- 40 Friday, August 1, 1975 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Manoogians Help Armenian Seminary in Jerusalem Detroit industrialist Alex Manoogian and Mrs. Manoo- gian were awarded a bronze plaque bearing their like- nesses by Israel Religious Affairs Minister Yitzhak Raphael last month at the dedication of the new Ar- menian Theological Semi- nary in Jerusalem. The seminary was built with a $750,000 contribution from the couple. Manoo- gian, who is well known by Armenians throughout the world, is the president of the international Armenian Benevolent and Aid Society. Jerusalem Mayor Teddy Kollek, who attended the ALSAC Benefit A bowling marathon at Bowlcraft Lanes, School- craft and Evergreen, this weekend will be used to raise money for the ALSAC Children's Research Hospi- tal in Memphis, Tenn. Former Detroit Tigers, bowling stars, and other ce- lebrities will appear at the charity event, beginning 6 p.m. today. The price of bowling is 50 cents per game. For information, call Stan Rosenblatt, 968.-0536. City of Hope Unit to Have Meeting Mr. and Mrs. Group, City of Hope, will meet 8 p.m. Saturday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Feinstein, 27400 Franklin, Southfield. President Clara Silber will discuss future projects. A social hour will follow. LAWN Sprinkling Systems Expert repair 8 Installation 541-0903 MICHAEL KAPUT Photography Weddings • Bar Mitzvas 642-1039 CARS TO BE DRIVEN To any state. Also drivers furnished to diive your car anywhere. Legally insured' and I.C.C. licensed DRIVEAWAY SERVICE 9970 Grand River Detroit, Mich. 48204 WE 1-0620-21-22 M usic M ack dedication, ordered the plaza around which the seminary was built to be named the Manoogian Plaza. Raphael, meanwhile, announced he was donating, on behalf of the ministry, about $5,000 to the semi- nary for the purchase of bookS. The head of the Ar- menian Church, Catholicos Vazken I also participated in the dedication ceremony. The Manoogian gift, however, is not the first made by a Detroit Armen- ian to an institution in Is- rael. In 1969, Edward Col. Becker Named to State JWV Post Robert J. Perliss, state of the Depart- epart- ment of Michigan of the ment Jewish War Veterans of the U.S., appointed Col. Arthur C. Becker state civil defense officer for the JWV. Col. Becker is director of civil defense for the city of Southfield and has received national recognition in CD from the United States Civil Defense Council. Any group or organiza- tion interested in receiving Civil Defense Literature or information may contact Col. Becker at Southfield Civil Defense, 354-9152. Col. Becker is also available to speak about CD in Israel. Event to Benefit Cancer' Society The American Cancer Society, Oakland County Unit, and the Oakland County Sportsmen's Club will present their second an- nual Target Day 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Aug. 16 at the sports- men's club. Proceeds will benefit the American Can- cer Society, Oakland County Unit. Special events include the red bird shoot, the dynamite shoot, and skeet and trap. There will be games and re- freshments. For informa- tion, call the ACS, 644-0770. Radomer Aid Sets Meeting Radomer Aid Society will meet 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Workmen's Circle Cen- ter. Plans will he made for the annual banquet to be held Nov. 2. A social hour, with refreshments, will follow. ....quty for b Me 2)istriminatitz9 pm d an Orciteitra 358-3642 Everything Everyone Else Does, Plus A Little, SANdy fRiEdmAN phoToqRAp y 25900 Greenfield (in the Landmark Bldg.) 398-7211 cANdicls moviEs • pORTRAITS Mardigian, a wealthy Ar- menian-born Detroiter, agreed to sponsor a $75,000 project which involved the refurbishing of an Old City building to house priceless treasures of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusa- lem. The Israel Museum pre- sented the exhibition of the priceless "Treasures of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem" which were put on public display for the first time in July 1969. The display included richly illu- minated and illustrated manuscripts containing the finest works of Armenian art from the 10th to 17th centuries, church vest- ments, gold and silver church chandeliers, gold and silver jewel encrusted book bindings and historical books and documents. Mardigian is an active member of St. John's Ar- menian Church in South- field. As head of the build- ing committee, he was responsible for the erection of the gold-domed structure off Northwestern Hwy. and Nine Mile Rd. Mardigian was ap- proached for the refurbish- ing project by Archbishop Shahe Ajamian of Jerusa- The archbishop made a later trip to Detroit in December 1969 when he was invited to speak for the quarterly report din- ner for Capital for Israel. While in Detroit, Arch- bishop Ajamian promoted tourism to Israel and espe- cially to Jerusalem. The archbishop is known for his leadership in the campaign for the restora- tion of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the most sacred shrine of Christian- ity. After the Six-Day War, Bishop Ajamian was desig- nated by the International Committee for the Restora- tion of the Holy Shrines on Mt. Zion, to carry on a simi- lar campaign in the United States, which he accom- plished with success. There are about six mil- lion Armenians throughout the world with about half that number living in Soviet Armenia. According to the archbishop, who was inter- viewed recently by the Jeru- salem Post, there are 300,000 Armenians in the U.S., 8,000 in Israel and 4,000 in Jerusalem. U.S., USSR Discuss Mideast WASHINGTON (JTA) — Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger in Helsinki Wednesday said that the U.S. was continuing to "exchange ideas" with the Soviet Union on the Middle East because "it is clear that no final solution can be achieved by either of the parties by itself." He said the Soviets were skeptical of any results emerging from the current step-by-step process of ne- gotiations between Israel and Egypt but were not ac- tively opposing them. Kissinger, who is accom- panying President Ford at the final session of the Eu- ropean Conference on Secu- rity and Cooperation in Hel- sinki, told reporters that he had discussed the Mideast with Soviet Communist Party Secretary General Leonid Brezhnev and with British Prime Minister Har- old Wilson. Disputed Book on Kissinger Due NEW YORK — Matti Golan's controversial book about U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's di- plomacy will soon be pub- lished here, the New York Times reported. The Israeli's book, which was seized by the Israeli censor last May, will be pub- lished with 20 percent of its material rewritten. The book is based on transcripts of talks between Kissinger and Israeli leaders that led to the Israeli-Egyptian dis- engagement agreements in January 1974 and the Israe- li-Syrian accord of June 1974. ''' r lem who was visiting De- troit. Mayor Kollek followed up their meeting with let- ters until Mardigian agreed to sponsor the project. Asked if he had dis- cussed with the Soviet leader a compromise on the trade and emigration issues, Kissinger said they had reviewed the discus- sions that a group of Sena- tors had on their recent visit to the Soviet Union and that the U.S. had pointed out its judgement of what is required with respect to the trade legis- lation. Kissinger said that all along the U.S. held the view that progress in this area is more likely to be achieved by an understanding of the needs of each side and that decisions should be made in- dependently on that basis rather than by legislation. Jewish Agency Aids Vietnamese , Medallion at Seminary Entrance Depicts Manoogians Bill Permitting Civil, Religious Marriage Choice Irks NRP JERUSALEM (JTA) — The National Religious Party threatened a coalition crisis last week over a pri- vate bill before the Knesset which would permit Israelis a choice between religious or civil marriage. The wom- en's rights measure, intro- duced by Shulamit Aloni of the newly formed Yaad fac- tion, failed to pass the first of the three Knesset read- ings required to become law. But the very fact of its in- troduction raised the hac- kles of the Orthodox bloc which issued a statement denouncing "this attempt to change the marriage and divorce law" in "violation of the status quo on which the coalition is based." The NRP threatened to "take the nec- essary consequences." Justice Minister Haim Zadok, speaking for the gov- Orthodox Help Soviet Emigres NEW YORK — A special desk to provide comprehen- sive guidance and counsel- ing to newly arrived Rus- NEW YORK—NYANA — sian Jews seeking The New York Association employment was inaugu- for New Americans, —' has rated by Project COPE, the agreed to accept 200 Viet- manpower division of Agu- namese refugees during dath Israel of America. September, for resettlement The new service is part of in the New York area. a broader program by Agu- The agency will provide dath Israel to help absorb the newcomers with what- the new emigres, by provid- ever supportive services are ing assistance for their spir- possible to help them with itual and physical needs. their initial settlement in The new desk will be New York. manned by Heshi Kahane, For the past several years who came to this country the bulk of NYANA's case from Russia nearly three load has consisted of Jewish years ago, and whose native newcomers from the Soviet language is Russian. Ka- Union. Since its establish- hane, who received his . Jew- ment in 1949 NYANA — ish education upon his ar- which receives its cases pri- rival at the Mesivta Torah marily from United HIAS Vodaath, brings with him a Service — has assisted over rich background of working 155,000 Jewish immigrants with his fellow immigrants to establish themselves in to help them settle in this, and around New York. " country. ernment, conceded that there was still room for improvement in the status of women in Israel, but warned that the proposed bill was too far-reaching and devisive. Civil marriage and di- vorce do not exist in Israel where such personal mat- ters are under the exclu- sive jurisdiction of the Orthodox rabbinical courts. The system, inherited from the days of the British Mandate and the earlier Turkish rule which permit- ted each religious sect au- tonomy on religious mat- ters, is part of the uneasy status quo that governs re- lations between the secular majority and Orthodox mi- nority in Israel politics. Yeshiva U. Names Mirsky to Postion NEW YORK — Prof. David Mirsky, dean of Yesh- iva University's Stern Col- lege for Women, professor of English, and an authority on American and British lit- erature, has been appointed acting vice president for ac- ademic affairs of Yeshi- University, effective in Sl tember. He will hold the office occupied by Dr. Joshua A. Fishman, who has taken a leave of absence to be a fel- low at the Institute for Ad- vanced Study in Princeton, N.J. As acting vice president he will be dealing with the day-to-day academic func- tioning of the university, its educational programs, long- range planning and evalua- tion, and coordination of un- dergraduate and graduate school curricula. He will also maintain the position ordean of Stern College. Happiness is wholehaTt- edrwss..