26—Friday, April 7, 1967
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Survivors Plan Israel Bond Dinner
Appleman Gets Franklin Series
Lehman Award at WSU to Focus
NEW YORK — Nathan Apple-
man, New York industrialist and
communal leader, has been named
recipient of the Herbert H, Leh-
man Human Relations Award.
Morris B. Abram, president of
the American Jewish Committee,
which sponsors the annual award,
said that Appleman is being
honored as "the person who best
Planning the United Israel Bond champagne dinner-dance, to
be held at the Shaarey Zedek, are representatives of five organiza-
tions, the majority of whose members are former refugees and
survivors of the Nazi holocaust. The groups represented are Shaarit
Haplaytah, Zionist Revisionists of America, United Jewish Social
Club, Workmen's Circle Branch 227 and Radomer Mutual Society.
The affair w ill be held May 20. Representatives of the organizations
planning the champagne dinner-dance, which will celebrate Israel's
19th birthday, are (from left), front row: Jack Waksberg, Mrs.
Leon Popov% ski, Steve Goldin. the chairman; Isaac Engel and
Meyer Silberherg; second row,. Mrs. Henry Fox, Leib Borenstein,
Harry Bow man, Oscar Goldberg and Mrs. Marvin Kozolowski;
third row, Mrs. Joseph Manela, Mrs. Harry Tuchklaper, Mrs. Jerry
Silbert, Kune Greenbaum and Simon Cieck; fourth row, Mrs.
Armand Kain, Carl Carson, Mrs. Andrew Martin, Adolph Roth,
Dr. John Marries and Jack Lipton; last row, Alex Joseph and Hugo
Iczkovitz. Not shown is Max Fridman, co-chairman of the affair.
Detroit Hebrew Teachers' Association
Schedules Annual Dinner on May 8;
Outlines Major Aims to Assist Schools
The Association of Hebrew sponsor the second annual dinner,
Teachers of Metropolitan Detroit. 6:30 p.m. May 8 at Cong. Bnai
in cooperation with the United Ile- Moshe.
brew Schools and Hebrew teachers
Rabbi Charles H. Rosenzveig,
general chairman of the dinner
stated: "This affair will constitute
Odessa Society Plans an important link in a planned
series of events whose goal it is to
Yom Ha-Atzmaut
examine and define the role of
Odessa Progressive Aid Society Jewish education in Jewish life.
will celebrate Israel's 19th year of Similarly, the existing and pro-
statehood at a Yom Ha - Atzmaut jected place and placement of the
gathering 9 p.m. April 15 at Cong. Hebrew teacher within the struc-
Beth Yehudah. Samuel Belkin, a ture of Jewish education require
founder and former president of urgent immediate attention. What
the society, will
is needed most, what can be ac-
be the celebra-
complished fastest, and what will
tion chairman.
produce most fruitful results in
Louis E. Levi-
Jewish education, must become the
tan, director of
provinces of interest and thorough
the Detroit Israel
involvement of the entire Jewish
Bond Organiza-
community."
tion, will be the
guest speaker. A
Detroit publicists ROSS CHAP-
special feature of
MAN, AVRUM SCHULZINGER and
the program, will
MILLI FOX announce the merger
be the showing
of their respective agencies to
of the movie of
Belkin
form public relations services by
David Ben-Gurion's 80th birthday Chapman, Schulzinger and Fox.
celebration. Refreshments will be The trio, all veteran public rela-
served and Israel will be toasted tions figures in the area, have
with Israeli wine. All members established offices at 19200 James
and their friends are welcome.
Couzens.
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
fILD-TIME
baseball great Hank Greenberg tells this
kJ story on himself. Pitcher Dizzy Dean, who had handled
Hank with consummate ease in a previous World Series,
got careless in an all-star
game and fed him his
favorite pitch—a high,
inside, fast ball. Hank
pickled it for a line triple.
Back in the dugout, Man-
ager Frisch fumed, "I
told you not to give
Greenberg a fat pitch
like that." "Shucks," ex-
plained Dizzy Dean, "I
jes' got curious. I was
beginning to think he
couldn't hit nuthin'!"
•
•
•
There's a challenging item
buried in the text of this
year's report by the Georgia Game and Fish Commission. It
reads, "One of our hunters was shot, though not seriously, this
spring when another hunter mistook him for a squirrel."
•
•
•
It takes a lot to upset a true English cockney lady these days.
Consider the one who didn't budge one inch out of the way when
a full grown lion, escaped from the zoo, tore past her one morn-
ing. As it disappeared around the corner, she remarked calmly
to a friend, "Blimey, you don't see many of THEM about nowa-
days!"
C 1967. by Bennett Cert. Distributed by King Features Syndicate
-
NATHAN APPLEMAN
exemplifies those creative achieve.
ments that characterized Herbert
H. Lehman's outstanding career of
public service."
Presentation of the award will
be made at a dinner April 20 at
Americana H o t e 1, New York.
Governor George M. Romney of
Michigan will make the keynote
address. He will be introduced by
Senator Jacob K. Javits (R-NY).
Serving as co-chairmen for the
dinner are two former presidents
of the Federation of Jewish Philan-
thropies of New York, Gustave L.
Levy and Salim L. Lewis. Chair-
man of the national sponsoring
committee is Max M. Fisher of
Detroit, national general chairman
of the United Jewish Appeal.
The tribute to Appleman marks
the highpoint of the Appeal for
Human Relations' 1967 campaign
which seeks $5,800,000. The appeal
is the fund-raising arm of the
American Jewish Committee.
Jewish Draftees
Get Deferments
During Passover
The National Jewish Welfare
Board's commission on Jewish
chaplaincy has received an official
communication from Gen. Lewis
B. Hershey, director of the Selec-
tive Service System, announcing
that all draft boards have been re-
quested to give "favorable consid-
eration, wherever possible," to re-
quests of registrants of the Jewish
faith for postponements of physi-
cal examination or induction into
the Armed Forces during Pass-
over.
This communication, addressed
to Rabbi Selwyn D. Ruslander,
Dayton, 0., chairman of the JWB
chaplaincy commission, was Selec-
tive Service Operations Bulletin
No. 81, amended as of June 30,
1966, entitled "Jewish Holy Days."
The bulletin gives Jewish regis-
trants scheduled for physical ex-
amination or induction between
sundown April 24 and sundown
May 2 the right to request defer-
ment until after Passover. Re-
quests for such deferment should
be made directly to local draft
boards.
JWB is the agency accredited
by the Department of Defense to
serve the religious, morale and
welfare needs of Jewish military
personnel and their dependents in
the U. S. Armed Forces and in
Veterans Administration hospitals.
It is a member agency of USO.
Passover begins at sundown
April 24 and continues through
sundown of May 2.
Classified Ads Get Quick Results
Sngagements
on Communism
"The Future of Communism in
Europe" will be the subject of
the annual Leo M. Franklin Mem-
orial Lectures at Wayne State Uni-
versity, to begin 8:30 p.m. April 17
in the DeRoy Auditorium at WSU.
Kenneth Devlin, senior analyst,
department of research and analys-
is for Radio Free Europe in Mu-
nich, will be the first speaker
April 17.
Michael B. Petrovich, professor
of history at the University of
Wisconsin, will discuss " The Sig-
nificance of the Yugoslav 'Here-
sy'" on April 24; Gregory Gross-
man, professor of economics at
the University of California at
Berkeley, will speak on "Economic
Reforms: The Interplay of Poli-
tics and Economics" May 1; and
Arnold Horelick, senior analyst
in the social science department
for the RAND Corp. in Santa Mon-
ica, will deliver a prognosis on
"Party and Society in the USSR"
May 8.
The concluding lecture will be
"The Prospects for Communism in
Europe," delivered by R. V. Burks,
professor of history at Wayne
State University, May 15.
The Leo M. Franklin Memorial
Lectures in Human Relations were
established at Wayne State in 1958
by Temple Beth El, as a way of
honoring the name of Rabbi Frank-
lin, a pioneer in the field of
improved relations among men of
diverse creeds and races.
Vladimiritzer Meeting Set
Vladimiritzer Emergency Relief
Organization will hold a social
meeting 8 p.m. Tuesday at Cong.
Beth Joseph. Friends are invited,
according to Samuel A. Kayne,
president.
FRANK PAUL
Dr. Gordon Appointed
Einstein College Dean
Dr. Harry H. Gordon has been
named dean of Einstein College of
Medicine of Yeshiva University.
Dr. Gordon is the brother of
Mrs. Morris (Leah) Bernstein of
Detroit. He is the son of late Rabbi
Samuel Gordon of Tarrytown, N.Y.
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Classified Ads Get Quick Results
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