Scientific Advances in Israel's Farming Education Progress Reported at Hebrew U. - trained personnel in every field, and particularly science and tech- nology, that the country needs, but also in seeing to it that the State's young citizens are trained to main- tain the established traditions of democracy and independent thought so essential to the nation's healthy and meaningful survival. University President Avraham Harman said it was appropriate that the school of education build- ing bear the name of Samuel and Betty Katzin. Mr. Katzin is a grad- uate of Chicago University who majored in mathematics and also studied at the Juilliard School of Music (he is an accomplished ama- teur violinist) and Mrs. Katzin is a teacher. Harman went on to say that Samuel Katzin, a prominent Chi- cago automobile dealer and real estate developer, has a long stand- ing interest in education. He served for many years as the president of the Chicago College of Jewish Studies and of the city's board of Jewish education and was also president of the Chicago chapter of the American Friends of the Hebrew University on whose na- tional board he still serves. • • • A lecture hall in the law faculty the Hebrew University's Mount if Scopus campus was dedicated by Menache H. Eliachar, prominent Jerusalem businessman, in mem- Ory of his father, the late Isaac Eliachar, first president of the United Jewish Community in Jeru- Salem and its first deputy mayor in r917-29. JERUSALEM—A 72-bed student hostel at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem's Levy Eshkol Faculty of Agriculture in Rehovot was dedicated by its donor, Mrs. Else Bonem, of Chicago and Miami Beach. The building bears the name of Mrs. Bonem and of Erna and Leo Bonem, her brother-in-law and his wife. The Bonem family are in the cattle farming and meat production business. Stressing the importance of Mrs. Else Bonem's work in fulfilling Israel's human needs, University President Avraham Harman told the gathering attending the dedica- tion that she was a member of the Women of the Book Society, a section of the American Friends of the Hebrew University which sup- ports the Jewish National and University Library on the univer- sity's Givat Ram campus in Jeru- salem, and a Builder of Scopus- i.e., one of a dedicated group of women who each pledge a mini- mum of $1,000 to aid the univer- sity's scholarship program for needy and outstanding students. Mrs. Bonem's work for Israel also includes the Bonem Health Center in Ramie. The Hebrew University Faculty of Agriculture, Harman told the audience, was the only such aca- demic institution in the country. The scientific revolution in Israeli farming, he added, had begun here in Rehovot, on the faculty's cam- pus, which centralized within it the forces of modernization in agriculture and provided the coun- try's farming sector with a vital underpinning of scientific knowl- edge and discipline. The faculty is growing steadily and the uni- versity welcomes this growth, he asserted, but, at the same time, growth presents fresh difficulties not least of which is the need for student housing. Prof. S. F. Monselise, the fac- uly's dean, recalled that when the faculty had opened, close to 30 years ago, it had an annual intake of 12 students. The first-year class in 1970-71 will be 144, he revealed. Total enrollment at the end of the current academic year stands at 726, among whom are substantial numbers studying in both special and regular courses. Prof. Mon- selise referred to the growing need for specialization in agriculture and stressed the necessity to in- crease the teaching faculty beyond the present figure of 90. He also pointed out the need for more space, and more equipment and more books. The dormitories on the Rehovot Ethiopians, Israelis Join to Develop Technical Aid JERUSALEM—A new approach to technical aid for developing countries has developed with the signing of the Israeli-Ethiopian agreement to set up at the Haile I Can't Hate the Jew By RABBI SAMUEL SILVER (A Seven Arta Feature) In Mount Vernon, New York, a Negro publisher of a Negro news- paper could no longer stand the artificial wedge being inserted be- tween his people and the Jews and he delivered himself of this poem which he printed on the front page of his paper. "The Westchester Observer." Ben Anderson's poem speaks for itself. It's called "The Jew and Me." I cannot hate the Jew I'd be foolish if rdid. I'd not be thinking as an adult, But as some pathetic kid. campus, he said, now provide ac- commodation for 167 students. One third of the population of Israel attends either kindergarten, elementary or high school, and the figure of 800,000 children thus en- rolled in the school system repre- sents an eight-fold increase over the situation in 1948, when the state of Israel came into being. These figures were revealed by Israel Deputy Minister of Educa- tion Aharon Yadlin, at the corner- stone laying ceremony for the Samuel and Betty Katzin Chicago Building for the School of Educa- tion due to rise soon on the Mount Scopus campus of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Yadlin also told the gathering that the ministry of education would look increasingly to its faith- ful partner, the *university's school of education, in the current decade when the number of high school teachers must he doubled and even tripled. Ile said the educator's basic task today was to ensure that Israel's children continue to • receive the best possible educa- tion, even in conditions of tension and in areas where lessons must often be conducted in the shelters as border settlements come under daily shelling attacks. The deputy minister emphasized the role edu- cation plays in Israel not only in ensuring a steady supply of *the . . , . I won't buy anti-Semitism. I won't nor should you. What better friend have we got Than we find in the Jew? , When everybody kicked US 'round. Like we were bits of dust, Who were the only ones To lend a hand to us? When we sought to break the spell Of slavery's cruel trance. Of all the peoples in the land. Who gave black folk a chance? Perhaps you can't remember, But, by God, I do. The only hand stretched out to us Was that of the Jew Long before we ever dreamed Of a Civil Right. Who stood beside the black man In his almost helpless plight? When the black man lived in fear Of the hateful, rampant mob, Who gave the black man help? Who gave him a lob? And even to this very day. While bigots pierce our hide, What other "cousins" will you find Standing by our side? Who stood with our valiant kids In school the other night? Think for just a little while, And get your logic right! Who supported Dr. King. Roy Wilkins and the CORE? I cannot hate Jewish folk. Too well I know the score. The Jew is In the vanguard Of the fight for freedom's cause, The champion of democracy, Of just and equal laws. I cannot stand for bigotry. For hate against the Jew, I still remember Cheney And Schwermer and Goodman too. Bravo, Mr. Ariderion! I Sellassie I University in Addis Ababa a joint microbiological training program with the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. The official ratification took place July 15, when the agreement was signed by Dr. Mekonen Keb- ret, vice president for academic affairs of the Haile Sellassie I University, and Avraham Harman, president of the Hebrew Univer- sity, where the ceremony was held. The underlying philosophy of the new approach to technical aid lies in the gradual "Ethiopianiza- tion" of the five-year program by a staged transference of the new microbiological unit to the Ethio- pian University staff members. Upon the conclusion of the five- year period, all teaching and re- search in microbiology at the Haile Sellassie I University would be assumed by the Ethiopians. The new agreement is the larg- est university aid program ever undertaken by Israel and will provide the necessary scale and concentration of effort, as well as the continuity frequently absent in past technical assist- ance programs. Israel's program of technical aid, particularly to Africa, has been in progress for well over a decade. In many developing countries, infectious diseases such as malaria, yellow fever and typhus caused by micro-organisms are wide- spread and constitute a dangerous menace to public health. Their eradication is of the utmost con- cern to public officials throughout the developing world. Having developed a prominent body of research scientists in the field of microbiology, the Hebrew University is well equipped to em- bark upon a program of this na- ture and magnitude. In addition, many infectious diseases prevalent elsewhere in the world have been eradicated in Israel as a result of the concerted attack upon them, supported by research in microbiology and allied fields. During the first phase of the program, due to start in Febru- ary, the first team of Israeli teachers from the institute of microbiology at the Hebrew Uni- versity will arrive in Addis Ababa for a four-month period, and every year subsequently during the five-year period, to conduct the courses to be offered yearly. The second phase of the joint program will include training for Ethiopian students and staff at the institute of microbiology at Nazi Centers Reported at Work in S. Africa; . Arabs Trained Near Bonn for Palestine Army Words differently arranged have a different meaning, and mean- ings differently arranged have dif- ferent effects.--Pascal. Jordanians, 12 Egyptians, three Frenchmen, three Iraqis, three sympathetic Germans, and even some Americans—are being train- ed in commando tactics near Bonn. The group, part of the Palestin- ian Liberation Army, is call2d Mudschahid El Falastin and is be- ing instructed in the arts of gren- ade throwing, Molotov cocktail mix- ing, document faking and radio communications "in the Venus- berg woods above elegant homes," Atlas says, The group is also said to include some Italians and an Irish blonde. NEW YORK (JTA)—"It's being openly stated in South Africa that two secret Nazi centers are oper- ating in the apartheid country," Atlas magazine reports in its cur- rent issue. One, formed near the end of World War II, is comprised of former SS members, and the other, called "The Spider," is a successor to the pre-war rightist organization called "the Link," the magazine says. The aim of the latter seems to be "to unite Nazi sympathizers all over the world," the magazine says, adding: "Reportedly more Nazis are now hiding in the Re- public of South Africa than in any country outside Europe with the exception of Argentina." The magazine also reported that more than 40 Arab guerrillas-22 Classified Ads Get Quick Results OUT-OF-TOWN GUESTS The CARIBE MOTEL PROVIDES YOUR WITH .. . 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The high professional standard of the Haile Sellassie I Univer- sity's school of medicine is inter- nationally acknowledged. With the establishment of the new micro- biological unit, a vital link in its already extensive program of medical education will be forged. Once the program gets under way, plans for expansion of its scope are anticipated. Such expan- sion may take the form of joint research projects of mutual inter- est to both countries, particularly finding new sources of protein- rich foods. In addition to the contribution of the two universities, a consider- able share of the sponsorship will be undertaken by the ministry for foreign affairs of the government of Israel, within the framework of its technical cooperative program, through its department for inter- national cooperation. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 34 — Friday, July 24, 1970 Studio See over fifty displays of fine interiors—view our boutique, featuring accessories front around the world. 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