Lezell-Glasser
Engagement Told
MISS ANITA LEZELL
Mrs. Bess Entner Lezell and
H. A. Lezell announce the en-
- gagement of their daughter,
Anita Sue, to Allen H. Glas-
ser, son of Mrs. Irving Glasser
and. the late Mr. Glasser.
The bride-elect is a senior in
-the School of Business Admin-
istration at the University of
Michigan. Her fiance is a senior
in the School of Commerce and
Finance at the University of
Detroit, where he is 'affiliated
with theh Phi Sigma Delta fra-
ternity. The couple plan a June
6 wedding.
Family-Children's
Service Re-Elects
Shaye as President
Max M. Shaye has been re-
elected president of the Jewish
Family and Children's Service
for
. a fourth one-year term. Dur-
ang the past year Shaye has
been president of the Detroit
Service Group
which is the
year - round
Campaign or-
oanization of
the Allied
Jewish Cam-
paign.
Also re-
elected were
Mrs. Benjamin
E. Jaffe, vice-.
president, and ?
Dr. Jack Rom,'
trea s urer.
Samuel Ler-
ner, new di-
Shaye
rector of the
agency, was elected secretary.
Three members of the board,
Mrs. Theodore Bargman, Mrs.
Joseph Jackier and Merle Har-
ris, were re=elected to the exec-
utive committee as members-at-
large. Mrs. Stanley Akers, Dr.
Charles LeBeaux, Milton How-
ard and Gilbert B. Silverman
were elected to the board for
three-year terms, and Philip R.
Marcuse was elected for a one-
year term.
The JFCS board, at its last
meeting, unanimously approved
a resolution requesting passage
by the state legislature of a re-
vised ADC-U bill that would not
be restrictive in terms of eligi-
bility by unemployed.for ADC-U
benefits.
The agency provides foster
home care and residential treat-
ment and is eager to solicit new
foster homes. Couples interest-
ed in becoming foster parents
may call the agency, DI 1-5959,
or write to JFCS, 10801 Curtis,
Detroit 21.
Cleveland Federation
Gets $1 Million Gift
CLEVELAND, (JTA) — The
Jewish Community Federation
is slated to be housed in a new-
ly constructed building of its
own, according to an announce-
ment by President M. E. Glass.
The board of trustees was •n-
formed that a group of donors
have offered to provide a fund
of approximately $1,000,000 for
the acquisition of a site and
the erection of a building
thereon.
People Make News
MISS MATILDA FENBERG,
75, a prominent Chicago at-
torney; re-
ceived her law
degree from
Y a 1 e Univer-
sity in New
Haven, Conn.,
41 years after
concluding
her studies.
A mix-up of
three-tenths of
a percentage
point caused
the degree to Miss Fenberg
be denied her in 1922, but
the situation was rectified by
Yale Law School faculty at the
262nd commencement.
* * *
ABRAHAM D. BEAME,
Comptroller of the City of New
York, was presented the Brith
Abraham Justice Award at the
organization's 76th annual con-
vention which opened on Mon-
day at the Concord Hotel.
* * *
AARON A. LEBOW, owner of
Shorewood Furniture Company
in Oak Park, has been installed
as vice-president of the Michigan
Chapter of the National Society
of Interior Designers.
* * *
PHILIP M. KLUTZNICK of
Chicago, recently U.S. represen-
tative to the Economic and
Social Council of he United
Nations (UNESCO), has been
elected a member of the board
of trustees of Brandeis
University.
* * *
DR. HAROLD T. EISENMAN,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Irving
-Eisenman, 4005 W. Outer Dr..
has received the degree of Doe-
tor of Medicine at the 49th
commencement of the Chicago
Medical School on June 15. The
new physician will begin his
internship on July 1 at Henry
Ford Hospital, Detroit. He plans
to specialize in internal
medicine.
* * *
DR. ALFRED J. MARROW,
former chairman of the Ameri-
can Jewish commission on com-
munity interrelations, has been
named winner of the 1963
Brotherhood Award of the Na-
tional Conference of Christians
and Jews for his book, "Chang-
ing Patterns of -Prejudice," it
was announced by Dr. Lewis
Webter Jones, NCCJ president.
* * *
BORIS I. BELL has been
elected president of the Houston
(Tex.) Council for Retarded Chil-
dren. He is an active leader in
Houston Jewish communal af-
fairs.
I Men's Clubs 1
TEMPLE ISRAEL MEN'S
Club has elected Jack Caminker
as president. Other officers
are Harold Tobias, Alan P.
Goldstein and Louis Zuckerman,
vice - presi-
dents; Em-
manuel B e r-
shad treasur-
er; Dr. Jack
Kutnick, Irv-
ing J. Rosen-
thal and Sid-
ney Solomon,
s e c retaries.
Board m e m-
Caminker bers are Syd-
ney Beerbohm, Bernard Black,
William W. Brown, Harley Cit-
rin, Bernard Disik, Newton
Freidman, Bernard Goodman,
Maurice Zeiger, Joseph Kahan,
Sam Katz, Paul Kaye, Bernard
Linden, Stanley Millman, Paul
Monchnik, Gabriel Moscow,
Norman Robbins, Philip Roth-
child, Myron Schefman, Donald
Schiff, Herbert Schilberg, Ab-
bott Schlain, Abel Selburn,
Harry Singer, Gerald Sucher,
Moe Traurig and Dr. Richard
Schaefer.
JOSEPH WILLEN, executive
vice-president of the Federation
of Jewish Philanthropies of New
York, has been awarded an hon-
orary doctor of humanities de-
gree by Boston University.
*
*
MRS. MOSES P. EPSTEIN of
New York, a former president of
Hadassah and a lifelong Zionist,
has been named . Religious Lay
Woman of the Year by Religious
Heritage of America.
* * *
ALLAN G. BECKER, 30201
Acacia, Livonia, has received
his Ph.D. in physics from
Wayne State University, having
completed his dissertation, "The
Effect of Nuclear Radiation on
Superheated Liquids," under a
grant from the National Sci-
ence Foundation. He is working
for the Institute of Science and
Technology, a research branch
of the University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor.
*
* *
DR. GERSHON R. WEINER,
a recent graduate of the Col-
lege of Osteopathic Medicine
and Surgery, will serve his in-
ternship at Mt. Clemens Gen-
eral Hospital. He is a former
Air Force captain and graduate
of Wayne State University.
* * *
DAVID BLUMBERG of Knox-
ville, Tenn., chairman of the
Bnai Brith Youth Organiza-
tion, will be honored today
(Friday, June 21) with the civic
and community service award
of Religious Heritage of
America. He is cited for his
"world-wide service as head of
the Bnai Brith international
youth commission."
-International Music
Artists to Participate
in Israel's Festival
. Israel's summer festival, an
annual event since it was intro-
duced in 1961, will begin this
year on July 16 and continue
through Aug. 12, featuring in-
ternationally-renowned artists
and groups from various parts
of the world.
The United States will be
represented by the noted con-
ductor, William Steinberg, and
Isaac Stern, Eugene Istomin,
Jan Peerc e, - Leonard Rose,
Agnes Moorehead, the New
York Pro Musica, Jennie Tourel.
Rosalyn Tureck, Howard Fried,
Jacob Barkin, -Maurice Gan-
choff, Joy Clements, Moshe
Koussevitzky and Paul Ukena.
Sir William W a 1 t o n, the
British conductor, will par-
ticipate, as will the Wood Wind
Quintet of the Paris Phil-
harmonic Orchestra, Shanta Rao
and Company from India, and
Jean Vilar of France.
Performances will be in Is-
rael's three major cities; Tel
Aviv, Jerusalem and Haifa. Last
year's festival attracted 90,000
persons with many from the
United States and Canada in
attendance.
Establish Jewish
Charities Memorial
Fund for Justice Butzel
A memorial fund established
by the United Jewish Charities
in tribute to the late Justice
Henry M. Butzel has been the
recipient of many gifts, an-
nounces Max J. Zivian, UJC
president.
Justice Butzel was a founder
and the third president of UJC,
predecessor agency of the Jew-
ish Welfare Federation and now
its property holding unit. Jus-
tice Butzel was awarded the
Fred M. Butzel Memorial
Award, for distinguished com-
munal service, by the Federa-
tion, in 1957.
Zivian said the late Justice
Butzel was chairman of UJC's
endowment committee after his
retirement from the State Su-
preme Court.
Colton-Weiss
Troth Announced
Wwwases
•
MISS MARILYNN OOLTON
Mr. and Mrs. Sol R. Colton,
19125 Kingston, announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Marilynn Rhoda, to Norton M.
Weiss, son of Mr. and Mrs. Her-
man Weiss, 18100 Fairfield. An
August wedding is planned.
Jewish Groups Take
Part in Kennedy's
Civil Rights Parley
WASHINGTON, D.C., (JTA)
— A large number of Jewish
organizations' lay and religious
leaders participated at -the in-
vitation of President Kennedy
Monday in a White House con-
ference on civil rights problems.
Jewish spokesmen pledged
support along with other leaders
when the President outlined
actions desired by an interfaith
advisory committee. The Presi-
dent stressed the need for the
major faiths to work among
their own membership to end
bias in real estate policies, em-
ployment and other related
areas. New initative by the
clergy on a local level was
urged.
Jewish spokesmen cited to
the President the Jewish tradi-
tion on racial equality and said
that the National Council on Re-
ligion and Race held recently
in Chicago had not fully achieved
its goals and that new initiative
was needed in synagogues
throughout the country.
Larry
Freedman
Orchestra &
Entertainment
LI 7-2899
Excavate Ancient
Hyksos City in Negev
BERKELEY, Calif.—The In-
stitute for Mediterranean
Studies has received from the
U.S. State Department a grant
of $45,000 to continue the un-
covering of an ancient HyksOs
city in the Negev Area of
Israel.
The director, R. A. Mitchell,
recently left to prepare for
another two and one half month
attack on the site of Tell Nagila.
Last summer the expedition
unexpectedly uncovered, direc-
ly beneath the surface, the re-
mains of an ancient city dating
to one of the most obscure
periods of Middle Eastern his-
tory—the -- Hyksos Age, 16th-
17th centuries, B.C. The schol-
arly world has expressed its
hope that this expedition will
reveal some of the mysteries of
this period.
Mitchell and Ruth Amiran,
Israeli field archaeologists, will
direct an international staff of
30 and a work force of 90 men
this coming summer. This crew
will uncover more of the ancient
houses, streets, public build-
ings in which the Patriarchs of
ancient Israel might have lived,
walked and conducted business.
In conjunction with the exca-
vation, a summer archaeological
seminar will provide a training
ground for thirty graduate stu-
dents. Ten institutions have
associated with this experiment
of field training and are grant-
ing up to nine units of credit to
their stUdents who participate.
The eight-week program begins
July 11.
Music the Stein-Way
DICK STEIN
& ORCHESTRA
LI 7-2770
Max Schrut
For Good Photographs
and Prompt Service
Call me at
BLAIR STUDIO
Weddings - Bar Mitzvahs
We Come to Your Home
With Samples
UN 4-6845
TY 5.8805
Everybody Loves Our New taste Tempting
Garlic Bread ...Exclusively at
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WE WRAP BAKED GOOD FOR FREEZER ON REQUEST
Custom made and
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•
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FRIDAY SPECIAL
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COFFEE CAKE
49c 1b,
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Under Supervision of
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PLEASE SHOP EARLY FRIDAY —WE CLOSE THIS FRIDAY
AT 7:52 P.M., CLOSED SATURDAY, OPEN SUNDAY
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June 21, 1963 - Image 20
- Resource type:
- Text
- Publication:
- The Detroit Jewish News, 1963-06-21
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