12—Friday, Sept. 13, 1974 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Mosad Aliya, Mizrachi Village Made for Youth Since Rosh Hashanah last year, The Endowment Program has AIDED 31 students in technical, undergraduate, and graduate schools with scholarship help through the Jewish Scholarship Service UNDERWRITTEN the Institute for Jewish Life, a national program concerned with the continuity, quality and enrichment of Jewish life in America FUNDED Project JOIN, an internship program in Jewish communal- careers administered by the Jewish Vocational Service & Community Workshop and the Jewish Community Center INITIATED a Jewish cultural enrichment pro- gram for a group of mentally retarded clients in the Arnold E. Frank Community Work- shop of JVS-CW SENT the final installment of an emer- gency allocation for the restoration and rebuilding of Jewish community in- stitutions in flood-stricken Wilkes-Barre PROVIDED funding for the community- wide Tay Sachs disease screening program run by Sinai Hospital and the Ford Hospital Genetic Counselling Clinic GIVEN special "seed money" grants to Hillel organizations on campus at Wayne State University, the University of Michigan, and Michigan State University to expand Jewish programming and service for collegians ENDOWED a professorial chair in Jewish History at the University of Michigan AND MUCH MORE, made possible by the generosity of our community! . 0 - clat "1-tfAdc' LAlutouiWiutititkx, ido-upwa,z B&ok, 6,( Mandell L. Berman Alfred L. Deutsch President, Jewish Welfare Federation President, United Jewish Charities William Avrunin Executive Vice-President, Jewish Welfare Federation C. Kenneth Sarason Secretary, Endowment Program The Endowment Program 163 Madison Avenue WO 5-3939 These children are attend- ing a day camp for 600 boy ; and girls on the grounds of the Mosad Aliya Children's Village, a project of Ameri- can Mizrachi Women. Vaca- tions for children fro_,m. Is- rael's tense border settle- ments, and day care for chil- dren of working mothers, are receiving special emphasis in programs of American Mizra- chi Women since the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Israeli Wins Gold Medal in Teheran TEL AVIV, (JTA)—Danni Brenner, the 21-year-old son of a Haifa shipping tycoon, Mila Brenner, won Israel its first gold medal in an inter- national sporting event at Teheran last weekend. Brenner, whose father is co-owner of Maritime 'Fruit Carriers Lt., scored an upset victory in the 100-meters free-style swimming event at the Asian Games. He beat the favored Chinese and Jap- anese swimmers with a time of 55.64 seconds. Israel's jubilation over the win was tempered by the un- friendly political atmosphere at the games. The Chinese men's and womens fencing teams refused to meet the Israelis. Pakistan, which will host. the next Asian games, failed to show up for a bas- ketball game against the Is- raeli team. The Kuwaiti team asked for a postponement for the football (soccer) semi-finals from Sunday to Monday, the day the Israeli team must leave Teheran to be home in time for Rosh Hashana. Vile 'Protocols' Printed in Italy NEW YORK (JTA)—The Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith's representative' in Rome report that the in- famous czarist forgery "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion" has just been published in Italy by the firm Costan- tino Catapano in Lucera, near Foggia. Printed from a French translation which originated in Beirut in 1972, the current anti-Semitic docunient is re- portedly being distributed to priests, schools and private persons. Against a background of deteriorating economic con- ditions, ADL's representa- tive f ears "scapegoating Jews among reactionary ele- ments "for whom the 'Proto- cols' is an appropriate tool." Several thousand copies of the books are said to be in