36 Friday, February 21, 1975
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Bnai Brith to Honor Presidents
for Jewish National Fund
Bnai Brith lodge and
chapter presidents and tree
chairmen will have a break-
fast meeting to discuss
plans for the ninth annual
-Bnai Brith presidents
brunch 10 a.m. March 2 at
the Gallery Restaurant,
29595 Southfield, South-
field.
The presidents' brunch
will be held 10 a.m. April 20
at Cong. Beth Abraham-
Hillel. The event is co-spon-
sored by the Jewish Na-
tional Fund and will honor
the presidents of the men's
and women's councils and
chapter and lodge presi-
dents.
Co-chairmen of the Bnai
Brith Israel Martyrs For-
est are Meyer Littky, JNF
BB Volleyballers
chairman of the Metropol-
itan Detroit Bnai Brith
List Team Scores
Council, and Mrs. David
The Metropolitan Detroit Freedman, tributes chair-
Bnai Brith Men's Volleyball person of the Bnai Brith
League announces the fol- Women's Council.
lowing team standings:
Amer. League Won Lost
Morgentham
44
Keidan-Couplets 39
Brotherhood
37
L'Chayim 2
29
Couplets
20
Rey-Ut
9
19
24
26
34
43
54
At the. March 2 breakfast
meeting, plans will be for-
mulated for a past - presi-
dent's forest, to be part of
the Bnai Brith Martyrs For-
est. For information, call
the Bnai Brith Council,
354-6100.
Nat'l. League Won Lost
L'Chayim 1
Marshall
Detroit
Tikvah
Pisgah
Centennial
56
50
35
31
• 28
0
HARVARD
ROW MALL
24 Stores,& Services
11 Mile & Lahser
Pretty
and
Personal
7 Arabs Warn Firm
13
28 to Discontinue
32. Israeli Relations
35
COPENHAGEN (JTA) —
63
The shipping firm Aker Co.,
which was involved in the
Cherbourg affair of Decem-
ber 1971, has' received a
warning from Arab coun-
tries, according to the Nor-
wegian daily newspaper
Afton Posten that Arab
companies will embargo oil
Shipments to the firm- if it
does not break off relations
with Israel.
The Aker Co. Was involved
in the incident where five
ships sailed out of Cher-
bourg harbor to Israel at the
height of the French arms
embargo. The five were mis-
sile-carrying craft built in
France for Israel's Navy but
undelivered because of the
embargo.
On Christmas day, 1971,
their Israeli crews spirited
them out of Cherbourg har-
bor under a neutral flag and
brought them to Israel a
week later.
Bnai Brith Activities
the meeting. Mrs. Fred Rapa-
port is chairperson of arrange-
ments. There will be games,
and refreshments will be
served. The chapter will join the
lodge 8 p.m. Saturday for a
square dance and buffet dinner
at Einstein School, Oak Park.
Patrick Shultheis is caller.
There is an admission charge.
For information, call Mrs.
Ralph Gross, chapter president,
353-5585, or Ernest Shaw, lodge
president, 557-2472, ' •
The Bnai Brith Women's
Council of Metropolitan Detroit
will hold a delegates meeting 8
p.m., Wednesday, at the Zionist
Cultural Center. Mrs. Maynard
Kalef is council president.
* * *
ISRAEL LODGE will
hear journalist Berl Fal-
baum 8:30 p.m. Monday at
the Bonanza Sirloin Pit, 11
Mile and Greenfield Rds.
Dinner will be served at
7:30. There is a charge. For
information, call Sy Res-
nick, 398-2745.
* * *
TIKVA LODGE will have
a induction of new members
8:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Zionist Cultural Center.
Rabbi William Blank of
Wayne State University's
Hillel Foundation will
speak. Refreshments will be
served. Friends are invited.
* * *
MAURICE 'C. ZEIGER
LODGE will have a Sweet-
heart Ball 8:30 p.m. Satur-
day at Kings Arms Restau-
rant. There will be music for
dancing and refreshments.
Friends are invited. at a
nominal charge.
* * *
.
LOUIS MARSHALL CHAP-
TER will have an election meet-
ing 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Zion-
ist Cultural Center. Folk singer
Mark Goldenberg will enter-
tain. Refreshments will be
served.
* * *
TIKVAH CHAPTER will
have its annual installation
luncheon noon March 11 at Al-
varo's Restaurant. For reserva-
tions, needed by Tuesday, call
Mrs. Jack Weinberg, 545-5993,
or write her at 21330 Gardner,
Oak Park, 48237. Guests are
invited.
•
*
*
HENRY MORGENTHAU
CHAPTER will meet 8 p.m.
Thursday in the Lincoln Towers
Apts. club room. Election of
officers will take place, and
bowlers will sponsor a bingo at
.
* * *
CENTENNIAL CHAPTER
will hold its annual election
night dinner 7 p.m. Tuesday at
the home of Mrs. Paul Bruse-
loff, 22218 Ivanhoe, Southfield.
The evening will feature elec-
tion of officers and the state-of-
the-chapter report, given by the
president, Mrs. Samuel Gold-
stein. A special highlight will be
a spring fashion show with Cen-
tennial members as models. For
information or reservations,
call Mrs. Marvin Check,
559-0688, or Mrs. Jack Gold,
557-6371.
*
_ *
Funds Raised for WSU Pharmacy
More than
2,200 was
pledged for the Wayne State
University College of Phar-
macy and Allied Health
during a recent fund-raising
drive, headed by Sydney
Bluestone, president of the
Sentry Drug Store chain.
Bluestone, a registered
pharmacist and WSU alum-
nus, helped organize a com-
mittee which obtained
pledges from pharmacy al-
INVITATIONS
by HATTIE
SCHWARTZ
356-8563
•STATIONERY
PARTY FAVORS * * * *
ENTERTAINMENT
. ASTROLOGE
SEYMOUR
• CARICATURES
• COMEDIANS
SCHWARTZ
• FOUR LADS
AGENCY
.• ARTIE NELSON
356-8525
• AL SIMMS BAND
* * * R
-
a- BELLY DANCERS
Do Your Wedding—Bar Mitzv
• Candids •Movies
Fred Levine
834-1414
dick stein inc.
from one to any number of musicians
jeep smith
patty grant
dick stein
mori little
shelby lee
johnny griffith
Let the Professionals Perform
358-2777
"music the stein way"
Open Thurs., Fri.,
Sat. 'til 9 -
SUNDAY
12 to 5
S • 0 • S •
(Sunday Only Special!)
February 23rd.
20
OFF
BNAI DAVID MEN'S
CLUB will meet 11 a.m.
Sunday at the synagogue.
Brunch will be served. The
synagogue's boy scout troop
and Scoutmaster Irwin Rat-
ner will be honored. Mike
Edwin, district supervisor
of the Boy Scouts of Amer-
ica, will be guest speaker.
Nominal.
on all our
NEW
SPRING
Israeli Professor Researches Biological Energy
Dangling initials dramatize
this charming ring.
And a complementary
bracelet has a name
or initials.
Both are offered in sterling
silver, 14 Karat yellow gold
and in sterling silver with
14 Karat gold letters.
with
RING St. Silver
3 initials $9.50
14kt Gold 3 Initials $55
BRACELET St. Silver
3 initials
$12.50
14 kt Gold $150.00
GEORGE
011KENSTEIN
JEWELERS Ltd.
• Certified Horologist
• Graduate Gemologist
• Goldsmiths • Precision
Watches • Precious Stones
HARVARD ROW SHOPPING
CENTER
Lahser & 11 Mile
353-3146
REHOVOT—The energy
of tomorrow will be derived
from a "cold technology"
based on photochemical and
biochemical principles
rather than the "hot tech-
nology" of fuel burning we
use today.
This is the prediction of
Professor Lev Tumerman,
one of the oldest practicing
scientists at the Weizm-ann
Institute, who is deeply con :-
cerned and involved with
one of the youngest areas of
science — Bioenergetics —
which deals with energy
transformation and utiliza-
tion in living organisms.-
For more than 20 years,
Prof. Tumerman, a recent
immigrant from the Soviet
Union, worked as an experi-
mental physicist at Lebed-
ev's Institute of Physics in
Moscow. Arrested together
with his wife in 1947 for
Zionist activities, they spent
seven years in solitary con-
finement in the central pol-
itical prison in Vladimir —
a small town near Moscow.
There, Tumerman used
the prison library to study
extensively, studies that led
.him to shift his scientific
field of interest from pure
physics to the biological
sciences. Released and reha-
bilitated in 1954, after Stal-
in's death, he was appointed
head of the Bioenergetics
Laboratory of Moscow's
newly organized Institute of
Molecular Biology, working
on the problem of how en-
ergy is stored in photosyn-
thesis.
Now in the Weizmann
Institute's chemical physics
department, Prof. Turner-
man is concerned with find-
ing a solution to the world's
food and energy crises. He is
hopeful that Bioenergetics,
recognized only in the last
20 years as a separate disci-
pline, will lead to the devel-
opment of engineering dev-
ices capable of simulating
the principles nature uses in
producing food and energy
from living organisms.
"Nature has found mirac-
ulous ways of transforming
one kind of 'free energy' into
PANT
SUITS
another in plant and animal
life, thus producing the driv-
ing force for all life proc-.
esses," he explains.
Red Magen David
Seeks Recognition
Master
Charge
Bank,
Americard
GENEVA (JTA) — Israel
has renewed 'its request
here for international recog-
nition of the Red Magen
David - as the distinctive
symbol of its emergency
medical services for mili-
tary victimes — the equiva-
lent of the Red Cross.
Ambassador Shabtai Ro-
senne, acting head of the
Israeli delegation to the
United Nations' Genva
headquarters, forwarded a
request for recognition to
the president of the Diplo-
matic Conference on the Re-
Affirmation and Develop-
ment of International Law
Applicable in Armed Con-
flicts currently in session
here.
-.7toriommildialliliallagamiamosammare.,
* * * *
Let the Photographic Ambassador
*
IVAN S. BLOCH LODGE
will have an election meet-
ing 8:30 p.m. Monday at the
Jewish War Veterans head-
quarters. This will be the
final general meeting for
the bowling league, and new
officers for the league will
be elected. Nominations will
be accepted from the floor.
Harold Ure is head of the
nominating committee.
There will be reports on the
stag, the K of C Tourna-
ment, the Toronto Tourna-
ment and the final banquet.
* * *
umni. Monies raised will be
used for loans, research and
scholarShips.
while they last!
To encourage you to shop on
Sunday — all our Pant Suits
are REDUCED 20% — THIS
ONE DAY ONLY! Hurry in for
great savings! Sorry, layaway
are not includes
All that's left
from our
SIDEWALK
SALE
1/2 of 1/2 off
1:3 IR. rl" 0 WS
GLAMOUR AND LEISURE SPORTSWEAR
HARVARD ROW MALL
;ASH; NS
11 Mile & Lahser,
Southfield