'18 Friday, May 25, 1919 I THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 1979 CADILLAC ANDY BLAU "Best Deal In Town" WILSON-CRISSMAN CADILLAC CALL BUS. MI 4-1930 13 S N. a ••Il RES. 642-6836 Baby Celebration JERUSALEM Jerusalem's Shaare Zedek Medical Center celebrated Israel's 31st anniversary by delivering a set of triplets, another set of twins and a host of single births — that increased the city's popula- tion by 25. Using Solar Ener Come see how Detroit Edison is using the sun's energy to heat space and water in its experimental Jubilee Solar Home. Visit the Jubilee Solar Home and see how Detroit Edison is experimenting with the sun's natural energy to help keep your future bright. Fortunately, Detroit Edison customers have Plenty of electric power available. Today, and many years into the future. It's a result of a lot of planning, devel- opment and investment and the fact that more than 84 percent of Detroit Edison's power is gen- erated from coal, our nation's most abundant fuel. The balance is generated by other fossil fuels. Looking far ahead, Detroit Edison is conducting research on other energy sources that may prove to be practical in our geographic area. While it may be some time before solar energy developments make possible economical applications for people's homes, the Jubilee Solar Home already will have begun to determine if the sun's energy may someday be a useful replacement for the oil and natural gas now used for heating so that these fuels may be saved for other uses where only they will do. The Jubilee Solar Home looks like a traditional house. But if you walk around to the back you'll see the solar collectors on the roof. Heat from the sun is captured by the collectors, stored in the water, then distributed by air to heat the home. Solar-heated water also warms water for bathing, laundering and cleaning. Solar energy is expected to fulfill 20 to 30 percent of the space heating requirements and 80 to 90 percent of the water heating requirements. On days when the sun doesn't shine or when more heat is needed, an energy-efficient heat pump moves the natural heat, always present in the outdoor air, inside the home. Electric elements provide additional heat as required. In warm weather, the heat pump reverses automatically for energy-efficient air conditioning. The Jubilee Solar Home is exceptionally well insulated to keep heat inside in winter and to make air conditioning more efficient in summer. All doors and windows, and even the fireplace, are designed to be energy efficient. When you visit the Jubilee Solar Home, be sure to examine some of the new ideas in electric appliances and lighting selected for energy efficiency, convenience and safety. And note the interior lighting and outdoor security lighting system, designed to use little electricity. Detroit Edison's Jubilee Solar Home was built by Fred Greenspan Development Corporation in cooperation with • the Builders Association of Southeastern Michigan. Keeping plenty of power in your hands. Detroit Edison FOLLOW THIS MAP TO GET TO DETROIT EDISON'S JUBILEE SOLAR HOME ■ Located in Northville Township ■ Northville Colony Estates ■ Six Mile Road, a mile west of 1.275 ■ 17075 White Haven Drive OPEN HOURS Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 1 to 7 p.m. To arrange special tours for groups call 237-7749 between 8:30 and 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF CONTRIBUTIONS • General Electric Lamp Division • The Hearthside — furniture and interiors • Hotpoint — appliances • In-Sink-Erator — hot water dispensers • Owens Corning Fiberglas — insulation • Wallside, Inc. — basement windows • Weathervane — windows WSU Press Group Completes a Successful Mission to Israel Dr. Thomas Bonner, president of Wayne State University and Dr. Av- raham Harman, president of Hebrew University in Jerusalem, saluted the be- ginning of a cooperative scholarly publishing agreement between their two schools, through the Morris and Emma Schaver Publication Fund. A Wayne State University delegation traveled to Israel for the formal signing on April 22 at the Hebrew University Faculty Club. liVyne State University Press was represented by Richard Kinney, Norma Goldman and Bernard. Goldman, director; Har- riette and Leonard Simons, founder of the Press' board of advisers; and Helen and Kurt Keydel representing the WSU Board of Gover- nors. WSU President Emeritus George Gullen and Ruth Gullen, Edith and Thomas Marwil and Be- verly and Sam Levin acted as delegates for the faculties and Detroiters who support the WSU Press. The highlight of the dele- gation's three-week tour, including a visit to Egypt, was a reception at the Jerusalem home of Emma Schaver where President Harman and members of the Hebrew University fa- culty greeted the guests. The delegation was also re- ceived at the ninth Jerusalem International Book Fair held at Binyanei Ha'ooma. WSU Press dis- played more than 90 publi- cations, many previously sponsored by the Schaver Fund. President Harman spoke at the Schaver re- ception on the scholarly benefits of the new Wayne State University-Hebrew Uni- ver%ity publication agreement which will see studies in Jewish culture emanating from the Insti- tute of Contemporary Jewry published by Wayne. George Gullen responded, remarking upon the vitality and vividness of the Israeli scene and his experiences on visiting the sites so meaningful to both Chris- tians and Jews. Keydel voi- ced his hope that this new venture would be but the first in a series of ties be- tween these two urban uni- versities, that a program of student and/or faculty ex- change would be developed, perhaps in the pattern of WSU's programs in Munich and Freiberg. Mrs. Schaver, a bene- factor to both universities, was honored by each speak er for her vision and firm support of scholarly stud and publication. At the ( )reclusion of the cere- mon :s, President Harman pres ated Presidents Bon- ner ; id Gullen with univer- sity iedals. H )rew University fa cult, guided the WSU dele- gation over -the latest ar- Shown at a reception at the Jerusalem home of Emma Schaver are, from left, Mrs. Schaver, President Avraham Harman of Hebrew University, President Thomas Bonner of Wayne State University and Prof. Yehuda Bauer of Hebrew U. theological excavations along the Herodian walls of the Temple Mount. The Hebrew University campus on Mt. Scopus was visited and then the WSU group toured Jewish and Christian sites north to the Galilee and south to Masada. As part of the Schaver program, WSU Press had its own book sales and display at the mammoth Jerusalem Book Fair. Although 1,250 publishers from around the world were represented, only two American univer- sity presses had indepen- dent booths: WSU and Yale. Long lines of Israelis, from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m., waited to buy admission tickets to visit the book fair, swelling the total atten- dance to over 100,000. Anticipating oppor- tunities for book exchanges with Egypt, Richard Kin- ney, associate director of WSU Press, and WSU Gov- ernor Keydel began dis- cussions in Cairo with Cairo University officials on possible publishing agree- ments between their press and WSU. While managing the WSU book display in Jerusalem, Kinney was greeted by ex-Detroiters and WSU graduates now living in Israel. Several of the Press's Israeli authors stopped by the booth to see their books on display, and potential authors offered their manuscripts for consideration. At the close of the exhibition WSU Press presented its book display as a gift to the library of Hebrew University. Another important ave- nue of cooperation between Wayne and Israeli scholars was opened by Kinney's negotiations with Hebrew University's Magnes Press: WSU would act as Ameri- can publisher of significant books in English with Magnes Press as Israeli publisher. The first book to come out of WSU Press under this arrangement will be Hebrew University geography professor Yehoshua Ben-Arieh's story of the discovery and exploration of the Holy Land in the 19th Century. Israeli professor Yehuda Bauer's in-depth study of American Jewry's role in helping save those caught in the Holocaust is scheduled for publication next year by WSU and will inaugurate the program of publishing by Wayne under the auspices of the Schaver Fund. Kinney also spoke with Director Gideon Stern of the Israeli National Academy of Science and Humanities concerning WSU Press act- ing as American distributor for academy publications. Dekel Academic Press in Tel Aviv has also ap- proached WSU Press for a similar arrangement. Sculptor, Artist Display Works at BB Museum WASHINGTON — Two major exhibits, one by Washington sculptor and artist Phillip Ratner and the other by Lithuanian ex- patriate sculptor Jacob Sheiniuk, Will go on display Monday in the Bnai Brith Klutznick Museum in Washington, D.C. The Ratner exhibition — "Spiritual Sources: Phillip Ratner's Visions of the Bible" — is based on a gift of 10 bronzes donated to the museum by Harold and Syl- via Greenberg of Washing- ton. The collection of 48 pieces includes bronzes from Ratner's early career, lithographs, tapestries and stained glass. The second exhibit is entitled "Menner Froyen un Kinderlach: Shtetl Sculptures by Jacob Sheiniuk." Working in wood, meta. and clay, Sheiniuk has rec- reated the Lithuanian ghetto of Michaeliczk, his boyhood home. The exhibits will remain on display through Sept. 30. Annexation Asked JERUSALEM (ZINS) — Some 15 Druze leaders from the Golan Heights have asked the Israeli govern- ment to incorporate the Golan into Israel. The delegation, which vi- sited Premier Menahem Begin, said another group, which published a notice last month about their re- luctance to associate with Israel, was "a small minor- ity incited by extremists."