Miss Margaret Bennett
Engaged to Arkansan

People Make News

A $50,000 scholarship at the
Feinberg Graduate School of the
Weizmann Institute of Science, at
Rehovot, Israel, has been estab-
lished in the name of Joseph Brai-
nin, executive vice president of the
American Committee for the Weiz-
mann Institute,
in recognition of
more than two
decades of dis-
tinguished s e r v-
ice to the insti-
t u t e's develop-
ment. The schol-
arship, to c o n-
tinue in perpe-
tuity, is the joint
tribute of t h e
Weizmann Insti-
tute and its
American C o m-
mittee. Announce-
ment of the schol-
arship in Brai-
nin's name was
Brainin
made by Meyer
W. Weisgal, president of the insti-
tute, a friend of 50 years. Brainin
retires at the end of the year from
his executive post with the Amer-
ican Committee, with which he has
been formally associated since
1953. Thereafter he will continue
in a close relationship with the in-
stitute, spending part of each year
on the Rehovot campus.
• s •
BOYCE TOPE, executive vice
president of the Detroit Auto Deal-
ers Association, will head the
Michigan Week activities in Ma-
comb, Oakland and Wayne counties,
for the second year in a row.
Tope's appointment as regional
chairman for the three-county area
was announced by Detroit Post-
riaster Edward L. Baker, Michigan
Week deputy general chairman for
the southeastern part of the state,
The 15th annual Michigan Week
will be conducted May 19 - 25.
• • •
"People should give to charity
as long as they live so that they
can see the good that it's doing."
These moving words were spoken
by JOSEPH KOTLER of Brooklyn,
N.Y. on the occasion of his decision
to send a second ambulance to
Magen David Adorn, Israel's offi-
cial Red Cross service. The Kotlers'
first ambulance arrived in Israel
in time to see action in the Six-Day
War.

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ALLEN S. COHN, 24375 Rensse-
laer, Oak Park, is one car richer
this week as the winner of the na-
tionwide Mobil Battery Sweep-
stakes. Cohn was presented with a
new Dodge Charger Monday at the
Mobil service station on Linwood
and Davison, where the winning
card was filled out by the attend-
ant. Cohn, who said he was in that
particular station by chance one
day last summer, is the only win-
ner of a car in the contest; how-
ever, the attendant also receives a
car for sending in the winning en-
try. Cohen was induced to enter the
contest by his wife Dorothy, a
"habitual" contest participant.
"This is the first time we've ever
won anything, though." There are
385,000 charge account customers
across the country who were eli-
gible to enter. The father of two
children, Cohn is a real estate
salesman. The Cohns have two
cars—neither of them new. The
1968 Charger comes fully equipped,
and Mrs. Cohn gets to pick the
color.
s • •
Dr. CECIL ROT H, the dis-
tinguished British historian and
antiquarian who is currently serv-
ing as visiting professor of history
at the City University, New York,
was guest speaker at a public
lecture Tuesday at the Jewish
Museum. Professor Roth w a s
fourth speaker in a special se-
ries of lectures by prominent
scholars arranged by the Jew-1
ish Museum in connection with its
current archaeological exhibition,)
"Masada: A Struggle for Freedom."
■
• •
An award to the Jewish Book
Council of America citing its 25
years of service in fostering Jewish
literature in English, Hebrew and
Yiddish marked the fifth annual
Jewish Book Fair held by the
American Congress at Stephen
Wise Congress House, New York.
Rabbi Joseph Sternstein acted for
the Congress in presenting the
award to HYMAN BASS, national
president for the Jewish Book
Council.
• • •
Dr. NORMAN DRACHLER, su-
perintendent of Detroit Public
Schools, was among the recipients
of Centennial Medallion Awards
from Wayne State University at its
centennial class commencement ex-
ercises in Cobo Hall Tuesday. The
awards were granted to 14 civic
leaders in recognition of service to
the community and university.
• • •
RALPH BENSMAN was elected
president of the Oak Park, Hunt-
ington Woods, and Pleasant Ridge
Democratic Club. Other officers
elected were vice-presidents, Mrs.
Morris Weiss, Gordon Yaker, Her-
bert Pont and Nick Budaj; secre-
taries, Mrs. David Brody and Mrs.
Robert Howe; and parliamentarian-'
historian, David Wolock.
• • •
JULIUS • CHAJES, director of
the Center Symphony Orchestra,
will present the first performance
of his work ''Hallelujah (Psalm
98)" at Cong. Emanu-El in New
York City Dec. 29. Commissioned
by the synagogue, the work is dedi-
cated to the reunited city of Jeru-
salem.

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is

MISS MARGARET BENNETT

Mrs. Eric Bennett of Cherrylawn
Ave. announces the engagement of
her daughter Margaret Trudy to
Harold Irwin Steinberg, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Morris Steinberg of
Wynne, Ark. Miss Bennett is the
daughter of the late Eric Bennett.
Miss Bennett and her fiance are
seniors at Michigan State Univer-
sity, where Mr. Steinberg is affili-
ated with Alpha Epsilon Pi Frater-
nity.
A June 16 wedding is planned.

More Time Needed, Says
Pincus of WZC Delay

LONDON (JTA)—Louis Pincus,
chairman of the Jewish Agency
executive, said in an exclusive in-
terview with the Jewish Telegra-
phic Agency here that the next
World Zionist Congress to be held
in Jerusalem, must "chart the way
ahead for the Zionist movement,"
an issue that is quite distinct from
the movement's structure which he,
personally, does not think needs
altering.
He asserted that the opening of
the congress in Jerusalem, origin-
ally set for February, was post-
poned because "a little more time
is needed for reflection and ex-
change of views" among all Zion-
ist groups "on such basic issues
as the structure of the Zionist
movement."
(In Jerusalem. the date of the
next World Zionist Congress was
postponed again, but the date re-
mained undecided as Zionist lead-
ers were being polled on their
preference. One group favors mid-
June 1968. But that would con-
flict with Prime Minister Levi Esh-
kol's scheduled conference with
Jewish business leaders from
abroad. Others favor postponement
until next December. A decision
is expected later this month.)

`Right Conditions Needed
for Aliya From West'

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Leon Dult-
zin, member of the Jewish Agency
Executive, predicted that Israel
could expect 20,000 settlers from
countries of the free world in 1968
provided that adequate conditions
are established for their absorp-
tion. Dultzin, who just returned
from a tour of Latin America, the
United States and Canada on be-
half of aliya (immigration), also
forecast the return to Israel next
year of some 5,000 yordim, emi-
grants from Israel, "who want an-
other try at settlement."
The Zionist official, who heads
the Jewish Agency's economic de-
partment, wanted however, that
unless Israel provides the right
conditions for Western immigrants,
"we shall miss an opportunity
which may not come again and
will lose essential immigration."
He added that special efforts must
be made to encourage the immi-
gration of Jewish youth from the
Western countries, "many of whom
seek foreign gods like the 'hip-
pies' and others."
He said that 1968 will be the
"test year' for immigration from
the West and if it is successful
there is a chance of doubling the
number of immigrants in the years
to come.

Letting others do',.your thinking
is just thoughtlessness.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, December ,22, 1967-31

U.S. Labor Will Lend Histadrut $10 Million

NEWT YORK (JTA) — Aharon
Becker, secretary-general of Hista-
drut, Israel's labor federation, an-
nounced that George Meaney, pres-
ident of the AFL-CIO, had recom-
mended that the American labor
movement lend $10,000,000 to His-
tadrut for its economic programs.
The response of the American la-
bor unions to this recommendation,
Becker said, at the conclusion of
his seven - week tour to the United
States and Latin America, has
been "tremendous."
Louis Stulberg, president of the
International Ladies Garment
Workers of America, has pledged
$1,000,000 toward the loan, and
Paul Hall, of the Seafarers' Inter-
national Union of North America,
has announced that his union will
contribute at least $200,000. The
$10,000,000 debenture, Becker said,
will be drawn from the pension
funds and loaned for a 15-year
period at 6 per cent annual inter-
est. In addition, Histadrut has re-
ceived assurances that another
$10,000,000 will be forthcoming
from European trade unions.
The total in loans, Becker said,
will be matched by workers in Is-
rael, providing $40,000,000 for in-
vestment in industrial expansion in
his country, particularly in the
chemical and electronic fields.

Becker left Dec. 13 by air for
Tel Aviv. He was the guest in the
United States of the AFL-CIO and
the National Committee for Labor
Israel.

Larry Freedman

UN 2-0660
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