•
People Make News
Dr. ISRAEL ADLER of Jerusa-
lem, Jewish music authority, gave
a performance last week of the
earliest known written work of Jew-
ish music. The 800-year-old selec-
tion was heard in public in New
York for the first time. The 12th
Century manuscript, found in the
Geniza archives of the Jewish
Theological Seminary of America,
has been indentified as the work of
Obadiah the Norman, a former
priest who converted to Judaism
circa 1102.
Dr. Nahum Goldmann, former
president of the World Zionist Or-
ganization and now president of
the World Jewish Congress and the
World Conference of Jewish Or,
ganizations, Sunday, at the Waldorf
Astoria, New York. Dr. Goldman
will receive the ZOA Theodor Herzl
Award at the dinner.
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* *
Dr. LEO DIESENDRUCK, pro-
fessor of physics at Queens Col-
lege, New York, son of a famous
Jewish professor at Hebrew Union
4.
4,
4-
College, the late Zvi Diesendruck,
SIMON H. FABIAN, a New York was elected national president of
film executive long active in philan- the Labor- Zionist Organization of
thropic affairs, has ben elected America-Poale Zion at its 36th na-
chairman of the national campaign tional convention in New York.
• * *
cabinet of the Jewish Theological
Seminary of America.
The Detroit Public Schools has
*
appointed Milton Weiner director
Rabbi DAVID MAX EICHHORN, of school social work service. This
who was the first Jewish chaplain department provides a variety of
to enter Dachau after its liberation social work serv-
by the U.S. Seventh Army, has re- ices to school
tired as director of field operations children. For the
of the commission on Jewish chap- past two years,
laincy of the National Jewish Wel- Weiner served as
fare Board, a post he held since administrative
1946. He will devote himself to assistant in this
scholarly writing and to a rabbinic department-He
served for five
post in Cocoa Beach, Fla.
years as planning
'associate
for the
Congressman EMANUEL CEL-
LER will shortly lead a delegation Jewish Welfare
Weiner
of leaders, including Congressman Federation. He is
chairman
of
the
national
commit-
HERBERT TENZER and Dr.
CHARLES W. FEINBERG, national te on public relations of the Na-
director of American Red Mogen tional Association of Social Work-
Dovid for Israel, on a visit to Israel ers.
* * *
where they will help lay the corner-
Leaders in the fields of religion,
stone for the newest medical instal-
lation of Magen David Adorn, Is- education, business and world af-
fairs will assemble in New York
rael's Red Cross.
4
4, *
this weekend to pay tribute to
A Technion scientist is participat- Rabbi MAURICE N. EISEN-
ing in the search for drugs to com- DRATH, on the occasion of his 25th
bat new, virulent strains of malaria anniversary as president of the
encountered in tropical regions. Union of American Hebrew Con-
The U.S. Army Medical Research gregations. The two-day celebra-
and Development Command has tion will begin with a special Sab-
awarded a $14,000 research con- bath service and academic convo-
tract to the Technion Research and cation at Central Synagogue.
*
Development Foundation to finance
Dr. JONATHAN MAGNES, pro-
the work of Dr. MORDECHAI
RUBIN, associate professor in the fessor of physiology at the He-
department of chemistry at the brew University-Hadassah Medical
Technion-Israel Institute of Tech- School, was elected dean of the
nology, who is studying the "Photo- faculty of medicine. He succeeds
chemistry of Anti-Malaria Drugs." Dr. Lipman Halpern, who died in
* 4
September. Dr. Magnes is the son
Alderman MICHAEL M. FID- of the late Judah L. Magnes, one
LER, president of the Board of of the founders and the first presi-
Deputies of British Jewry, will join dent of the Hebrew University.
the Zionist Organization of Amer- Dr., Magnes, who has done re-
ica at its annual dinner honoring search work at the agricultural
is
Vocational Service Looks to Future
Conferring at the Long-Range Planning Conference of the Jewish
Occupational Council in New York are (from left), Albert Cohen,
executive director of Detroit's Jewish Vocational Service and Com-
munity Workshop; Samuel S. Greenberg, past president of the Jewish
Vocational Service and Community Workshop and honorary chairman
of the Jewish Occupational Council; and Kaye G. Frank, newly
elected president of Jewish Vocational Service and Conimunity Work-
shop. Cohen reported that United Community Services of Detroit was
increasingly taking cognizance of the many contributions which JVS
was making to the well-being of the total community in the field of
rehabilitation and manpower development. He reported on the efforts
of his agency to get close to and reach out to Jewish youth in order
to determine their educational and vocational needs. Frank pointed
out that this past summer Detroit JVS had placed more Jewish
youngsters than ever, as a result of an intensive campaign. He also
stressed that Jewish agencies face a great challenge to provide a
channel for the expression of idealistic impulses of Jewish youth into
concrete projects under specifically Jewish auspices. Eugene Green-
span, assistant executive director of JVS, also took part.
31 r. Bider to Take Bride,
Rose Himber of Brooklyn
research station at Rehovot, Col
umbia University and the Univer
sity of Pisa, joined the Hebrew
University in 1938 and was made
associate professor in 1957. He was
promoted to professor in 1963.
•
4
ALFRED DEUTSCH has been
elected to membership on the
board of trustees of Sinai Hospital.
Deutsch, 1966-68 chairman of the
Allied Jewish Campaign, will fill
the unexpired term of Mrs. H. C.
Broder of Southfield, who resigned
earlier this year. Deutsch holds
board positions with the Detroit
Service Group, the TB and Health
Society and the Jewish Theological
Seminary of America.
•
*
Dr. NORMAN DRACHLER, su-
perintendent of the Detroit Public
Schools, was praised by officials
in the U.S. Office of Education
for his, and the system's, efforts
"to be responsive to the commu-
nity and the needs of the stu-
dents." Gregory Anrig, head of
the Office of Education's equal
opportunity branch, said he would
call Drachler "an example of the
new breed superintendent we need
if some of the cities' problems are
to be solved."
* * *
E. ALBERT PALLOT of Miami
Beach is new chairman of the
Bnai Brith commission on com-
munity and veterans services.
* as *
DR. SIMON N. HERMAN, dep-
uty bead of contemporary Jewry
of the Hebrew University, has
been awarded the Philip W. Lown
Distinguished Fellowship in Edu
cation for 1968-69. Dr. Herman will
visit university campuses through-
out the United States and Canada
and will study problems of Jewish
education as they relate to Jewish
students. On his return, Dr. Her-
man will introduce a new gradu-
ate seminar at the institute on
"Jewish Education and Israel —
Diaspora Relations: a social psy-
chological approach."
4,
4.
MISS
BY POPULAR DEMAND!
Now Booking - - -
ED BURG
and His Orchestra
Good Music
-for All Occasions
LI 4-9278
Tourists File Complaints
of Jailed Egyptian Jews
TEL AVIV (JTA) — First-hand
reports of continued detention and
maltreatment of large numbers of
Egyptian Jews have been brought
here by tourists who visited Egypt
a short time ago. They said that
Jews are imprisoned mainly in the
Helouan concentration camp near
Cairo and have been under arrest,
without trial, since the June 1967
Arab-Israel war.
The tourists, some of whom
spoke to relatives of the prisoners,
reported many complaints of mis-
treatment by prison wardens. They
said the prisoners were allowed
to receive visitors only once a
month and then only for a half
hour.
Jordan Reported Seeking
Arab Summit Meeting
JERUSALEM (JTA) — A Cairo
radio broadcast heard here Sun-
&y said that Jordan has ap-
roached other Arab countries to
convene an Arab summit meeting
over the mission of the special
United Nations peace envoy, Am-
bassador Gunnar V. Jarring.
The broadcast, quoting diplo-
matic sources in Amman, said that
Jordan's Prime Minister Bahjat
el-Talhouni, was in Saudi Arabia
'and Foreign Minister Abdul Mo-
neim Rifai was in- Egypt to pro-
pose "urgent Arab coordination
which only a summit conference
can achieve."
According to reports from Lon-
don, King Hussein will visit there
for talks on the Middle East.
ra
D B
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TURKEYS
*
ERICH GOLDHAGEN, director
of Brandeis University's Institute
of East European Jewish Studies,
has been elected a member of the
board of governors of the Inter-
national Institute for the Study of
National Socialism. The institute
will collect and prepare a vast
body of documentation on the Nazi
regime for scholarly publication.
Institute officers also plan to is-
sue a multilingual scholarly jour-
nal in addition to publishing mono-
graphs on various aspects of Nazi
Germany. Located at the Free Uni-
versity of Berlin, the institute
will, however, be autonomous.
* * *
Bibliophiles, designers, librarians
and printers are invited to see an
exhibit of 25 scholarly books, pub-
lished in 1967 and selected earlier
this year for excellence in design I
and production.
Under the sponsorship of Wayne
State University Press and the As-
sociation of American University
Presses, the annual show will be
held Dec. 2-13 at the WSU Press
offices, 5980 Cass, weekdays from
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
ROSE HERBER
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Himber
of Brooklyn announce the engage-
ment of their daughter Rose to
Gary Irwin Bider, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bennett Bider of Coolidge
Hwy., Oak Park.
Mr. Bider attends Telshe Yeshiva
University.
A Feb. 16 wedding is planned.
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
32—Friday, November 22, 1968
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•
•
•
•
•
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Cocktail Lounge
Dancing and
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Sauna Baths
Children's Playground
Baby Sitting
Also Nearby
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Sun. Afternoon •
Golf, Roller Skating
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Year Round Indoor Pool