24 Friday, September 18, 1981 Advice and reprehension require the utmost delicacy; painful truths should be de- livered in the softest terms, and expressed no farther • . THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS than is necessary to produce their due effect. A courteous man will mix what is con- ciliating with what is offen- sive; praise with censure; deference and respect with the authority of admoni- tion, so far as can be done in consistence with probity and honor. Engineering as Career for Jews to Be Topic of Technion Unit AFFORDABLE DENTURES •. • FULL DENTURES PARTIAL DENTURES ...$169 0° .169°' •: RELINE and REPAIRS — 1 DAY SERVICE CARMI I Licensed Dentist • Insurance Accepted i . .• UNITIER. CIETIRE6FL INIC • i r . k .iiiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1111111111111111111111 a-- i • . • • 16240 TWELVE MILE ROAD SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN 49076 • is more than a nursing home It is pleasant atmosphere with a community room where resi- dents meet for meals, share reminiscences, planned activities, religious observances, visiting or just relaxing. Our trained .professional staff provides caring support for both physical and emotional needs. Private Rooms Available For info. contact Mrs. B. Court, Administrator 557-3333 THEYLEG The Technical Profes- sionals for Technion, the newly-established group within the Detroit Chapter of the American Technion Society, will hold a panel discussion on "Engineering as a Profession for Jews," 8 p.m. Tuesday at United He- brew Schools. The public is invited. The program was or- ganized by Prof. Shlomo Carmi of the Mechanical Engineering Department at Wayne State University. Panel chairman is Julius J. Harwood, director of materials sciences labora- tory research for Ford Motor Co. and a board member and past president of the Detroit Chapter of the American Technion Society. Panel members include Louis Gelfand, a retired automotive engineer and a board member and past president of the Detroit Chapter; Herbert K. Sachs, professor of mechanical engineering at Wayne State Univer- sity; and Frank L. Theyleg, international automotive engineering executive and executive vice president of the De- troit Chapter, American Technion Society. U.S. government surveys GELFAND show that there are thousands of unfilled engineering faculty posi- tions at American univer- sities, while at the same time engineering student enrollment is increasing. The central question that the panel will examine is "Why aren't there more Jews choosing engineering as a professional career?" Historical, traditional and HARWOOD economic factors will be explored. Technical Professionals for Technion is a group of Jewish engineers, ar- chitects and scientists, to- gether with Technion alumni and Israeli engineers and scientists l iv- ing in metropolitan Detroit, who are committed to the support of Israel and Techn- ion. Council High Holiday Drive Aims Greetings at Russia To demonstrate contin= ued concern for the plight of Soviet Jewry, the Jewish Community Council of Met- ropolitan Detroit has in-. itiated a campaign to send a High Holy Days message to, Jews who have repeatedly been denied permission to leave the USSR. The council has called upon member organizations to join in an effort to send Rosh Hashana greeting cards to long-term "re- fuseniks" — Soviet Jews Who have been denied per- mission to emigrate, and alternately been harassed through interrogation, im- prisonment, and loss of jobs as a result of their human rights activities and at- AVE I GOTA REGAL FOR YOUI tempts to secure immigra- tion visas. The focus of the council ef- fort is the Brailovsky and Chernobilsky families. Irina Brailovsky is the wife of Viktor Brailovsky, a lead- ing Soviet Jewish activist who was recently sentenced to five years internal exile for "defaming the Soviet state." The families, which include two children, first applied to emigrate in 1972. Boris and Dana Cher- nobilsky and their two daughters have been waiting for permission to emigrate since 1976, and Boris has become the focus of intensified police harassment because of his determination to live freely as a Jew in Israel. The Council has prepared a New Year's card which of- fers a holiday message in Russian and a calendar listing major Jewish holi- days on the reverse side of the card. The council project has been coordinated by a newly established Soviet Jewry Committee under the chairmenship of Ronald Karp, Lawrence Jackier and Joel Gershenson. Additional Rosh Hashana cards are available from the Jewish Community Council office, 352-6166. Festive Wedding in Geula Quarter SHELDON METZ, SALES MGR. rBill vreig SAVE CALL ME TODAY 600 5. MAIN, ROYAL OAK LL L ■..1 OPEN MOH. $ THURS. 'TM O P.M. 548-3600 JERUSALEM (JTA) — There was dancing in the streets in Jerusalem's Or- thodox Geula quarter last week in celebration of a wedding in the Hasidic house of Gur. The rebbe's eldest grandson married a 19-year-old cousin — and thousands of Hasidim, in their Sabbath finery, came to help the family rejoice. In order to improve the mind, we ought less to learn, than to contemplate.