THE JEWISH NEWS — i 1
Friday, August 3, 1951

✓ ciivitieJ ivt Society

Mr. and Mrs. Yale Drazen and children (Sylvia Hainer, for-
merly of Detroit), are here from St. Louis to visit Mrs. Drazen's
mother on Clements Ave.
Dr. and Mrs. Paul Fenton, of Outer Dr., 1 have returned from a
month's vacation in Mexico.
Warren Rovetch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rovetch of Oakman
Court, returned on the Queen Elizabeth this week. He spent the
42oast year and a half at Balliol Collqge,
Oxford, on a Fulbright scholarship doing
graduate work in economics,and is one of only
15 people in the world to achieve the partic-
ular degree of Bachelor of Philosophy in
;Economics. His extended thesis was written
,on the subject of wages, trade unionism, and
productivity in the British automotive in-
':::dustry. Warren, who is 24, was graduated
locally from Central High School and Wayne
University. He previously spent the year of
:48-'49 in England on a British Trade Union
Scholarship, and had just been back here
for a year, when he was returned to England
on the Fulbright Scholarship. He won his
degree in four terms rather than the six
Rovetch
terms usually required.
Current guests at the Caribbean Hotel in Miami Beach, Fla.,
are Mickey Glazer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Glazer, of Waverly
Ave.; Ida Dan, daughter of Mrs. Esther Dan, of Burlingame Ave.:
and Sandra German, daughter of Mrs. Rose German, also of
Detroit. •
An open house Saturday at 2539 Elmhurst will honor Selma
Friedman, who will depart shortly for Nahalal, Israel, where she
plans to take up permanent residence. All friends and relatives
are invited. -
Judyth Boraks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Boraks of
Waverly Ave., is spending the summer at the National Music
Camp at Interlochen, Mich. She is in the College division major-
ing in Fine Arts.
Mrs. Joseph Fishman, of Indiana Ave., has returned from a
five-week visit with ,members of her family in Minnesota and
Wisconsin. She was joined by Mr. Fishman in Chicago preceding
her return. The Fishmans now have as their house guests Mr.
Fishman's sisters, Mrs. Mary Marshak and Mrs. Reuben Shapiro,
of St. Louis, Mo.
The following were guests at Hilltop Inn, Charlevoix,
Messrs. and Mesdames Kenneth Macabe, Theodore Pories, Dave
Wexler and family, Manfred Weiner, J. Wolf and daughter, Robert
Green and sons, Oscar Webber, Phil Cohen, Fred Simons and son,
Louis Linden, Dr. and Mrs. G. Stein, Jim Fine, Bill Robinson and
Jerry Pliskow, all of Detroit.
Dr. and Mrs. Gerald Aptekar and sons, Robert and Donald,
are spending the month. of August in Charlevoix.
Dr. and Mrs. Herbert M. Smith, formerly of Shrewsbury Road,
are now. residing in their new abode at 18625 Muirland Ave.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lewiston of Wildemere Ave. had as their
house guest for a month, the latter's sister, Mrs: Max Abramson
of Hollywood, Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Mosher of Boston Blvd. have returned
from a vacation at Harbor Beach.
The Percy Newmans of Fairfield Ave. have been hosts the
past week to their cousin, Mrs. Pauline Ituthven of New York.
. Mr. and Mrs. J. Arthur Sarason of Ohio Ave. motored to
Minnesota to visit their children at camp. En route home, they
will stop off for a brief holiday at Charlevoix.
. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Loewenstein and son, Burton, formerly
of Warrington Drive, have moved into their new home abutting
the grounds of Franklin Hills Country Club.

Shirley Zaft to Sing
At Summer Top' Concert

Featured at tonight's "pop"
concert of the Detroit Symphony
Orchestra at
the State Fair
Grounds will be
Shirley Zaft,
young Jewish
soprano, w h o
will sing Verdi's
"Ah Fors e Lui"
a n d "Sempra
Libera" from La
Traviata.
At Saturday's
concert, ending
AsaVa the seventh
, .
Shirley Zaft week of the
Symphony's summer series, Boris
Maximovich, pi a n i s t, will be
heard playing Tschaikowsky's
Piano Concerto , (First Move-
ment). .

Alfred May Named Accredited Jewish
Agency Representative in This Area

Alfred May, prominent Detroit
attorney who for several years
has taken an active interest in
Israel affairs, especially matters
involving investments, this week
was notified What he has been
appointed accredited represent-
ative of the Jewish Agency for

D. P. Zack Named to

Accountancy Board

David P. Zack, well known
accountant, has been named by
Governor Williams as a member
of the State Board of Account-
ancy.
Mr. Jack is actve in many
local Jewish move ents includ-
ing the Farband-Labor Zionist
Organization.

Palestine in this area.
Mr. May, whose offices are in
the National Bank .13uilding, will
be prepared to answer questions
involving investment problems
in 'Israel.
An active lef- der in the Na-
tional Conference of Christians
and Jews and the Detroit Round
Table, Mr. May has just returned
from participation in a three-
day seminar of the Conference
at Cornell University.

MAE WEISS

Strictly Kosher Catering
Established 1916
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Center Film Series to Show
`Date of Birth' Monday Night

"Date of Birth" will be the
film shown by the Jewish Com-
munity Center's film discussion
series, Monday, 9 p.m., at the
Woodward Jewish Center. Dis-
cussion following the screening
will be led by Mrs. Mary K.
G u i n e y, assistant director,
Wayne County Bureau of Social
Aid.

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United Hebrew School Youth Present
Play Honoring the Late Fred Butzel

Culminating their five - week
summer program, which this
year was dedicated to a recon-
struction of Jewry's contribu-
tions to the Detroit community,
the children of the United He-
brew School presented a play in
Hebrew on July 27 before 150
other youngsters and many
adults.
The summer program, which
consists of an informal and
timely project, honored Detroit
on its 250th anniversary, and
stressed the role played in the
city's development by the .Jew-
ish community.
Fred Butzel, the late liberal
and humanitarian leader, was
the center of the children's
play. They told of his philoso-
phies of life, of his help to im-
migrants, struggling college stu-
dents and his contributions in
the city toward inter-racial
goodwill.
The play was written in He-
brew by the children them-
selves. Youngsters from the He-
brew Schools' three summer
branches all contributed. Teach-

ers of the schools directed the
play.
Exhibits were on display
showing the old JeWish quarters
in cernparison with • the homes
and buidings we know today,
and such other historical ac-
counts as the handling of Jew-
ish immigrants when they ar-
rived in Detroit were shown.
As a climax to the occasion, a
check for $700 was presented to
Abe Kasle as the youngsters'
contribution to the Allied Jew-.
ish• Campaign. The children
carried out their school cam-
paign as the adults, making
pledges and fulfilling them.
Kasle, in accepting the check,
said, "It gives one a feeling that
our community is growing
stronger and better, and the
future for good leadership looks
very bright, as among these
children we will have some of
our future leaders."

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IZFA Summer Camp Set
For Camp Kinneret, Aug. 30

The staff of the Intercolle-
giate Zionist Federation of
America Summer Camp met last
weekend in Kalamazoo to plan
the 10-day IZFA camp, which
will be held Aug. 30 to Sept. 8,
at Camp Kinneret, Chelsea,
Mich.
Attending the camp, accord-
ing to Jerry Le Mette, of Chi-
cago, camp director, will be stu-
dents from colleges in Michigan,
Illinois, Ohio, Wisconsin,. Mis-
souri and Kentucky.

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