CtIUCiCe3 in, Society
At the Infants' Service Group Mother and Daughter dinner
May 24, entertainment was furnished by the Wayne University
Puppeteers. Prizes were given to the oldest and youngest mothers
and the mother with the most children. Mrs. Al Sklar and Mrs.
Harry Baskin were chairmen.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Greenberg, formerly of 4203 Cortland,
are now residing at 19791 Strathmoor Avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. Herschel H. Levine, formerly • of Mark Twain
Ave., have moved into their new home at 32455 Tareyton, Farm-
ington, in Franklin Knolls.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Cantor, formerly of Detroit, announce the
graduation of their daughter, Marsha Doreen, on June 1, from
Miami Senior High School. Marsha was active in the school
journalism department and won third place in the national Quill
and Scroll news writing contest in Florida and has had - short
stories published in the school magazine. Marsha held offices on
the school newspaper and is an active member of Quill and Scroll,
honorary journalism society. She will enter the University of
Florida in Sel4ember to major in advertising and journalism.
Rabbis Joseph Elias and Emanuel Applebaum have been ap-
pointed by Rabbi Mendel Feldman, chairman of the 12th annual,
convention of the Rabbinical Alliance of America, to serve on the
planning board of the convention to be held at Brewster Hotel,
New York, June 16 and 17.
Mr. and Mrs. Al De/son, of Los Angeles, Calif., former Detroit-
ers, are currently in town as the house guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Jerome J. Elden, of 3311 W. Chicago Blvd.
Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Sharp left for New York on Wednes-
day and from there will sail for an extended visit in Israel.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Horowitz, of Mendota Ave., recently hon-
ored their daughter, Avon, at a sweet sixteen party in their home.
Helping Avon to celebrate were Nancy Appel, Joyce Chudler,
Mickie Feldman, Joyce Feldman, Jackie Green, Barbara Heaven-
rich, Sharon Horowitz, Phyllis Katz, Arlene Levine, Shirley Miller,
of Bay City, Rochelle Miller, Marcia Miller, Eleanor Millman,
Phyllis Moss, Sherry Tobias, Iris Topor, Millie .Shaw, Jan Willis
and Shirley Wolack.
In honor of the 50th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Hyman Lipschitz, of Gladstone Ave., their sons and daughters
will honor the couple with a dinner on Sunday, at Horowitz Cater-
ing. Out of town guests will arrive here from Fairmount, W. Va.,
St. Louis, Mo., Chicago, Ill., and Raleigh, N. C. to join in the fes-
tivities.
Mr. and Mrs. David Kalisher, formerly of London, England,
now of Elmhurst Ave., on Sunday honored the Bar Mitzvah of their
son, Lester, with a dinner and reception in his honor. The cere-
mony was observed May 22, at the Humphrey Shul.
Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Srere have returned from a tour of
Europe.
Raymond Knute Feldman, son of Mr. Ben Feldman, of Miami
Beach, Fla., formerly of Detroit, will graduate on Saturday, from
the Kirksville College of Osteopathy and Surgery, Kirksville, Mo.
He is a member of Phi Sigma Gamma social fraternity.
Mrs. Sarah Gordon, of Atkinson Ave. has left for Chicago,
Ill., to attend the graduation of her son-in:law, Arthur L. Fligman,
from the Chicago College of Optometry. Dr. Fligman, an alumnus
of City College of New York and Michigan State. College, is af-
filiated with Mu Sigma Pi professional fraternit7alDr. and Mrs.
Fligman (she is the former Marcia Gordon) wi ii• il:side at 1675
Atkinson upon their return to Detroit next week.
Michigan-Ontario Rabbis'
Region to Meet June 2
Rabbi Samuel Stollman of
Congregation Shaarey Shomaim,
Windsor, will preside at a Michi-
gan-Ontario meeting of the
Rabbinical Council of America,.
Wednesday, at Lachar's. Twenty
members have been invited.
Rabbi M. J. Wohlgelernter is
chairman of midwestern region
of the rabbinical body, which
includes the Michigan-Ontario
unit headed by Rabbi Stollman.
Other Detroit area members
are: Rabbis Jacob M. Brown,
Hayim Donin, Israel Halpern,
Max Kapustin, Israel T. Notis,
Samuel H. Prero, Detroit, Rabbi
Louis Kaufman, Mt. Clemens,
and Rabbi Henry Hoshander,
Pontiac.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of the late Bluma
Lenhoff acknowledges with
grateful appreciation the many
kind expressions of sympathy
extended by relatives and friends
during the family's recent be-
reavement.
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Bar Mitzvahs
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Baron, of
18428 Indiana, announce the
Bar Mitzvah of their son, Elliott
Henry, on Saturday, at Cong.
Shaarey Zedek. A dinner in his
honor will be held Sunday, at
Holiday Manor.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Barney Plotnick,
of Wisconsin Ave., announce the
Bar Mitzvah of their son, Steven
Jay, this evening, at Temple Is-
rael. No cards.
Do You Know--
DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-15 I Order British Bank to Pay Arab Fnnds Frozen in Israel
Friday, May 28, 1954
LONDON, (JTA) — Jordan's to make Barclay's Bank and the
highest court, the Court of Ces- Ottoman Bank—both British in-
sation, has ordered Barclay's stitutions—responsible for Arab
Warner-Freedman
Bank
to pay 6,000 pounds sterl- funds frozen in their branches
Rites Set for Dec. 19
ing to a Palestine Arab refugee in Israel.
whose funds were frozen in a
branch of the bank in Israel
under Israeli law.
The effect of this decision is
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THIS PRECIOUS GIFT
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Give baby's portrait, the gift most dearly cherished by
MISS MARILYN WARNER
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Warner, of
Lawrence Ave., announce the
engagement of their ' daughter,
Marilyn, to Lawrence G. Freed-
man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hy
Freedman, of Glynn Ct.
The bridegroom-elect is a
senior in the college of educa-
tion of • Wayne University. A
Dec. 19 wedding is planned.
Protest in Commons
Over Ban on Travel
of Jews Via Iraq
LONDON, (JTA)—Severe criti-
cism of the policy of the British
Overseas Airways Corporation, a
government agency, toward Jew-
ish passengers on routes travers-
ing the Middle East was voiced
in a discussion in the House of
Commons.
The debate was precipitated by
Barnett Janner, Labor M.P., who
asked the government to ex-
plain why the BOAC put diffi-
culties in the way of Jews, of
British or other nationality, who
wanted to travel to Iraq or
through Iraq. He demanded
that the government obtain
from the corporation assurances
that such discrimination would
cease.
J. D. Profumo, Joint Parlia-
mentary Secretary for the Min-
istry of Transportation and Civil
Aviation, said that since 1950 the
BOAC on the basis of an Iraqi
regulation, had refused to take
Jews on such routes unless they
had special visas issued by Bag-
dad. Mr. Profumo insisted that
such regulations had been is-
sued in the interests of Jewish
passengers, to avoid embarrass-
ment on inconvenience to
them.
Another Laborite, Sidney Sil-
verman, interjected that Iraq
had refused to issue such visas
to any Jew crossing its territory.
He called the British govern-
ment's refusal to act in this
matter "connivance against
British subjects travelling in
British aircraft." Again Mr. Pro-
fumo insisted that the regula-
tions were in the best interests
of Jewish passengers. He also
said he knew of no case where a
Jewish passenger had been halt-
ed in transit in Iraq.
Mr. Janner, who referred to
the matter as a "case of shock-
ing discrimination," said that
owing to the unsatisfactory na-
ture of Mr. Profumo's reply he
would again raise the issue in
the near future.
A BOAC spokesman later told
the Jewish Telegraphic Agency
that the Arab government had
informed the line that they
would not permit Israelis to en-
ter their territory or cross it.
Iraq, he added, had extended
this ban to all Jews. For any air-
line to contravene this regula-
tion would mean that Iraq
would inflict their maximum
punishment "amounting to im-
pounding the aircraft." In view
of this and for their own sake,
the spokesman declared, book-
ings were not accepted from
Jews on this route.
That Robert Browning in one
of his poems, entitled "Love
Among the Ruins," borrowed the
prosody—both as to rhyme and
meter—from a Piyut by Yom-
Tov of York, killed in the York
Massacre, 1189, bearing the cap-
tion "Amnam Ken?" The writer
will furnish an example of such
poetry in a subsequent issue of
The Jewish News.
That the English poet Addi-
son put to verse Psalm 19 "The
Heavens declare the glory of
God," but did not succeed. He
did not excel the Hebraic idiom
and the profound message that
the Psalm carries to man.
That Psalm 104 has been
designated by Humboldt as a
cosmologic portraiture of the
universe. It is very strange that
in the archaeological excavation
of the tomb of Tutankhamen
they found a papyrus, written
by both Akhnaton and his wife
Nefer-Neff Itti—who were the
parents-in-law of Tutankhamen
—which in substance is almost
a repetition of Fr salm 104. Prof.
Breasted of the University of
Chicago, a member of that ill-
fated expedition, has deciphered
it in English, which Cherni-
chovsky translated into Hebrew.
One continues wondering what
is what. What an extraordinary
Do not worry about tomorrow
coincidence!
—you don't even know what
—Noah E., Aronstam, M.D. may happen to you today.
parents and grandparents. And baby's portrait by Coville is
DOUBLY cherished for its exquisite artistry. Coville, by
reputation, is Detroit's outstanding photographer of babies
and children. Coville service, tot, is outstanding.
Phone for
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