Page Sixteen DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle Frid a , November 15, 194( Cell Winokur posed for publicity pictures' that found their way to the Detroit News. U. of M. alumnus Sheldon Ellis takes over his new job as prosec- uting attorney of Hillsdale... Bernie Rosenberg gets flashed on the This issue marks the beginning screen of Detroit's theatres in the of the second year in which the Child's First Camp," and "Dan Community Fund's drive shots of Detroit Jewish Chronicle brings Keep Away" (an excerpt from its activities in Detroit. Bernie to its readers the popular column, Goldberg's forthcoming booklet was snapped during his summer "Personel Problems," by Dr. W. A. "Seven Ages for Marriage) THE MULTIT UDE OF SOCIAL work as counselor at the Aaron gatherings makes it easy for h the weekly Wednesday nite open DeRoy Center. Norm Thal Is now Goldberg. social mixers at Wayne's Hillel. of snooper to spot names for thi s president of the Men's Club of From our readers' comments and • • ■ part of the col'm . . . Nancy Ka that Toledo Congregation. Y REPORTED ROMANCING .. . letters, we know that Dr. Goldberg with Lloyd Kaplan, Clara Israc • • has created great interest in this Anne Rosenfeld sporting a nice and Hal Gerstein, Marvin Cohn feature which deals with their and Mirlan Fellow, Audrey Hart- sparkler from Norman Saulles... JUNIOR MISS DEPT. Ruth Littky's home was the site everyday lives. It discusses the man and Bob Blchoff. Joe Cohen.and Lee Hertzberg are for the Winx Club Sadie Hawkins problems that married and single Carl Katz and Jane Lazar looking for an available date . celebration . . . Jerie Altman, people have brought to Dr. Gold- strolling down the avenue, red Nov. 19 will see Lenore Bayles Estelle Wein, Clara Glusman, Lau- berg for counseling. JERUSALEM, (JTA) — T sheiks of Arab villages near Nec head Levona Levy and Hank and Joe Stulberg . . . united. ra Axelrod and Phyllis Cohen did Sterngold at the coke-counter . . FlorenCe Gold and Sue Jalan are a good job. Fifteen other Anglo-Jewish pub- Mordechai, which was the scene an list attack on Jewish settlers Evelyn Citrin and Bernie 'Morin on the unavailable Sheldon LaBret's home on San lications throughout the United • • • window shopping . . . at the Juan drive was the spot for AZA's States have followed the Chron- Arabs last week, visited the Jewi Chapter 527 recent shindig . . . icle's lead in publishing the col. settlement and apologized for t plays . . • Roy Robbins and SPORTIES . . incident, declaring that it w Judy Pregerson and Helen Fried Arnold Sky is president of the umn. Twelfth grade council represent- and Irving Strub. instigated by agents sent fro atives at Temple Beth El are Ir- group. While Dr. Goldberg is a native Safed by extremist chiefs. Thy • • • Spotted Ilene Ratner and Mel Platt, Bluma Schreiber and Buddy win Goldhoff, Joel Hamburger, THE OPENING OF the Bel- Detroiter, he has only recently re- formally presented a peace off, Donald Meshorer and Suzanne Aire Supper Club found notables turned to this city after acting as to the Jews. Gottloeb, Dick Kozloff and Lois Sherman. everywhere. Good luck to George assistant superintendent of chari- Feinberg, Norm Kohlenberg and A few days earlier, however, vl Joel Epel is building his new ties of the public welfare depart- Barbara Berkman, Gus Feig and chemical lab on 8 mile . . . Hatilc- and Dave Taxe and Gene Adelson ment of Illinois and as director lagers fired on Jewish settlers i in their enterprise. Marlon Reed, Harry Weberman vah (The Eternal Hope) is Rebec- of Public Welfare Consultants, Massouth Itzhak, south of JeruK Three watches and an expensive Chicago. and Betty Enfield and Ben Hoff. ca Gratz's new publication with lam. The Arabs dispersed afte man with Phyllis Glanzrock. Sara Lee Eichler doing the edit- ring is what Charles Laskey, the Jewish settlement police fired shot cleaning man on McNichols road, • • ing. Dr. Goldberg is a special instruc- into the air. No one was shot, bu found in the pockets of his forget. tor in sociology, at Wayne Univer- two Jews were injured by stones. • • a FOR THE FUTURE ful customers . . . Tsk, tslt ... and sity and is the author of articles NAMES IN THE NEWS Jewish inhabitants of the Ha The Final Brith Young Women the wives are probably getting Windsor's Aaron Katzman takes bawled out for mislaying the stuff. on U. S. jail and prison schedules tikvah quarter between Tel Avh will launch their membership drive and on forms and procedures for over the helm of Wayne's Hillel... Sunday afternoon at the „Jewish Many happy returns of the day homes for children and the aged. and Jaffa report that the Aral "army" called "Najada" Center with a snappy program ac- BBYO Howard Leibman was guest M one year olds Bill Coll and speaker at the AZA Sabbath serv- cording to Charlotte Waterstone, Among Dr. Goldberg's most there nightly, using firearms and Marvin Oshinsky . . . Freida Las- ices in Grand Rapids . . . in con- vice president. Dancing and re- ser lost her appendix . . . Thrush popular columns have been "A Lox dressed in uniforms, without in. freshments are on the agenda for nection with the current SOS Francis Bloom is taking in the and Bagel Jew defends his Broth. terference from the authorities. drive . . . Harriet Cooper and ren," "Is This Love?" "My Daddy The wearing of uniforms has great white yvay of N. Y. is Bigger Than Yours," "Your been prohibited even for Jewish sports organizations. Dr. Goldberg's Popular Column Stai Second Year as a Chronicle Feature PHIL ROTHSCHILD, Sheiks Apologize for Arab Attack s • • SIXTY YEARS OF LIGHT:. Just sixty years ago this week, electric lights winked on for a handful of Detroiters—eighty-nine, to be exact. Amid applause and excitement, four little generators in the Edison power plant at Washington Blvd. and State St. (which now houses Detroit Edison's downtown office) had begun to hum. ;'. :1101 i : 4 ,111111' ; il!.- -4 ■ i iiii t 00 —all ° NIIN. ---.4 IIIII o w/ •• I —••• Nall NIII • 0 • ii ONO 11110111 '111 im Z ._ f - - .011111 ........„. __., 1 'ill IP .0 "-- As overworked housewives cleaned the soot from ,,_....741 114 " — kerosene lamp chimneys, they thought enviously of the new lamps. Off and on, they had been think. ing of them ever since Thomas Edison invented the incandescent lamp seven years before. But, though some of these women might have foreseen a day when they could flood their homes with sun- light at the flip of a switch, they couldn't have dreamed of a time when lamps would purify the air they breathed or sterilize the food they cooked. And they would have been incredulous had they been told that electricity soon would be accom- plishing a score of household chores. Similarly, the husbands of these women, reading by flickering lamps about John L. Sullivan's latest battle, might have looked forward to a day of better lighting. It isn't likely, though, that many of them foresaw the growth of southeastern Michigan into a great industrial giant. How could they visualize vast factories lighted day and night by hundreds of thousands of fluorescent lamps? Yes, it was an historic event for Michigan. But the Edison Illuminiting Company did not consider itself a public benefactor—bringing Edison's priceless gift of light to a darkened city. Far from it. It thought of itself as just another small business—it had little realization of its destiny. The first bills were high. Many of those eighty-nine customers used their current recklessly, demon- strating their lamps to friends and playing with them as though they were toys. It was November, when the nights are long and the days are dark. And the rate was more than six times as much as you pay today. As people saw the advantages that electricity had for them, they sought electric . service. business grew. With its growth, service improved and rates began to go down. They are still going The down. Today, more than 850,000 customers are served with light and power by Detroit Edison. Quite a contrast to the eighty-nine of sixty years ago. ::: T H E DETROIT • . • EDISON COMPANY