THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS People Make News IRA A. FEINBERG, well-known total some 6,000 individuals as and the Abraham and Sarah Rab authority and speaker on the Mid- dle East who has served with the U.S. Army as an Arabic translator in military intelligence has joined the Wall Street firm of Gruntal Co. as a registered representative. • • • The president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews met with ROBERT H. ARNOW of New York, president of the Jewish Tele- graphic Agency. Alderman MICH- AEL FIDLER, board president, said the board attached great im- portance to the JTA as in informa- tion medium linking far-flung Jew- ish communities all over the world. He said the board would seek ways to make the JTA's daily bulletins available to greater numbers of British Jews. Arnow was accom- panied on his visit by S. J. Gold- smith, European editor of the JTA. The United Hias Service, the worldwide Jewish migration aid agency, has re-elected CARLOS L. ISRAELS president. The board elected Charles Stern, a Wall Street broker, as vice president. Gaynor L. Jacobson was re-elected executive vice president. The of- fice of chairman of the national council was left vacant for a year in memory of Edwin Rosenberg, who had previously filled it. Mr. Rosenberg had been instrumental in creating the United Hias Service through a merger in 1954 between HIAS and the United Service for New Americans. MARTIN BARAHL, comptroller of the Sterling Supply Co., has been elected president of the De- troit Association of Credit Manage- ment, affiliated with the 36,000- member National Association of Credit Management. • Declaring that he found Amer- ican Jewry highly receptive to the Idea of aliya (immigration to Is- rael), Gen. UZI NARKISS, direc- tor general of the Jewish Agency's department of immigration and absorption, reported this week that he confidently expected an almost 50 per cent increase in U.S. and Canadian aliya this year. Gen. Narkiss made this statement at a farewell luncheon given to him by the executive of the Jewish Agency-American Section follow- ing the conclusion of a month-long visit to the U.S. "I am confident that American aliya this year will against the 4,300 in 1968," he said. * • • Julius J. Rosen of Baltimore and Miami Beach, has been named the recipient of the 1969 Kether Shem Tov Award of the Union of Ortho- dox Jewish Con- gregations of America. 'The presentation will highlight the- an- nual national din- ner of UOJCA, May 18, at the Rosen Americana Hotel, New York. * * • JAIME LAREDO, young Bolivian violinist, and the celebrated Rus- sian cellist Mstislav Rostropovich, will collaborate in a performance of the Brahms Concerto for violin and cello with the Cleveland Or- chestra, George Szell conducting, May 8, 10 and 11 in Cleveland. Both Mr. and Mrs. Laredo (Ruth Meckler of Detroit), along with John Browning, Pierre Boulez and Leonard Rose, will serve on the faculty of the Blossom Festival, new summer home of the Cleve- land Orchestra. • • • DAVID LIPPITT was Indianap- olis Life Insurance Company's leading agent in Michigan in vol- ume of business sold during March, and he ranked second among all company agents in the nation, Ar- nold Berg, vice president and dir- ector of agencies, announced. • * Rabbi MORTON M. KANTER, of Temple Beth El will represent the Jewish Chautauqua Society as lecturer at Adrian College, Adrian, Mich., Wednesday. He will lecture in the chapel at 10 a.m. on the subject "The Jewish Response to America's Unrest." • • • Prof. ZEVI SCHARFSTEIN dean of Hebrew educators in America, was honored on his 85th birthday at the testimonial banquet of the merged Herzliah Hebrew Teachers Institute and Jewish Teachers Sem- inary Sunday in the Statler-Hilton Hotel of New York City. The gath- ering also witnessed the first pres- entation of two annual awards for distinguished service to Jewish education. The Harry A. Abram- son Prize was awarded on the Un- iversity of Manitoba of Winnipeg for its program of Yiddish studies Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF (*.ALVIN COOLIDGE had his moments. Once, at a ban- quet, he was presented with a cane by the chairman, who rhapsodized, "The nuthogany from which this cane is fashioned is as impreg- nable as the rock-bound coast of Maine, and as beautiful as the sun- kissed shores of Hawaii." Mr. Coolidge arose, ex- amined the cane for a raoment, then turned to his expectant audience, 44 ,Birch," he said loudly ....and sat down. • • • When an American de. gtroyer laid over for a Weekend in Swedish waters, gobs taros aboard decided to go to limb. Unable to under- stand one word of Swedish, they resolved to play safe by sitting behind a solid-looking citizen and doing whatever he did. In the course of the service, the pastor paused to make some special announcement, whereupon the citizen leaped to his feet, 'The two sailors promptly did likewise, whereupon the entire con. gregation dissolved into a gale of laughter. Later the sailors learned the cause of the merriment. The pas• tor had• announced a baptism and requested the father of the baby to rise. • • • A psychiatrist was puzzled by disclosures made to him by a new patient. "Is there any insanity in your family?" he de. jnanded finally. "There must be," nodded the patient. "They keep writing me for money." 0 1969, by Bennett Cert. Distributed by King Features Syndicate. inowitz Prize went to the Talmud Tora of Minneapolis. A posthum- ous award of a testimonial scroll for pioneering and creative Jewish cultural philantrophy was present- ed on the occassion of the centen- nary of the birth of the late Israel Matz. The Matz Foundation has subsididzed the publication of many modern Hebrew classics and gave support to numerous cultural endeavors. Rabbi MILTON ARM, Mrs. ADELE M O N D R Y and GEORGE M. ZELTER of Detroit are members of the national board of the seminary. * * Parent Cooperative Preschools International, at its annual national meeting in the Stetter Hilton Hotel, gave one of the highest awards to Mrs. MARILYN ROSENTHAL of Livonia for her work as originator and editor of "Offspring," the of- ficial educational publication of this international nursery school movement. Mrs. Rosenthal left the editorship of "Offspring" last spring after editing the journal for nine years since its inception. "Offspring" has grown from a circulation of 2.000 to its present 17,500. It is read by parents and educators in the United States, Canada, New Zealand and other countries. It is also used by Peace Corp Volunteers in some 20 coun- tries. Mrs. Rosenthal is a lecturer in the English department at East- ern Michigan University and cur- rently a doctoral student in the American culture program at the N University of Michigan. She recent- ly had an article published in "America" entitled "And Yiddish Yet ..." She is the wife of Avram Rosenthal, director of library ser- vices at Henry Ford Community College, and the mother of three children. • * ABRAHAM FEINBERG, chair- man of the executive committee of the American Bank & Trust Co. and vice-chairman of its board of directors, has been named chair- man of the annual dinner-dance honoring J. Paul Austin, president and chief executive officer of the Coca-Cola Co., Max Ratner, cham- ber president, and Samuel Gallant, executive director of the chamber, have announced. The event will be I May 21, at Americana Hotel, New York. * * At a recent meeting of the board of directors of First Israel Bank and Trust Company of New York, SAMUEL ROTHBERG, a leading business executive and prominent philantropist, was elected a mem- , ber of the board. The announce- ment was made by Benjamin Scho- enfein, president. Rothberg, direc- tor of American Distilling Co., Pek- in, III., and serves as president of two New York City organizations — Israel Investors Corporation and Capital for Israel, Inc. •• • Rabbi Gilbert Klaperman, chair- man of the national rabbinic ORT committe, announced the appoint- ment of Rabbi RICHARD C. HERTZ of Temple Beth El as a member of the board of directors. * * EDWARD D. MOLDOVER, New York attorney and civic leader, was elected president of the New York chapter of the American Jewish Committee 'at its 24th an- nual meeting at Plaza Hotel, New York, Sunday. * • • National recognition has been warded to DAVID M. LIPPITT, a representative of the Indianapolis Life - Insurance Company, through the publication of his article, "Professionals and Prosperity," which appears in the current issue of Insurance Salesman. After having spent years in ing to be Friday, May 2, 1969-19 Woman Premier Source of Orthodox Discussion striv- accurate, we must spend as many more in discovering when and how to be inaccurate. —Samuel Butler. JERUSALEM (ZINS) — Spokes- men for the Orthodox Agudat Israel Party have sharply attack- ed the leaders of the Orthodox Workers' Party, Mizrachi Poale Hamizrachi, for supporting Golda Meir as prime minister. Agudat Israel, which is not a part of Golda Meir's cabinet, in- sists that it is not in accordance with Jewish law to have a woman as head of the government quot- ing, "A king shall rule over you and not a queen." The leaders of Mizrachi found a justification for their action: Deborah the prophetess, led the Jewish people in war; Israel is at present also at war. Secondly, the symbol of the state is President Zalman Shazar, and not the woman Golda Meir, who is "only" premier. SOME DATES STILL AVAILABLE FOR 1969 Adz& Photographers UN 4-8785 SIDNEY L. BLATNIKOFF UNIT MANAGER 272-3470 A - U • L • American United Life Insurance Company HEALTH • GROUP • ANNUITIES • PENSIONS LIFE • FE 8-9222 SPARTAN Doeitii 6161 SELLS FOR LESS (Tell Us If We're Wrong) BE A DODGE FEVER BELIEVER GEORGE RUSKIN 855 Oakland Ave. Pontiac, Mich. President A SALE OF THE FINEST SPORT COATS From the country's Leading manufacturers $65 to $115 values $49 50 $59 50 '695 ° SLACKS THE FINEST All Hand Tailored $30. to $45. values $275 ° $245 ° $27 50 P.S. Just arrived . . . . SENSATIONAL VALUE BEAUTIFUL TROPICALS Made to sell for $125. only $8 9 50 The One and Only HARRY THOMAS Fine Clothes For Over 35 Years 15200 W. Seven Mile Rd. New Store Hours Daily 9:30-6 Open Sunday 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. We Honor Mich. Bernhard & Security