activities in Society
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Klayman, of Curtis Ave., recently
celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary with a dinner party
at Jeri's. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. William Yaker,
of Beverly Hills, Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. Max Charness, of W. '7 Mile Rd., recently
tendered a surprise party honoring the 25th wedding anniversary
of their children, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Bolton, of Cornell Rd.
Honoring the couple was their son, Dr. Norman Bolton, and their
two grandsons, Kenneth and Steven. Among the guests were
Rabbi Israel I. Halpern and Cantor Shabtai Ackerman, while
from out-of-town were Mr. and Mrs. M. Feingersh, sister and
brother-in-law of Mr. Charness, of Windsor; Mr. S. Stein, Mrs.
Charness' brother, and Mrs. S. Dalfen, her sister, and Mr. and
Mrs. Alex Raider, her niece and nephew, all of Montreal. Mr.
Sam Raskin brought congratulations from the Knights of Pythias,
and Mr. Sidney Charness, brother of Mrs. Bolton, acted as master
of ceremonies.
A family dinner party given in the home of their children
recently honored Mr. and Mrs. Herman H. Stark, of 19169 Ilene,
on the occasion of their 40th wedding anniversary. A previous
announcement listed the Starks' address incorrectly.
Mr. and Mrs. Johua Karbal, of Stratford Rd., recently were
hosts to '75 guests at a dinner and surprise party honoring the
30th birthday of their son-in-law, Mr. David Sklar, of Dartmouth
Ave., Oak Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Silverman and family, of 24225 Norfolk,
are presently spending'an early winter vacation at Oakton Manor
Resort, Lake Pewaukee, Wis.
Out-of-town guests here to attend the Bar Mitzvah of Robert
Michael Sayles, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sayles, of Oak Park,
Mich., are farther Detroiters Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Zilitsky, of
Los Angeles; Mr. and Mrs. Erwin L. Sayle, of Erie, Pa.; Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Levin, of St. Petersburgh, Fla.; Mrs. Al Horstein and
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Miller.
litaihomplawimmoiii44.46arir
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley L. Aiges of LaSalle Blvd., have as their
guests his mother, Mrs. Ben Aiges; sister, Mrs. Barbara Bender
.
.
er daughter, Lori Beth, of Brooklyn, N.Y.
Hias, Celebrating 75th Anniversary,
Dedicates Hall of Records in N. Y.
NEW YORK, (JTA) — The
United Hias Service started a
year-long program of celebra-
tion of its 75th anniversary
with a ceremony dedicating a
permanent and international
Hall of Records at its head-
quarters. Several hundred dele-
gates from various organiza-
tions attended the function.
Ben Touster, chairman of
the 75th anniversary commit-
tee, said that the Hall of Rec-
ords contains data on Jewish
migration dating back more
than half a century. The rec-
ords will be accepted by the
U.S. Government as proof of
entry and residence in the
United States.
Touster explained that the
Hall of Records is named after
the late Wilhelm Weinberg,
Jewish financier who immi-
grated to this country follow-
ing the Nazi occupation of the
Lowlands, and from whose re-
siduary estate funds were pro-
vided for the establishment of
the Hall.
Carlo L. Israels, United Hias
president, pointed out that the
records contain data on immi-
grants who rose to great re-
nown in this country, and
throughout the world. They in-
clude such names as: Albert
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I-
Einstein, Mischa Elman, Greg-
or Piatagorsky, Mark Chagall,
Alexander Kerensky, David
Ben - Gurion, Itzhak Ben-Zvi,
Franz Werfel and others.
Gen. Joseph M. Swing, -U.S.
Immigration and Naturalization
Commissioner, declaring that
the records would be accepted
by the government as proof of
entry and residence in this
country, said: "Such is the
reputation that United Hias en-
joys with the organization I
head, that if you say an immi-
grant was here, according to
your records — he was here!"
Landsmanshaften
Plan Action for
Projects of JNF
The committee of Landsman-
shaften for Jewish National
Fund announces the formation
of a group to implement the
resolutions adopted at the
Landsmanshaften panel at the
JNF conference on Nov. 30,
according to Harry Kaminer,
chairman of the committee.
Members of the committee
are I. Burnstein, Ben Grant,
Julius Honeyman, Harry Ka-
miner, William Keller, Morris
Malin, Harry Rosenthal, Mrs.
Harry Rosenthal, Max Rosen-
thal, Solomon Rubin, Morris
Rossman, Mrs. S. Sborow,
Messrs. Bert Seedberg, Sol Sel-
man, Max Schulzinger, Isadore
Sosnick and David Teitelbaum.
Kaminer said members of
this committee will solicit the
cooperation of every Landsman-
shaften society in carrying out
the resolutions which call for
the establishment of a Detroit
Landsmanshaften Forest of
18,000 trees in the new Inde-
pendence Forest of 2,000,000
trees which is now being
planned by the Jews of the
United States, the placement
of a JNF Blue-White Box in
the home of every member,
and the participation of every
member during JNF Month,
the month of Shevat 5719
(Jan. 10 to Feb. 9).
Kaminer also announced that
a mass meeting of Landsman-
shaften is planned as a cul-
minating event for Thursday,
Jan. 22, at the Labor Zionist
Institute.
ments they bac: to make, add-
ing "these problems are told
only in confidence to the
rabbi and psychiatrist."
Emphasizing that he was not
suggesting the suburbs had
nothing to offer, Rabbi Lorge
added, "I am saying that the
suburbs, too, present problems
and people should consider
those problems very carefully
before deciding whether to stay
or move."
join in the exodus to suburbia
had warning this week that
such a transfer may bring as
many problems as it solves.
Rabbi Ernest M. Large,
spiritual leader of Temple Beth
Israel, said that many people
had come to his study "to con-
fess that by moving into sub-
urban areas they have over-
extended themselves finan-
cially." Among the problems
which the migrants had not
anticipated, he said, were
higher taxes, cost of landscap-
ing and transportation and
inadequate-sized schools.
C ud. w-e.
MISS NANCY LUSTIG
The engagement of Nancy
Gail Lustig, daughter of Mrs.
Marian Lustig, of Woodingham
Dr., and the late Mr. Herbert
W. Lustig, to Howard S. Sha-
piro, son of Dr. and Mrs. Jack
Shapiro, of Stuyvessant Rd.,
Birmingham, has been an-
nounced.
Miss Lustig is a junior in
the college of education at
Wayne State University, and is
president of Delta Phi Epsilon
sorority. Her fiance is a gradu-
ate of the University of Michi-
gan, and is presently a junior
in the WSU college of medi-
cine. He is affiliated with Phi
Sigma Delta, Phi Delta Epsilon
and Alpha Omega Alpha fra-
ternities.
/11°P
19147 Livernois Ave.
At 7 Mile Road
Open Thurs., Fri. to 9 p.m.
-
7144-1-P1-447.
gt. pup, to Xnota!
Diamond Crystal Has
2 Salts for Housewife
Two types of
made by
the Diamond Crystal Salt Co.
are manufactured under rab-
binical supervision of t h e
Union of Orthodox Jewish Con-
_gregations of Amer-lc-2r.- •
One is Diamond Crystal Ko-
sher Salt, which, because it is
neither too coarse nor too fine,
flows freely, spreads evenly,
penetrates thoroughly a n d
washes off quickly.
The other is Diamond Crys-
tal Weather-Pruf salt for table
use. Always pure, it is free-
flowing even in damp, humid
weather. Its even flowing pro-
vides controlled shaking, which
means even spreading to make
foods taste better.
Diamond Crystal comes with
a familiar pouring spout and
a little red cap with little
holes around the side which
lifts up. This gives controlled
shaking without spilling.
Enrolled in the Boy Scouts of
America are more than 4,780,-
000 boys and leaders.
After visiting our studio and seeing our
work many people say, "Yes, but a portrait
like that would be too expensive." We say
-F
t _
h
p hotor
"Not_ at all.
?
isn t a matter of expense .. .
it's a matter of experience It costs no more to do
a portrait you'll be genuinely
proud of . .. so why charge more?"
Visit our studio soon so we can show you what
we mean. Just call UN 4-8484 for an appointment.
Portraits- Weddings-Bar Mitzvahs'
8MM and 16MM Color Movies — Color Slides
3-D Stereo — Candid Books
8632 McNICHOLS ROAD WEST — DETROIT 21, MICH.
TELEPHONE: UNiversity 4-8484
WE ARE ACCEPTING RESERVATIONS FOR
The Fabulous
AVALON ROOM
Now Open For
Luncheons, Showers,
Sales Meetings, Parties,
etc.
$1 9 0
WE'LL SERVE 35 TO 200
CALL FOR INFORMATION
SPECIAL HOLIDAY TRAYS
Complete Luncheon
$1.25 Per Person
SAMMY'S
COOLIDGE AT 9 MILE
OPEN DAILY 7 A.M. to 1 A.M.—SATURDAY 'TIL 2 A.M.
LI. 7-1355
15—TH E DETROIT JEWISH NEWS—Frid ay, D ecember 26, 1958
I
Nancy Lustig Plight Suburbs Have Woes, Rabbi Says
He reported cases of children
CHICAGO (JTA ) —Am eri can
Troth to H. S. Shapir . Jews
contemplating plans to suffering because of readjust-