• Hirshhorn Art Sculpture Collection at Smithsonian Honors Immigrant 1 .., Ay JOSEPH POLAKOFF (Copyright 1974, JTA, Inc.) WASHINGTON , — The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, housing Joseph H. Hirshhorn's col- lection of sculpture and paint- ing of the past 125 years, is fir?ally ready to be shown as America's permanent testi- ( monial to the Latvian Jewish emigrant whose widowed mother made purses in, a Brooklyn factory six days a week to feed her family of '13 children. _ This new public museum, a part, of the Smithsonian In- stitution on the mall between the Capitol and White House, is the result of the magnifi- cent gift to the nation of some 4,000 paintings and 2,000 sculptures that Hirsh- horn, now 75, assembled over 40 years while he was amas- sing i a fortune in Wall Street and from uranium mines in Canada. The appraised value of the works is more than $100,000,000. Hirshhorn's gift, which leaves him and his wife with only a few items in their own home in Greenwich, Conn., traces art in every medium by European and American masters. The inaugural . ex- hibit which opens with a series of receptions during the first week in October and will continue through Sept. 15, 1975, consists of 800 to 900 works in all media. ' Sampling of the exhibit re- veals such outstanding works as Henry Moore's "King and- Queen," Pablo Picasso's "Baby Carriage," Auguste RUSSELL SCHREIBER ASSOCIATES AGENCY OF THE SHOW WORLD• • -Entertainment • Speakers • Concerts Downtown Detroit - 962-8000 • Orchestras MAGICIAN Available For All Occasions 20 years experience- MAGICAL MEL 547-2464 , - ration- am .0 moo Miami Beach , ; Christmas - New Years fulj- XTRA WEEK E3 0 Rodin's "Burghers of Cal- ais," Henry Matisse's "Backs I-IV, "Thomas Eakins' por- trait of his wife, Sir Jacob Epstein's portrait of Joseph Conrad in the last year of that writer's life; Elie Nadel- man's portrait bust of the French poet Baudelaire, and Ben Shahn's "Supreme Court of California: Mooney Ser- ies," one of 16 Shahn had painted to dramatize the celebrated Toth Mooney case in San Francisco. To commemorate the mus- eum's opening, William Schu- man, one of America's finest composers, has written "Pre- lude for a Great Occassion." In addition, 'Harry N. Abra- hams, Inc., of New York, has published an inaugural book of 768 pages with an intro- duction by the museum's dir- ector, Abraham Lerner, an artist in his own right who first met Hirshhorn 29 years ago in a New York art gal- lery where he was then em- ployed. The museum, a circular four-floor structure with an inner open core that some critics have likened to a -bagel, was created by an act of Congress on Nov. 7, 1966, at President Lyndon B. John- son's request after he had ac- cepted Hirshhorn's offer. The architect was Gordon Bun- shaft of New York, who also designed the Johnson Lib- rary at the University of Texas and the Beinecke Rare , Code Transmitted by Syrians Was Basis for Terrorist Attacks TEL AVIV (JTA)—A code transmitted through a Damas- cus radio news broadcast gave 0 the green light for what was to have been a series of ter- rorist outrages against civil- le COMPLETE PRICE- per person ians in Israel over the Rosh additional double occ . . Hashana holiday, security I 7 Days - 7 Nights per person authorities disclosed Monday. Dec, 22 — 29, 1974- Dec. 22 -Jan.5, 75 That and other information on terrorist activities emerg- Dec. 29 — Jan. 5, 1975 ed from the investigation of ■ INCLUDES: Round trip jet airfare via Delta Air- 0 two Arab youths who were ■ lines or Eastern Airlines ■ Appropriate meal and ra: arrested on Rosh Hashana verages enroute ■ Round trip airport transfer eve in the act of planting a ■ Pre-registration -of all rooms ■ Twin-double ac- home-made time bomb in a busy Tel Aviv supermarket. commodations at the beautiful NAUTILUS Hotel The pair have been identi- , ■ Full Breakfast daily ■ Welcome cocktailsaPlus fied as Hassan Abed, 22, and i 2 Dinners at Wolfies restaurant ■ All baggage Nabih Hilef, 21. They joined I handling ■ All tips and all taxes • El Fatah several months ago I Special Children's Rates and underwent an intensive sabotage training course in • Special Reduction for groups of 15 or more Syria while ostensibly in Jor- ataJ dan for a "family visit," the (313). 557-5145 authorities revealed. ■ Abed and Hilef were di- I H, TON; MILLER, HUDSON & FAYNE TRAVEL CORP. rected by a third -terrorist, ■ ( located in the Advance Bldg.) identified by police only as a ii 0 24-year-old resident of Tul- 230Z7 Greenfield Rd., Southfield, Michigan 48075. ii. karem. It was the latter who 1 Nar , :15 monitored t h e Damascus 11 newscast and. passed the word ▪ Address on to the others to proceed with the supermarket bomb- A City State Zip ing which was to have been 4 Send all information on Miami Beach JN 170 .- I 0 -_9rv. Ahirt 09eweler SELECTED JEWELRY Near Post Office followed by other terrorist acts, police said. The police have learned of additional small terrorists cells recruited and activated by terrorist agents who en tered Israeli territory last summer under the "summer visitors" program. Some of the "visitors" remained in the country after their per- mits expired. Police believe they may be linked to the terrorist murder of Avraham Wexler, a 50-year-old Israeli civilian, in the Jenin vege- table market last Saturday. 4, Oak Park, Mich. LI 7-5068 ment of that commitment ex- cept that it's seven times over." Hirshhorn was born in Mitau, Latvia in 1899, the 12th of his parents' 13 chil- dren. When his father died, his mother brought the entire family to New York in 1905, settling in Brooklyn's Will- iamsburg section. Hirshhorn helped his fam- ily by selling newspapers. When he was 14 he started in Wall Street as an office boy. Three years later, in 1916, when he was only 17, he plunged his savings of $225 into establishing his own brokerage. In the late 1940's he entered Canadian uran- ium mining. While he sold most of his uranium interests in 1960, he still is chairman of the Callahan Mining Corp. in Canada. A chance meeting at the ACA gallery in New York led to -the long and fruitful Hirsh- horn-Lerner association. Ler- ner, who was born in 1913 in New York, had worked as a mural artist in the Federal Arts Project after being graduated from New York University and had served as an art instructor at Brooklyn College when he joined the gallery as an em- ploye in 1945. Not long afterwards, a short, stocky, vigorous man hurried into the gallery, quickly examined some paintings and bought four. Flabbergasted, Lerner tele- phoned the gallery's director that "an _ apparition" had just purchased four items at one t i m e. The director laughed. "Don't worry," he t o 1 d Lerner. "That was Hirshhorn: he is the most dynamic collector in New York." Hirshhorn and Lerner met frequently and went together to gallery exhibits. "He nev- er bought anything that he did not respond to," Lerner has recalled. In 1956, Lerner became Hirshhorn's curator of the collection that was stored in warehouses in New York and in his office on Broadway. Eleven year s later, after Congress had voted to build the museum, President Johnson selected Lerner as its curator. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, Sept. 27, 1974-37 - MICHAEL KAPLIT Photography Weddings • Bar Miizvas 642-1039 Let The Professionals Perform DICK STEIN Inc. Jeep Sm ith — Dick Stein Shelby Lee — Patty Grant Mori Little — Leonard McDonald Etc. From one to any number of musicians Complete Party Planning on Request 358-2777 "Music The Stein Way" SHIRT JACKETED 3-PIECE Alliance Israelite to Train Teachers NE WYORK (JTA) — A new venture in education started this month in Israel with the opening in Jerusalem of a teachers' training center by the Alliance Israelite Uni- verselle and the Association of Jewish Humanities Instruc- tion in Israel, it was reported by the American Friends of the Alliance Israelite Univer- selle. The opening of the institute —which was called Kerem (Vineyard)—was the result cf a two-year study by an Is- raeli group of scholars and educators. The group came to the conclusion that wide- range reforms must be intro- duced in the teaching of hu- manities and Jewish subjects in Israeli secondary schools. LEARN HARD WAY COMPLETE JEWELRY SERVICE 13720 W. 9 Mile Rd. Book and Manuscript Lib- rary at Yale. Hirshhorn had difficulty in deciding where his collection should go. Canada, which he greatly admires, was a prime choice. Israel's new museum in Jerusalem invit- ed it. England offered to build a new museum for it in London's Regents Park. Invitations came also from the State University of New York, Beverly Hills, Balti- more and Zurich. President Johnson personally persuad- ed Hirshhorn to give it to the Smithsonian. From its start, the project has been plagued by rede- signing and scaling down of the structure, strikes, law- suits over unexpected costs, bidding' delays. Various Con- gressmen attacked it as a monument to one man's ego although many American museums are named after their principal benefactors in- cluding the Smithsonian it- self. Congress appropriated $15,300,00 to. build the com- plex but in 1970 cost over- runs increased charges by $1,000,000. In his original gift, Hirshhorn had promised ad- ditional art worth $1,000,000. Hirshhorn made up the deficit with cash on his or- iginal promise and then- pledged another $1,000,000 in art. About the latter $1,000,- 000, Charles Blitzer, assistant secretary for art and history at the -Smithsonian, said that it was "in essence a fulfill- It may be true that haste makes- waste, but some find it out only by costly experi- ence. PANTSUIT , $ 34 90 Reg. $52 The classic weekender in solid red, green or navy over its own matching checked shirt. in 100% pantsuits have floral Sizes 10 to 18. BANIKAMERICARD blouses. MASTER-CHARGE giLbgbias WA t 1CUSE STCPt 3160 W.12 Mile, Berkley 23 Mile & Van Dyke. Shelby Pima Open doily 10 to 6 — Mon., Tht.irs , Fri. 'til Sundays 12 Classifieds Get Quick Results Great look Polyester. Some to S 9