THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, July 3, 1981 21 Scientific 'Magic Show' at the Paul Borman Home Explains Holograms, Optical Lasers Developed at Weizmann Institute Science and the most im- Invitees that night to a pressive latest advances in "Magic Show" may have the use of lasers and optical been puzzled by the invita- fibers were transformed tion of Paul and Marlene into magic and became a Borman. It didn't take fascination for a represen- long for the 75 in tative gathering of affiliates attendance to be educated to with the Detroit Friends of the theme by the guest the Weizmann Institute of speaker, Dr. Asher Friesem. Science at the home of Mr. The background of the and Mrs. Paul Borman in eminent physicist is impor- Birmingham, June 25. tant for a full appreciation • Decision on Embargo Due WASHINGTON — The /eagan Administration will have to make a decision by the middle of July on whether or not to lift its suspension of the shipment of the four F-16s to Israel. State department sources said this is because six more F-16s are scheduled to be shipped to Israel on July 17. It is conceivable that all 10 planes might be sent at that time. Meanwhile, delivery of other arms scheduled for shipment to Israel began Wednesday in compliance with President Reagan's, promise that the embargo applies only to the four F-16s. State department spokesman Dean Fischer stressed that the "review" being conducted by the Ad- ministration and Congress on whether Israel violated the arms agreement with the United States when it used American weapons to destroy the Iraqi nuclear reactor June 7 affected only the four F-16s. He said that no decision had been made on the six F-16s due to be delivered in July. He said all arms ship- ped abroad must technically be approved by the Ad- ministration just before the scheduled date of shipment. Saunders Sees Little Change After Election WASHINGTON (JTA) — Harold Saunders, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs in the Carter Ad- ministration, predicted this week that no matter who won the elections in Israel it would not "produce an easy job" for American officials who want to "press forward" with the Middle East peace process. Answering questions at a luncheon of the Women's National Democratic Club, Saunders explained that Is- rael is not "united" over what to do about the West Sank and Gaza Strip and any solution will result in a "national trauma of some sort." He noted that the present government of Premier Menahem Begin may pro- vide more difficulties in the "long run" than the opposi-• tion Labor Party because of its claims to sovereignty over the West Bank. Al- though a strong rightwing government might have a greater capacity to deliver concessions. He said the six planes will be shipped "barring some future decision" not to but stressed that this is "not part of the review process." Fischer said that special envoy Philip Habib will re- turn to the Middle East probably next week. The spokesman said Habib could not be credited with the decision by the Lebanese Christian militia to turn over their patrols in Zahle to 600 Lebanese policemen. He said the deci- sion was due to an effort by Arab foreign ministers. Fischer said the U.S. wel- comes the move because it "contributes to a diffusion of tension." But he said that the U.S. could not confirm reports that the Syrians moved their troops from around Zahle, ending a 91-day siege of the Chris- tian village or that the Sy- rians have begun moving some of their SAM-6 anti- aircraft missiles out of Lebanon. French Govt. Names 3 Jews PARIS (JTA) — Three Jews, including a senior member of the Communist Party, were appointed to,jhe new French government led by Socialist Prime Minister Pierre Mauroy. The 73- year-old Minister of Indus- try Pierre Dreyfus and 53- year-old Minister of Justice Robert Badinter belong to the main stream of the Socialist Party and are active in Jewish affairs. The third, 47-year-old Charles Fitterman, ap- pointed Minister of State in charge of transport, is the second highest ranking member of the Communist Party. He is one of the four Communists who joined the government coalition. Judge Rebuked for Bias Remark NEW YORK (JTA) — The New York state Com- mission of Judicial Conduct has ordered a 68-year-old upstate judge removed from the bench after a lengthy inquiry into a letter he wrote to a motorist he ad- dressed as "Kikie." Judge Morgan Bloodgood of Malta, in Sarasota County, has 30 days to ap- peal the ruling and presumably will continue serving in his $21,000 a year part-time position pending the outcome of the appeal. of the magic of that evening. Dr. Friesem was born in pre-state Israel in 1936. Coming to Detroit as a youth, he was graduated from Cass Technical High School and received his BS degree in electri- cal engineering in 1958. He earned his PhD de- gree at the University of Michigan in 1968. He made aliya and he has been professor of applied physics at the Weizmann Institute of Science since 1972. He is the first incum bent of the Kleeman Chair in optical science at the Weizmann Institute. - For the past two years he has been chairman of the Is- rael Laser and Electro- Optic Society. He is a fellow of the Optical Society of America, senior member of the American Institute of Electronic Engineers and an affiliate of several other honorary societies. He is the holder of international pa- tents and author of more than 50 publications. He is currently on sabbatical from the Weizmann Insti- tute at the University of Michigan, where he is visit- ing professor of electrical and computer engineering and is senior research engineer in the radar and optical division of the Environmental Research Institute of Michigan. The background of the eminent scientist serves to explain the notable contri- butions he has made to re- cent scientific develop- ments at the Weizmann In- stitute, primarily in his role as holder of the Kleeman Chair. It has just been an- nounced that increased capabilities for data processing, information transfer, material- testing, three- dimensional displays and various aspects of media and communications are the focus of the newly- established Peter and Carola Kleeman Chair. In his lecture at the Bor- man home, Dr. Friesem ex- plained the manner in which he is exploring the fundamental physical prin- ciples underlying holog- rams (three-dimensional images recorded with laser light) and optical fibers (hair-thin strands of plastic, glass or some other transpa- rent, non-metallic material which transmits light) and their application in an in- creasing number of spheres. In the area of information storage and retrieval — es- sential to computer data processing — Prof. Friesem, in collaboration with the in- stitute's polymer research and plastics research de- partments, has produced both archival and erasable holographic recording materials capable of storing as many as 50 pages within the confines of a single mil- limeter. He is presently inves- tigating systems which combine the use of a digital computer with optical tech- niques for restoring de- focussed or smeared photo- graphs. Using the basic princi- ple of light wave interfer- ence, by which three- dimensional holograms are formed, Prof. Friesem has also pro- vided the Israel Aircraft Industry with a highly sensitive system for the non-destructive testing of weak spots and flaws in aircraft parts, and has developed rapid, dry- processing recording materials to allow practi- cal and convenient evaluation of the stress required to expose these flaws. In the field of communica- tions, Dr. Friesem is busy perfecting techniques by which an entire picture may be transmitted simultane- ously through a single opti- cal fiber — a technique which promises better and faster pictorial communica- tion than presently avail- able with the expensive bundles of thousands of strands used in conven- tional systems. These were the details that became a magical theme at the exciting eve- ning at which the Weiz- mann Institute supporters were re-introduced to the notable achievements of the Israel scientific institute which ranks among the top five institutions of its kind in the world. Joining the quests of De- troit Chairman Paul Bor- man were Norman Cohen, national president of the American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science; and Harold Hill, executive vice president for the American Committee. Also in attendance was na- tional Vice President Daniel Honigman and the members of the new Steer- ing Committee for the American Committee ac- tivities in Detroit: Burton Farbman, Marty Goldman, Graham Orley, Norman Pappas and Alvin Spector. The progress made at the Weizmann Institute in recent decades, the many hundreds of noted scien- tists and staff members and the candidates for higher degrees attending the Weizmann Institute were elaborated upon by National President Co- hen. 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