100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

May 06, 1966 - Image 32

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-05-06

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

Six Israeli Youth t o Attend World Science Gathering

REHOVOTH — Six Israeli teen-
agers have been chosen to repre-
sent their country at the eighth
London International Science Fort-
night July 27-Aug. 10.
The gathering serves as a meet-
ing place for hundreds of young
science _ - students from all over the
world.
The Israelis, four boys and
two girls, were selected by a
joint committee of the Weiz-

They Made
the Grade



LEONARD J. ZIMMERMAN, 22,
a senior at Ferris State College
majoring in advertising was the
winner of the annual scholarship
presented by . the West Michigan
Chapter of the American Mar-
keting Association. Zimmerman's
competitive paper written on "The
Impact of the Large Retailers on-
our Society" was a large factor in
his receiving the $300 award.

*

* *

Clarinetist NORMAN LETVIN,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Letvin
of Parkside Ave., was judged a
winner of the annual Pro Mozart
Society Scholarship in auditions
April 27. The scholarship will pay
Norman's way to the Summer
Academy Mozarteum n Salzburg,
Austria. Norman, 16, in the 11th
grade at Cass Technical High
School, is the music student of
Vincent Melidon. He has been
studying clarinet for seven years.
* * *
Frank R. Crantz, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Crantz, 23191 Kipling,
Oak Park, will start out his edu-
jo Sus...tam:an atn le ..100,1UD reuonuo
Michigan with several financial
awards to his
credit. Frank,
senior at Oak
Park High School,
has been award-
ed a Regents-
Alumni Scholar-
ship and an Edu-
cational Oppor-
tunity Grant by
the university, in
addition to a
Frank
State 'of Michi-
gan Competitive Scholarship he
won -earlier— a total of $1,400 to-
ward his education. Frank, who
plans to study medicine, will be
presented with a Phi Beta Kappa
Award certificate at an honors
convocation at Ford Auditorium
Thursday.
* * *
JUDITH JO WAX, receiving her
bachelor of arts degree from the
University of Michigan this month,
has recently been honored by
membership in the Phi Beta Kappa
Honor Society. Miss Wax was also
a participant in the U of M honors
convocation for four consecutive
years, and during that time had
been elected to Phi Sigma Iota,
language honor society and to Phi
Kappa Phi for high academic
achievement in her junior year-
A graduate of Shaarey Zedek He-
brew High School, Miss Wax is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Reuben Wax of Lauder Ave.
* * *
HARVEY S. ELLIS, 23-year-old
son of Mr. and Mrs. Max Ellis of
Washburn Ave., received his li-
cense to practice dentistry Mon-
day, having graduated with honors
from the University of Detroit
Saturday. Ellis was awarded a cer-
tificate of merit by the American
Association of Endodontics and
was ruled exempt from state
board examinations by virtue of
his outstanding clinical achieve-
ment at the university. Ellis is a
graduate of Mumford High School.

mann Institute, Yad Weizmann
and the youth division of the
ministry of education from
among the participants in the
Science Summer Camps, held for
the last two years at the Weiz-
mann Institute of Science.
The program for the Science
Fortnight includes lectures, visits
to scientific institutions and vari-
ous social events. Afterward the
young Israelis will • remain in the
United Kingdom for another two
weeks as guests of the "Bridge in
Britain" Organization, which is ar-
ranging extensive tours and meet-
ings with British youth. -
* * *
Registration has just opened for
this year's Science Summer Camp,
which will be held on the campus

Youth 'Army' Takes Over
Fifth Avenue Sunday

NEW YORK—A parade up Fifth
Avenue by 10,000 young people and
greetings by Rabbi Isser Yehuda
Unterman, chief rabbi of Israel,
will highlight this year's Youth
Salute To Israel Sunday, in a
communitywide celebration to com-
memorate Israel's 18th annivers-
ary. Israel observed its annivers-
ary April 25.
Following the parade, an Israel
Independence Day cultural pro-
gram will be held at the Central
Park Mall. where Rabbi Unter-
man will greet the gathering.
More than 20,000 adults are ex-
pected to attend this pageant on
May 8, which also is the Jewish
festival of Lag b'Omer. Rabbi
Unterman is in the United States
on a visit.
Participating youths will be
members of the Hebrew schools,
Zionist youth movements, Jewish
youth organizations, Hebrew High
Schools, Yiddish folk schools and
JewLh centers.
Sponsoring organizations are the
American Zionist Youth Founda-
tion, the Jewish Education Com-
mittee and the Jewish National
Fund.
The theme of the youth march
is "Prophecy and Fulfillment."
The students will wear costumes
and blue and white clothes —
symbolizing the colors of the Jew-
ish people as represented on Isra-
el's national flag.
An Independence Day celebra-
tion will be held the night before
by the American Veterans of
Israel (Aliya Bet and Mahal) at
the Carnegie International Center.
This year, in addition to the
veterans of the Jewish Legion of
World War I; all those who work-
ked for the establishment of Israel
through such organizations as
American For Haganah and Amer-
ican League For A Free Palestine,
will participate.

WSU Loan Named
for 'Mr. Mackenzie'

of the Weizmann Institute July 3-
15. Some 50 secondary school stu-
dents will be chosen, with scholar-
ships available.
The youngsters will be housed
in bungalows on the grounds and
use the various Institute facilities.
They will be divided into biology,
mathematics, chemistry and phys-
ics groups, and work under the
supervision of Rehovoth scientists.
The camp program includes
games, hikes, lectures and visits
to other scientific institutions.
* * *
School children in Israel are to
be shown the "Golem of Rehovoth"
at work at the Weizmann Institute.
A film has been made of the
famed home-built, high-speed elec-
tronic computer in the laboratories
of the Institute's department of
applied mathematics. It will be
used in a telecast for seventh grade
students on the new educational
TV system, recently inaugurated in
Israel.
The TV directorate has decid-
ed to show how the automatic
"Golem" works in order to pop-
ularize the study of mathematics
among the younger generation.,
The computer is named the
"Golem of Prague" after an auto-
maton in human form created by
the renowned Maharal (Rabbi Ju-
dah Low).

2 Correspondents
Awarded National
Merit Scholarships

Robert B. Stulberg and Edward,
B. Zuckerman, both high school
correspondents for the Jewish
News, were among 112 Michigan
high school seniors who won Na-
tional Merit Scholarships.
There was a record 2,350 win-
ners in the country chosen from
14,000 finalists. The boys will each
receive a $100 grant during each
of their four years in college.
-Robert, son of Dr. and Mrs.
Samuel Stulberg, 19560 Roslyn, at-
tends Cass Tech. He is a member
of Shaarey Zedek Junior Congre
gation; a state champion debater;
plays the cello in the Cass or-
chestra and is a member of the
Detroit Music Study Club. He will
attend either Yale, University of
Michigan or Columbia.
Edward is editor of the Mum-
ford Mercury and a Temple Israel
Religious School graduate. The son
of Mr. and Mrs. Louis I. Zucker-
man of Corners Dr., Birmingham,
he plans to attend Cornell, major-
ing in English.

Orthodox Lawyers Group
Urges Pennsylvania Court
on Buses for All Schools

HARRISBURG — The Supreme
Court of Pennsylvania was urged
to retain the Pennsylvania School
Bus Act, in a legal brief submitted
by the National Jewish Commission
on Law and Public Affairs, a group
of Orthodox Jewish lawyers. The
constitutionality of the bus act is
being tested by a group of tax-
payers with the assistance of the
American Jewish Congress and the
American Civil Liberties Union,
because it- mandates bus service
for children attending non-public
schools.
In its "friend of the court" brief,
the National Jewish Commission
declares that the state of Penn-
sylvania "would fail to provide
equal protection of the law and
would, in effect, hamper the free
exercise of every citizen to ob-
serve his religion if he were to
deny bus transportation service to
children solely because they are
attending school sponsored by reli-
gious groups."

Future Mackenzie High school
graduates will be given scholarship
preference according to terms of
the new Herbert S. Eiges Memorial
Student Loan Fund established at
Wayne State University recently
by his widow, Helen.
Mr. Eiges, known to thousands
of Mackenzie students and gradu-
ates as "Mr. Mackenzie Himself"
died in February. The 66-year-old
civics and economics teacher had
been at Mackenzie since it first
opened its doors in 192g. He was
founder and sponsor of the school's
alumni association, faculty adviser
to the student yearbook "The Stag"
in addition to being a member of
the Detroit Roundtable of Chris-
tians and Jews and state chairman
of the Lay Society for the Michi-
gan Diabetic Society.
A graduate of The University of
Michigan, Eiges also earned a A whip for the horse, a bridle for
the ass,
law degree from WSU in 1929.
Mrs. Eiges lives at 15010 Glaston- And a rod for the back of fools.
bury.
— Proverbs

OSS REALTY CO.

"".



•-. •■■•■•••e

Temple Israel Debaters Trounce Pittsburgh

The Temple Israel High School
debating team, consisting of Rick
Oppenheim and Bobbi Tobias for
the affirmative and Janice Scha-
efer, Judy Cassel and Suzi Sha-
piro, negative, were victorious in
two debates with the team from
Rodef Shalom Temple, Pittsburgh,
Sunday at Temple Israel.

The subject was "Resolved:
The federal government should
provide financial aid to all pa-
rochial schools." Teams took turns
debating both sides.
This marks the fourth consecu-
tive victory of the Temple Israel
debaters against Rodef Shalom.
Coached by Manuel S. Simon, su-
pervisor of Temple Israel High
Seven Venezuelan Teen-agers School and counselor at Mumford
High, they were also victorious in
to Attend Camp Bnai Brith
two debates in Pitfsburgh, March
During 1966 Camping Season 20.
STARLIGHT, Pa.—Seven teen-
aqers from Maracaibo, Venezuela,
Truly the finest
will be among the 400 campers
Music and Entertainment
this season at Camp Bnai Brith
for the discriminating
here, announced Ben Barkin, chair-
MACK PITT
man of the Bnai Brith Youth Com- I
And His Orchestra
mission, which operates the camp.
Lincoln 5-8614-
Spanish-speaking staff members
on the Camp Bnai Brith staff will
help make the youths' first experi-
ence in the United States especially
meaningful.
The youths are Alain and Monica
O'Hayon, Sara Gelman, Wilma and
Dorann Spritzer, Rosa Grunhaus,
and -Betty Ghelman.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
32—Friday, May 6, 1966

I BY POPULAR DEMAND !

Max Schrut

For Good Photographs
and Prompt Service
Call Me at

Now Booking - -

ED BURG

BLAIR STUDIO

and His Orchestra

Good Music
for All Occasions

Weddings - Bar Mitzvahs

We Come to Your Horne
With Samples

LI 4-9278

UN 4-6845

TY 5-8805

EXPECTING OUT OF TOWN GUESTS
FOR A WEDDING OR A BAR MITZVAH?

(=brook House Motel

Is Conveniently Located at

20500 JAMES COUZENS

(8 Mile & Greenfield—Across from Northland)
Call 342-3000 For the Finest Accomrriodations!
Dine at the SCOTCH & SIRLOIN RESTAURANT
Airport Limousine Service Available

We Make Our Own Glasses

HEADQUARTERS FOR
• LATEST DOMESTIC AND
IMPORTED FRAME FASHIONS

• PRESCRIPTIONS FOR GLASSES -
ACCURATELY FILLED

• Immediate Repair

• Reasonably Priced

ROSEN OPTICAL SERVICE

13720 W. 9 MILE nr. COOLIDGE

LI 7-5068

OAK PARK, MICH.

Hours: Daily and Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Thursdays to 9 p.m.

WE'RE LICENSED AND SPECIALIZE
IN SHIPPING PACKAGES

TO THE U.S.S.R.

(For 16 Years)

WITH FULL GUARANTY OF DELIVERY
We Feature the Finest Selection of

Material for Suits, Dresses, Etc.

WAYNE DRY GOODS HOUSE

Henry Tobet and Alex Korba, Proprietors

7146 MICHIGAN AVE.

VI 3-4130

(7 Blocks West of Livernois)

"Smartest Move

You'll Ever Make"

17350 LIVERNOIS

DI 2-1300

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan