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Aids School for Girls NEW YORK (JTA) — Yeshiva University has ac- quired a three-story build- ing in midtown Manhattan as the new home for its af- filiated Tonya Sol oveitchik-Yeshiva Uni- versity High School for Girls in Manhattan, it was announced by Dr. Norman Lamm, university presi- dent. Dorsey's Memory Honored Tributes to the memory of Dr. John Dorsey, who held the post of University Pro- fessor at Wayne State Uni- versity, who died Sunday at the age of 77, recalled his many affiliations and his encouragement and the en- couragement he had given to many cultural projects in the Jewish as well as the general community. Dr. Dorsey, who authored many books on psychiatry and philosophy, appeared at many Jewish educational functions. He had impor- tant roles in the setting up of the LaMed, Borman and Field Lecture Series at Wayne State University and hosted many dinner meetings for visiting Jewish scholars. He was idolized by his DR. JOHN DORSEY many Jewish students who looked to him as a guide in judging curricula and in planning professional careers. Tel Aviv U. Helps Train Top Brass TEL AVIV — Because Is- rael has grown quickly, and talented manpower has sky-rocketed to top busi- ness, military, and civil pos- itions without necessarily acquiring the academic qualifications specific to the field or to the administra- tive position, upper echelon personnel need special programs tailored to their needs. Where does the Israeli military top brass, the top business executive, or the civil servant near the top of the ladder turn for such es- sential, but highly specific programs? Tel Aviv Uni- versity runs such special academic programs de- signed to suit the fast-paced schedule of the upper eche- lon. In the program academi- cally run and accredited by Tel Aviv University at the Israeli Army's National De- fense College, military of- ficers from the rank of col- onel and above and top-level civil servants take a wide range of subjects such a Middle East studies, the history of the Jewish people, and business administra- tion, to synthesize a well- rounded scope of knowledge important to high-level Is- raeli decision-making. The curriculum also includes strategic and military courses for top-level milit- ary planning. Haifa Promenade HAIFA — A new prom- enade is being constructed directly over the Mediter- ranean in Haifa. It will fea- ture wide stone steps slop- ing to the sea and provide areas for fishing, sitting, gardens and palm trees. The walk will be 1,100 feet long and 80 feet wide in Haifa's Bat Galim section. Initiates Police Probe Shooting of Accused Britain Crackdown on Nazi Official Living in New York Arab Gunmen NEW YORK (JTA) — Police continued their in- vestigation over the weekend into the shooting of Boleslays Maikovskis, a 73-year-old Latvian immig- rant accused of having been a police commandant in Nazi-occupied Latvia who rounded up Jews for execu- tion at the Dwinsk ghetto in 1941 and 1942. Maikovskis was shot Fri- day at his home in Mineola, L.I. by unidentified assail- ants. He was questioned by detectives at Nassau Hospi- tal in Mineola where he is recovering from a bullet wound of the right knee. His condition is described as st- able. Officials of the Jewish Defense League, whose members have been picket- ing Maikovskis' home, have denied any connection with the shooting, but lauded the attack. Maikovskis, who was sen- tenced to death in absentia by a Soviet court in 1965, has been fighting deport. - tion by the U.S. Naturaliza- tion and Immigration Ser- vice, which claims he lied about his role in the pro- Nazi Latvian police force to gain entrance to the United States. In deportation hear- ings on Oct. 20, 1977, he was accused of helping to assemble 600 Jewish children and march them from the Dwinsk ghetto. The children were never seen again. In two years of federal hearings, the retired car- penter invoked the Fifth Amendment in refusing to testify. Hh came to the U.S. in 1951. Maikovskis' appeal from an INS order that he must testify will be heard next month in the federal Circuit Court of Appeals for the second circuit. His de- portation hearing has been suspended pending the out- come of that appeal. In Chicago, five persons who were part of a group of 40 people demonstrating against a Nazi rally in Lansing, Ill., last week were arrested for disorderly con- duct. In New York, about 50 members of the Jewish De- fense League last week staged a demonstration out- side of the offices of Tscherim Soobzokov, a former Nazi accused of col- laborating and participat- ing in the deaths of over 300,000 Jews during World War II. Soobzokov has been in this country since 1955 and residing in Patter- son. He is presently under investigation by the Immigration and Naturalization Service for lying on his applica- tion to enter this country. Meanwhile, Michael self- 23, Kuehnen, proclaimed "fuehrer" of a small extreme right-wing German group called the National Socialist Action Front, has been arrested on a warrant issued by the Federal Supreme Court, on suspicion of setting up a ter- rorist organization. This move comes only one week after Kuehnen was released from custody in Flensburg, North Germany, where he had been held following a violent clash between police and neo-Nazis. In Amsterdam, among the 350 Nazi war criminals listed in the Dutch investi- gation register as missing, only some 10 to 20 are Dutch nationals. The others are Germans and Belgians, according to Prof. Benjamin Sijes of The Netherlands State Institute for War Israeli Marine Biologists Create Underwater Habitat JERUSALEM — An un- derwater habitat has gone into operation off the coast of Eilat, at the Hebrew Uni- versity's Heinz Steinetz Marine Biology Laboratory. "Neritica," one of only three habitats of its kind operating in the world to- day, was built at Gal- Marine Ship Repairs of Eilat by a German visiting professor at the Hebrew University, Dr. Hans Fricke of the University of Munich, with engineer Gert Helmers and diving instructor Victor Paffenhauser. It will be used by the Heb- rew University as a work- shop, classroom, diving base and laboratory 24 hours a day, and serve Israeli scien- tists as well as guest scien- tists from abroad for re- search. Dr. Fricke is now using it for research on fish behavior. Built of steel and weighing 26 tons, includ- ing ballast, Neritica is six meters high, four square meters in cross-section and has 14 cubic meters of living space. It is di- vided into two parts: The lower part is a wet space which leads into the upper part, a dry laboratory which serves as living space for two to three divers and which contains the control equipment. Its four closed circuit television cameras can be moni- tored either from Neritica or from the ground control unit. Neritica is continuously flushed with fresh air supplied by a low pressure compressor on the shore. Humidity is kept as low as possible, and various con- trol systems ensure maximum safety for the oc- cupants. In case of emergency Neritica can be self-dependent for both air supply and electricity for at least 24 hours for two di- vers. The whole habitat, apart from-the primary bal- last container, can be lifted to the surface for decom- pression. Documentation in a radio interview. Meanwhile, the Central Organization of Dutch Former Resistance Groups has scheduled a meeting with Dutch Minister of Jus- tice Jacob de Ruiter on Aug. 23 in order to urge him to conduct more active policies with regard to the search for missing Dutch war crimi- nals. In Rio de Janeiro it was learned that since the ar- rest last June of Franz Gustav Wagner, who has been called the "human beast" by survivors of the Treblinka and Sobibor Nazi death camps, pro- Nazi and anti-Jewish demonstrations have been held in six cities of Brazil's southern pro- vince, Rio Grande de Sol, including its capital, Porto Alegro, Jewish community leaders re- ported. Wagner has been accused of supervising the murder of more than a million in- mates of the two death camps. Poland, Austria and West Germany have made formal requests to the Brazil gov- ernment for Wagner's ex- tradition. Israel's extradi- tion request still lacks some documents required by Brazilian officials for such action. Initially, police disre- garded the Nazi activities, suggesting they were the work of irresponsible street gangs. But after the inter- vention of a delegation of Jewish community leaders, led by Samuel Burd, presi- dent of the Porto Alegro Jewish Federation, Dr. Sin- val Guazelli, the governor of Rio Grande do Sol, ordered a thorough investigation. Seminary Prints Book on Ethics NEW YORK — The Jewish Theological Semi- nary has recently published a new book, "The Ethical in the Jewish and American Heritage" by Simon Green- berg. In his work, Dr. Green- berg examines the ethical component of human life. Commencing his philosophical inquiry with a study of moral and ethical intention, Dr. Greenberg also discusses sources of ethical authority. Another aspect the author examines is the ethics of secularism. Detroiter Assists in Youth Seminar Detroiter Gary Torgow, an alumnus of Yeshiva Col- lege and regional director of the Central East Region of the National Conference of Synagogue Youth, will act as program coordinator for the Central East leadership seminar to take place Aug. 23-27 at Camp Livingston, Bennington, Ind. LONDON (JTA) — Is- raeli official circles in Lon- don are pleased at the British government's deci- sion to crack down on Iraqi diplomats suspected of being involved in terrorist activities. Britain has expelled 11 Iraqis thought to have links with the spate of killings in London over the past two years. Althciugh all the vic- tims have been Arabs, some of the incidents sprang from differences over the Arab- Israeli conflict. However, it is too soon to say that the action against the Iraqis will put an end to Arab terrorism in London. This was illustrated re- cently when a Palestinian woman threw a hand gre- nade at the car of the Iraqi ambassador, who was pre- paring to return to Baghdad. The ambassador was not in the car at the time. The action may have been an attempt to re- venge the dea th in January of Said Ham- mami, the London rep- resentative of the Pales- tine Liberation Organiza- tion. He is believed to have been killed by the Iraqi- based "Black June" Pales- tinian movement, headed by Sabri al-Banna, alias "Abu Nidal." The Libyans, too, have long been sus- pected of supplying passports and- arms to gun- men. In addition, the Iraqis are believed to have permitted terrorists in Britain and Europe to transmit coded messages over the embassy radio link. Since the Lebanese civil war, London has replaced Beirut as the Arab states' main diploma- tic meeting pl .ce. Here exiles plot against their own countries, and the indi- vidual states conspire against each other. Foreign Aid Topic of Rabbis' Meeting With President WASHINGTON (JTA) — Five rabbis were among the score of clergymen of major American religious organi- zations who met with Presi- dent Carter at the White House last week to discuss U.S. foreign assistance programs now before Con- gress. The rabbis were Stanley Rabinowitz, president of the Rabbinical Assembly; Ely Pilchik, president of the Central Conference of American Rabbis; Bernard Rosensweig, president of the Rabbinical Council of America; Benjamin Kreit- man, executive vice presi- dent of the United Synagogue of America; and . Mark Tanenbaum, director of the inter-religious affairs department of the Ameri- can Jewish Committee. If you're faithful to your wife, you have a healthy body.