THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, May 25, 1973-13

buY
Illack8tWhite Scotch
in half gallons?

Half gallon. The economy-size package makes

-

good sense for shoppers.

Built-in pourer. Allows for a smooth, even

flow. No spill over, even when the bottle's full.

Scotch drinker's Scotch. Light, Black &

White Scotch for people who really enjoy
the taste of Scotch.

Concave grip. So easy to handle, even

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ItAcKatwHrTE.

, it_BLICSC HO
AN•N S

' 44;24

p„.

Priced right.

1/2 gallons of Black & White
Scotch is still priced at

e"

r, • 4 r

97

Black & WhIte.The Scotch drinken Scotch.

Histadrut Election
Set for September

TEL AVIV (JTA) — The
Histadrut Executive, by unan-
imous approval, set Sept. 11
as the date for the next His-
tadrut elections in which
1,100,000 members of the
trade union federation are
eligible to vote.
The decision, taken Sunday
after a week-long debate,
represented a victory of His-
t a d r u t Secretary General
Yitzhak Ben Aharon over ele-
ments that wanted the elec-
tions postponed until the end
of this year or early next
year to avoid a conflict with
the national and municipal
election campaigns this fall.
Histadrut by-laws call for
elections every four years.
B e n Aharon emphasized
that the Histadrut election
campaign would not stop him
from criticizing the govern-
ment's economic and foreign
policies.
Labor Party Secretary
Aharon Yadlin warned Ben
Aharon Sunday that he is
mistaken if he believes he
can carry the Histadrut elec-
tions while embroiled in argu-
ments with the government.

Classifieds Get Quick Results

Tragedy Averted by Alert Newsboy

JERUSALEM (JTA) — A
Jerusalem newsboy who spot-
ted a suspicious-looking par-
cel in a government office
building here was credited
with averting a major dis-
aster.
Police said the parcel con-
tained a time bomb set to
explode at 7 a.m. when office
employes would be arriving
for work.
The youngster, who was
not immediately identified,
noticed the paper and cello-
phane-wrapped parcel in the
Generali Building in down-
town Jerusalem at 5:30 a.m.
and reported it immediately
to police headquarters a short
distance away.
Sappers dismantled the
bomb and police began a
seach for the perpetrators.
They said the bomb was
probably planted by terrorists
who intended the blast to co-
incide with the 25th anniver-
sary of Israel's Declaration
of Independence.
The Generali Building is
a government office block
with shops on its ground
floor.
In New York, Khalid .Dah-

TEL AVIV (ZINS) —
The three-year-old Black
September terrorist group
is responsible for 150 acts
of terror, 68 against Is-
raelis and six against Dia-
spora Jews; 17 incidents
carried out in Western
countries and 14 in Jor-
dan. Casualties totaled
228, with 116 fatal. Thir-
teen terrorists have been
killed and five wounded.
Ninety terrorists were ap-
prehended, with 80 later
released. Of 10 in custody
eight are in Israel and
two in Paraguay.
All terrorists in West-
ern Europe have been
freed after apprehension.

ham al-Jawari, an Iraqi
citizen, was indicted in ab-
sentia by a federal grand
jury for the attempted bomb-
ing last March of the El Al
freight terminal at Kennedy
Airport and the Israel Dis-
count Bank and First Israel
Bank and Trust Co. of New
York in midtown Manhattan.
In each instance, explo-
sive devices were found in
rented cars that had been
parked near the Israeli in-
stallations.
Al-Jawari has not been ap-
prehended and is believed to
have escaped to Europe.
A Gaza military court im-
posed a five-year prison
sentence on Dr. Rashed Mous-
mar, a Gaza physician who
hid wanted terrorists in his
home.
The court added three
years to the sentence—for
a total of eight—by revoking
a pardon won by Dr. Mous-
mar after a previous convic-
tion. He was convicted four .
years ago of maintaining con-
tact with terrorist organiza-
tions but served only two
years .of a five-year sentence.
Although at the time he
was pardoned Dr. Mousmar

Technion Honors Late President

HAIFA —. A project to
honor the late Lt. Gen. Yaa-
cov Dori, a former president
of Technion—Israel Institute
of Technology, will provide
facilities for the more than
1,000 teachers at Technion.
The all-purpose faculty cen-
ter will memorialize Israel's
first chief of staff, who died
in January at age 73.
The American Tehnion So-
ciety has set up a special
committee to oversee this
project. National chairmen
are Colonel J. R. Elyachar
of New York and Charles
Krown of Los Angeles.
The Dori Faculty Center

Israel Technion Research Used
in U.S. Skylab Launch Rocket

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We're Detroit's foremost importer of high-quality cloth-
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So if you want something that doesn't look like-it came
from just some other Detroit haberdashery, save yourself a
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For the man who wants to shop in Montreal or Paris,
but only has time to drive to Warren.

HAIFA—In the design of
the vital interstages of the
Saturn V rocket which
launched America's Skylab
space station into earth
orbit, NASA used methods
based on the theory and ex-
perimental work of Prof.
Joseph Singer of the depart-
ment of aeronautical engi-
neering at Technion—Israel
Institute of Technology.
With research contracts
from the U. S. Air Force,
Prof. Singer and his associ-
ates have, for 13 years, con-
ducted research into the
buckling strength of cylindri-
cal and conical shells, which
form the outer skins of air-
craft and missiles like
Saturn.
In the mid 1960s they
evolved a method for anal-
yzing such structures from
the standpoint of the buck-
ling strength of their outer
skins, which are reinforced
with external stiffening ribs
called stringers.
NASA then adopted Prof.
Singer's analytical method
in designing the intermediate
stages which link the first
and second and second and
third, stages of Saturn V
which launched the Apollo
vehicles on their way to the
moon, and now the Skylab.
Stringers provide bracing
for the thin-walled missile
body to prevent it from
buckling under the forces of
acceleration when the rock-
et's engines lift the heavy,

signed a pledge that he would
have nothing more to do with
terrorists, he continued to
shelter them in his Gaza
villa.
In Milan, a man identified
as 40-year-old Gianfranco
Bertoli, a self-style anarchist
who, recently in Israel, threw
an Israeli-made hand gre-
nade into a crowd outside
the police station, killing a
woman and seriously wound-
ing 30 other people. Several
of the injured were on the
hospital danger list.
The dead woman was iden-
tified as Gabriella Bartolon,
manager of a small boutique
near the police headquarters.
Police believe• the grenade
was aimed at the Italian
minister of interior, Mariano
Rumor.
Police seized Bertoli. The
grenade was identified as of
Israeli manufacture.
Bertoli, who comes from
Venice, was said to have a
police record stretching back
23 years. They said he had
arrived recently in Marseilles
from Haifa. •It was not im-
mediately known how long
he had been in Israel or what
he was doing there.

multi-stage assembly.
Prof. Singer, who is Tark
Professor of Aircraft Struc-
tures, is one of Israel's fore-
most aeronautical pioneers.
On loan from Technion, he
serves as senior vice-presi-
dent for engineering at Israel
Aircraft Industries.
Born in Austria, Prof.
Singer immigrated to Israel
in 1938, served in the Bri-
tish Royal Air Force in
World • War II and then
studied aeronautical engi-
neering at Imperial College
of London, graduating in
1948. Upon completing a
master's degree at Brooklyn
Polytechnic Institute in 1949,
he returned to Israel to join
the engineering department
of the fledgling Israel Air
Force and, attaining the rank
of major, became the head
of the test and development
section.
Prof. Singer left the Air
Force in 1955 to join the
academic staff of Technion's
then new faculty of aeronau-
tical engineering and concur-
rently study for a doctorate
at Brooklyn Polytechnic In-
stitute.
He served as dean of the
faculty and has been a
visiting professor of aeronau-
tics at Stanford University
and California Institute of
Technology. He is past presi-
dent of the Israel Society of
Aeronautics and Astronau-
tics and a Fellow of the
Royal Aeronautical Society.

will include dining, cultural
and sports facilities, as well
as offices for the Technion
Teachers' Association.
Gen. Dori retired as hief
of staff in 1949 and two years
later became president of the
Technion. He founded the
graduate school of the Tech-
nion in 1956. In 1965, Gen.
Dori retired from the presi-
dency, but continued to serve
as a member of its board of
governors.

*

*

Dr. Isadore Rudnick, pro-
fessor of physics at the Uni-
versity of California at Los
Angeles (UCLA), has been
named Alberman Visiting
Professor at the Technion.
Prof. Rudnick, who has al-
ready taken up his duties,
will spend one year in Haifa.
Prof. Jacob Ziv of the
faculty of electrical engineer-
ing at the Technion, has been
appointed to the Herman
Gross Chair in Electronics
there. He was senior re-
search engineer in the science
department of the Israel
Ministry of Defense and later
became head of the depart-
ment's communications divi-
sion.

Isaac Stern Plans
Project in Israel

NEW YORK (JTA)—Isaac
Stern, the world famous vio-
linist, announced a new mu-
sic project in Israel.
He said a music and art
center would open in Jeru-
salem this summer for the
purpose of establishing a
framework where music stu-
dents and their teachers can
meet with internationally
known performers to play
and discuss music, improve
their training and further
their art.
Stern, who will be the di-
rector of the project, made
the announcement at a press
conference held by the Amer-
ican-Israel Cultural Founda-
tion. He said the project
was privately funded by a
source which asks to remain
anonymous.
Stern said that the center
is now under construction in
the Mishkenot Shaananim sec-
tion of Jerusalem.

