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July 08, 1960 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1960-07-08

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Friday, July 8, 1960 — 1 8

Miss. Fredaa Ti eds

Dr.

David Schwartz

MRS. _DAVID SCHWARTZ

July 3, • the date of her ma-
ternal grandparents' 55th wed-
ding anniversary, was chosen by
Brenda June Freedland for her
wedding to Dr. David Schwartz.
The couple was united in
marriage by Rabbi Jacob E.
Segal and Cantor Nicholas Fen-
akel in a double-ring ceremony
at Adas Shalom Synagogue.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Freedland,
of 1400 Ardmoor Dr., Bloom-
field Township. The bridegroom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Al-
bert Schwartz, of Windsor, Ont.
Grandparents of the bride are
Mr. and Mrs. William Milinsky,
of 17201 Indiana.
The ring plaCed on the bride's
finger was the same gold wed-
ding band with which both her
grandmother and mother were
wed.
For her marriage, the new
Mrs. Schwartz chose a gown of
camilla pink silk taffeta with
sabrina neckline and short
sleeves. The empire bodice was
appliqued with white peau d'
lange lace, and her dome-shaped
skirt, adorned with garlands of
the lace, draped into a mid-
Victorian bustle back, extending
into a chapel train.
Her headpiece was a Mary
Queen of Scots cap of matching
lace, which held in place a
poufe veil of camilla pink silk
illusion. She carried a lace
handkerchief, in which were
nestled an arrangement of mini-
ature white roses.
Lois Ann Cohen was maid of
honor, and bridesmaids were
Darryle Freedland and Barbara
Freedland, her cousins; Rona
Lawson, her future sister-in-law,
and Mrs. Noel Lawson, the
bridegroom's cousin.
Serving his brother as best
man was Sheldon Lee Schwartz,
seating the guests were Her-
bert Freedland, b r other of
the bride; Noel Lawson, his
cousin; Howard and Brian Du-
bin, Neil Rott and Gary Milan,
all her cousins, Irving Ordower,
of Windsor and Albert Kerzner,
of Toronto. Melvin Wallace
Schwartz, another brother of
the bridegroom, served as jun-
ior usher. _
A dinner and reception hon-
oring the couple followed the
ceremony in the synagogue so-
cial hall.

Center Slates 8-Week

Archery Courses

Archery classes for all ages
will be offered for members of
the Jewish Center beginning
July 11-13.
Classes will be held for jun-
iors, 2 p.m., iNiondays; teens,
6:30 p.m., Mondays; teens, 7
p.m., Tuesdays; and adults, 7:30
p.m., Wednesdays.
There is no fee for the one
hour; eight - week series of
classes, but advance registra-
tion at the Center's physic -al
education department is re-
quired. The Center will supply
all equipment. For information
phone the physical education
department, -DI 1-4200.

Classified ads bring fast results!
_

• •

,

.

Jewish Center Offers
Playground Facilities

For the first time this sum-
mer the Jewish Center will
offer - for its members a fully
equipped playground at the
main building, 18100 Meyers.
Facilities include archery,
miniature g o 1 f, shuffleboard,
badminton, volleyball, softball
and track and field equipment.
Also tennis, trampoline,
basketball, tumbling and wiffle-
board will be offered in the
gym.
Playground hours are: jun-
iors, 2-4 p.m. Sundays, 1-3 p.m.
Mondays and Wednesdays and
noon - 2 p.m. Fridays; tweens,
noon-2 p.m. Sundays, 6-8 p.m.
Mondays and Wednesdays, 1-3
p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
and 10 a.m.-noon Fridays.
Teens, 10 a.m.-noon Sundays,
4-6 p.m. Mondays and Wednes-
days, 6-8 p.m. Tuesdays and
Thursdays and 2 - 4:30 p.m. Fri-
days; and adults, 10 a.m.-noon
Sundays (includes softball), 4-
7:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thurs-
days (volleyball, 6 - 7:30 p.m.),
and (gym) 8 - 10 p.m. Monday
through Thursday.
A family fun jamboree will
be offered on the playground
6-7:30 p.m. Wednesdays.

Former Localite's Work
with AJC Wins Victory
in Segregation Case

The efforts of Mrs. Ruth Ger-
ber Blumrosen, a former De-
troiter and graduate of the
University of Michigan College
of Law, have paid off in another
of the ever-existing battles
against discrimination.
The mass-produced commun-
ity of Levittown, N. J., will be
racially integrated next month.
Levitt and Sons, Inc., has an-
nounced that two Negro fami-
lies are buying homes.
Mrs. Blumrosen was instru-
mental in the Levittown segre-
gation case, brought into court
by the American Jewish Con-
gress of New Jersey two years
ago. She provided much of the
legal and research work. She
now is a resident of Cedar
Grove, N. J.
Levitt was ordered to sell
homes to Negroes by a State
Supreme Court decision effec-
tive July 8.

Temple Emanuel Has
Two on UAHC Board

Dr. Harry Essrig and Hyman
J. Bylan of Temple Emanuel
have been named to the Board
of Trustee • of the Union of
American He b r e w Congrega-
tions. Dr. Essrig will serve as
a representative of the Central
Conference of American Rabbis.
For Bylan, it will be his second
term on the Baard.
The Board of Trustees of the
UAHC is the governing body
of th' Reform movement. It is
considered unusual for a con-
gregation to place ooth a spir-
itual and lay leader among
this group.

Hare-for-Governor Club
Hosts Candidate at Party

A bagel party in honor of
Gubernatorial candidate James
M. Hare will be given by parti-
sans and friends under the au-
spices of the Northwest Hare-
for-Governor Club, at 8 p.m.,
July 20, in the Hayim Green-
berg Center, 19161 Schaefer.
Hare will explain his views
on Michigan unemployment and
his ideas for stimulating the
Michigan economy. The public
is invited to attend.
The recently organized club
is chaired by Aaron Lebowitz.
Other officers - include Sid
Adler and Sam Udkoff, vice-
chairmen; Hyman Goodman,
treasurer; Anne Bradley and
Mildred Tenebaum, secretaries;
Joe L. Lambert, membership;
and Maurice Layne, public re-
lations and educational director.
For information, call the office
at TE 2-0890.

Set June Date

MISS JOANNE HOFFMAN

Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hoffman,
1220 W. Fulton, Grand Rapids,
announce the engagement of
their daughter, Joanne, to
Marshall Keltz, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Archie Keltz, 17352 North-
lawn Ave. Both are students at
the University of Michigan. The
wedding is planned for next
June.

411

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Dr. Morris J. Lipnik
Heads Theater Group

Marriages

.1

SHULMAN - SCHWARZEN-
BACH. The marriage of Colette
Schwarzenbach, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest B. Schwar-
zenbach, of Great Neck, Long
Island, and New York City, and
Dr. Marshall D. Shulman, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Shul-
man, of Detroit, was solemnized
recently by Rabbi Maurice
Zigmond, director of Harvard
University Hillel Foundation,
in Cambridge, Mass.
Mrs. Shulman, a UPI foreign
correspondent, is a Wellesley
College and University of Edin-
burgh graduate. She was a UN
correspondent and was a re-
porter in the USSR and in
Poland.
Dr. Shulman, University of
Michigan graduate, received his
Ph.D. at Columbia University.
He was an assistant to Secre-
tary of State Dean Acheson and
had befriended President Tru-
man who conferred with him
frequently on State matters. He
is now on leave from his posi-
tion as associate director of the
Harvard Russian Research Cen-
ter to do special research at
the California Pacific Palisades
where the newlyweds now are
making their home.

e mnteiz

and his Orchestra
DI 1-1609

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Superb Photography

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8632 McNichols Rd., West

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know-how assures you of that
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COME IN
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SEE OUR
EXCITING SPECIALS!

Tours to Mexico Now
Offer Kosher Meals

Tours to Mexico, featuring
kosher meals throughout the
trip, are being sponsored by the
National Council of Young
Israel, announces Council Di-
rector Rabbi Ephraim Sturm.
This is the first time in the
history of organized tourism, ac-
cording to Sturm, that such a
feature has been included in a
Mexico planned trip.
Price of the tour, conducted
by Treisser Tours, 10 W. 47th
St., New York, N.Y., is $297.
Reservations still are available
for Aug.. 7 and 21.

! WHY WORRY I

Leave Everything to Us

Musk and Entertainment

This Week's Radio and
Television Programs
of Jewish Interest

MESSAGE OF ISRAEL
Time: 11:05 p.m., Sunday.
Station: WXYZ.
Feature: Rabbi Joseph L.
Ginsberg of Temple Anshai
Emeth, Peoria, Ill., will speak
on "High Standards of Life."
::
*
. . TO DWELL TOGETHER
Time: 9:15 a.m., Sunday.
Station: WJBK-TV.
Feature: Wayne County Cir-
cuit Judge Wade H. McCree,
Jr., and Dr. Mel J. R a v i t z,
sociology professor at Wayne
State University and staff mem-
ber of the Detroit Housing
Commission, will participate in
the presentation, "W i t h o u t
Prejudice."
* * *
COUNCIL-ALTMAN HOUR
Time: 10 p.m., Saturday.
Station: WJLB.
Feature: The role and activ-
ities of the National Women's
Division of the American Com-
mittee for Bar Ilan University
will be discussed by the Divi-
sion's founder, Mrs. Max Stoll-
man.
* * *
THE JEWISH HERITAGE
Time: 11:30 p.m., Sunday.
Station: WCAR.
Feature: "Herzl—Architect of
a People" will be presented by
the Culture Commission.
* * *
WORDS WE LIVE BY
Time: 10:30 p.m., Sunday.
Station: WWJ.
Feature: "The Psalms As
Great Human Documents," the
fifth in a summer series of 14
dialogues on the Book of
Psalms, will be discussed by
Mark Van Doren, critic and
Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, and
Maurice Samuel, noted author
and lecturer.

Dr. Morris J. Lipnik was
elected president of the Jewish
Comm u-
nity Center
Theater, by
t h e theater's
board of
directors.
Other off
cers are: vice-
president;
Carl Bern-
stein; secre-
tary, Lorraine
Ernst; treasur-
er, Loretta
Goldman; his-
torian, Sarah
Stein; mem-
bers of the
board, Joyce
Feurring, Ber-
nard Gross,
S o 1 Belinky Dr, Lipnik
and Ruth Hurwitz.

CUSTOM MADE CAKES
FOR EVERY OCCASION
Come in and see our
selection of photos.

Special Prices to Camps, In-
stitutions and Organizations

for quantity baked goods.
Inquiries invited.

ZEMAN'S NEW YORK BAKERY

12945 W. 7 MILE RD.

UN 2-7980

13137 DEXTER
WE 5-9102

CLOSED SATURDAYS, OPEN SUNDAYS

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