People Make News JERRY B. BOBROFF, former Southfield resident, has been trans- fered to Columbus, 0. in connec- tion with his promotion to Ohio state manager for White and White Inspection Service. Bobroff was assistant state manager for the firm's Detroit office for t h r e e years. He is a graduate of Michi- gan State University. * * • MRS. DAVID KLIGER will ad- dress a luncheon meeting of the Royal Oak Woman's Club 12:30 p.m. Monday at the club. Her sub- ject will be "The Woman Speaks." Mrs. Klinger, who is on the teach- ing faculty of the University of De- troit in the department of speech and communication arts, also is a lecturer in the department of hu- manities at Mercy College. • • Dr. Benjamin M. Kahn, national director of Bnai Brith Hillel Foun- dations. will be one of the speak- ers at the bien- n i a l convention of National Jew- ish Welfare Board, April 24- 28, in San Fran- cisco. Other speakers include Dr. Max Lerner, Prof. Eugene Borowitz and Dr. Dr. Kahn Manheim S. Shapero. * s • JOSEPH MEYERHOFF, chair- man of the board and executive committee of PEC Israel Economic Corporation, has been elected pres- ident of the corporation, upon the resignation of John Furman. Mey- erhoff has accepted the office on a temporary basis, pending the appointment of a new full-time president. Harold L. Seligman, vice president of PEC, resident in Tel Aviv. will be in charge of the Israel office. • * WWJ - TV's weatherman. SONNY ELIOT, was cited by the National Association of Television Program Executives (NATPE) for having the nation's best local weather show. Eliot's weathercasts were cited for "excellence in production and broadcast." The award further commended WWJ - TV for having "a daily report of Michigan's cli- mate, conditioned but not com- promised by imagination, enthu- siasm, and comedy." • • • DR. LEON LUCAS, professor in the Wayne State University School of Social Work, will lecture at an institute sponsored by the National Association of Spanish Psycholo- gists March 16-19 at Murcia. Spain. Topic for the institute will be "Be- havioral Clinics and Marriage Guidance." DAMN U.S. Secretary of Labor W. Wil- lard Wirtz has announced the ap- pointment of LEO GLANTZ as as- sistant state veterans employment representative for Michigan. Glantz was selected for the position through Federal Civil Service com- petition. Glantz is a graduate of Wayne State University, receiving his BBS degree in education in 1943. He spent 17 years in man- agement and proprietorship levels of private business before joining the Michigan Employment Security Commission in 1962 as an employer relations representative for the Detroit area. Beside his activity in business and training, Glantz has been a business education teacher in adults education since 1957 in the cities of Detroit, Oak Park and Royal Oak. Security Preferred in Search for Peace, Almogi States Here "If we have the choice of peace without security or security with- out peace, we will choose security without peace," declared Yosef Almogi, former minister of devel- opment and housing and a mem- ber of the Israel Knesset, who spoke at three Israel Bond func- tions here last week. "We are not as yet able to grasp the effects of the Six-day War," Almogi declared. "The war solved for us the problems of integration. j For 19 years we had worried about integrating the immigrants who came from such varying back- grouds. But the war proved that we were one people. We fought side by side. Patriotic fervor was ' unanimous. We had worried about! our youth. Did they have the fiber J of their fathers, who had fought for and developed Israel? Well, the Six - day Wer was won by our youngsters. The religious and the secularists rejoiced together at the Kotel Maaravil (Western Wall)." Almogi praised the dedication of the Pioneer Women, whose lucheon resulted in Israel Bond subscrip- tions totaling nearly $100,000. A total of $40,000 in Israel Bond sales was realized at the Labor Zionist Movement dinner and over $20,000 reinvestments and new pledges re- sulted from the Israel Bond Re- investment and Awards Party. Israel Paid for Research WASHINGTON (JTA) — Israel has been listed by the National Science Foundation as one of the ' five nations which received in ag- gregate more than half of an es- timated $62.000.000 allocated by United States agencies for research abroad during 1967. BY HENRY LEONARD Meyer-Jackson Rites Planned for July 28 MISS SUSAN MEYER , Mrs. Bernard M. Meyer of Wareham Dr., Huntington Woods, announces the engagement of her, daughter S usan Diane t o Elliot Jackson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hy- man M. Jackson of Parkside Rd. The bride-elect is the daughter of the late Mr. Meyer. Miss Meyer attended Miami University in Oxford, and was graduated from Wayne State University. where she was a member of Alpha Kappa Delta sociology hon- orary. Her fiance attended Wayne, and graduated with a bachelor of business administration degree from Detroit Institute of Technol- ogy. He is affiliated with Tau Ep- silon Pi Fraternity. A July 28 wedding is planned. Coo,. 1968, Doyenu Productions NEW YORK (JTA)—Clifford L. Alexander, chairman of the Feder- al Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, criticized industry's contribution to minority employ- ment in white collar jobs as "paper compliance, paper pledges and fu- ture intentions " Alexander's views are contained in an article in the current issue of "Rights," published by the Anti- Defamation League of Bnai Brith. "For Negroes and Puerto Ricans the problem exists at every level and in every job category- for Jews and for women of all races and ethnic groups the problem is lim- ited primarily to executive posi- tion-s. from which all these groups are;_effectively excluded." Alex- ander wrote. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, March 1, 1968-31 PHOTOGRAPHY GARSON ZELTZER 547-4805 WEDDINGS — BAR MITZVAS SPECIAL OCCASIONS PRESENTS Hal Gordon MUSIC BIG BAND OR SMALL COMBOS UN 3-8982 UN 3-5730 FACIALS and COSMETICS itlx4 64*9-4A-- European Facialist and Makeup Artist 20211 GREENFIELD ROAD NORWAY BUILDING • SUITE 7 DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48233 CALL 272-5770 FOR A FREE BOOKLET Fisher to Head CJFWF Lecracies Endowment Fund Max M. Fisher has become chairman of the legacies and en- dowment fund committee of the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds, it was annonuced by Louis J. Fox, CJFWF president. Fisher succeeds Fox, who has been chairing the committee since its inception three years 31'0. Fisher is a vice-president of CJFWF. For the past three years he was general chairman of the United Jewish Appeal and is now its president. He is a past presi- dent of the Detroit Jewish Welfare Federaton. The appointment of Fisher, ac- cording to Fox, "is the best pos- sible guarantee that the building of the Legacies and Endowment Fund will go forward to fulfill .s vital purposes of making pos- sible the innovations. the probing research and the other special services which are not possible within our budget." The fund, Fox pointed out, also makes it possible for the council to meet "unexpected emergencies." The legacies and endowment fund comittee, which has an initial goal of $1,000,000, has received commitments for more than $700, - 000 from 220 benefactors during its first three years. The majority of the commitments are bequests for the future. New Jackson Highway to Honor Louis Glick "Why don't you call it, 'How I Won the Six Day War From My Suite in the Tel Aviv Hilton' ... Equal Opportunity Unit Hits 'Paper Compliance' JACKSON, Mich. — Jackson's city commission voted to name that city's new access route and part of its downtown perimeter after the late Louis Glick. Mr. Glick, chairman of the board of Glick Iron & Metal Co., died last september at age 83. He was active in several businesses, and known to many companies as the man who made their found- ing possible. The naming of the highway had been the rented of much con- troversy since a committee formed last year under a former Jackson mayor had selected Airline Drive as the street name. A bowling alley proprietor, who said Mr. Glick helped to set him up in business, began a write-in cam- paign to promote naming the high- way for Mr. Glick. Shalach 1Ionos Time . . . 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