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September 01, 1950 - Image 15

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1950-09-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

TIIIIIIIMPIP1111111111.1w

To Wed in October

irt Society

Mr. and Mrs. Felix Mahler of Whitmore Road spent 10 days
in Chicago and Milwaukee recently.
Mrs. Morris Stoller and her sons, Merrill and Fred, are spend-
ing the week in Cleveland, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Fisher and family, formerly of Lakewood
Blvd., Grosse Pointe, are now residing in their new home at 18622
Oak Drive.
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Schwartz, formerly of W. Boston Blvd.,
are now residing at the Belcrest Hotel.
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Spevakow of Renfrew Road, accompanied
by their daughters Joan and Marcia, are touring through northern
Wisconsin and Michigan for several weeks' vacation.
Mrs. Milton Rosenberg of Chicago is the house-guest this week
of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Selesko of Santa Barbara Drive.
Mrs. Jerome Morton and her daughter, Judy, of Roslyn Road,
are spending the Labor-Day week-end in New York City and
Washington, D. C.
Mrs. Ida Shwayder of Denver, Colo., who has just returned
from a European trip, is visiting her daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Sims of Huntington Woods.
Miss Hattie,. Gittleman of Elmhurst Ave., has returned from a
two weekS' visit with Mrs. Charles Cohen in Rye, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Katz of Suffolk Drive are sojourning for
two weeks at the Waldorf Astoria, New York.
Mrs. Ray M. Lewis has returned from vacationing at the Edge-
water Beach Hotel in Chicago.
Mr. and. Mrs. David Curtis of Clairmont Ave. are home from
a visit to Cincinnati and Dayton, 0. They have as their house
guests their sister, Mrs. Joyce Louis and children, Toby and Her-
bert. of Dayton.
Mrs. Irving B. Ackerman of Shrewsbury Rd. and her children
have returned from Frankfort where they spent the summer.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Ferst of 3252 Monterey will hold open
house Sunday evening, Sept. 3, to honor their sisters and brothers
who will spend the Labor Day weekend in Detroit. Their guests
of honor will be Dr. and Mrs. Julius Sherr of Los Angeles, Mr.
and Mrs. M. A. Baskind of Pittsburgh, Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Shaman
of Pittsburgh and Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Shaman of Columbus.
Dr. and Mrs. H. M. Plavnick of W. Outer Dr., their sons, Stuart
and Ronald, and daughter, Lois, have returned from New York and
Atlantic City.
Mr. and Mrs. Morris H. Bravell (Arlene Singer) announce the
adoption of a son, Paul Elliott, born Aug. 13.
Dr. and Mrs. Shmarya Kleinman are now residing at 2284 W.
Boston Blvd.
Dr. and Mrs. Herschel Zackheim and family of Curtis Ave.
have returned from a motor trip in Northern Michigan.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Schey of Stansbury Ave. have as their
house guest their cousin, Manuel Kaplan from Tuscon, Ariz.
Mrs. Morris Bashin of San Antonio, Tex., was given a shower
Aug. 22 by Mrs. Nate Katchman of Cortland Ave. Before her
marriage she was Jeanette Gottschalk. .
Barbara Borin, Barbara Kasle, Janice Coleman, Janie Robin-
son, Mary August, Nancy, Judy, Susan and Mary Ann Dunitz, Mar-
lene Danto, Jean and Beverly Danto, Susan and Carol Castleman,
Myrna and Susan Cohn, Nancy Falk, Frida, Judy and Ellen Jones,
Julie Honigman, Denise Nelson, Susan Grosberg, Sandy Balaban,
Slovia Brown and Ann Roggin returned to Detroit from a summer
at Camp Wi-Co-Su-Ta, in New Hampshire.
Jeffrey Jenks and Richard Jones are back from Camp Winan-
kee on Lake Winnepesankee in New Hampshire.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Robbins and their daughters, Alice
and Martha, are vacationing in Charlevoix until Labor Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Coplan and daughter, Lenore, from Miami
Beach are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Louis Goldberg, of Webb Ave., and
Mr. and Mrs. Abe Gittleman, of Washburn Ave.
Miss Anne Farbman, of New York City, will spend the High
Holy Days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Farbman, of
Tyler Ave.
For their forty-third wedding anniversary Mr. and Mrs. A.
Punush visited in St. Petersburg, Fla., as house guests of Mr. and
Mrs. G. Hecker. They also visited in Miami Beach.

Yiddish Paper

Questions Official

Status of CJFWF

NEW YORK, (JTA)—Analyz-
ing the report issued by• the
Council of Jewish FederatiOns
and Welfare Funds on its activ-
ities for the first six months of
this year, Dr. S. Margoshes, col-
umnist of The Day, Yiddish
daily newspaper, takes issue
with the fact that the Council
considers itself "the national as-
sociation of organized JewiSh
communities."

"How many Jewish Commun-
ity Councils have their official
representatives either on the
General Assembly of the Jewish
Federations and Welfare Funds,
or on its Council, or both?" Dr.
Margoshes asks in his column.
"I have not seen the list of con-
stituencies of the General As-
sembly of the Jewish Federa-
tions and Welfare Funds, which,
I presume, select the Council,
but I have a notion that there
are very few Jewish Community
Councils on that list."

The writer refers to the part
of the report which points out
that the Council "is being di-
rected and guided by more than
300 lay and professional com-
munity leaders who are partici-
pating in the programs of more
than 25 national, regional and
departmental committees, and
are drawn from small and large
communities in every part of the
United States and Canada."

Jews Win Absentee
Ballot in Colorado

MISS RUTH FEINSTEIN

At a recent cocktail party,
Mrs. Sarah Feinstein of W. Out-
er Dr. announced the engage-
ment of her daughter, Ruth
Doris, to Cecil Charles Malach,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Ma-
lach of Glynn Ct.
The couple plans to be mar-
ried Oct. 22, and will reside on
Outer Dr.

DENVER, (JTA) — The
House of Representatives of
the Colorado Legislature
unanimously voted to amend
the state election law to per-
mit persons of the Jewish
faith to vote by absentee
ballot in the primaries which
fall on Sept. 12, the first day
of Rosh Hashanah. The Sen-
ate unanimously passed the
amendment last week. The
State of Michigan decided
more than a month ago to
permit Jews to vote by absen-
tee ballot in its primary.
The Attorney •Leneral of
Vermont, Clifton G. Parker,
handed down a legal opinion
denying the use of absentee
ballots to Jews during the
primaries, which occur on
Sept. 12.

Nathan Rothschild was the
first Jewish "lord" in England.

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UJC president, announced.
The United Jewish Charities
was the first central organiza-
tiOn for philanthropic work in
Detroit and is now the property
holding corporation of the Jew-
ish Welfare Federation.
Its object is to accept, hold
and disburse monies and other
property for charitable pur-
poses, and to support the pro-
gram of the Federation and its
constituent agencies.

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9038 - 12th

Byron Miller, mid-West attor-
ney for the American Jewish
Congress, denounced those uni-
versities and colleges who re-
fuse to make public their ad-
mission records, at a meeting
of the committee on discrimin-
ation in higher education of the
National Students Association
convention in Ann Arbor.
Pointing out that some uni-
versities had burned their rec-
ords, prior to an investigation
of their admission practices, Mr.
Miller urged the convention to
go on record favoring State Fair
Education Laws." It is of prime
importance that methods and
techniques be devised for ascer-
taining discriminatory practices
of universities and colleges, prior
to enactment of legislation and
this job should be done solely by
students on the campus rather
than outside groups," he de-
clared. The Congress attorney
explained a few methods that
had been devised by his or-
ganization in enactment of laws
in the States of New York and
Massachusetts.

News Brevities

An exhibition of paintings and
drawings by Rabbi Abraham J.
Shapira of Jerusalem will be
featured by the Jewish Theo-
logical Seminary of America at
its JEWISH MUSEUM, 1109
Fifth Ave., New York. The
show, which is the first Ameri-
can presentation of the artist's
work, will have its formal open-
ing on Sept. 6, and is tentatively
scheduled to last through Oct. 9.
* *
Alex Schreiber of Detroit and
Los Angeles announces the
opening of his new PARADISE
THEATER in Westchester, 'Los
Angeles. His son, Max Schreiber,
will manage the theater, which
seats 1,300 and features tele-
sonic hearing aids, push-back
seats, a "crying room", cooling
plant and other luxury equip-
ment.
* * *
With an assigned quota of 500
pints of blood per month, for
military uses, the Detroit Re-
gional BLOOD CENTER has be-
gun recruitment for additional
donors, it was announced by
John M. Sullivan, executive
director of Detroit Chapter,
American Red Cross. Persons
wishing to contribute blood will
save time by first calling the
Red Cross Blood Center, WO.
1,3900, and asking for the ap-
pointment desk.

THE JEWISH NEWS-15
Friday, September 1, 1950

Urges Collegiates Back
Fair Education Laws

TR. 5-2067

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