54 Friday, November =25, 1977' THE DETROIT- JEWISH NEWS Columbia University Honors _ Physicist Isidore I. Rabi NEW YORK—Dr. Isidore I. Rabi. Jewish Nobel lau- reate in physics, was paid homage by Columbia Uni- versity last week. Dr. Rabi obtained his doctorate at Columbia 50 years ago, and his role in the development of physics, in addition to the Nobel Prize, have included a half century of teaching, leadership and advisory roles on the national and international level, accord- ing to Walter Sullivan in the New York Times. Now 80 years old, Dr. Rabi is still active on the Columbia campus. He was born in Rymamw, Poland, but his family moved to Brooklyn when he was a small child. Soon after obtaining his doctorate in 1927, he went to Europe where the "new physics," based on Eins- tein's relativity theories and the quantum theory of behavior on the atomic level, was taking shape. On his return to Columbia in 1929, he became a cham- pion of the new physics and helped set the stage for the epochal developments that followed, culminating in the release of atomic energy. It was in the basement of a Columbia laboratory that such a release was demon- strated on this side of the Atlantic. During last weekend a symposium on the role of science in contemporary society was conductea in honor of Dr. Rabi, which included several Nobel lau- reates, and the present and former Presidential science advisers. The university president, Dr. William J. McGill, also announced the creation of a physics professorship in Dr. Rabi's name. Dr. Rabi won his Nobel Prize in 1944 for his discov- ery of the resonance method of determining the magnetic properties of the atomic nucleus. From 1952 to 1956 he was chairman of the General Advisory Com- mittee of the Atomic Energy Commission. Among his many other roles on the national scene was the chairmanship of the Sci- ence Advisory Committee to President Eisenhower. `Thank You, Does your paycheck God, for Israel' seem to vanish as soon By MARTY ODGERS as you get it? The Payroll Savings Plan where you work will take a little some- thing from each check and buy Bonds, before you have a chance to make the rest disappear. Soon, you'll see big savings right before your eyes. Savings to help you and America, • - too. So use some fore- sight. Buy United States Savings Bonds. E Bonds pay 6% interest when held 5 years (4.-z% the firsi„year). to maturity Lost, stolen or destroyed Bonds can be replaced if records are provided. When needed, Bonds can be cashed at your bank. Interest is not subject to state or local income taxes, and federal tax may be deferred until redemption. NOW a . stock mAmerica. . JointhePayro ►► SavingsPlan. It's tinie again to cele- brate this day When we give Thanks to Thee, So, first of all, I want to thank you for Israel, Odi land where we are free! Free, God? No, not really! For the sound of guns are still heard, And the fighting goes on, The killing, the heartaches, The anguish, and the tears! No, God! We're not free yet! But I thank You for Our Land, And the promises you have given, For the desert blooms in a mighty way For ALL the world to see; That they might know This is OUR Land And one day we WILL be free! New PLO Bid AMSTERDAM (JTA)— The _Netherlands Palestine Committee has again applied for a subsidy to the Ministry for Development Aid, this time for 1978. Its applications for the years 1976 and 1977 were rejected, partly owing to strong oppo- sition by Jewish organizations. Rabbi Goldberg, 1st Jewish. Clergy in U.S. Navy Dies NEW YORK—Rabbi David Goldberg, the first Jewish chaplain in the Navy, died Nov. 15 at age 91. Rabbi Goldberg was com- missioned in the Navy on Oct. 30, 1917, and was the only rabbi to serve as chap- lain in World War I, accord- ing to the National Jewish Welfare Board, which accredited him to serve-mil- itary and naval personnel. In June, 1918, he was transferred to the Great Lakes Naval Training Sta- tion outside Chicago where he served until 1919. He entered the U.S. Naval Reserve in 1925 and kept his commission until March, 1941, when he was honor- ably retired in the rank of lieutenant commander. Rabbi Goldberg, at his own request, was allowed to wear a shepherd's crook insignia, instead of the Christian cross to signify his chaplaincy. In 1941, the Navy and the Army adopted the two tablets of the Ten Commandments and the Star of David as the insignia for the Jewish chaplaincy. Dewey Stone, Aided Illegal Emigres in Pre-State Israel With Boats, Arms BROCKTON, Mass.— Dewey D. Stone, a business- man who helped organize the illegal immigration of Jews to Palestine after Joseph J. Miller Joseph Joel Miller, leader of the Joe Miller Orchestra, died Nov. 19 at age 53. A native Detroiter, Mr. Miller was a member of Mosaic Lodge of the Masons and Temple Beth El for which he blew the shofar for 25 years. He was a World War II veteran. Mr. Miller resided at 29124 Wellington W., Southfield. __ He is survived by his wife, Shirley; a son, Cary I.; two daughters, Risa and Audrey; and two brothers, Hal of Los Angeles, Calif., and Leonard H. Volume Is Up TUNIS (ZINS) — The Suez Canal has regained its position as a major water- way, but fewer oil tankers now use it. These observa- tions were made by Nash- our Ahmed Mashour, chair- man of the Suez Canal Authority, who said that traffic through the canal has risen to an average of 55 ships a day, or almost the average that used before the Six-Day War. Oil tank- ers now account for only 40 percent of the canal's busi- ness, compared with 75 per- cent before the 1967 war. . World War II, died Nov. 20 at age 77. Mr. Stone was an influential supporter of the founding of Israel. In 1946, Be sure your friends and relatives Dr. H. Cantor, 52_ Dr. Herbert Cantor, a physician with offices in Huntington Woods, died Nov. 18 at age 52. A native Detroiter, Dr. Cantor was a 1951 graduate of the University of Mich- igan's school of medicine. He was a member of the Michigan Wayne County and American Medical Associations; American Col- lege of Physicians, Ameri- can Society of Internal Med- icine and Phi Delta Epsilon Medical Fraternity and a member of Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society. He was a diplomate of the Board of Internal Medicine, former vice chief of staff at Grace Hospital and adjunct clinical instructor of medi- cine at Wayne State Univer- sity's school of medicine. Dr. Cantor also was a mem- ber of Adat Shalom Syna- gogue. He resided at 31146 Oakleaf, Franklin. He leaves his wife, Mari- lyn; three sons, David, Gary and Mitchell; his mother, Mrs. Miriam Can- tor; and a sister, Mrs. Abram (Joyce) Epstein. DEWEY STONE he headed an operation in the U.S. to acquire boats to ferry Jews to pre-state Israel, a movement that was opposed by the British, who controlled the region at that time. After the found- ing of Israel, some of these boats formed the core of new nation's navy. Mr. Stone also was a member of a' small secret group that gathered mili- tary equipment and ammu- nition for the Jewish settle- ment in pre-state Israel. He served for 27 years as chairman of the board of governors of the Weizmann Institute of Science in . Rehovot. Mr. Stone was an active lay member of the board of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. are as informed as you on Jewish happenings all around the World! Give them a gift today!! • .■■•■■=1 ammo mime r To: The Jewish News 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd., Suite 865 Southfield, Mich. 48075 Please send a year's gift subscription to: NAME ADDRESS CITY FOR: STATE state occasion FROM ❑ $12 enclosed ZIP