32—Friday, December 12, 1969
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
People Make News
HERMAN STEIN, vice president
in charge of the Linden Division of
Food Fair Stores, Inc., and WIL-
LIAM LEVI, executive vice presi-
dent of J. M. Fields, will be honor-
ed at a testimonial dinner in New
York Thursday on behalf of Tel-
Aviv University. They will receive
honorary fellowships from the uni-
versity at the Waldorf Astoria din-
ner sponsored by American Friends
of Tel-Aviv University.
• • •
Rabbi MAURICE N. EISEN-
DRATH, president of the Union of
American Hebrew Congregations,
arrived in Kyoto, Japan, to partici-
pate in a meeting of the prepara-
tory committee of the World Con-
ference on Religion and Peace.
Rabbi Eisendrath is a co-charman
of the committee and the only .
American Jewish figure represent-
ed on it. Others include religious
leaders from Vatican City and
other parts of Europe, Asia and
Africa, representing the Catholic,
Protestant, Unitarian, Buddhist,
Hindo, Moslem, Shintoist and Sikh
faiths.
• * •
LOUIS ROSENZWEIG, a Detroit
attorney for more than - 40 years,
has been appointed counsel to the
State Bar grievance administrator.
State Bar President A. D. Rueg-
segger announnced. He will begin
his duties on Jan. 1. He is chair-
man of Michigan's Fair Employ-
ment Practices Commission and a
referee for the Michigan Civil
Rights Commission.
NATHAN GOULD, of Roslyn,
N.Y., has been elected executive
vice president of Women's Ameri-
can ORT. Gould, who is national
executive director of Women's
American ORT, was chosen for
this additional post by 2,000 dele-
gates, representing the organiza-
tion's nearly 90,000 members in
700 chapters throughout the U.S.
at the group's recent 20th Biennial
National Convention held in New
York.
* * •
TAU EPSILON RHO LAW FRA-
TERNITY, Detroit Graduate Chap-
ter, will hold its annual pre-con-
vention dinner-dance 7:30 p.m. I
Wednesday at Elmwood Casino,
Windsor. The national convention
of the fraternity will be held in
Philadelphia Dec. 28 to Jan. 1.
Capital for Israel
to Hear Executive
Abbie Ben Ari, executive vice
president of Israel Communica-
tions in Jerusalem and former di-
rector of the Israel Government
Tourist Office in
North America,
will be the guest
speaker at a Cap-
ital for Israel)
Dinner 7 p.m.,
Dec. 21 in the '
Young Israel of
Oak-Woods Social
Hall.
Born in South
Africa, Ben Ari
migrated to Is-
rael in 1952 and
lived on a- kibutz
for eight years.
He moved to Kir-
Ben Ari yat Gat, a new !
town in the Negev, served on the
municipal council and was one of
the original planners of this and
other new communities.
Ben Ari has been a spokesman
for the Israel Foreign Service and
has served on special missions
abroad and as the Israeli repre-
sentative on various bodies and in-
ternational conferences. He also
has lectured extensively at univer-
sities.
Cocktails at 6 p.m. will precede
the dinner. Norman Allan is gen-
eral chairman of the Detroit Chap- ,
ter, Capital for Israel. Louis E.
Levitan is Detroit representative
for Capital for Israel. For reserva-
tions, call Bonds, 352-6770.
ERWIN S. SIMON, Detroit at-
torney, was re-elected president of
the Michigan Welfare League at
the League's recent annual con-
ference held in Lansing.
* * •
IRVIN H. YACKNESS has been
elected commodore of the Cruising
Club of America. Yackness is a
past commodore of the Great
Lakes Yacht Club and a Mackinac
Race winner.
* * *
New York City Central Labor
Council President HARRY VAN
ARSDALE, Jr., received the third
annual Labor Human Rights
Award of the Jewish Labor Com-
mittee's National Trade Union
Council recently at the New York
Hilton Hotel.
• • •
T. John Lesinski, chief judge of
the Michigan Court of Appeals,
announced that DAVID HARON,
law clerk on his staff, has been
notified he passed the State Bar
Examination. Haron received his
law degree from the University of
Michigan in May. Married to the
former Pamela Colburn of Oak
Park, Haron is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Percy H. Haron of Kensing-
ton Ct., Southfield. Haron is to be
sworn in for admission to practice
law on Wednesday.
a
HENRY SHAW of London has
been named director of the Bnai
Brith Hillel Foundation serving
Jewish students at the University
of Melbourne and Monash Univer-
sity in Australia. Shaw has been
Hillel director at the University of
London for 15 years. He begins his
new duties with the 1970 spring
semester. The Hillel Foundations
established its program at the two
Australian schools in 1960. Some
2,000 Jewish students are current-
ly enrolled there.
Israeli Hero Coming
to Alpha Omega Fete
Menachem Sadinsky, Israeli
Sabra war hero, who led the first
unit to enter Jericho and com-
manded armored tank forces on
the Jerusalem, Jordanian and Sy-
rian fronts in the Six-Day War,
will be the speaker at the Alpha
Omega Fraternity's second annual
dinner dance on
behalf of Israel
Bonds 8 p.m.,
Dec. 20 at Hotel
Pontchartrain.
Henny Youn g-
m a n, humorist
will be the guest
star.
Dr. Sheldon
Mintz will to
toastmaster.
Sadinsky
A native of Is-
rael and a graduate of the Hebrew
University, Sadinsky, one of his
country's leading educators and
youth leaders, is now in the United
States under an exchange program
and is serving as the youth direc-
tor of the Rogers Park Jewish
Community Center in Chicago.
Low-Income Housing
by California Federation
OAKLAND, Calif. (JTA) — The
Jewish Welfare Federation has re-
ported that construction is expect-
ed to begin in January on a senior
citizens low-income housing pro-
ject for which it is a co-sponsor.
The 50-unit project was started
two years ago but problems of gov-
ernment financing, city zoning and
tax exemption have delayed the
start of actual building.
Federation officials said the fed-
eral Department of Housing and
Urban Development had given
formal approval for the project in
Oakland's Dimont district and that
legislation had been approved by
the California Legislature to pro-
vide tax-exempt status to the pro-
ject.
Goodfellows Elect
Judge John Wise;
Sale Is Monday
Circuit Court John M. Wise was
elected president of the Old News-
boys' Goodfellow Fund last week-
end.
A resident of Detroit since age
12, Judge Wise is a graduate of
Eastern High
School and holds
and LLB and
juris doctor from
Wayne State Uni-
versity Law
School. -With a
law practice here
since 1930, he
was appointed a
Recorder's Court
referee in 1945.
He was first
Judge Wise elected to the
Circuit Court judgeship in 1959 and
will serve his current term until
1976.
Judge Wise is past president of
the Probus Club, and Wayne State
Law Alumni Association and this
year was the recipient of the Dis-
tinguished Alumni Award from the
Wayne State Law Alumni Associa-
tion. A 33rd-degree Mason, he has
been an officer and board member
of numerous civic and community
organizations including the Detroit
Service Group, Crisis Club, Wayne
County Civic League and Detroit
Men's ORT.
He, his wife, Sunny Ann and two
daughters live at 19644 Renfrew.
On Monday, Detroit's 200 Old
Newsboys will be out on the
streets from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. selling their Goodfellow
editions to furnish a merry
Christmas for 35,000 underprivi-
leged children, according to 1969
President Allen B. Schmier.
Schmier said, "Our goal this
year is $200,000, which will supply
35,000 Christmas packages for
needy boys and girls. We not only
are giving gifts to these under-
privileged youngsters but, even
more -important, are proving that
someone cares."
Goodfellow gifts this year will
include underwear, socks, shirts for
boys, dresses for girls supplied by
the Ruth Alden Dress Drive, toys,
games, dolls and candy (approxi-
mately seven tons donated annual-
ly by Fred Sanders Co.). These
gifts already are being packaged
at the Volunteers of America Ware-
house on Rivard Street.
In addition, the Old Newsboys
Goodfellow Fund of Detroit also
carries on a year-round shoe pro-
gram, supplying shoes for schocl
children on request of the attend-
ance department of the Detroit
Board of Education. Other year-
round activities include the testing
of eyes and distribution of glasses
whose parents cannot afford them,
and the furnishing of hearing aids
for those who need them.
Ex-Bonn Aide in Portugal
Suspended Pending End
of War Crimes Probe
BONN (JTA)—West Germany's
former ambassador to Portugal,
Hans Mueller-Roschach, has been
suspended from duty pending the
completion of an investigation of
war crimes charges against him.
The envoy has been accused of
participating in the mass murder
of Jews while he was a member
of the Nazi Foreign Office between
November 1941 and March 1942.
The charges are under investiga-
tion by the central office for war
crimes prosecution in Cologne.
Meanwhile, Stuttgart police re-
ceived an anonymous telephone
threat to murder Chancellor Willy
Brandt unless he releases Nazi
war criminal Rudolph Hess. Hess,
once Hitler's chief deputy, is the
last of the surviving top Nazis in
jail.
In another West German devel-
opment, a 30-year-old left-wing
radical, Bodo Saegel, has been ar-
rested in Berlin on suspicion of
having planted a bomb in the
Jewish community center there
last month.
Parley Backs
War on Israel
E & B
CARPET CLEANING
In order to emphasize that
"Zionists" not ''Jews" are involved
in the Middle East struggle, a
resolution adopted at the conven-
tion of the Association of Arab
American' University Graduates,
held at Wayne State University
last week-end, denounced anti-
Semitism.
The chief action was the en-
dorsement of the Palestinian "war
of national liberation against
Israel."
Many speakers repeated the
arguments heard often in the UN
and in Arab quarters in the attacks
on Israel.
Delegates at the conference here
were picketed last Friday by Is-
raeli-students and Arabs in turn.
picketed the Israel Bond dinner
that was held at the Sheraton in
honor of Leonard N. Simons.
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--C .,
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Addressing the Detroit Economic
Club, Monday, the Detroit News'
military analyst, Col. Robert D.
Heinl Jr., expressed the view that
prospects for a Middle East peace
are more remote today than ever.
Reporting on his survey of con-
ditions in Israel and the Arab
countries, Col. Heinl said Israel
can beat all of the Arab states,
commenting: "Give Israel bows
and arrows and its forces could
still be in Cairo in 48 hours."
He also said the terrorist groups
are not popular in the Arab lands
because they are viewed as a
threat to the stability of existing
governments.
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