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May 10, 1974 - Image 42

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1974-05-10

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

MIL

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Dance Party Set
42—Friday, May 10, 1974
by Menora Singles
Menora Singles will have
a singles dance and party
Operation Joshua
8:30 p.m. Sunday at Alva-
to Introduce Young ro's
•Restaurant. There is an
Adults to Israel
admission charge.
This dance is open to sin-
NEW YORK — American
Jewish college students will gle adults age 18-39. Dance
have the opportunity to ex- attire is casual. Refresh-
amine the problems and way ments will be available and
of life in Israel today, and music will be provided by
learn of the work of the Uni- the Gibraltar Rock. Pro-
ted Jewish Appeal, through a ceeds will go for the Israel
special summer project spon- Emergency Fund. For in-
sored by UJA's university formation, call Al Levett,
programs department.
557-5447, or Ron Chess, 255-
Operation Joshua, a sum- 0727.
mer program in Israel run by
and for college students, will Wine-Tasting Party
begin its fifth year July 14.
"A Series of Encounters"
The program is designed as will present a wine-tasting
an inexpensive way in which session for singles 22-35, fea-
a student can get to know turing a wine specialist, 8
Israel in depth.
p.m. Wednesday at the
Open to any American col- United Hebrew Schools main
lege student, the Operation building. For reservations,
Joshua tours take partici- by today, call Gordon Sil-
pants to horder kibutzim, im- verman, 341-4200.
migrant absorption centers,
development towns and other
areas of indicative of Israeli Art, History, Theater
life today.
Taught at Bar-Ilan
RAMAT-GAN — Bar-Ilan
Ill blows the wind that University has approved the
profits nobody. — William opening for the coming aca-
Shakespeare.
demic year :of two new de-
partments — one for art
history and the second for
theater.
by John Miller
Both departments will at
• weddings • graduations
first offer courses leading
• Bar Mitzvas • Anniversaries
towards a minor subject for
Reasonable Rates
the BA degree, but it is
831.1127
8-11 mornings or eves.
planned to expand them even-
tually into major subjects.
Prof. Murray Roston, of the
department of English, has
been appointed to help set up
ewrieatuited
the two departments.

I

OLOR PHOTOGRAPHY






PARTIES
BAR MITZVAS
SOCIALS
ETC.


► 4

,
/

(Copyright 1974, JTA, Inc.)

Chaim Weizmann, the first
president of Israel, was long
conscious of the oil monopoly
problem. No one could have
written about it more clearly
than he did 40 years ago in
his autobiography, "Trial
and Error." In a chapter in
which he discusses "oil and
politics," he warned of the
need to break "oil's monopo-
lostic hold."
Dr. Weizmann himself
worked on the solution of the
problem and hoped that the
scientific institute in Rehovot
which bears his name would
continue the work and that
Palestine "would be made
the center of the new devel-
opment which would get the
world past the conflict aris-
ing from the monopolistic
position of oil."
As he saw it, the oil prob-
lem was basically part of
the general question of raw
materials with which his en-
tire scientific career was in-
volved. He said, in his mind,
"science and Zionism were
fused in one organic whole."
Some look to the sun, some
to nuclear energy, some to
coal to solve the energy
problem. Weizmann looked to
the farm. In World War I,
the British government had

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Dr. Arnold Golnick, the
newly elected president of
Alpha Omega Dental Fratern-
ity, will be honored at the
installation dinner-dance of
the local chapter 8 p.m. Sat-
urday at the Troy Hilton Ho-
tel. Dr. Golnick, a native of
Scranton, holds a dentistry
degree from the Univedsity
of Pittsburgh and a master
of science degree in pedo-
dontics from the University
of Detroit. President of the
Michigan Society of Dentistry
for Children, he is on the
staffs of Sinai and Children's
Hospitals. Dr. Golnick is
chairman of the department
of pedodontics and assistant
professor of clinical pedodon-
tics at U. of D.'s school of
dentistry.

Men's Clubs

BETH EL MEN'S CLUB
will host columnist Pete
Waldmeir at its final Sunday
discussion series gathering 10
a.m. May 19 at the temple.
Breakfast will be served at
9:30. The public is invited at
no charge.

The man who never alters
his opinion is like standing
water, and breeds reptiles of
the mind.—William Blake.

lacked rubber, acetone and
other chemicals. Weizmann,
in his research in fermenta-
tion, found that some bac-
teria in the soil mixed with
some plants like tapioca, pro-
duce plain alcohol, butyl al-
cohol and acetone out of
which a high octane fuel
could be made.
The world of bacteria is
quite a world. Some people
think we have overpopula-
tion. They point especially to
India. Six hundred million
people there, they cry out.
In the bacteria world, that
is considered birth control.
Dr. Selman Waxman, himself
a Nobel Prize winner for his
bacteriological discoveries,
writing about Weizmann,
notes that one pound of soil
often contains 150,000,000
bacteria. It's not easy to
know so many bacteria. But
Dr. Weizmann is so well
known there that some bac-
teria are named after him.
The British government
was able to use Weizmann's
findings in the manufacture
of needed chemicals. Fac-
tories for their manufacture
were established all over the
world, including the United
States. The ones in America
were eventually taken over
by the U.S. . government.
Henry Wallace, who was
Vice-President under Frank-
lin Roosevelt, said that the
world would never know its
debt to Weizmann for his
contribution in the making of
synthetic rubber.
Weizmann was also search-
ing for the development of
vegetable substitutes for the
protein of meat. Weizmann
made significant contributions
in all of these fields and
looked to the scientific insti-
tution in Israel which he
founded to continue this work.
When the Nazis took over
Germany, Weizmann tried to
get Fritz Haber to join the
Israeli scientific institution.
Haber was a Jew who had
converted to Christianity. He
made perhaps the most sig-
nificant chemical discovery
of his generation, the extrac-
tion of nitrogen from the air.
It was the basis of many new
German industries. When
first approached by Weiz-
mann with the -idea of com-
ing to Israel, Haber's answer
was a positive negative. But
later a penitent Haber ap-
peared. He had been stripped
of everything by the Nazis.
He started the journey to Is-
rael, but died en route.
Weizmann's notable scien-
tific discoveries no doubt had
their effect in getting Eng-
land to issue the Balfour
Declaration. Lloyd George
was Prime Minister at the
time. He once remarked to
Herbert Samuel, "Weizmann
will be remembered when
both of us are forgotten."
The world needs science
more than it needs Arab oil,
which after all will be a
thing of the past some 40
years from now. When the
last Arab oil well has dried
out, the world will perforce
have to turn to the wells of
science.
And this perhaps is a good
enough reason in itself why
the world needs Israel. Some-
thing tells us that Weiz-
mann's dream will come
true, that Israel will be one
of these science wells, so
much needed, despite the
fact that the United Nations
seems entirely unaware of it.

111111111111111111111111.11111111111111-

Fashion Show Due
at Donor Luncheon

Flowers For
Every Occasion
... Or An

Beth Achim Sisterhood will
have "A Fashion Fantasy"
at its annual donor luncheon
noon May 21 at the syna-
Occasional Flower
gogue. Mesdames Kenneth
• WEDDINGS
Belen and Esther Rosenblum
• BAR MITZVAS
are donor luncheon chair-
men.
• SHOWERS
• PARTIES
There will be prizes, and
Mrs. William Tarnow, vice ' CALL ANY DAY — ANYTIME!
president of ways and means,
will open the sisterhood gift
shop at 11 a.m.
For tickets, call the ticket
chairmen, Mrs. Isadore
Levin, 645-9471, or Mrs. Max
Kruger, 273-3424. Sisterhood
president is Mrs. Arthur
Schussler.

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