8—Friday, November 28,-1969
raelis Develop
Tobacco With
Hilo-her Yield
I.
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Is
Center Businessmen I nstall Officers
HANUKA BEGINS
The Center Businessmen's Club were installed:
held its installation of officers at
President, David B. Brown; vice
A new tobacco plant, which has
'it alt.•igh House. The following president, Irving Lyons: recording
secretary, Sam Furman; treasurer, a 50 per cent higher yield than ex-
Sam Green; financial secretary, isting types cultivated in Israel,
IF YOU TURN THE
Joseph Tanzman: board members, has been developed by scientists
of the Hebrew University's Levi
Max Simon and Julius Wallace.
Eshkol School of Agriculture.
In appreciation of services ren-
Next spring, the new variety
UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON'T
dered, the club presented the out- will be distributed commercially
FIND A FINER WINE THAN
going president, with a gold watch.
for the first time in Israel and on
the West Bank, giving Arab and
Ile who distrusts God is not Jewish tobacco farmers a possi-
worthy
to
be
His
instrument.
—
bility of earning some 150-200
Milan Winorias, Detroit. Mich.
Francois de Fenelon.
pounds (5-13.50-$58), more per dun-
am (v4 acre) of tobacco field as
compared with present-day in-
come.
The deVelopment is the latest
stage in seven years of exten-
tobacco plant research
sive
For the
which gained momentum when a
Finest
severe attack of blue mold di-
sease that had ravaged Europe,
Personalized
hit Israel in late 1962, destroy-
Service &
ing 95 per cent of the seedbeds.
In addition to applying chemic-
Satisfaction
als to combat the disease, the
in Auto
scientists launched a breeding pro-
ject in an attempt to promote a di-
Purchasing
sease-resistant plant.
Allen Charnes
Their newest successful research
result is the development of a to-
bacco plant from a first generation
15 Min. horn Farmington, Sfld., Oak Park, Huntington Woods
hybrid which has increased yield
1/2, Mile East of Southfield
by more than 50 per cent even un-
der adverse soil and climatic con-
ditions.
Producing the hybrid seeds,
which is usually very costly in
other plant species, is relatively
easy in tobacco. While in many
other plant species only one seed
is obtained per flower, tobacco
plants produce about 2,000 seeds
from each flower.
Thursday Eve., Dec. 4th
.43. era
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reg. 5.95
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RAISINS AND ALMONDS
By Martha Schlamme
149
1 29
SHOSHAMA DAMARI
Chants of Israel
198
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CANTOR LEIBELE WALMAN
149
JEWISH MELODIES OF
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LIVING HEBREW
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Hebrew U. Exhibition
United Arabs and Jews
Holzda
Fur Sale
JERUSALM OF GOLD
Special
MAZEL TOV
Traditional Jewish Freilachs
116-1122
JERUSALEM—A large exhibition
of kibutz-grown roses, held in a
villa in an East Jerusalem suburb
under the auspices of the Hebrew
University Adult Education Center,
became the first large-scale Arab-
Jewish gathering in a private
house in that part of the city.
Close to 300 persons, including
notables and more than 100 other
residents from East Jerusalem at-
tended the opening of the flower
exhibition in the home of Isa
Marogi, superintendent of the St.
John's Opthalmology Hospital in
Shu'fat, on the Jerusalem-Ramal-
lah road.
Also present was an equal num-
ber of West Jerusalemites, corn-
prising Hebrew University faculty,
as well as Christian clergy from
the Old City and Bethlehem,
United Nations staff, representa-
tives of the American and British
consulates, and of the municipality
of Jerusalem.
Picked under shell fire at 3 a.m.
in Kibutz Maoz Haim in the Belt
She'an Valley, the roses were
transported to Jerusalem by kib-
utz members for the one-day ex-
hibition. A total of 55 different
kinds of roses were shown, select-
ed from among 190 rose varieties.
grown by N. Nebo, in the kibutz
nurseries.
Contact between the kibutz and
Marogi, who, together with his
deputy, Nassar Danyan, main
tains a large flower garden in the
grounds of the St. John's Hospital,
was initiated by Kalman Ya-
ron, director of the Hebrew Uni-
versity's Adult Education Center.
Mrs. Marogi is one of more than
300 East Jerusalem citizens study-
ing Hebrew at a language course
conducted by the Center at the
Ecce Homo convent on the Via
Dolorosa in the Old City.
From a pure language-teaching
program, including Arabic
taught to residents of West Jeru-
salem. thet project is now becom-
ing a venture for the promotion of
Arab-Jewish contact.
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