is , 10 Friday, July 11, 1%1 I f THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Bar-Han Honorary Doctorate Recipients. Announced (Continued from Page 1) in France. A practicing Jew, he has headed the Ecole Normale • ••••••••••••••••••• THE FAMILY JACOBS • • • • 50th YEAR • • • • • OCEANFRONT • BOARDWALK •• 25th & COLLINS • MIAMI BEACH, FLA. 33139 • • KOSHER Open ail year • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. ALL Rooms Waterview Color TV • Air Conditioned Refrig. • Strict Dietary Laws Music • Entertainment • Pool Social Programs • Free Chaises Individual Diet Catering Rabinical Supervision • • • • • • • • INCLUDES MEALS •• • '25 • • • • • • • • • • • Per Pers. Day. Dbl. 0cc. • • 50 of 123 rooms APR. 27 to DEC.1 • ERIC JACOBS. Owner-Mgmt •• • Dial Free: 800-327-3110 • : N.Y. Off. (212) 757-7491 . ••••••••••••••••• • 4 INSTANT COLOR PASSPORTS ID. & VISA PHOTOS Israelite Orientale of the Alliance Israelite Universe- lie in Paris and taught at the University of Paris in Naterre and in the Sor- bonne. Among his many honors is that of Knight of the French Legion of Honor. Dr. Moskowitz is an outstanding supporter of Zionism, Israel and Jewish causes. With his wife, he established the chair for the study of his- toric Eretz Yisrael at Bar-Ilan. Prominent in the U.S. medical world, he has received many awards and honors for his work for Jewish and Israeli causes. He has held high office in State of Israel Bonds, the Jewish National Fund and the Zionist Organiza- tion of America. Resolu- tions of appreciation and commendation to him have been passed by the Califor- nia Senate, city of Long Be- ach, city of Hawaiian Gar- dens and city of Los Angeles. Dr. Emanuel Rackman, president of Bar-Ilan Uni- versity, presented the doc- torate citations. Some 1,400 students and candidates for higher de- grees received their awards at the ceremonies, which concluded with a dinner in honor of the major awardees and eminent government and foreign personalities attending the functions. An important feature of the ceremonies was an address by the Minister of the Interior Dr. Joseph Burg. Other participants in the program were: Dr. Meir Gruzman, who delivered the response for the graduates, and the Bar-Ilan University and Vocal Workshop, under the direc- Aothenberg's New irclt BARCELONA Hotel & Tennis Club PROFESSIONAL PORTRAIT LIGHTING 1352-70301 LEO KNIGHT PHOTOGRAPHY 2511 W. 12 Mile Rd. Corner Northwestern Hwy. SUMMER SPECIAL! Opening June 30 from 26 per person/ per night dbl. occ. • 3 private tennis courts • Olympic size swimming pool • 400 ft. private beach • Color T.V. In every room • Synagogue on premises YOU'RE FREE ... KIDS BRING YOUR PARENTS. 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All this and much morel!! - ADD $16 FOR ALL TAXES AND SERVICE " APPLIES TO TUESDAY DEPARTURES SEASONAL SUPPLEMENT APPLICABLE ON VARIOUS DEPARTURE DATES GUARANTEED NOW THRU SEPT. 8 Hamilton, Miller, Hudson & Fayne TRAVEL CORP. 23077 GREENFIELD. SOUTHFIELD, MI 48075 CALL: 557-5145 or 800-482.7270 TRATELYATERNT' tion of conductor Josef Friedland. The presentation of the doctorate to Slomovitz, who was unable to attend the ceremonies due to an illness in. the family, was made in absentia to Phillip Stollman, chairman of the Ashkelon Power Plant Proposal Draws Protests TEL AVIV (JTA) — The municipal council and resi- dents of Ashkelon, as well as ecologists, are up in arms against a decision of the Na- tional Council for Planning and Building to build Is- rael's next and biggest coal-fired electricity generating station on the outskirts of their town. They say the decision, op- posed by many experts, will damage the town and have a serious effect on tourism in the area. They demand that the station, to be the biggest in the country even though only two of the projected 550,000-kilowatt units in- stead of the original four are to be installed within a de- cade, be located further to the south, on the border be- tween the Gaza Strip and Israel proper. Ministry of Energy sources say the projected generating station would be the last to be built on the coast, as no g further sites are available. Hagana Joins Palmakh for a Reunion TEL AVIV (JTA) — Some 40,000 veterans of the Hagana and Palmakh gathered on the lawns of Tel Aviv's Yarkon Park re- cently, and spent time look- ing back to their fighting days in the pre-state under- ground army. The rally was organized by Moshe Rivlin, Jewish National Fund leader and chairman of the Hagana Veterans Association, under the slogan: "60 Years Hagana, 40 Years Pal- makh." The Hagana, defense force of the pre-Israel Jewish Agency and Vaad Leumi, was formed in 1921. The Palmakh, was formed in 1941. . from the metropolitan De- troit area, in addition to Stollman and Mr. and Mrs. Feinberg, were Max and Frieda Stollman, Dr. Leon Fill, Mrs. Bernard (Bar- bara) Stollman, Gary Ran and Emma Lazaroff- Attending the ceremonies Schaver. global board of Bar-Ilan University, who turned it over to Charles Feinberg, also of Detroit, the nation- ally prominent bibliophile and art connoisseur, for the formal acceptance. * * * Citation to Slomovitz By PRESIDENT RACKMAN In the industrial world Detroit is known as the city which revolutionized the mobility of humans. It gave the automobile to the race of man and thus radically altered character of our lives. In the Jewish world, however,, troit is known as the city which gave to Jewish journalioin its most respected personality — a gifted writer and heroic champion of every worthy cause, a man whose outlook and performance demonstrate his profound commitment to the loftiest values of his dual heritage as an American and as a Jew. In your adolescence you immigrated from Russia to the United States. English was not your mother tongue but you mastered it rapidly. At the University of Michigan you studied journalism and acquired basic experience as a re- porter for its daily newspaper. However, when you did enter the field of Jewish . journalism almost half a century ago, you brought to it not only your professional skills but also a deep understanding of Jewish life and the impera- tives for Jewish survival, as well as a firm resolve to ad- -Vance every cause that would fulfill those imperatives. Consequently there was no area of Jewish enterprise in which you were not involved, and indeed I know of none that did not honor you upon one occasion or another. The list of Jewish organizations that bestowed honors upon you is a veritable catalogue of Jewish organizations the world over. It was impossible for you to share all their views but once you were impressed that an organization could contribute to the survival of the Jewish people or the Jewish heritage, you rallied behind it. However, even as you served Jewish causes gen- erally, it was especially to Jewish journalism that you gave your very all. You wanted Jewish journalists and their newspapers to rise above the standard of the marketplace. You understood well the power of thp press for both good and evil. And you directed and inspired colleagues to exercise their power for good. Therefore, among your greatest awards are those given to you by your peers. Yet, the non-Jewish world also appreciated your ex- ceptional gifts and dedication. Catholics and Protestants appreciated your stance on every issue that affected hu- manity at large and Americans in particular. As you did not pander to the taste of the multitude in journalism so you did not surrender to the demands of the powerful. You never compromised the right. The founders of Bar-Ilan University can attest to that. When the school was first projected and many refused to acknowledge the need for it, you helped the fledgling school to become the mighty bea- con of learning that it now is. For these reasons and many more, on the eve of your 85th birthday, the trustees and the senate of Bar-Ilan Uni- versity have authorized me to confer upon you the degree of Doctor of Humane Letters, honoris causa, with all the rights and privileges appertaining thereunto. In token whereof I cause the hood of the university to be placed over your shoulders, and I hand you this diploma. Changes at Israel Consulate. NEW YORK (JTA) — Changes in the staff of the Technion Unveils Israel Consulate General here will take place during New Projects HAIFA — Kislak Park, the next several weeks. Paul Kedar, Israel's con- named in honor of the late New Jersey realtor Julius I. sul general here, will return Kislak, was inaugurated to Israel in mid-August. He recently at the Technion — will be replaced by Naftali Israel Institute of Technol- Lavie, presently director of the press department and ogy. envi- spokesman at the Foreign first Israel's ronmental wind tunnel Ministry in Jerusalem. was also dedicated at the Kedar has been serving as Technion recently. The Consul General since tunnel has been named in August 1978. Benjamin Abileah, de- memory of the late M. David puty consul general, was Lipson. The Toronto Chapter of appointed a counselor in the the Canadian Technion Israel Embassy in Wash- Society, together with the ington. Abileah will be re- Urban Development Insti- placed here by Uri Bar-Ner, tute of Ontario, supported who has been serving until the Environmental Wind now as deputy director of Tunnel in memory of Lip- the North American di- vision of Israel's foreign son. • ministry. Another new appointee iri the Israel Consulate in New York is Yitzhak Oren, who replaced Dr. Emmanuel Lotem as con- sul for academic affairs. Lotem was appointed first secretary in the Is- rael Embassy in Sc Africa. Gideon Shorn. a counselor on Christian issues and churches here, was transferred to the Is- rael Embassy in Wash- ington as a counselor. Meanwhile, Nachman Shai, Israel's spokesman at the United Nations is in as spokesman for the Israel Embassy there. Judith Varnai-Dranger was ap- pointed the new Israel spokesperson at the UN. Slavery is a system of complete injustice.