiful heated pool and patio • All sports • Gala floor shows • • • • • 0 FREE GOLF "WHERE VACATION DREAMS COME TRUE!" 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