Modern Hotel Rises on Tel Aviv Coast To meet the needs of Israel's rapidly growing tourist industry, the Rassco Israel Corp., in one of its newest projects, is nearing completion of the Park Hotel, a nine-story, 96-room hotel, facing the oceanfront on Tel Aviv's coastline. Scheduled for a spring opening, it will provide all the features of a luxury hotel, in addition to large public halls and meeting rooms. The $2,950,000 hotel was constructed largely through funds obtained through investors in North and South America. Israeli Student Union Is Up in Arms Over Government's Censorship of Organ JERUSALEM (JTA) — An all- out offensive against government censorship of the press was launched here by the Israeli Students Union, which announced that the last issue of its organ, Nitzot (Sparks), was forced to elim- inate a cartoon found offensive by two representatives of Prime Min- ister Levi Eshkol's office. The incident is the second involv- ing government censorship revealed here recently. A week ago, it was discovered that two editors of the illustrated magazine Bul (Stamp) had been secretly tried, convicted, and sentenced to one-year prison terms for publishing material found by the government to have violated the state security law. According to the Students Union, publication of the last is- sue of Nitzot was held up when the editors of the student publica- tion refused to eliminate a car- toon to which the premier's rep- resentatives, Adi Jaffe and Sha- ron Keidam, objected. The issue was finally released Monday, with the cartoon deleted. The lead editorial in the inde- pendent and influential morning daily, Haaretz, criticized the cen- sorship and revealed that even Ha- aretz was censored when it was forbidden to run a story about a meeting of the student union on the cartoon matter. In it leading editorial, Monday, DOR U Haaretz asked: "Is this information also top secret? Is it against the security of the state?" Maariv, the leading evening daily, said that the latest instance of gov- ernment censorship of the press "presents an unwholesome trend" forcing Israeli citizens to complain to the foreign press, asking the latter "to right what they believe is wrong." At the same time, however, Ma- ariv deplored the "stubborn re- fusal" of the student paper to agree to the elimination of the cartoon, and regretted the fact that the students made the affair public. * * * Tel Aviv Journalists Seek Clarity on Secret Trial TEL AVIV (JTA) — The Tel Aviv Journalists Association adopted a resolution Sunday, call- ing on the Israel government to clarify the recent arrest and sen- tencing in secret of the two editors of Bul magazine for publishing information connected with the security of the state. Another resolution adopted at the association's biennial meeting urged vigorous action against the libel law and other restrictions against the press. Friday, March 3, 1967-11 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS People Make News ARTHUR D. SHMARAK h a s been appointed as educational tele- vision studio production coordina- tor for the Oak Park School Dis- trict, it was announced by Dr. Otis M. Dickey, Oak Park super- intendent of schools. Shmarak, son of Mr. and Mrs. A r t h u r Shmarak of Freda Ave., has been with the Detroit Board of Educa- tion's department of educational broadcasting as a producer and director for the past six years. While with that department, he was responsible for training stu- dent crews and on-camera teach- ers, as well as directing and pro- ducing shows. While obtaining his bachelors and masters degrees, he worked at Wayne State Univer- sity television. He holds a BA in mass communication and his mas- ters degree in secondary speech education. Shmarak is married and the father of two children. * * * T h e appoint- ment of Robert A. Corbeil as as- sistant vice presi- dent and assist- ant branch office supervisor of American S a v - ings and Loan Association has been announced by President Al- Corbeil fred L. Deutsch. * * * EMANUEL MARK, director of the Labor Zionist Institute, has joined the staff of the Jewish Wel- fare Federation of Detroit, William Avrunin, execu- tive director, an- nounced. Mark, who will be direc- t; for of the profes- sional division of the Allied Jewish . Campaign, w i II continue to work part-time for the institute until June. A graduate Mark of Roosevelt Uni- versity in Chicago and the Jewish Teachers Seminary in New York, he has done graduate work at Wayne State University. He be- came regional director of the Labor Zionist Organization in 1960. Prior to joining the institute in 1957 he was director of Sholem Aleichem Institute. For 10 years, he has directed the Farband Camp and since 1963 has been director of the landsmanshaft and organization di. vision of the Histadrut Campaign. He is a member of the culture commission of the Jewish Corn- munity Council. Mark resides at 22859 Bellbrook, Southfield. * * * It is better to have loved and lost. SEN. S. H. COHEN, a Labor Than never to have loved at all. Party member in the Australian —Tennyson Senate since 1961, has been elect- ed deputy leader of the opposition in the senate at a federal Labor Party caucus. He is an active mem- BY HENRY LEONARD ber of the Victoria Jewish com- munity. Sen. Cohen is the only Jewish member of the Australian Parliament and his election as deputy leader marks the first oc- casion in more than a generation of a Jew to any kind of leader- ship post in any parliaments, fed- eral or state, in Australia. New Music in Concert of European Selections Resnik, violin; Meyer Shapiro, vi- ola; Albert Tipton, flute; Arno Mariotti, Oboe; Charles Sirard, bas- soon; Arthur Krehbiel, horn; Paul Schaller, clarinet; Alvin Belknap, trumpet; and the pianists Lawrence LaGore and Bernard Katz. Admission is free. Guests are welcome. The annual concert of "European Contemporary Music" under the direction of Marguerite Kozenn Chajes, will take place 8:30 p.m. March 13 at the Friends of the Li- brary Auditorium, Detroit Public Library. Mrs. Kozenn Chajes, who will also act as commentator, has brought new music from Switzer- land, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Ro- mania, Germany and Hungary, all to be performed for the first time in the United States. Among the sponsors of the con- cert are the Detroit Federation of Musicians, Detroit Public Library and Tuesday Musicale. Maria Roumell will be heard in Ernest Bloch's Psalm 114 and in art songs by Franz Mittler. 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FLORIDA COMPLETELY AIR-CONOITIONEO j j,) / TV IN EVERY ROOM ..,-,., ..- Histadrut to Build Hotel Where Offices Were "Ah doctor, If you could only inlect some Yiddishkeit into hien that way1 1, Cop:. 1967, Dayenu Producttons TEL AVIV (JTA) — A longtiine Tel Aviv landmark, the "Red House" of the Histadrut, Israel's labor federation, will be torn down and replaced by a multi-story popu- lar-priced hotel. Yehoshua Levy, head of the His- tadrut Hotel Corp., said 140 rooms would be built in the first stage and 200 rooms later in the second stage. Funds for the project will come from Histadrut and the govern- ment. The Histadrut structure gots its name from its color, which was camouflaged during World War II, and never restored to its full orig- inal red color. 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