Ribicoff to Address Yeshiva Dinner June 21 Senator Abraham A. Ribicoff (D.-Conn.) will be principal speak- er at the 12th annual dinner of Detroit Friends of Yeshiva Uni- versity, Wednesday at the Shera- ton-Cadillac Hotel. Sponsored by a committee of more than 80 business and civic leaders, the dinner will honor Dan- iel A. Laven who will receive the Laven Ribicoff Yeshiva Uni ■ el. sity Distinguished Service Award. presented annually to civic leaders in the nation most outstanding in aiding the Univer- sity's scholarship program. Alfred A. May is dinner chair. man with Nathan Fishman and Dr. Jacob E. Goldman as co-chairmen. David Goldberg is treasurer, and Nathan I. Goldin. secretary. Senator Ribicoff is chairman of the government operations sub- committee on executive reorgani- zation and a member of the Senate finance committee. In the past year he has been prominent in conduct- ing hearings on urban problems and traffic safety. Laven is a member of the gov- erning boards of the Jewish Wel- fare Federation and the Jewish Home for the Aged, and has serv- ed as board chairman of Sinai Hospital. Ile is the president of Central Heating Co. Honorary chairmen of the din- ner. are Abraham Borman, Tom Borman. Louis M. Elliman, Max M. Fisher. Irwin Green. Morris Ear- bal, Hon. Nathan J. Kaufman. Ed- ward C. Levy. John E. Lurie. Philip Slomovitz. Max Stollman and Phillip Stollman. Nathan Freed- land is chairman of the scholar- ship committee. Serving as chair- man of the dinner executive com- mittee is Rabbi Hayim Donin of Congregation Bnai David. hiva University volunteered for ful that hundreds of Yeshiva Uni- service in Israel at the outbreak versity alumni have been in Israel since the creation of the State, of the Arab attack. 'More than 100 were able to de- working in professions and indus- tries, and that the first American part and are now in Israel working in factories and on the land. Many to die in the War for Independence more are planning to go to share in 1948, Moshe A. Pearlstein, was an alumnus. in the rehabilitation work ahead. '-Close ties exist between Yes- "First news of the attack evoked an overwhelming spon• , hiva University and educational centers in Israel, including an ex- taneous response from every section of the University's five change program whereby faculty members and thousands of stu- undergraduate and nine gradu- ate schools. Students and faculty dents have spent a year at coun- joined in assembling outside the terpart schools in both countries. United Nations. Girls from Stern Yeshiva University's Wurzweiler College for Women took pushkes School of Social Work was instru- mental in founding Israel's first into the streets and raised more than 527,000 in less than two school of social work at Bar Ilan days. Doctors, nurses, and stu- University. Yeshiva University hoard mem- dents at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Hospital volun- bers and other lay leaders were the first and greatest contributors teered to emplane for Israel as a to the current UJA appeal: Among medical brigade. The university's vice president of science and them are: Charles C. Bassine, $1,000,000; Jack D. Weiler, medical affairs, Dr. Marcus D. Kogel, has granted leave of ab- S1,000.000: Joseph Lubin, $500,000; Charles Revson, $500,000; and sence to all medical staff mem- bers wishing to serve in Israel. many others in sums ranging from $100,000 to $250,000. They acted, The surgeon general of the Is- raeli Army is an alumnus of as one of them said, in the knowl- edge that "helping Israel helps Yeshiva University, as are Yeshiva University. helping Yes- several members of his staff. "Students were especially mind- hiva University helps Israel. DAYENU BY HENRY LEONARD JEWISH ;416-TORY CHART . ilill tUalnit Z(01•1 Ottuit vituu J' •utlio -nattnitlItil •PE-CZR Utlf014 OF TEMPLE Ulttil WM .1117 Ill CIII 7,. 1 r • 9ot6YWKIIM-1 EXILE 5470 cc • DEST0.00NC*1 Of Inuit 70 C.E. . • ■ Itillf Le at( ( t`t Cita la & a SPANISH 040.015 RION 1491'4 1101“ • [Ill 0 (Wittltfil eLa•••• ■■ •• 11 ft It 1.rli VI GI L L • • •• • • •. 1 .10 . • • CRMIELNICkl MASSACRE 1L41 Ce • KiEV POGROMS (Silt • HITLERAIM . • (934 •NASSER1SM CRISIS 110( .1tUilicil IL i• 10 Cu ru • I 151.1,.--.0 - Pioneer Stiegel Glass Wo r k in a Paperback That American glass is, today, highly prized for its beauty and artistry is no mere accident of history. In a long, unbroken line stretching from Stiegel to Libby, fine c r aft s m en have labored against seemingly insurmountable odds (a lack of public patronage, poor pot-clay, a shortage of work- ers, etc.) to fashion an industry equal to those of the finest in Europe. Until the turn of the century, however, critics and collectors were surprisingly apathetic to American glass. As late as 1900, only one book existed on the sub- ject: at that time, too, the wares of "Baron" Henry William Stiegel (1729-1785), one of the most famous of all American glass-makers, were virtually unknown. That this extra- ordinary craftsman was finally hailed for his artistry is largely due to the efforts of pioneer his- torian Frederick William Hunter, in his 1914 work "Stiegel Glass." The book ranges over Stiegel's life, his work and the whole ques- tion of glass-making in Colonial America — techniques, types, fac- News Brevities In November. McGraw-Hill will publish the fourth novel by a young Israeli author, Miss Yael Dayan. Her hook, DEATH HAD TWO SONS. is a story set in contempor- ary Israel and tells how Haim Kal- insky. a man who was forced by the Nazis to choose between his two sons—one to live, the other to die—is reunited with his son, Dan- iel.the one he had rejected. Yael Dayan, an officer in the Israeli Army reserves, was to leave for Vietnam recently, where she was to work as a reporter for an Israeli evening newspaper. She changed her plans and departed for Greece, immediately following the overthrow of the government by military forces there, but was only in Athens a short time when the rapid flare-up of the Israeli- Arab conflict decided her to return to her native country. She re-enlist- ed in the Israeli army. Her father, Gen. Moshe Dayan, is the Com- More than 30 alumni of the mander-in-Chief of the Israeli University are residents in the Army and the recently named Min- Detroit community as rabbis, edu- ister of Defense. cators, social work professionals. * physicians, scientists, and mem- "Doctor in the House." a play bers of various industries. by Ted Willis. from the novel by In a statement to The Jewish Richard Gordon, will be given by News this week. Max J. Etra, the SOUTHFIELD COMMUNITY chairman of Yeshiva University PLAYERS 8:30 p.m. June 30 and board of trustees, pointed out: July 1 at the Southfield Civic Cen- "More than 300 students of Yes- ter. to I , • f i , and we still survived!" THE COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE EXCHANGORS will offer an all-day session on the "Theory and Practice of Exchanging Real Estate" 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, at the Whittier Hotel. Goldie Levinstein, certified real estate exchangor will be instructor. In- terested brokers and salesmen are invited to participate. For informa- tion call Miss Levinstein, VA 2-9000. * ♦ JOCELYN AND HER GYPSIES Authentic Gypsy Orchestra Strolling Violins, Floor Show, Concerts GR 4-7638 Wayne State University Press has just issued a volume dealing with "occupational therapy in milieu." Lela A. Llorens and Eli Z. Rubin are the authors of "Develop- ing EGO Functions in Disturbed Children." The authors, who are associated with the Lafayette Clinic and Wayne State University, evaluate group activity programs as well as individual programs. Treatment data is illustrated with charts which will prove most valuable to student of the disturbed chil- dren's problem. 19th century leader of Italian independ- ence, was one of the first Jews to serve in the first Italian Parlia- ment, Max Schrut For Good Photographs and Prompt Service Call Me at BLAIR STUDIO Weddings — Bar Mitzvahs We Come to Your Horne With Samples UN 4 6845 TY 5-8805 - e.. at ihe 141 '1 1 A• $ C./ O/1 hi puce k l rAt 3 \ 01 tary School. S. Y. Agnon, 78-year-old Israeli author quietly but firmly asserting his determination to return to his homeland "even if I knew I would be greeted by all the cannon fire in the world," was accorded an emotional tribute, June 7, by more than 1,000 students, faculty, offi- cials and trustees of Yeshiva Uni- versity, New York. Dr. Samuel Belkin, the Univer- sity's president, presented the Nobel Prize-winning author with an honorary Doctor of Hebrew Letters degree, and stirred a pro- longed burst of applause when he urged him to "convey our prayers to our brothers in Israel for peace." The throng at the University s Nathan Lamport Auditorium, in Manhattan, also rose in ovation as Belkin expressed the hope that "Jerusalem will never again be taken." Early Parliamentarian Allesandro d'Ancona, a ORCH ESTRA Registration is at the Reading Center of the Stevenson Elemen- Yeshiva University Lauds S. Y. Agnon tory sites, etc. The biographical section explains away a lot of myths associated with the German- born artisan, including his claim to nobility. The book was published by Dover Publications (180 Varick, N.Y. 14). CALL: LI 7-0896 or LI 5-2737 Southfield will include speech correction for pre-school children in its summer school program beginning June 26 at Birney Junior High. Regular elementary and high school classes will be offered. Disturbed Children's Problem Viewed by Two Authors in WSU Volume THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 22—Friday, June 16, 1967 „orwr, 41/050111 I tt7:9• ■ 4 1 4,11 Norman Allan & Co. 17540 WYOMING . TEL. 341-1330 . THUR., FRI. TIL 9. EXPECTING OUT OF TOWN GUESTS FOR A WEDDING OR A BAR MITZVAH? Cranbrook House Motel Is C iently Located at 20500 JAMES COUZENS (8 Mile & Greenfield—Across from Northland) Coll 342-3000 For the Finest Accommodations! 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