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April 02, 1976 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1976-04-02

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

8 April 2, 1976

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Cardozo Law School Picks Jewish Welfare Board Blasts
1st Faculty for Fall Opening Planned Arms Sale to Egypt

NEW YORK — The first
faculty of Yeshiva Univer-
sity's new Benjamin N. -Car-
dozo School of Law have
been appointed for the
school's opening in Septem-
ber, according to Monrad G.
Paulsen, dean and vice pres-
ident for legal education.
Dean Paulsen said that a
full complement of 12 out-
standing scholars, have been
assembled.

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They have been associated
with some of the nation's
finest law schools as stu-
dents and teachers, and
bring to their new positions
a wide range of legal spe-
cializations as well as exten-•
sive experience in teaching
and professional practice.
Among the new faculty
is General Telford Taylor,
who was chief U.S. prose-
cutor at the Nuremberg
War Crimes Trials follow-
ing World War II. He has
taught law at Columbia
University the past 14
iears and joins the Car-
dozo School as professor of
law.
At the same time, the
school's facilities, at the
University's Brookdale Cen-
ter, are being renovated to
accommodate the initial
250-member student body.
The 18-story structure
currently houses Wur-
zweiler School of Social
Work and Ferkauf Gradu-
ate School of Humanities
and Social Sciences, to-
gether with the university's
development offices. Eight
floors of the building are
planned for the new law
school and its full comple-
ment of some 650 students:
The academic program
will require three years of
study in residence involving
a total of 85 semester hours
leading to the Juris Doctor
degree.

—8 Across 10 Down-

by Iry Brechner

1. NYU Basketball great
of 1960 . s (init ) .
3. appetizing favorite
on Passover (2 wds)
8. what the Jewish News
is printed with
9. Yiddish for "brains -
12. means "day' . in Hebrew
13. Herz) was its founder
14. Hebrew name for
Howard. Harry
15. Orthodox sect
Shearim
17. used in famous phrase
with "tooth -
18. - short for government
army man
20. important piece of
real estate in Sinai
(2 wdsi
23. essential investment
for Jews (2 wds)

2. white Passover robe
4. Hebrew for "land''
, fo, fum
5. feir.
6. many Jews tried to
escape it in Spain
7. initials of famous
Dodger pitcher
10. food not Kosher for
Passover
11. the land of milk and
16. first 2 letters of
"Fables' . author
19 Passover plate
ingredient (plural)
21. Hebrew for "A .. as -
in A,B,C . s
22 valuable portion of
Israeli stamps (sing)
24 abbreviation for one
of the books of Bible
25. Fine English iabbr i

Solution on Page 17

This puzzle may not be reproduced without the written

permission of the author and The Jewish News.

NEW ORLEANS (JTA)
— The National Jewish
Welfare Board Monday de-
plored the projected sale of
U.S. military equipment to
Egypt and declared that "it
would be wiser to develop
relations with Egypt
through economic rather
than military means."
In a resolution adopted at
the closing session of the
JWB's five-day biennial con-
vention at the Fairmount
Hotel, the organization
which serves Jewish com-
munity centers and Ys all
over the country and Jewish
servicemen and women here
and abroad, urged Congress
"to object strongly and, to
legislatively block the sale
of military supplies to coun-
tries in confrontation with
Israel or to those whose
forces or weapons could, in
case of war, be turned
against Israel."
The resolution warned
that U.S. arms sales to
Egypt would strengthen
militarism rather than the
forces of moderation in that
country.

In another resolution,
the convention delegates
urged the U.S. not to
"retreat from the provi-
sions of the Jackson-
Vanik Amendment which
was designed to increase
emigration by Soviet
Jews."
Israel's Minister of Edu-
cation and Culture, Aharon
Yadlin, addressed an earlier
session of the convention on
his country's efforts to
grapple with "the social
problems presented by the
social, economic and educa-
tional differences between
Oriental and Western
Jews."
He declared that "our na-
tional unity is the basic as-
sumption of our approach to
these problems — we are
one people."
Yadlin said that the big-
gest challenge facing the
present generation of Jews
is the improvement of corn-
munications and coopera-
tion between Jews in the
Diaspora and in Israel. The
educational and unifying
ties between centers of Je-
wry throughout the world
must be strengthened, he
said.

Daniel Rose, who was
re-elected to a second term
as president of the JWB,
reported that centers affi-
liated with the JWB are
located in more than 200
communities in North
America and operate out
of almost 500 separate fa-
cilities.
He said new center facili-
ties ranging in cost from
$600,000 to more than $12
million have been opened in
the last few years. In aggre-
gate, center budgets totalled
$100 million a year, he said.
Three Frank L. Weill
Awards for 1976 were pre-
sented at the convention.
The recipients were Dore
Schary, author, playwright
and former film executive;
Jacob Goodstein, vice presi-
dent of the JWB; and Isa-
dore E. Millstone, a St.
Louis businessman. The

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Florence G. Heller Award
for professional contribu-
tions to the JWB's work was
presented to Louis Smith, of
Wilkes Barre, Pa.
At the closing session of
the biennial convention,
Hugh W. Greenberg, pres-
ident of the Jewish Com-
munity Center of Metro-
politan Detroit, was
elected to the board of di-
rectors of JWB. N. Brews-
ter Broder of Detroit, ac-
tive in efforts for that
city's Jewish Center and
Jewish Welfare Federa-
tion, was re-elected to the
board.
The Detroit Jewish Cen-
ter was cited by JWB "for
its 50 years of service to the
Jewish community," and
the Fresh Air Society was
recognized similarly on the
occasion of its 75th anniver-
sary.

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