THE DE TROIT JEWI SH NEWS — Friday, July 20, 1962 —

22

•

Nancy Borin Will
Wed Harvey Lash

MISS NANCY BORIN

Mr. and Mrs. William Borin,
19469 Parkside, at a recent fam-
ily dinner party announced the
engagement of their daughter,
Nancy Sue. to Harvey Alan
Lash, son of Mr. and Mrs. Irv-
ing Lash, 18075 Littlefield.
The bride-elect attended
Michigan State University and
is now a student at Wayne
State University. Her fiance, a
graduate of the Wayne State
School of Business Administra-
tion, will attend the Wayne
State Law _School in the fall.
He is affiliated with Sigma
Alpha Mu fraternity. A Dec. 16
wedding is planned.

Ohio Woman Provides
for Ben-Gurion in Will;
Expect Legal Contest

A Sandusky, 0., woman has
bequeathed .two office buildings
valued at $90,000 to Israel
Prime Minister David Ben-
Gurion.
The remainder of the $167,-
000 will of the late Mrs. Ann-
ette Kronthal Jabocs was left
to various charities.
An earlier will provided a
trust fund of $70,000 for Mrs.
Jacobs' friend of 14 months,
'Eliza Emma Bassett, who was
not mentioned in the most re-
cent bequest. Mrs. Bassett is
expected to contest.

One article that has not gone
up in price since it went on sale
in May 1941 is the Series E
Savings Bond. It still sells for
75 cents on the dollar of matur-
ity value — and matures in 7
years and 9 months instead of
the original 10 years.

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Big Brothers, Inc.,
Seeks Jewish Men to
Befriend • Lonely Boys

Several Jewish boys have
been waiting for Big Brothers
for some time, according to
William L. Clark, executive di-
rector of Big Brothers of Oak-
land County, Inc., 132 Franklin
Blvd., Pontiac (FE 5-9974).
Stated simply by Clark, for
boys who have no man at hand,
the Big Brothers of Oakland
County provide one. Big Broth-
ers work with boys, between
seven and 16, who have become
involved (or seem doomed to
I be) in behavior difficulties; and
Iwith those who are simply un-
happy or emotionally disturbed
and troubled.
"The Little Brother is a boy
in need of friendship and guid-
ance," said Clark. "He may be
fatherless or without adequate
male influence. He needs regu-
lar association with a man of
good character and understand-
ing."
Presently serving as Big
Brothers are men from all
walks of life — executives, fac-
tory workers, professional men.
They are expected to give two
or three hours a week at their
own convenience to be with
their Little Brother. Clark said
all prospective Big Brothers are
given an orientation course which
will prepare them for the job
ahead and they are further pre-
pared by sitting in at 'a session
in Juvenile Court and by an in-
terview with the agency psycholo-
gist.
"The difficulty in obtaining
Jewish men to do this job had
made it necessary for these
loiiely boys to have to wait for
`their f r i e n d,' " Clark said.
Those interested should contact
Clark at the above telephone
number.

Birt4
Announcements

July 12 = To Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Solway (Merle Shuman),
29037 Lorikay Dd., Farmington,
a daughter, Judith Ann.
* * *
July 9 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Koblin (Mildred Lipschutz),
13239 S. Norfolk, a daughter,
Michelle Naomie.
* * *
July 8 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Weinfeld (Rita Beit-
ner), 20511 Audrey, a son, Rob-
ert Marc.
* * *
July 8 — To Dr. and Mrs. L.
Seymour Barahl (Rosalie Hor-
owitz), 12878 Southfield, a
daughter, Karrie Kim.
* * *
July 5—To Mr. and Mrs. Ber-
nard Friedrich (Charlotte Lie-
berman), formerly of Detroit,
now residing in Atlanta, 'Ga., a
son, Bruce Mitchell.
• * *
July 4 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Chareton (Marlene En-
gel), 19521 Hardy, Livonia, a
daughter, Wendy Robin.
* * *
July 3 — To Mr. and Mrs. Eli
Kurtz (Jeanette Lerner), 29180
Oriole, Livonia, a son, Ronald
Larry. * * *

Daniels-Safran
Rites Solemnized

MRS. LOREN DANIELS

Sharon Elaine Safran was
wed to Dr. Loren Stuart Dan-
iels in a double-ring ceremony
performed July 15 by Rabbi
Morris Adler at Cong. Shaarey
Zedek.
Parents of the bride are Mr.
and Mrs. Hyman Safran, 19350
Parkside. The bridegroom is the
son of Mrs. Max Freeman and
the late Albert Daniels.
The bride wore a gown of
antique ivory peau de sole, ap-
pliqued with ivory corded Alen-
con lace with motifs of tiny
pearls. The lace bodice had
long sleeves and a draped cum-
merbund. Garlands of matching
appliques decorated the swirl-
ing skirt which fell into a
chapel train. A tiara of match-
ing lace held her veil of ivory
silk illusion. She wore a blusher
for the service. She carried her
Confirmation Bible adorned
with a royal bouquet of minia-
ture white orchids, stephanotis
and ivy.
Mrs. Charles Cnudde was ma-
tron of honor. Bridesmaids were
her cousin Martha Solomon of
Endicott, N. Y.; her cousin
Cheryl Safran, Barbara Boxman
of Washington, D. C.; Suellen
Bloom and Joanne Shook.
Roger Daniels served his
brother as best man. Head
groom's man was Fred Safran,
brother of the bride. Seating
the guests were Lee Kramer of
Royal Oak, Joel Safran, cousin
of the bride; Kenneth and
James Safran, brothers of the
bride; and Doctors Sheldon
Abramson of Southfield and
Jerome Greene of Littleton,
Colo., and David Levenson of
Durham, N. C.
Following the rites, guests
were received at the Statler-
Hilton Hotel for a dinner and
dance in honor of the newly-
weds, who departed shortly
afterward for an extended trip
to Hawaii. They will make their
home in Royal Oak.

Israel Bond Parley in
Washington on Sept. 21

Steps to enable Israel to
speed up her economic expan-
sion program in order to cope
with heavily increased immigra-
tion this year will be the major
concern of a Washington Plan-
ning Conference which will be
held under the auspices of the
Israel Bond Organization be-
ginning Sept. 21.
Dr. Joseph J. Schwartz, vice
president of the Israel Bond
Organization, said the three-day
parley in Washington would
usher in the Fall campaign in
June 20—To Mr. and Mrs. the 1962 effort to sell a total of
David Eugene Katkin (Diane $66,500,000 in Israel Bonds.
B l o o m b u r g) of Huntington
Woods, a son, Alan Howard.
Cincinnati Plans New
* * *
June 4— To Mr. and Mrs. Jewish Home for Aged
CINCINNATI, (JTA)—Plans
Frederick R. Schriber (Annette
Folbe), 23150 Beverly, Oak for a new Home for the Jewish
Aged on Glen Meadows Lane in
Park, a son, Jeffrey Evan.
* * *
Cincinnati have been approved
May 13 — To Dr. and Mrs. by the institution's board of
Jacob Trombka (Elsie Weiner), trustees.
Harry D. Liebschultz, presi-
former Detroiters now living in
Pasadena, Calif., a son, Aron dent, reported to donors to the
institution's recent campaign to
Shraga.
raise $1,000,000 for the new
They say Venice will be com- home that contracts were being
pletely covered by water in a written "so that we can start
building immediately."
century.

`Cyrano' Opens in Stratford July 30

STRATFORD, Ontario—When
the house-lights dim on July 30
for the first night of the Strat-
ford Festival's fourth major
drama presentation "Cyrano de
Bergerac," the audience will be
transported back 300 years to
an earlier playhouse—the great
hall of the Hotel de Bourgogne
in Paris. There another first-
night audience is assembling to
watch a piece entitled "La
Clorise." The theater slowly
fills, aristocrats resplendent in
shimmering silks and soft vel-
v e t s , swaggering musketeers
with sword and plume, eager
citizens and elegant ladies, pick-
pockets and impudent pages. As
they crowd onto the stage ex-
citement mounts. A marquis re-
counts a society list of resound-
ing names; a girl peddles
oranges and drinks to the
crowd. A hush descends, and
all eyes turn to the balcony as
the all-ppwerful Cardinal ,Ri-
chelieu takes his seat. Specta-
tors and players, now all one
audience, await breathlessly.
The play begins. . . .
Although the actual first per-
formance of "Cyrano de Ber-
gerac" is still two weeks away,
preparations are going ahead in
every department backstage at
the Festival Theater, while in
the auditorium rehearsals take
up a good part of each day.
Louis Applebaum has written
music for the production. This
ranges from pastoral songs of
Gascony to the full-blooded and
joyous choruses sung by the
cadets. Movement and marching

vised by choreographer Alan
Lund.
The elaborate hair styles of
this period in France call for
many wigs and additional hair
pieces to be made. There will
be over seventy-five wigs and
numerous long moustaches and
neatly clipped beards worn in
the production. Many of these
are currently being modelled
and dyed in the Festival's wig-
room.
Nearly every member of the
company is taking part, from
Christopher Plummer (as Cy-
rano) Toby Robins (Roxanne),
Douglas Rain, Peter Donat and
other principals to apprentice
actors and schoolboys as pages.
"Cyrano de Bergerac" will go
into repertory with the three
Shakespeare plays on July 30.
It will be given only 19 per-
formances during the 1962
Stratford Festival season.

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