a • • ctivities in Society 1 Miss Schwartz-, to Wed al17.Ka 7-p of Louisville Fourteen members of the Detroit-Gold agency of the' Massachu- setts Mutual Life Insurance Co., headed by Ruben Gold, attended the company's eastern regional conference at the Greenbrier, White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. In the group in addition to Gold were Bruce M. Biene- man, Arthur D. Disner, Joseph F. Hirsch, Samuel Kastner, Girard Marcozzi, Henry J. Meurer, Melvin Mogill, Mario Oliverio, Donald W. Runde, CLU, Nicholas P. Scavone, Paul L. Sherizen, Morris I. Silver- man and Melvin Weisz. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Elbinger of Miami Beach were recently honored at a champagne brunch on their 50th wedding anniversary by their children, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Heydt of New York and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Warshaw of Kentucky Ave. Delegates from CARIH's (Children's Asthma Research Institute and Hospital) national network of volunteer auxiliaries will convene next week in Denver to be briefed on the latest developments in treat- ment, techniques and research. Among th 130 chapter representatives to the convention will be Mrs. Morris Burnstein, president of the Detroit Council of Presidents; Mrs. Harry Friedman, president of the Detroit League; and Mrs. Phillip Rosen of the Detroit Junior Chapter. Attending as guests are Dr. Harry Friedman and Mr. and Mrs. Peter Gilbert. A kidush in honor of Marine Sgt. Aaron Blumenfeld, 18480 Wood- ingham, will be held following Sabbath services Saturday at Cong. Beth Yehudah. Sgt. Blumenfeld was honorably discharged from the U.S. Marine Corps July 7 after four years in the United States and overseas. Dr. and Mrs. Herbert Brode of Oxley Rd., Southfield, have left for a month's travel in Europe. Dr. Brode is attending the oral surgery convention in -Englnad. When Arabs Greeted Israeli Soldiers: `Poor Devils Thougl it We Were Iraqi At least once during the Six-Day War the Arabs welcomed the Israeli army with open arms. It was more out of confusion than love, however, writes the son of Detroiters Mr. and Mrs. Fred Growe of Breckenridge Ave., Fern- dale. Dan Gilead, 46, of Kibutz Ha- sorea, wrote of his experiences as an anti-aircraft officer of the re- gional command: "When our tanks broke into the city of Nablus,, which is a keystone of the whole of the western bank, Jordan, the whole populace was out to a man, waving flags and throwing flowers to our troops. "When our men started to dis- arm the male population and sol- diers, they met with reluctant compliance, .which gave way to stupefaction, and in no time the cheering mob disappeared as if by magic. "The poor devils thought our army was a much publicized Iraqi relief force. We just came in by the wrong gate, from the east instead of from the west, where Arab Legionnaires were still peering intently over battle- ments when they were roughly taken by the s c r u f f of their kefiyes and sent back without further ado into POW corrals. "The Iraqis, by the way, very obligingly left every tank, vehicle and rifle all in neat order the moment our f or c es came into binocular range and could be iden- tified as such and scrambled for the far banks of the much be-sung River Jordan." Gilead noted that when he went into Syria to assess captured anti- aircraft equipment and initiate its removal, he found a "well-nigh staggering amount of material, MISS CHERYL SCHWARTZ Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Schwartz of Wakefield Way, Southfield, an- nounce the engagement of their daughter Cheryl Barbara to David W. Karp Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. David Karp of Louisville. Miss Schwartz is a graduate of the University of Michigan and was affiliated with Sigma Delta Tau Sorority. Mr. Karp is a gradu- ate of the University of Michigan and was a member of Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity of the Louisville Medical School An early fall wedding is planned. guns, trucks, tanks and ammuni- tion. . . . It is almost inconceiv- able what a poor and underdevel- oped country like Syria actually wanted to do with this fantastic amount of war material, which was enough to sustain a major power for a very long time. Well, if anything, the Syrians are con- scientious stackers of goods, and although our air force left very little intact that was above ground, there are still vast quantities of goods neatly tucked away in bomb- proof shelters. "The cost of all this, which must approach the billion mark, would easily have paid to convert all the subpoverty hovels, that go for villages in that part of the coun- try, into garden cities". Latvian Jewish Druggist Sought by Son in Midwest Abrams Tuvje Zeba, a Latvian Jewish pharmacist whose last known whereabouts were in Swe- den, is sought by his son, Indikis Ekis of Omaha. Zeba, son of Herman and Lyndia Zeba of Ventspili, Latvia, did work In his own drug stores in Klostere and Aizpute. He escaped from Lat- via to Sweden in June 1941, and then disappeared. Ekis hopes that some Latvian I Jews who migrated to this coun- try may know of his father's whereabouts, although Zeba may have changed his name before leaving Sweden. Ekis said it is be- lieved that his father entered the United States with help from the Quakers, not from United HIAS Service. Persons with information may reach Ekis at PO Box 383, DTS, Omaha, Neb. 68101. MONTREAL (JTA) — Canadian Jewry was on the verge of reach- ing its $25,000,000 goal for the Israel Emergency Fund this week when an additional $1,500,000 was sent to Israel, bringing total con- tributions past the $24,500,00 mark. Toronto was first among Cana- dian Jewish communities with $10,000,000 in contributions. Mon- treal Jewry was a close second. raising $9,300,000. * * * COPENHAGEN (JTA) — Former Danish Prime Minister Viggo Kampman presented to the Emergency Fund for Israel a check for 1,500,000 groner ($210,000). The check was given to Ambassa- dor Esther Herlitz of Israel at a reception. Part of the gift will be used to repair damage to Israeli settle- ments in the June war. The bal- ance will be use to aid Arab refugees in Israeli-held Arab terri- tory. Danish Jews raised a similar amount for the fund. Dr. David Herreshoff, 75 Mc- Lean, Highland Park, assistant professor of English at Wayne State University, and Dr. Jacques L. Salvan, retired professor of French, are the authors of two books published by WSU Press. Dr. Herreshoff's "American Dis- ciples of Marx, From the Age of Jackson to the Progressive Era" traces the activities of the first Marxists in America. Dr. Salvan's "The Scandalous Ghost, Satre's Existentialism as Related to Vitalism, Humanism, Mysticism, Marxism" is a volume of essays relating the philosophy of Sartre to other philosophies as a basic human attitude, making it meaningful to the layman with- out oversimplifying it. THE NEWEST • IN WEDDING • BAR MITZVAH CONFIRMATION AND PARTY ACCESSORIES BY Larry Freedman HATTIE SCHWARTZ Orchestra and Entertainment 356-8563 647-2367 THE NEW NEW Julia Suburban WSU Press Publishes Books by Professors Canadian Jews Near $25 Million for Israel; Danes Match Gift Green-8 Center Only! GREEN-8 OPEN SUNDAY! SHOP 12 TO 5 P.M.! Greenfield/8 Mile Rd. Summer Sale Greatest Ever, Knit ';;14 ■11..1 Sale! Your Choice: ! Arnel Shifts 20 A tremendous array of new summer cool- ers in beautiful prints of all colors. Sizes 8 to 18. All great values! Regularly $70 Imported wool knits in 1, and 2-pc. styles! Just one shown irz green or brown with a touch of iridesence. 8 to 18. NOW 90 Eshkol Welcomes JTA President NOTE: Juliet can be reached from Greenfield as well as 8 Mile during the current road construction work. GREEN-8 OPEN SUNDAY Prime Minister Levi Eshkol welcomes JTA President Robert H. Arnow to his office in Jerusalem. Mrs. Arnow is in center. The prime minister issued an appeal to world Jewry through the JTA for Jewish unity in Israel's support. Juliet Charge Security Charge Michigan Bankard Green-8 ShOpping Center, Greenfield/West 8 Mile Mon., Thurs., Fri. and Sat. til 9 p.m. SHOP SUNDAY .12 TO 5 P.M.