THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

People Make News

The National Council for Excep-
tional Children in Washington an-
nounced the appointment of State
Senator SANDER M. LEVIN, (D-
Berkley), as a member of an
advisory committee of the council.
Levin has been serving as chair-
man of a Senate subcommittee on
special education which was creat-
ed in October 1965. The 12-
man Advisory Committee w ill
begin shortly a study of legislation
in the 50 states relating to handi-
capped children. It will hold its
first meeting at a two day con-
ference in Washington.
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Vice President HUBERT HUM-
PHREY will be the guest of honor
and principal speaker at a Demo-
cratic harvest dinner Oct. 6 at
Cobo Hall. Sponsor of the $100-a-
couple dinner, the major fund-
raising event of the 1966 cam-
paign is the Michigan Democratic
Party. Co-chairmen of the dinner
are George M. Zeltzer, vice presi-
dent of American Savings and
Loan Association, and William G.
Burgett, director of organization,
Michigan Democratic Party.
* *
President Johnson has named
BARRY BRUCE R. JACOBS, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel D. Jacobs,
19245 Parkside, as a Foreign Serv-
ice Officer of the United States.
Jacobs received this appointment
after successfully completing the
highly competitive written and oral
examinations. Within a few weeks.
Jacobs will be assigned to a posi-
tion with an embassy or consulate
in one of the 113 countries with
which the United States maintains
diplomatic relations or with the
Department of State in Washing-
ton. Jacobs graduated from the
Milford School in Milford, Conn.,
and received his BA from the
University of Michigan.
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Jack A. Goldfarb, prominent
business, philanthropic and com-
munal leader, has
been named the
recipient of the
1966 Herbert H.
Lehman Human
Relations Award
of the American
Jewish Commit-
tee, as "the per-
son who best ex-
emplifies those
creative achieve-
ments that char-
acterized Herbert
H. Lehman's out-
standing career
of public serv-
ice." Presentation
of the Award will
be made at a tes-
timonial dinner Goldfarb
with Irving Mitchell Felt as chair-
man.

Former Detroit doctor and teach-
er Dr. S. E. GOULD, has been
appointed by the National Re-
search Council as chief of research
in pathology for the Atomic Bomb
Casualty Commission in Hiro-
shima, Japan. Currently visiting
professor of pathology at the Uni-
versity
of Miami School of Medi-
.
eine, Dr. Gould also is professor
emeritus of pathology of Wayne
State University and was director
of pathology at Wayne County
General Hospital from 1932 to 1963.

YEHUDA GOLDENBERG of Tel
Aviv has been appointed director
of Aliya and economic affairs de-
partment of the Zionist Organiza-
tion of America.
* *
Technion, Israel Institute of
Technology, announces the ap-
pointment, by the board of gov-
ernors, of Prof. PINHAS NAOR
as senior vice president, and of
Prof. ELISHA SHKLARSKY as
vice president for academic af-
fairs. The period of appointment
is for one year.

Dr. ARNULF M. PINS, con-
sultant to the Task Force of the
National Jewish Welfare Board on
Jewish Community Center Func-
tions and Programing, has been
appointed eexcutive director of the
Council on Social Work Education.

* * *

LOD, Israel—Construction began
here this week on the Zale Voca-
tional High School, established by
a $490,000 gift to
the Israel' Educa-
tion Fund of the
United Jewish
Appeal by the
Zale Foundation
and Jacob Feld-
man of Dallas.
The Zale Foun-
dation is the phil-
anthropic arm of
the Zale Jewelry
Co. Morris B.
Zale heads both
the company and
t h e foundation.
Mr. and Mrs. Wil-
liam Zale of Dal-
1 a s represented
the donors at
groundbreaking
Zale
ceremonies in the
city hall of this growing immigrant
development town, site of Israel's
international airport. Mayor Itz-
kovitch of Lod, officiating, predict-
ed the Zale School would be the
single most important factor in
turning this former Arab village
into a key Israeli communications
center.

FRITZ SAENGER, Social Demo-
cratic member of the Bundestag
and a member of the foreign policy
committee of the lower house of
the West German parliament, will

Guardian Opens Oak Park Branch

pay a 10-day visit to Israel next
month at the invitation of the Israel
government. Saenger is known as
a friend of Israel, and he has con-
siderable influence in the formu-
lation of Bonn's foreign policy.

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Friday, September 30, 1966-27

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Saiwh Dorf Betrothed
to Louis R. Brown

:Fine Jewelry and Gifts •
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Keidan Lodge of Bnai Brith, was
honored by the lodge, which
planted 10 trees in his name in the
Martyrs Forest, Israel. Crokett
provided legal representation to
Mississippi Negroes whose civil
rights were being violated; and he
enlisted the aid of other Northern
lawyers for that purpose.

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Dr. ISRAEL GOLDSTEIN, rabbi
emeritus of Congregation Bnai
Jeshurun, New York, was elected
to his 37th term as president of
the Jewish Conciliation Board of
A m e r i c a. Also reelected were:
Charles Frost, Dr. Leo Jung, Dr.
Julius Mark and Judge Jacob Pan-
ken, vice presidents; William
Sachs, treasurer; Jacob Goodman,
associate treasurer; and Ruth Rich-
man, executive director.

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GEORGE W. CROCKETT JR.,
who recently addressed Harry B.

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MISS SARAH DORF

Pyrex COFFEE

CARAFE

A beautiful gift

Trimmed in antique

style silver . . .

Fourteen inches high .

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Mr. and Mrs. Louis Dorf of
Westhampton Rd., Southfield, an-
nounce the engagement of their
daughter Sarah Elaine to Louis
Reuben Brown, son of Mrs. Esther
Brown of Whitney Ave.
The bride-elect and her fiance
Dr. BARUCH GIVONI, research attend Wayne State University's
Just E. of Demery's-644-7626
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associate in the Building Research college of education and are plan- • •
Thurs. & Fri. to 9 p.m.
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Station of the Technion, Israel In- ning a June 18 wedding.
4000•01104110011110111001b11•1111,011k.
stitute of Technology. has been ap-
pointed to the Expert Advisory
Panel on Environment Health of
the World Health Organization, in
Geneva, for a period of five years.
* * *
GABRIEL ENDE, son of Rabbi
and Mrs. George Ende of Queens,
New York, has been elected presi-
dent of the Student Zionist Organi-
zation. Ende, a 21-year-old senior
at Queens College and the Jewish
Theological Seminary, will head
SZO which conducts educational
cultural and social activities on
more than 150 college campuses
in the United States and Canada.
* * *
RABBI LEON FEUER, veteran
Zionist, was co-opted as a member
of the Jewish Agency Executive.
as representative of the Reform
Rabinate in the United States.
Rabbi Feuer was for many years
a close associate of Rabbi Abba
OUR HARD-SURFACE FLOOR COVERINGS
Hillel Silver and Dr. Emanuel
ARE A BIG HIT, TOO!
Neumann.
* * *
You'll love the elegant color combinations and
SAMUEL D. LE1DESDORF, a
variety of custom stylings that our fine hard-
prominent American Jewish lead-
surface , wide-width floor coverings will offer
er, was honored by New York
University Sunday on the occas-
you. You'll like the prices, too. Just right for
ion of his 85th birthday. Leides-
your fall home redecoration. Come see!
dorf, who is chairman of the board
of the NYU Medical Center, is a
EXPERT COLOR-COORDINATION ADVICE
past president of the Federation
of Jewish Philanthropies of New
York, and has been very active
in the United Jewish Appeal, the
Joint Distribution Committee and
numerous other Jewish philan-
thropic endeavors.

FLOOR

COVERING CO.

Life is but a day at most.—
Burns.
0 life! thou art a galling load
18245 W. 8 MILE (Just W. of Southfield)
KE 5-1000
Along a rough, a weary road.
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president of Guardian.

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10-CUP CAPACITY
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reg. $16.95
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at Morrey's
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283 HAMILTON, BIRMINGHAM •
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stands on warmer . . .

Size Li in 5727 . . .

A red-letter day for Guardian Savings was the ground-breaking
ceremony for its new Northland office at 22180 Greenfield, just
south of Nine Mile Rd. The Oak Park branch will occupy 4,000
square feet and will replace a temporary trailer office now at
that site. It is scheduled to oven in January. Attending the cere-
/molly were (from left) Alert Colburn, Oak Park councilman; Joe
Forbes, Oak Park mayor; Edward Siegal, vice president of Guardian;
Joseph R. Leeman, Guardian chairman of the board; Philip M.
Fisher, Guardian treasurer; Mary Rosen, vice president and branch
manager of the new Northland office; and Philmore A. Leeman,

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Classes are now being held 12:30 p.m., Thurs-
days, at the Northland Community Concourse
and 7:30 p.m., Tuesdays, at Sholem Aleichem
Institute.

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