THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Friday, October 17, 1958-26
Author Lois Kuhn to Speak Miss Eder's Betrothal Fine New Novel Sid Shmarak's
at Book Fair Children's Day Told at Dinner Party by Young Author,
Business Briefs
Lois Harris Kuhn, nationally book on the life of Jo Davidson,
Rona Jaffe, 26
known author, will head the world-famed sculptor, which
program for children's day at
the seventh annual Jewish Book
Fair at the Davison branch of
the Jewish Community Center.
Mrs. Kuhn is the author of
the highly popular Covenant
Handicapped Youth
Helped by UJA
,, ....
Thousands of children are
among the handicapped and
ill who benefit by the UJA-
supported JDC Malben pro-
gram in Israel. The program
maintains and operates a net-
work of services, hospitals
and other institutions for the
aged, handicapped and chroni-
cally ill.
Jewish Surgeon Hailed
for 'Heart Booster'
NEW YORK, (JTA) — The
chief heart surgeon of Maimon-
ides Hospital of Brooklyn, larg-
est kosher hospital in the world
outside Israel, was revealed as
the inventor of a "booster heart
system"—a device being hailed
by scientists as the "completion
of a century-old surgical
dream."
The inventor is Dr. Adrian
Kantrowitz. He showed movies,
of the manner in which his new
electronic instrument has been
tested on 10 dogs, before the
American College of Surgeons,
vention as "ingenious achieve-
where colleagues hailed his in-
ment."
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was published earlier this year.
Mrs. Kuhn will lead informal
literary discussions with a
group of teen-agers from local
and neighboring communities
at a weekend session at Camp
Tamarack immediately preced-
ing the Jewish Book Fair, which
is set for Nov. 22 to 24.
She will return to Detroit
Nov. 22, for the opening "Meet
the Authors" session, and will
be the featured speaker for the
children's program of the Book
Fair on Nov. 23.
Mrs. Kuhn is descended from
an ancient Sephardic lineage,
one of her ancestors being
Sarah Bernhardt, thus giving
the authoress an early and in-
herited theatrical background.
She has been active in small
theater groups in her home
town of Philadelphia, producing
plays of others as well as her
own, and has worked actively
with Brownies, Cubs and PTA
groups. She has written and
directed plays for many civic
and communal groups.
Mrs. Kuhn, who describes
herself as "one of America's
13,000,000 married women who
work," is presently engaged in
completion of a novel, between
her regular professional duties
in the medical field.
This year's Book Fair will in-
clude eight outstanding writers
in the Jewish field, according
to Morris Garvett, Book Fair
chairman. Other authors and in-
dividual programs for the three
days of the Book Fair will be
announced in subsequent weeks.
anoun,cements
Oct. 11—To Mr. a n d Mrs.
James Stark (Gloria Cohen) for-
mer Detroiters now of Grand
Rapids, Mich., a son, Bradford
William.
*
* *
Oct. 9 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin J. Blank (Celia Glick),
of 24320 Manistee, Oak Park, a
son, Jeffrey Glen.
* *
Oct. 4 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Watnik (Sharon Stone),
former Detroiters now of North
Hollywood, Calif., a son, Brian
Aaron.
* * *
Sept. 22—To Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Solomon (Jane Berry), of
13330 Sherwood, Huntington
Woods, a daughter, Linda
Michele.
* * *
Sept. 22 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald K. Primack (Judith Co-
hen), of 24810 Rensselaer, Oak
Park, a daughter, Pamela Hope.
* * *
Sept. 20—To Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Zaretsky (Charles Selbst,
of Detroit), of 1709 E. 68th
St., Chicago, Ill., a son, Bruce
Barry.
* * *
Sept. 11 — To Lt. and Mrs.
Lloyd Newman (Iris Cappell),
Detroiters now living at 736D
Nelson Rd., Columbus, 0., where
Lt. Newman serves with the
U.S. Air Force at Lockbourne
Field, a son, Mark Harrison.
* * *
Sept. 8 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Kutnick (Marilyn Cohl),
of 24455 Rensselaer, Oak Park,
an adopted daughter, Kathy
Ellen.
• * *
To Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gil-
more (Arlene Barnett, of De-
troit), of Charleston, S.C., a son,
Jonathan Andrew.
Publishing a volume of verse
is like dropping a rose petal
down the Grand Canyon and
waiting for the echo." — Don
Marquis.
MISS BEVERLEY EDER
At a recent dinner party,
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Eder,
of Canterbury Rd., announced
the engagement of their daugh-
ter, - Beverley Lois, to Richard
D. Mitchell, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Samuel Mitchell, of W.
Lincoln Ave., Oak Park.
The bride-elect is a former
student of Michigan State and
Wayne State Universities. Her
fiance attended Adrian College
and Wayne State.
Plans are being made for a
Dec. 28 wedding.
People ...
Make News
"The Best of Everything"
beckons the reader to be on the
watch for the novel's author,
Rona Jaffe. Her first published
work (published by Simon &
Schuster, 630 5th, N. Y. 20),
this novel deserves commenda-
tion as good writing, splendid
narrative and ably - concocted
motivation.
Miss Jaffe is a 26-year-old na-
tive New Yorker. She indicates
an understanding of New York
life, of those born in the great
city and of the girls who flocked
there in search of a new life
away from the quieter areas
from which they hail.
It is a story about the office
girls, their after-work life, the
men they meet, the night clubs
they attend, their desires for
home life in aspired marriage.
It is a long novel of 437 pages,
but it is full of action and it
holds the reader's attention as
a result of the author's ability
to weave a good story.
There are romances here be
tween single people and between
divorcd or those seeking di-
vorce. The point is that the nat-
ural developments resulting
from normal inter-sex relation-
ships are tol.d with warmth and
understanding.
This is a fine novel, by a very
young author.
The appointment of MORRIS IDICK STEIN
LAUB as director of the World
Now Offers a Second Orchestra
Council of Synagogues was an- For Your More Intimate Affairs.
Luncheons — Fashion Shows
nounced by Rabbi Bernard Se- Small
Weddings — Bar Mitzvahs
gal, executive director of the Under the Direction. of Joe Oddo
United Synagogue of America.
KE 5-2604
The WCS includes synagogues
in 21 countries. Its purpose is
to strengthen Jewish religious
life throughout the world.
* * *
NEW YORK—ABE BIREN-
BAUM, of Philadelphia, has
been elected to a two-year term
as chairman of the National
Ramah Commission, according
to an announcement made by
the Jewish Theological Semin-
ary of America. As chairman
of the Ramah Commission, he
succeeds the late Maxwell Ab-
bell Abbell, founder and first
chairman of the Commission.
The National Ramah Commis-
sion, with 30 members, is the
governing body of the Sem-
inary's camping movement. It
operates the four Ramah camps,
in Conover, Wisconsin, Lake
Como, Pa., East Hampton,
Conn., and Ojai, Calif. The
camps, which are all Hebrew
speaking, are designed to give
the 1,000 children and young
adults who attend them each
summer an experience in Jew-
ish living. They are sponsored
by the United Synagogue of
America and operated under
the educational supervision of
the Seminary's Teachers Insti-
tute.
Anne Frank Sequel
Wins World Radio Prize
VENICE, Italy, (JTA) — A
German entry has won the
$2,000 prize for the best hu-
man rights entry in dramatic
radio work in the tenth an-
nual competition for the Ital-
ian Prize. Even the Israeli
member of the jury voted for
the German work.
The winning entry was a
documentary on Anne Frank,
the Jewish teenager whose
diary revealed to the world
how Jews lived in the under-
ground in Nazi-controlled Eu-
rope. The radio script, "Sequel
of Anne Frank," was written
by Ernest Schnabel, who also
authored a book which traced
the Frank girl during the
period after her diary ended—
after the Nazis seized her
The NAT GREENE BEAUTY
SALON, located at 19147 Liver-
nois, is now open with a com-
plete staff of beauticians under
the personal supervision of Don
Vega, who was awarded first
prize in 1957 for a hairdo called
`The Forward L o o k' by the
North America Beauty and
Fashion Show. The shop has
the latest equipment and facili-
ties to care for m'ladies beauty
needs.
* * *
CADILLAC NYLON HOSE,
is again featuring "sportights"
and stocking tights. Made of
100% Helanca Stretch Nylon,
they are available in a variety
of colors in full fashioned or
seamless Helanca Stretch Ny-
lon hosiery that really stays up
over the knee, and comes in a
variety of colors. For informa-
tion call WO. 1-1789.
A poet can survive anything
but a misprint.—Oscar Wilde.
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