Dramatic Tel Aviv Hilton Story Tells About Notables and Events Describing the Hilton Drama during the first days of the war, Miss Ruth Bach of the Tel Aviv Hilton showed how the Tel Aviv luxurious hotel was speedily trans- formed into a war correspondents' headquarters. She mentioned many of the notables who came to the Tel Aviv Hilton, how the upper floors were vacated and the lower were used to capacity and how the dining rooms were reduced to snack bars where services were continued without interruption. Miss Bach stated in her report: "On June 5 at 8 a.m. the first air-raid alarm was sounded. On that day guests and staff moved into and out of the shelter no less than 8 times, including 3 times during the night. "As soon as the alarm was sounded in the city, guests were re- quested over the hotel's loud- speakers to proceed to the shelter. Elevators and electricity were shut off, but on every floor staff mem- bers with flashlights led the guests by the service stairs down to the shelter. There was no panic at any time and everything went off smoothly. "The shelter was buzzing with activity: journalists and photog- raphers were interviewing and shooting the people assembled there—guests as well as staff. Com- mentators of the major TV and radio networks were holding on to the specially installed telephones and shouted their reports overseas —everybody trying to get ahead of h i s competitors in dispatching newsworthy items as fast as they came in. "Many distinguished visitors converged on the Hilton shelter: Mr. and Mrs. James Tate, Mayor of Philadelphia, paid a surprise good-will visit to Tel Aviv and brought greetings of support support from Philadelphia, Tel Aviv's twin city. The Ambassa- dors of Britain and Brazil with their wives had moved to the Hilton shortly before the war broke out. Barons Edmond and Allan de Rothschild with a French Parliamentary Delega- tion of about 20 VIPs arrived from Paris and found them- selves in the shelter shortly after checking into the hoteL "Among the important press and TV personalities at the Hilton were Charles Collingwood and Mike Wallace of CBS, Saul Bellow (author of the best-seller Herzog), Winston Churchill of News of the World (grandson of the late Sir Winston Churchill), Charles Doug- las Home of the London Times (son of former British Conserva- tive Prime Minister Sir Alec Doug- las Home), Sidney Gruson, For- eign Editor of the New York Times, Cornell Capa, well-known Life photographer, and many others representing all the major radio and TV networks, news- papers and magazines. "Also staying at the Hilton were several foreign guests of the min- istry of tourism who had come to confer on plans to build an Inter- national Youth City in Israel. One of them was Richard Haims- ton, a Canadian, secretary-general of the International Student Move- ment for the United Nations. An- other member of the Delegation was British Member of Parliament (Labor) Frank Judd. "An American Peace Corps physician came to volunteer his services to help Israeli doctors. He and his wife had come to Israel for reunion with their parents of Detroit who had ar- rive a week before the war as tourists. I would be glad to help out, but I do not think my pro- fession is particularly useful just now . . . I am in the elec- tric sign business . . . he told us while sitting in the carefully blacked-out Hilton bar. "The bar became the meeting place for press, TV and radio peo- ple, high ranking Israeli officers and other VIPs. Reports from the various fronts were discussed, unbelievable stories told, political discussions heiu and predictions made. It all seemed like a dream, some of it like a nightmare. "Commanders, Generals (includ- ing General Odd Bull, head of the UN Truce Supervision Organiza- tion) and other important military personnel went in and out of the hotel lending additional 'glamor' to the Hilton during these days." Miss Bach made this interesting comment: "The client we missed is Ahmed Shukeiry, head of the Arab Palestine Liberation Army who one day before the war told the manager of the Ambassador Hotel in the Old City of Jerusalem: Next week we will be staying at the Tel Aviv Hilton !" He was promoted to assistant pro- fessor in 1955, associate professor in 1959, and professor in 1966. He also served as acting chairman of the mathematics department in 1959-60. In his new post, Raimi succeeds Prof. Morton Kaplon, chairman of the department of physics and as- tronomy. Raimi currently serves as sec- retary of the faculty senate. From 1964-66 he was chairman of the senate's subcommittee on academic honesty. Out of his work on this committee came an essay on col- lege cheating which was published! in Harper's Magazine last May. A native of Detroit, Raimi holds BS, MS and PhD degrees from the University of Michigan. He held a Fulbright scholarship for graduate study in France in 1959- 1960 and a postdoctoral fellowship from the University of Michigan in 1955-56. Dr. Raimi is a member of the American Mathematical Society, Mathematical Association of Amer- ica, American Association of Uni- versity Professors and the Council for Basic Education. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Raimi, 3361 Sherhourne. Sonya, his wife, is the daughter of .04 Her report gave credit for per- forming most difficult tasks to Hilton Resident Manager G. Gero- detti and to the executive chef from Switzerland, Marcel Roth. ;ft # ,4 4 6 h1/4. jilt" Dr. and Mrs. Robert S. Drews of Broadstreet Blvd. He and his wife and two daughters, Jessica and Diana, live at 46 Glen Ellyn Way, Brighton, a suburb of Rochester, N. Y. ABNER WOLF has resigned from the board of directors of Allied Supermarkets and has mov- ed to Florida. The Board of Directors of Bank of the Commonwealth has named E. C. A. FORSBERG as vice presi- dent of installment loan division. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, August 4, 1967-19 THE NEWEST IN WEDDING • BAR MITZVAH CONFIRMATION AND PARTY ACCESSORIES BY HATTIE SCHWARTZ 356-8563 CiCa.K0,14:1 N.1 &44, 441.11 Larry Freedman life F lif4 , : ,J2k 44P e COW! ikita:Ct: ...... ...... Norman Allan & To. Orchestra and Entertainment 647-2367 17540 WYOMING • TEL. 341-1330 • THUR., FRI. TIL 9. . GREEN-8 OPEN SUNDAY! SHOP 12 TO 5 P.M.! SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ! Saturday 9:30 to 9 and Sunday 12 to 5 By NATHAN ZIPRIN the divine hands of Michaelangelo — a symbol of the never-fading values of life. Ralph A. Raimi, professor of mathematics at the University of Rochester, became associate dean for graduate studies in the uni- versity's college of arts and science July 1. Raimi, acting chairman of the department of mathematics for 1966-1967, has been a member of the faculty since 1952, when he was appointed as an instructor. Green-8 Center Only! Greenfield/8 Mile Rd. Ziprin's Tribute to Carl Sandburg (A Seven Arts Feature) Carl Sandburg was a great poet in the tradition of Walt Whitman, a rebel against form and conform- ity, and an unsurpassed chronicler of the Lincoln story and of the Lincolnesque mystique that has penetrated deeply into the very sinews of Amer- ica. In verse and in prose he was a spinner of tales, a dreamer of dreams and an architect of what he hoped would be the new Amer- ica. Though he liv- ed deeply_ into Sandburg this century, the prairie and theold frontier held deep fascination for him. At heart he was a man of the frontiers who could look to horizons beyond the fences—and that was the essence of his greatness, of his impact on his generation. Carl Sandburg, it can be truly said, saw America in all its dimensions. It has been said of Sandburg that he explained Lincoln to the American people. That estimation, in this writer's opinion, is a dero- gatory formulation, since Lincoln never needed to be explained to the American people for Lincoln, like Sandburg, spoke the language and the thoughts of the people in whom he was deeply rooted. What Sandburg did was to create the truths of the historians and the biographers to whom the Lincoln theme has been so dear — and largely elusive — for more than a hundred years. In the hands of Sandburg, the figure of Lincoln became what Moses had become in Dr. Raimi Named Dean at Universityof Rochester I NOTE: Juliet can be reached From Greenfield as well as 8 Mile during the current r o o 4 construction work. \ COUTURIER and FAMOUS LABEL DRESS CLEARANCE ! :1; were $55 — now $27 SATURDAY & SUNDAY $19 COUTURIER SATURDAY & SUNDAY $19 DESIGNER were $90 — now $45 GOWNS SATURDAY & SUNDAY $19 were $110 —now $55 SATURDAY & SUNDAY $39 were $125 —now $62 SATURDAY & SUNDAY $39 were $160 —now $99 SATURDAY & SUNDAY $39 Use Your Juliet, Michigan Bankard or Security Charge ! Ai were $170 —now $99 VIII SATURDAY & SUNDAY $39 :1. 7N1 were $185 —now $99 I SATURDAY & SUNDAY $39 A .1• ■ • • =17 _ •":70 4 „:"V, were $150 to $225 Now $ 997 Saturday and Sunday (