Rapprochement Possibilities in M. E. Joey Adams Star I Hebrew U. Dedicates Low Workshop Building — A building on Topic of Talk by Joel Carmichael of Israel Fete for the JERUSALEM Hebrew University campus to F,li zabeth Sharon Kahn Joel Carmichael, author of "The is "some danger" in "the emotional Bonds in Lansing house scientific Workshops for fine Shaping of the Arabs" and fre- content of nationalism . . . The mechanics, electronic equipment E //gaged to New Yorker quent Joey Adams, star of stage, radio, contributor on Middle East- Arabs have been humiliated three THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 38—Friday, April 5, 1968 television and motion pictures, will head the entertainment at the Israel 20th anniversary celebration and dinner in Lansing May 11 in the Steinhaus Restaurant, East Lansing. Jack Rachman, chair- man of the Greater Lansing Com- mittee for State of Israel Bonds, announced the affair will be on behalf of Israel Bonds. Adams, who has served as presi- dent of the American Guild of Variety Artists, has appeared as a guest star on leading TV and radio network shows, for more than a decade. He has a daily radio show on WEVD, in New York City. A pro- ducer of two fea- ture films, Adams Adams has performed in the legitimate theater and in night clubs and con- cert halls. He is the author of "From Gags to Riches," "The Curtain Never Falls," "Cindy and I" and "It Takes One to Know One." His latest books, "The Joey Adams Encyclo- pedia of Humor" and "The Show Business Murders" are to be pub- lished soon. Adams has toured African and Asian countries on behalf of the U.S. State Department's Cultural Exchange Program and has visited Israel on several occasions as a guest of the the Israel government. He has been honored by the Uni- versity of Haifa and is a strong supporter of the Israel Bond pro- gram. ern affairs to learned journals, will discuss "The Possibilities of a Rapprochement Between Israel and the Arab Nations" 8:15 p.m. Wednesday at the Esther Berman Building, United Hebrew Schools. It will be the concluding lecture of the Midrasha Institute, theme of which is "Prospects of Peace in the Middle East: What Can We Learn From the Past." Carmichael, a native of New York, was educated at Cohimbia University, the Sorbonne and Ox- ford University. During World War. II, he was a specialist on the 1VIiddle East, Soviet Union and Ger- many for the Office of Strategic Services. After the war, he con- centrated on Islamic studies in Paris on a Fulbright Fellowship. MISS ELIZABETH KAHN He is a consultant on Middle Mr. and Mrs. Irving Kahn of Eastern affairs and author of many articles in Foreign Affairs, Independence Ave., Southfield, an- Commentary and Midstream. nounce the engagement of their The books he has written include daughter Elizabeth Sharon to "An Illustrated History of Russia," Mark Sheldon Singer, son of Dr. "A Short History of the Russian and Mrs. Harold Singer of Del- mar, N.Y. The bride-elect and her fiance are seniors at the University of Michigan. A June 30 wedding is planned. times in one generation. They have conceived a deep hatred (that) strengthens them." Like the Midrasha Institute speakers of the previous two weeks, Dr. Lengyel believes that the Great Powers hold the key to the destiny of the Middle East. According to the chairman of the department of social sciences at Fairleigh Dickinson University: "There must be a decontamination process" among the Arab peoples before there can be an end to the hatred. The intellectual Arab leadership is incapable of bringing this about, he said "The World Powers must do this." Dr. Lengyel traced the nation- alistic spirit of the Arabs to the period of the decline of the Otto- man Empire. Under the Otto- man rulers, he said, the Arabs felt no national consciousness because of the fusion of the re- ligious and secular community. But gradually, as the empire de- clined, nationalism became a quasi-religion. The West played its part in bringing a national consciousness to the Arab peoples, said Dr. Lengyel. It was brought by mis- sionaries and by schools of higher learning, such as the Protestant College of Beirut, now the Univer- Where ignorance is bliss 'tis folly sity of Beirut in Lebanon. Young to be wise.—Gray. intellectuals studying abroad also carried home new ideas. MUSIC BY Some of the Arab states scarcely older than their arch-enemy, Israel, the 14 nations are fused into an Arab League that would like to AND HIS ORCHESTRA form a "United Nations of Arabia," as Dr. Lengyel puts it. But the LI 1 -2563 differences are too many and great to discard; Lebanon is capital- • istic, Saudi Arabia feudalist and "Merging Traffic" puritanical, Egypt socialist, Accelerated JOEL CARMICHAEL Rock and Roll Sounds Morocco monarchist. "Israel Available for Parties Revolution," "The Death of Jesus," I doesn't relish the idea of the Bar Mitzvas, Socials, Etc. "Karl Marx, the Passionate Lo- Arab states united," said Dr. Call gician," "A Cultural History of Lengyel. "She wants them sepa- JEFF DEMBS 356-8547 Russia" and "The Shaping of the rate and scrapping." The world Arabs." He has translated and powers devised the states as they edited "A History of the Islamic exist today, and Israel is content Peoples" by Prof. Carl Brockel- to keep them that way. Economically, he said, only mann and other works. * * * Israel of all the Middle Eastern April 5, 6, 7 Little unites Israel's 14 Arab states has achieved a fourth stage neighbors, a variety of political, of progress, "the drive toward 1 -10 p.m. social and economic entities. Yet, maturity." (Five countries are in it is Israel herself that unites the traditional, first stage — them, for hatred can be a peculiar changeless and rooted to the soil. common denominator among un- Those in the second stage, he said, want the government to help derdeveloped nations. "The Rise of Nationalism in the them get rid of the disease, ignor- 30500 13 MILE RD. Middle East" was dis cussed ance and poverty that hold sway. Bet. Middlebelt and Wednesday evening by Dr. Emil These countries include Iraq and Orchard Lake Rd. Lengyel, who observed that there Syria. (The United Arab Republic and Lebanon are in the third, or "take-off" stage, in which they are beginning to acquire the necessary skills for progress, said Dr. Lengyel.) The very real hatred each Arab state holds for its neighbors rules out any cooperation in the near future, said Dr. Lengyel. Only their "intestinal" hatred for Israel keeps them together in the loose structure of the Arab League. SAM BARNETT and for glass-blowing was dedi- cated March 24 at a ceremony attended by the donors, Robert K. Low and his wife Frieda, of New York, for whom the building is named. The large gathering present in- cluded Mayor Teddy Kollek, who conveyed the greetings of the City of Jerusalem, and Low's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Max Low, who had come from the U.S. with a large group of members and friends of the Low family for the express purpose of attending the ceremony. 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