• I I I • IN I I I I
I I 1
1
Drezner-Samson
Troth Anno un ced
MISS HERMINE DREZNER
At a recent diner party, Dr.
and Mrs. Henry L. Drezner of
Trenton, N. J., announced the
engagement of their daughter,
Hermine, to Fred G. Samson,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ruby R.
Samson of Oak Park.
The bride-elect is a junior in
the School of Education at the
University of Michigan and is
affiliated with Delta Phi Epsi-
lon sorority. Her fiance, a senior
at the University of Michigan,
is affiliated with Pi Lambda Phi
fraternity and will enter law
school in September.
Editors Named
for Daily Collegian
New
Herschel P. Fink, editor-in-
chief of the Daily Collegian, has
named new editors to serve
Wayne State University's stu-
dent newspaper during the Win-
ter Quarter.
Working as Fink's new man-
aging editor will be Steve Ru-
binstein, 21, of 19742 Hartwell,
a journalism senior. He form-
erly held the position of execu-
tive news editor and spent the
summer working on the Jackson
Citizen-Patriot.
Linda Fisher, 19, of 20118
Stansbury, will keep her posi-
tion as city editor. She is a
sophomore in journalism.
Michaelyn Jackel, 21, of 4339
W. Outer Drive, will continue
her former job as copy editor.
Shaarit Haplaytah Will
Hear Adele Mondry
Adele Mondry of Pioneer
Women will speak on "Achieve-
ments and Problems in Israel
Today" at a meeting of the
Shaarit Haplaytah 8:30 p. m.
Wednesday at the Sholem Alei-
them Institute.
Installation films will be
shown. Refreshments will be
served. Friends are invited.
MOM
o men s U lu s
(Continued from Page 15)
FIDELITY LADIES CLUB
will meet Tuesday at the home
of Paula Stark.
*:*
' LACHOVER LADIES AUXIL-
IARY will install officers Thurs-
day at the home of Mrs. G.
Shapiro, 21420 Westhampton,
Oak Park. The group will bid
bon voyage to Mrs. Pearl Murav
who, with her husband, will be
leaving on an extended trip to
Israel. Mrs. Sarah Adelman will
be installed as president and
Celia Lanofsky as vice-presi-
dent. Friends are invited.
* * *
SISTERS OF ZION MIZRA-
CHI will hold a "Cash Linen
Shower" noon Thursday at Beth
Aaron Synagogue, according to
President Mrs. Morris Goldberg.
Lunch will be served. A musi-
cal program will follow. Pro-
ceeds will go to Mizrachi homes
in Israel. Guests are invited.
* * *
JUNIOR PRIMROSE CLUB
board will meet 8:30 p.m. Mon-
day at the home of Sandra Shep-
low, 19627 St. Francis, Livonia.
Plans for the club's annual
Valentine Day party at the
Southfield Nursery for Retard-
ed Children will be discussed.
Refreshments will be served.
* * *
UNITED HEBREW SCHOOLS
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY will
honor life members with a spe-
cial presentation at a luncheon
12:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Esther Berman Building, 18977
ichaefer, according to Mrs.
Charles A. Smith, president.
Families of the life members
are invited to attend the cere-
mony. Mrs. Samson S. Witten-
berg, program chairman, an-
nounces, that Mrs. Harry Ober-
stein will present a program,
"Our Treasure Chest," .describ-
ing the heritage of the Jewish
people with ceremonial objects
and paintings. Mrs. Bert Smok-
ier and Mrs. Jack Tobin are co-
chairmen. Mrs. Donald Nusch-
oltz and Mrs. Lawrence Gold-
berg are in charge of the lunch-
eon. Mrs. Irving Solomon, mem-
bership chairman, • says dues
may be paid at the meeting.
* * *
CHANA C Z ENE SH CHAP-
TER, Pioneer Women, will
meet 12:30 p.m. Monday at the
Labor Zionist Institute. Speaker
will be Milton Weiner, secretary
of community relations of the
Jewish Welfare Federation and
secretary of the committee for
the Jewish aged. His subject
will be "Our Changing Attitude
Toward the Aged." Hostesses
will be Lillian Goldman and
Miriam Goldman. Guests are
welcome.
BY HENRY LEONARD
PRIMROSE BENEVOLENT
CLUB will hold a victory din-
ner 6:30 p.m. Monday at the
Lamplighter Restaurant. Plans
are being made for the 32nd
annual anniversary dinner, to
be held Feb. 3 at the Alamo.
* * *
LADIES OF MOSAIC will
hold their paid-up membership
dinner 7 p.m. Wednesday at the
Metropolitan Savings Bank,
19870 W. Seven Mile. There is
no charge.
* *
PYTHIAN SISTERS will have
Imogene Beech, district deputy,
as their special guest Wednes-
day at the temple. Gertrude
Trager is the new most excel-
lent chief.
* * *
CONG. BETH ABRAHAM
SISTERHOOD will meet 12:30
p.m. Monday at the synagogue,
announces Mrs. Hyman Crystal,
president. Past President Mrs.
Isaac Tennenhouse will give a
book report on "Peaceable
Lane," by Keith Wheeler. A
dessert luncheon will be served.
Friends are invited.
Mrs. Abraham Cooper
Serves as Chairman of
`Overture to Opera'
•
On Jan. 21, Knopf will pub-
lish "Eighty - Seven Days," an
epic novel of the Russian Civil
War, by the late Andrew
Angarsky.
Told from the viewpoint of
the Whites, "Eighty - Seven
Days" opens in the spring of
1918 with a group of ex-Czarist
officers and noblemen in Mos-
cow plotting the overthrow of
the Red regime. As the conspir-
acy spreads, the novel gradually
expands to include a vast num-
ber of characters, historical and
fictional, drawn from all levels
of the chaotic Russian society.
Angarsky wrote "Eighty-Seven
Days" in English after spending
years of research for material
to supplement his own experi-
ences in Russia.
Copr. 1962, Doyen .Productions
Arils
401m,
By NATHAN ZIPRIN
Israel's cinema-going proclivi-
ties are remarkable. Whether
addiction to that form of enter-
tainment is due to lack of TV
in the land or to the showing
of generally superior films is of
course a moot question. Accord-
ing to recent statistics, some
32,500,000 cinema tickets were
sold in 1961. This would mean
that every resident of Israel
from the age of 15 and over
went to the movies at least 27
times during the year—an ex-
tremely high percentage as
compared with more highly-
developed countries. In 1961
there were 266 cinema theaters
in the land, 170 of them located
in the larger cities.
In Israel as elsewhere in the
world women must cope with
the fact that they are outnum-
bered by men. But that head-
ache for our feminine friends
in Israel is not quite bad, that
is if a ratio of 1,000 men to
1030 women can be overcome.
In Haifa the balance is almost
equal, but not quite equal in
the rest of the larger cities.
The kibbutzim however tell
another story. There the ratio
is 1129 to 1000 and in the new-
est communal settlements it is
even higher-1,212 to 1,000.
Another significant statis-
tical disclosure is the drop in
the Jewish birthrate in Israel
as compared with Arabs and
Christians. This situation is
reflected in the fact that
while the average Jewish
family counts four members,
the non-Jews have six.
Another interesting disclosure
is the fact that 38% of the
Jewish residents are native-
born and that of the foreign-
born some 43% are Oriental
Jews from a number of lands
in Asia and Africa. The Sephar-
dic Jews constitute almost 50%
of the total Jewish population
in Israel. Jerusalem tops the
list with the greatest percentage
of native-born Jews—some 52
per cent. In the new cities and
developments it is only 29 per
cent.
The latest statistics limn a
picture of an aging Jewish pop-.
ulation with Jews showing a
higher age ratio than non-Jews.
In 1960, Jews up to the age of
14 constituted 35% of the total,
while • Arabs and Christians
showed a percentage of 46 in
that significant bracket. Be-
tween the ages of 15 and 19
the Jewish ratio was 7.1% as
against 11% among non-Jews.
Between the ages of 19 and 29
the Jewish ratio was less than
14% as against 15% among the
rest of the population. In the 30
to 44 age bracket, the Jewish
ratio was 19% as compared
with 13% by the other groups.
A significant figure was the
disclosure that the Jewish ratio
in the 46 to 64 bracket was
only one half of a percentage
point higher than for the rest
of the population-5 per cent
to 4.1 per cent. That discrep-
ancy means that Israel through
its modern medical and health
care facilities has brought the
health and survival level of its
Arabs to a point of equality
almost with Jews.
Want ads get quick results!
For Young Men
6 to 60
PRINCETON
SHOP
SEVEN MILE
at EVERGREEN
KE 3-4310
Elegant Bar Mitzvah Suits
With The ROYAL Fit
Want The Best?
Ask the Folks Who've Had
SAM BARNETT
and His Orchestra
LI 1-2563
when you plan your wedding or
A public "Overture to Opera,"
bar mitzvah party rush out to
a free admission program of ex-
buy thousands of dollars worth
of equipment, add 17 years ex-
cerpts from the opera "Boris
perience, then shoot, process,
Godunov" and a panel diScussion
title and edit your film—or call
us at LI 2-7874.
of the 1963 Metropolitan Opera
season in Detroit, will be offered
HOWARD H. TRIEST
3 p.m. Wednesday at the Rack-
MOTION PICTURES
ham Memorial
Building.
The program
For the HY Spot
will be present-
Of Your Affair
ed by the Ed-
Music by
ucation C o m-
mittee of the
Detroit Grand
And His Orchestra
Opera Associa-
former/y with Mickey Woolf
tion, sponsors
BR 2-5447
of the Metro-
• Distinctive Ceremonies
politan season,
a Specialty!
Mrs. Cooper with the assist-
ance of the University Center
for Adult Education (W.S.U.-
U of M.-E.M.U.), and the Detroit
Public Library. Chairman of the
REBUILT ENGINES
event is Mrs. Abraham Cooper,
Chevrolet — Ford — (6'0'
850 Whitmore.
LOW AS $129
Members of the Celeste Cole
Exchange plus tax
8's slightly higher
Opera Workshop will present the
highlights f r o m Mousorgsky's
Transmissions
Any Model Overhauled
opera, one of the seven operas
which will be offered during the
LOW AS $69
Clutches, seals, gaskets, oil,
1963 season in Detroit in May.
rings and labor
Roy T. Will, chairman, De-
BRAKES RELINED
Chevrolets, Ford
$9.95
partment of Music, Wayne State
Others
$12.95
University, will moderate the
Easy Terms — Free Towing
panel discussion with Mrs. Theo-
DISCOUNT MOTOR
EXCHANGE
dore 0. Yntema, general chair-
111 N. Main, corner 11 Mile
man of the 1963 Metropolitan
Royal Oak
Jack Pasman, Pres.
Opera Season, Celeste Cole, di-
PHONE
543-7770
rector of the workshop bearing
her name, and Kurtz Myers, chief
mettomotostomoomoomoom000mmtb**4%;
of the Music and Performing
GEORGE GREEN PROUDLY PRESENTS:
•
Arts Department of the Detroit
•
MY SON, THE BANDLEADER,
Public Library, serving as •
•
•
•
panelists.
'87 Days' Depicts
Russian Civil War
"And Sam, to help me forget my small
troubles .. God, in His infinite wisdom,
gave me a major affliction."
Facts, Figures About Israelis
Penchant for Movies Disclosed
The world is like the wheel at
the well; the full bucket is em-
ptied and the empty one filled.
Vayikra Rabbath 34.
Hy Herman
FACTORY
•
MIKE GREEN
• •
•
•
LI 8-4432
•
%•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I I • • • I • I=
o The Bride
Let us help you plan your
;Wedding Breakfast, Reception—Shower
You
r . -• aa,.04,:f4
con be confident that our well trained
staff will put forth every effort
to make this memorable occasion
a very happy one.
For the convenience of your out-of-town guests, we also have
available comfortable air-conditioned rooms and suites . . . for
their dining pleasure, our beautiful Sapphire Dining Room . . •
and ample parking in our underground heated garage.
Please call our catering manager, Mr. Sned-
don who will gladly make an appointment with
you and show you our fine facilities.
Phone TR 5-9500
WOODWARD AT EAST KIRBY
William A. Dunn, Manager
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January 18, 1963 - Image 22
- Resource type:
- Text
- Publication:
- The Detroit Jewish News, 1963-01-18
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