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July 28, 1967 - Image 21

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1967-07-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

People Make News

Dr. Herman Dicker, former U.S.
army chaplain, has been appointed
director of research of the joint
Distribution Cominittee, it was an-
!minced by Louis Broido, JDC
chairman. As JDC
director of re-
sear c h, Dr.
Dicker will ana-
lyze reports on
the agency's op-
erations and
maintain current
statistical records
of JDC's global
health and wel-
fare programs.
JDC provides
wide range of Dicker
services for close to 400,000 needy
Jews in some 30 countries around
the world with funds from the
United Jewish AppeaL
* * *
Dr. ALBERT SABIN, famed vi-
rologist and discoverer of the oral
polio vaccine, arrived in Buenos
Aires for an 11-day visit as the
guest of the Jewish-Argentine Insti-
tute for Culture and Information.
Sabin arrived from Sao Paulo
where he received the State of Sao
Paulo Award for Meritorious Serv-
ice.

• •
Consul-G ener a 1 YISSAKHAR
BEN-YAACOV of Israel was re-
ceived last weekend by John Cardi-
nal Krol in Philadelphia. The meet-
ing followed the prelate's return
from Rome where he had re-
ceived his red hat. Ben-Yaacov
presented Cardinal Krol with a
Hebrew Bible printed in Jerusalem
and received, in turn, a medallion
commemorating the visit of Pope
Paul VI to the United Nations in
1965.
• • •
LEONARD G. ROSE, executive
vice president of Creditors Service,
Inc., was awarded membership in
the International Fellowship of
Certified Collectors at the 28th
annual convention of the American
Collectors Association in Minnea-
polis.
• • •
Chaplain GERRY J. ROSEN-
BERG has arrived in Saigon to
serve as Jewish chaplain of the
U. S. Military Ad•isory Command
in Vietnam, it was announced by
Rabbi Selwyn D. Ruslander, chair-
man of the National Jewish Wel-
fare Board commission on Jewish
chaplaincy. Chaplain Rosenberg
replaced Chaplain Alan M. Green-
span, who has been reassigned as
Jewish chaplain at Fort Dix, N.J.
• • •
MRS. SAMUEL TICK, of River-
dale, N.Y., has been elected na-
tional president of Brandeis Uni-
versity National Women's Com-
mittee.

a

DOOM

SANDER LEVIN, a former Oak
land County Democratic chairman
and a Democratic leader in the
State Senate, is being considered
a good choice of his party for
lieutenant governor, it was re-
ported by Tom Shawver, Free
Press politics writer, Sunday.
• • •
CLARA LEFF, former national
president of Pioneer Women, the
women's labor Zionist organiza-
tion of America, left July 26 on
a special three-week mission to
Israel.
• • •
Dr. ALBERT SABIN, the Ameri-
can Jewish scientist and discoverer
of the oral polio vaccine, was re-
ceived by Gen. Juan Carlos On-
gania, the president of Argentina.
Dr. Sabin is visiting Argentina as
the guest of the Argentina Jewish
Institute for Culture and Informa-
tion. The scientist was also re-
ceived by Mayor Eugenio Schettini
of Buenos Aires and participated
in a 90-minute television panel
show with Argentina's most distin-
guished physicians.
a • •
Rabbi PYNCHAS BRENER of
New York has been named the
new chief rabbi of the 15,000-
member Ashkenazi Jewish com-
munity of Caracas. Rabbi Brener,
who is spiritual leader of the
Holliswood Jewish Center in Hol-
liswood, was raised in Peru where
his father served as chief rabbi.
As spiritual leader of the Union
Israelite of Caracas, Rabbi Brener
will head a congregation of more
than 1,200 members and a Jewish
day school educating more than
1,000 children.
• • •
Two John F. Kennedy Memorial
Scholarships were awarded Sunday
to doctoral students at the Fein-
berg Graduate School of the Weiz-
mann Institute of Science in a
ceremony which took place in the
Ullmann Institute of Life Sciences
in Rehovoth • Israel. The recipients
were DAVID CHEN, who is work-
ing the biophysics department, and
JOSEPH HAIMOVICH, who is
working in the chemical Immun-
ology section.

Most Brandeis Graduates
to Continue Their Studies

WALTHAM, Mass.—More than
50 per cent of Brandeis Univer-
sity's 365 graduates who received
degrees in June will continue their
studies at graduate and profes-
sional schools throughout the Unit-
ed States and in Europe.
Of the 329 graduates responding
to a recent survey conducted by
Brandeis, 84 per cent of the men
and 52 per cent of the women in-
dicated immediate plans to pursue
advanced degree programs.

BY HENRY LEONARD

320,000 of 380,000
of Gaza Refugees
Were Relief Cases

JERUSALEM (JTA) — The Eco-
nomic Planning Authority Tuesday
released the results of a study of
the Gaza Strip that revealed that
when Israel took over the territory
in June, 320,000 were unemployed
and dependent on relief.
The authority said the population
of the 200-square mile area was
380,000. of whom 270,000 were
refugees. The Egyptians had put
the refugee total at more than
300,000. All the refugees were
without jobs. An additional 50,000
of the permanent population of the
area were also jobless and on re-
lief.
The authority estimated that per
capita annual income was $125,
compared to about twice that of
the population on the West Bank,
and about one-tenth of the Israeli
per capita income.
The report noted that the only
modern industry in the Strip was
a plant producing citrus products.
It employed 80 workers. Residents
of the Strip were not admitted to
Egypt without special permits. The
authority reported that the Sinai
Peninsula, an area of 37,000 square
miles, had a population of only
130,000.

Friday, July 28, 1967-21

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Jones Post Presents Flag to Federation Offices

A new flag for the Fred M. But-
zel Memorial Building was pre-
sented to the Jewish Welfare Fed-
eration of Detroit by leaders of
the Lawrence H. Jones Post, Jew-
ish War Veterans, in a ceremony at
the Federation offices. A. Arnold
Agree, chairman of the Butzel
Building management committee,
and William Avrunin, Federation
executive director, received the
flag from Joseph Jones, com-
mander of the Jones Post and
former Detroit Districts com-
mander of the American Legion.
Others in the JWV Jones Post
delegation were Dr. Arthur Brown

and Harry Nathan, past com-
manders; and Louis Weingarden,
quartermaster.
Mrs. Samuel Chapin, manager of
the Butzel Building, and Walter E.
Klein, director of the Jewish Com-
munity Council, were also at the
presentation.

For the HY Spot
Of Your Affair
Musk by

Hy Herman

And Ms

Orchestra

(Hy Utchenik)

• Distinctive Ceremonies

a sp•chotyl
342-9424

8th Maccabia Games
to Be in Jerusalem

a

meeting in Jerusalem the
At
Maccabi World Union Executive
decided that some of the events
of the. eighth Maccabia Games
will be held in newly-united
Jerusalem.
Jerusalem has never before
played host to the Maccabiah
Games, the world's largest all-
Jewish sports competition. Major
events of the Seventh Maccabia
Games, in 1965, were held in
Ramat Gan, just outside Tel Aviv.
The eighth Maccabia games are
set for 1969.

THE NEWEST

IN WE DOING • BAR MITZVAH
CONFIRMATION AND PARTY

4

,

HAT TIE

SCHWARTZ

356-8563

************************************;;
GREEN-8 OPEN SUNDAY !*
41 ( THE NEW
*
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Green-8 Center Only! SHOP 12 TO 5 P.M.! *
Greenfield/8 Mile Rd.
tr •
*
-ir
*
Suburban
9

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let

II

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4c
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• i-/ Month End

%

Dress
Clearance!

4(

+:
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4( 4(

EVERY
Labeled
I Summer
Dress
t0;11

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Now
Off and
ri: More

*

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4c

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Sunday *

JulY

30th!

4 . 4ii 1/2

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•:,..A.10 -,
(/)--,k.
, -,,41.,_-•
vtrile 1 -1

*

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NOTE: Juliet can
be reached from
Greenfield as well

as 8 Mile during

the current road

*

*-

*

construction work.

*
*

4(

-4(

*

*
*
*
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le,b i l Su nda y
-irviti

*
*

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Dress
Shown teas
$140
A Now $58
i l

4

4r

*

*

401
v.

*
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(

-ic

*
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GREEN-8 OPEN SUNDAY

Juliet Charge
Security Charge
Michigan Bankard

Green-8 Shopping Center, Greenfield/West 8 Mile
Mon., Thurs., Fri. and Sat. tit 9 p.m.

SHOP SUNDAY 12 TO 5 P.M.

*

*

*
,L.

7 i. -

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