U. of M. Students Set June Wedding Date MISS SUSAN COHEN The engagement of Susan Risha Cohen to Norman Eliot Levitin has been announced by the parents of the bride-elect, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cohen, of Wisconsin Ave. Mr. Levitin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Levitin, of Brook- lyn, N.Y., is a graduate of Brooklyn College, where he was affiliated with Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity. He is currently a doctoral candidate at the Uni- versity of Michigan. Miss Cohen is ,a U. of M. senior. Following a June 15 wedding, the couple will reside in St. Louis, Mo. • -Dromedary Recipes Offer Dessert Hint Expecting the unexpected, especially in desserts, is a com- mon family trait that frequent- ly poses a challenge to the most ingenious housewife. The makers of Dromedary Date-Nut Roll have come up with a number of recipes that not only will be treats for the family, but also can be made with minimum preparation. Featured at leading food stores, Dromedary Date - Nut Roll, with the kosher "U" seal, keeps fresh indefinitely in its vacuum-sealed tin, and may be stocked in quantity to prepare for unexpected guests. Here is a recipe for "Filled 'Dromedary Date-Nut Roll": 1 tin Dromedary Date-Nut Roll 1 /4 package cream cheese 1 tsp. butter 2 tblsp. crushed pineapple (drained) Cut a thin slice off each end of the Dromedary Date - Nut Roll. Using a sharp knife, care- fully hollow out the center of the roll. Cream the butter and cream cheese, add half the crumbs from the center of the roll and mix well with the pine- apple. Press the filling into the center of the roll, replace the end pieces and fasten with toothpicks. Wrap in wax paper, chill at least an hour before slicing and serving. (Note: 1/4 cup whipped cream may be sub- stituted for cheese.) Temple Israel Couples Club Schedules Oneg Shabbat .The fourth oneg shabbat of the season will be presented by the Young Marrieds Group of Temple Israel following services this evening. Meeting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Raskin, 14521 Lincoln, Oak Park, the group will hear a review by Rabbi M. Robert Syme on "Advise and Consent." Art Films at Center "Ballet by Degas," "Leonardo Da Vinci" and "Rembrandt: Painter of Man," will be the first in a series of art film programs, presented by the Jewish Center, 18100 Meyers, at 8:30 p.m., Thursday. Jules Trattner, director, art depart- ment, Cass Technical High School, will lead a discussion after the films. 1 Blind Woman in Russia Seeks Brother. Here A letter, written in Yiddish to the Beth Yehudah Schools here from a woman in Russia, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Grant, of Birmingham, Mich., enter- seeks information about h e r tained on Feb. 14, at Kingsley Inn, in honor of the marriage of brother, who is believed to be a their son, Barry M. Grant, to Lisa R. Geffen, daughter of Mr. Detroit resident. and Mrs. James H. Geffen, of Scarsdale, N. Y. The wedding The woman, Sarah Faktaro- was solemnized on Jan. 31, at the Savoy Hilton Hotel, in New vich, desires to learn the where- York City. The young couple now resides in Royal Pak. abouts of Itchie Margolin, the Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Schreiber were honored at a dinner son of Rachmiel Margolin. Mrs. at the Lee Plaza, last Saturday night, by their children and Faktarovich, who writes she has grandchildren, on the occasion of their 54th wedding anniversary. been blind for 15 years, has a Dr. and Mrs. Charles Gitlin returned from Miami Beach, where Dr. Gitlin attended the Clinical Congress of Abdominal Surgeons at the Deauville Hotel. Before returning home they were house guests of their sisters, Mrs. Ruth Holtman and Zinna Gitlin. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Wainer, of Canterbury Rd., have returned from a week's stay in New York, where Mr. Wainer attended the American Service Industries Show. daughter and two grandchil- dren. She continues, "I have heard in the city of Loyev that my brother lives with his family in Detroit. We were both born in Loyev." Any information on Mr. Mar- golin can be transmitted to Menachem Freimark, executive secretary of the Beth Yehudah Schools, 12305 Dexter, WE 1-0203. Friendship, Adventure, New Ideas Mark Beth Jacob Convention One Day Only activities in Society By CHARLOTTE HYAMS If sheer enthusiasm marks a convention's success, then the high school girls of Beth Jacob had a whopper of a parley. One hundred and fifty dele- gates from eight Jewish day schools throughout the country and two hi Canada, converged on Detroit over the weekend and left Monday after three days of fun, friendship a n d adventure. But the girls never seemed to forget that they had a seri- ous goal to achieve at this third annual convention. Guests of the Detroit Beth Jacob branch of the Beth Yehu- dah Schools, the delegates de- cided during the Friday and Saturday sessions, that if the fundamentals of the Beth Jacob movement—Torah, Avodah and Gemiluth Chassodim—are to be achieved, then each girl must "achieve perfection in these things, not only for herself, but for the entire community." These fundamentals, which stand for study, prayer and charitable acts, are brought out in the intensive study— both in Hebrew and in Eng- lish—and adherence to tra- ditional customs which the Beth Jacob schools include in their "way of life." Mrs. Chajes Schedules Contemporary Concert for Tuesday Musicale Marguerite Kozenn Chajes will present a concert. of inter- national and contemporary music at 10:30 a.m., Tuesday, in the lecture hall of the De- troit Institute of Arts, under the auspices of the Tuesday Musicale. Among the featured composi- tions will be Japanese selec- tions heard for the first time in America. Included will be the works of the Japanese com- posers Kiyose and Hayasaka. The program also will present compositions by Richard Ar- nell and Cyril Scott of Great Britain; a quintet by. American composer Quincy Porter; a word by Swiss composer Julien- Francois Zbinden; and a sere- nade by Paul Paray, conductor of the Detroit Symphony Or- chestra. The Tuesday Musicale, De- troit's oldest and lar g e s t women's musical group, spon- sors such an international con- cert once a year under the leadership of Mrs. Chajes. Tackling, also, the problems of recruiting youth into a Jew- ish education, the girls sug- gested that an effort be made "to break down the ignorance in many Jewish homes" through Beth Jacob-sponsored activities, that the meaningfulness of Jew- ish tradition for young Ameri- can girls be interpreted to the community and that the best way of bringing children into Jewish schools be displayed through "self perfection." Led by the GO (General Or- ganization) president Sora Is- bee, the Detroit girls began their planning -three monthS ago. Arrangements to place the visitors in members' homes were made by the time the "really hard work" began two weeks prior to the parley. From floor washing to cook- ing to entertainment, the con- vention belonged to the girls. But as far as problems were concerned, there were enough to go around for advisers Rab- bis Joseph Elias and Sholom $100 • Overalls • Polo Shirts • Blouses • Boys' Shirts • Many, Many More Items • All were much, much _higher! One Day Only An Sales Final • No Refunds • No Exchanges P.S. — Dresses - Coats - Jackets - Snow Suits . , OFF! Small yiuk 3cathionit- Oak Park Shopping Plaza Coolidge at 9 Mile OPEN THURS., FRI., SAT. 'TILL 9 P.M. ingsky Goldstein. The girls were not without their pre-convention "tsores." The New York delegation, halted by the impassable snow on the Pennsylvania Turnpike,- was forced to take refuge in Altoona, Pa. But undaunted, and in fact enjoying every minute of their well-publicized stay, the girls camped out in a local hotel, held their own separate work- shop, ate provisions sent in by an Altoona bakery and supplied out of their own "food fund," and exhausted telephone opera- tors between Pennsylvania and Detroit. Contrary to speculation, the girls made it to Detroit . . . Sunday morning. What Rabbi Simcha Wasser- man, dean of the West Coast Talmudical Seminary, C a 1 i f., called the "revolution of the young" in his keynote address, was echoed in the exhuberance of 150 wholesome Jewish girls. Leap Year Monday ' i•f)otn,fteici Wills, Michigan MI 4-1400 Dining at its very best in an atmosphere of elegance and charm. Open everyday including Sunday Special Children's Dinners on Sunday 5 PRIVATE DINING ROOMS TO ACCOMMODATE 10-300 GUESTS for • Showers • Sweet Sixteens • Luncheons • Wedding Receptions • Bar Mitzvah. Parties Xingsley gnn Woodward South of Long Lake Road add e‘mte etate, 7440.14, PASSOVER CANDIES "I hereby acknowledge that the production of Cherrydate Farms Confections, 5230 Baltimore Ave., Phils, Pa. is under my supervision for the Kashrus of Passover 5720-1960. "All candy products that carry the Kashrus Mate are Kosher fir Passover, use even by the most observant" 'RABBI DAVID WACHTFOGEL Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Ws, it's easy to raise money for your organization with fast-selling Cherry. dale Farms Passover candies. Every WSU Instructor to Address Beth El Young Adults Dr. Leonard Moss, professor at Wayne State University who attended the recent Interna- tional Congress of Jewish Folk- lore in Tel Aviv, Israel, will speak to members and friends of the Young Adult Group of Temple Beth El at 8 p.m., Sun- day, in the temple. A social hour will follow. . year, thousands of dollars are raised the dignified Cherrydaie way. Cher- Farms "Kosher for Passover" sydale confections_ are shipped to you GUARANTEED FRESH. Don't wait.. WRITE NOW FOR FREE SAMPLE. Get full color booklet and free in. formation on proven year 'round Cherrydale Farms fund Raising Platt. WRITE TODAY! Dept. No. 265 5230 BALTIMORE AVL PHILA. 43, PA.