Water Project Aids Orange Grove MONUMENT UNVEILINGS Unveiling announcements may be inserted by mailing or by calling The Jewish News office, 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd., Detroit 35. VE 8-9364. Written an- nouncements must be acompanied by the name and address of the person making the insertion. There is a stand. ing charge of $3.00 for an unveiling notice, measuring an inch in depth.) * * * The family of the late Bernice Posen and Phillip Mitchnick an- nounces the unveiling of stones in their memory 10:30 a.m. Sunday, June 26, at Nusach Hari Cemetery. Rabbi Segal will officiate. Rela- tives and friends are asked to at- tend. * * * The family of the late Bertha Weisser announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory 10 a.m. Sunday, June 26, at Beth Te- filo Emanuel Cemetery. Rabbi Lehrman will officiate. Relatives , Young women farmers are shown using a mechanized system for spraying a newly-planted orange grove at an experimental farm settlement in the Negev, northwest of Beersheba. The agricultural development of the area, which is helping to make room for new immigrants, is being aided by the National Water Project, built with the aid of Israel Bond funds. In the spraying procedure in the photograph above, the chemical is kept in a tank on the back of a tractor, which is fitted with a special attachment that covers four rows of trees simultaneously. and friends are asked to attend. * * * The family of the late Tillie Jacobs announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory 11:30 a.m. Sunday, June 26, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi I. Hal- pern will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. Fromm Analyzes Meyer Levin's 'The Story of Israel' Christology, Peace Traces Past History, State's Triumphs View of Prophets or the well - known author Meyer Levin, Israel is "'his second home." He began his literary ca- reer in Chicago. He moved to Pal- estine, labored among the builders of Zion, returned to this country, resettled in Israel and for the past .decade or more has been writing from Israel and has labored in be- half of the Jewish State. His newest book, "The Story of Israel," therefore emerged as a labor of love. Published by G. P. Putnam's Sons (200 Madison, NY), this splendidly written account of names of many of the great heroes in the struggle for that freedom, those of the Aaron- sohns as well as of the Zionist leaders, loom large in this mag- nificent tale. Primarily, it is the story of ,the great gathering, and the descrip- tion of a people's emergence from the ghetto into_ a state of national independence is, indeed, that of a great love by a dedi- cated admirer of the Jewish deter- mination never again to permit homelessness to drag the people into degradation. Of course, the heroes of the State of Israel pass in review in this story. Levin also writes about the workers and the sages, the military leaders and the schol- ars. He tells about Weizmann, Ben-Gurion, Sharett, Eshkol — about Generals Yadin and Dayan, and about the last two there is this deeply moving concluding paragraph to the book: "Isn't it a strange and beauti- ful symbol, that after the first Chief of Staff of the Israel army resigned to go back to the study of the Dead Sea Scrolls (he referred to Yadin), another Chief of Staff, General Dayan, also resigned to go back to his studies, and then to become— the Secretary of Agriculture. Indeed, as it is written, 'And they shall beat their swords into plowshares." It is in this spirit that Levin re- views Israel's history—past and present — and introduces the new nation to his readers. His book contains a number of very impressive photographs by Archie Lieberman and there are several sketches of Israelis--kib- butzniks and others—by Eli Levin that add to the merit of the book. . MEYER LEVIN a young nation's struggles and suc- cesses, of the events that preceded the rebirth of the nation, the Jew- ish people's difficult centuries of exile and the years of glory in state- hood, is excellent for young read- ers 'and most informative for their elders. The story begins with a per- sonal note—about his own family, his wife, his children, their inter- ests in Israel—and a comment on what makes Israel "so desperately prized: to be fought over by Philistines, Greeks, Romans, Sara- cens, Crusaders, Ottomans, British, Arabs and Jews: to be the source of so much conflict, tragedy and yet of elation .. ." and the account that follows is descriptive of the historic events alluded to. His review is of the history of the Jews, starting with biblical times, leading - up to current events, intermingled with the chronicles of our people as they underwent pogroms, experienc- ing difficulties wherever they turned, making the daring choice between submission to indig- nities and the quest for freedom as offered in the Zionist idea developed by Theodor Herzl. The THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 38—Friday, June 17, 1966 (Y SHOULD STOP STUFFINV YE-R pia AND Do SOMETHIN s FER YeRSELF. AND VER COUNTRY BY BUYING UNITED Devoting a chapter on "Early Christianity and Its Idea of Jesus" in his "The Dogma of Christ," is- sued as a paperback by Doubleday, Erich Fromm quotes from Jo- sephus, analyzes Pharisee and Sad- ducee ideologies and discusses the Am Ha-Aretz as he was viewed in Jewish life. Fromm declares that "every at- tempt to understand the origin of Christianity must begin with an investigation of the economic, cul- tural and psychic situation of its earliest believers." Much of the background ma- terial, as quoted from Josephus, is incorporated in this chapter, and the activities of the Zealots and the Sicarii and the Chris- tology of the early community are thoroughly reviewed. He points out that this Chris- tology "respects the concept of the messiah chosen by God to intro duce a kingdom of righteousness and love, a concept which had been familiar among the Jewish masses for a long time." "In only two ideas of the new faith," he writes, "do we find ele- ments that signify something spe- cifically new: in the fact of his exaltation as Son of God to sit at the right hand of the Almighty, and in the fact that this messiah is no longer the powerful, victor- ious hero, but his significance and dignity reside just in his suffer- ing, in his death on the cross." And he states that the idea of a dy- ing messiah or dying God is not new and he refers to Ezra and Messiah for proof. In a concluding chapter on the prophetic concept of peace, Fromm asserts that "it is the experience of `at-onement' with the world and within itself; it is the_end of alien- ation, the return of man to him- self." If all the penicillin vials supplied by UNICEF Were laid end to end, they would cover a distance 10 1/2 times the length of the Panama Canal. The family of the late Jerome H. Weinberg announces the un- veiling of a monument in his mem- ory 11 a.m. Sunday, June 26, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Syme will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. * * * The family of the late Jean ette Mendelson announces the unveiling ,of a monument in her memory 12:45 p.m. Sunday, June 26, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Groner will officiate. The Family of the Late HELEN WOLF Announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory 1 p.m. Sunday, June 26, at Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Rabbi Litke will officiate. Rela- tives and friends are ask- ed to attend. The family of the late Jacob Ostrow announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory 1 p.m. Sunday, June 19, at Chesed shel Emes Cemetery, Ruzhiner Section. Rabbi Gorrelick will officiate. Rel- atives and friends are asked to at- tend. The Family of the Late EVA L. SERMAN Announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory 2:30 p.m. Sunday, June 19, at Clover Hill Park Cemetery, Section 17. Rabbi Gorrelick will officiate. Relative and friends are asked to at- tend. The Family of the Late BENJAMIN D. LIEBERMAN Te Family of the Late CHARLES GOLDBERGER Announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory 11 a.m. Sunday, June 26, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi M. Lehr- man will officiate. Rela- tives and friends are ask- ed to attend. Announces the unveiling of a monument in his me• mory 10 am. Sunday, June 16, at Machpelah Ceme- tery. Rabbi Groner will of- ficiate. R e l a t i v es and friends are asked to at- tend. The Family of the Late RUB1N KOWALL The Family of the Late . CHARLES DAIEN Announces the unveiling of a monument in his mem- ory 11:30 a.m. Sunda y, June 26, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Prero will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The Family of the Late MORRIS BLUMENO Announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory 2 p.m. Sunday, June 19, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi I. Good- man will officiate. Rela- tives and friends are asked to attend. Announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory 11:30 a.m. Sun- day, June 19, at Clover Hill- Park Cemetery. Rab- bi Sperka will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. Sophye Janawitz, Mer- ril Janawitz, Shirley Weiss and Betty Swartz, Families of the Late ALLAN B. JANAWITZ Announce the unveiling of a monument in his mem- ory -10:30 a.m. Sunday, June 26, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi M. Lehr- man will officiate. Rela- tives and friends are ask- ed to attend. . The Family of the Late The Family of the Late HYMAN LIFSHITZ Announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory 11 a.m. Sunday, June 19, at Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Rabbi D onin and Cantor Adler will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. . PAULINE GOLDSTEIN Announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory 11:30 a.m. Sun- day, June 26, at Chesed shel Emes Cemetery. Rabbi Segal and Cantor Fenakel will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. sTA-res SAVIN6S BONDS! -1-7) The Family of the Late CLARA ALTMAN The Family of the Late Announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory 12:45 p.m. Sun- day, June 26, at Beth Moses Cemetery, 2711 Ma- sonic Blvd., between 13 and 14 Mile Rds. Rabbi I. Halpern will officiate. Relatives and friends are ,asked to . attend. LOTTIE GOLDSTEIN Announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory 1:15 p.m. Sunday, June 19, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Syme and Cantor Orbach will offi- ciate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend.