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August 16, 1963 - Image 23

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1963-08-16

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

Mrs. Jones to Speak
Paul Zuckerman to Represent Firm at Hadassah Honor
at U.S. Exhibition in Stockholm
Roll Fete Monday

NEW VELVET PEANUT PRODUCTS PLANT

PAUL ZUCKERMAN

Israel to Assemble
Japanese Automobile

(Direct JTA Teletype Wire
to The Jewish News)

Paul Zuckerman, president of
Velvet Peanut Products, an-
nounces the completion of the
new plant at 30111 Schoolcraft,
in Livonia.
The plant and equipment rep-
resent a $500,000 expenditure.
Velvet Peanut Products is the
largest independent peanut but-
ter manufacturer in the coun-
try. It is the only plant in the
United States producing peanut
butter exclusively.
"Our usage of peanuts in
1963 will be at least 10,000,000
pounds," Zuckerman said. "In
our first year in business, in
1937, we used 1.80,000 pounds."
The U. S. Department of
Commerce has invited Velvet
Peanut to participate in the
U. S. Exhibition at St. Erik's
Fair, Stockholm, Sweden, to be
held from Aug. 28 through
Sept. 8.
Velvet Peanut was singled
out for this honor as the larg-
est independent peanut but-_
ter manufacturer. Zuckerman
will represent his firm at the
exhibition. He is leaving for
Sweden on Wednesday.
Zuckerman revealed that a
200-square-foot booth is being
designed and constructed for
Peanut Butter by the U. S. Gov-
ernment. "We feel that this is
a distinction because it will be
the first and only peanut but-
ter ever on official exhibition
aimed to interest the European
trade," Zuckerman said.

HAIFA — The Kaiser-Ilan
auto plant announced Tuesday
it had made an agreement to
assemble the Japanese "Count-
ess," a four-seat CMA four-
door 50-horsepower sedan. The
first Israel-assembled Countess
is expected to be on the local
market by November.
The auto plant, had previous-
ly assembled the Renault-Dau-
phine until the French company
withdrew from Israel a few
years ago under pressure of the
Arab boycott. The auto firm in-
dicated it expected to sell 1000
Countesses annually at a price
SOL YETZ - MORRIS COBEN
of 9500 pounds ($3,166), in-
Post and Auxiliary will hold a
cluding customs charges.
steak roast and sing-along 5 p.m.
Sunday at Peterson Park, Curtis
between Coyle and Greenfield.
For information call Yetta Glass,
KE 5-4133 or Eli Friedman.
BETH AARON SYNAGOGUE
* * *
Men's Club will hold a Bob-Lo
BLOCH-ROSE Post and Aux-
picnic, Sunday, at area 8B on iliary will hold a family picnic
the island. There will be base- Sunday at the Totem Pole Day
ball, games and free prizes for Camp. Games, prizes and refresh-
everyone. The boat will leave ments will be furnished. A car
10 and 11 a.m. at the foot of pool will leave the Royal The-
Woodward. For tickets and in- atre parking lot at 10:30 a.m.
formation, call Abe Halem, Prospective members are invited.
861-8251, the synagogue office For information call Burt Chas-
or any men's club board mem- sin or Dorothy Goldberg, UN
ber.
2-6610.

MN Activities

I

Men's Club

Israel Boat Calls at USSR Port

The first Israel-flag passenger liner to call at a Soviet port
was the Zim Lines' S/S Jerusalem which put into Sochi at
the end of May while on a charter cruise of Mediterranean and
Black Sea ports with over 500 Israeli, British and American
passengers aboard. The above photo was taken by a crew mem-
ber shortly before the Jerusalem sailed from the Russian port
while her passengers, in gay cruise fashion, hurled colored
paper streamers at the crowds ashore. Observers estimated
close to 5,000 Russians, a great many of them undoubtedly
Jewish, gathered at the quayside to see the modern, white-
[ hulled Israeli liner. Scenes of intense emotion developed when
the ship's orchestra launched into a series of popular Hebrew
melodies in which the passengers and many of the people
ashore lustily joined. The Sochi Town Band responded with a
selection of popular Russian songs.

Mrs. Harry L. Jones, who has
just returned from an extended
tour of Israel will address active
Honor Roll workers of the De-
troit Chapter of Hadassah Mon-
day, at a luncheon at 12:15
p.m. at Hadassah House.
Mrs. Jones has played a major
role in the Detroit Chapter for
many years. Her first position
as vice president of a member-
ship when she was a newcomer
to Detroit from the East,
brought to the Chapter the un-
believable result of 1,000 new
members. Since then, Mrs.
Jones, besides serving Hadassah,
has been President of the
Womens Division of the Jewish
Welfare Federation and serves
on its National Board.
In 1962 she was selected De-
troit's "Woman Of The Year."
Invitations have been issued
to all women who will work
in this year's Honor Roll cam-
paign.
Mrs. Max L. ,Lichter is presi-
dent of the Detroit Chapter,

Atheneum to Publish
New Novel by Horowitz

People Make News

San Francisco hotel man,
BENJAMIN H. SWIG, prom-
inently identified with philan-
thropic and educational enter-
prises on several continents, has
underwritten the construction
of new student center at
Brandeis University, Waltham,
Miss.
* * *
DR. JEROME D. FOLKMAN,
Rabbi of Temple Israel of
Columbus, 0. and DR. BEN-
JAMIN PASAMANICK, Pro-
fessor of Psychiatry at Ohio
State University's College of
Medicine, have been designat-
ed adjunct professors of so-
ciology at Ohio State.
*
*
GEORGE STEINBERGER,
Franklin Life Insurance Co.
will lecture at a one day
school sponsored by the De-
troit Life Underwriters Assoc.,
10:30 a.m., Aug. 21 at the Hotel
Pick Fort Shelby. Steinberger
is a member of the Million
Dollar Round Table.
* * *
ALFRED LINDENBAUM,
13116 Balfour Rd., Huntington
Woods, an elementary teacher
in the Detroit Public Schools,
attended a conference on smok-
ing by school children at
Wayne State University. ROB-
ERT LUBY, divisional director
of health and physical educa-
tion, Detroit schools, was a
speaker.
* * *
NATHANIEL H. GOLD-
STICK, former legal adviser to
the Detroit Police Dept. will
lecture to recruits of the Metro-
politan Police Academy of
Michigan, Monday, at the Light
Guard Armory, 4400 Eight Mi.
Rd.

SEYMOUR SAMET, head of
the Greater Miami chapter of
the American Jewish Commit-
tee, has been named temporary
executive director of the Dade

County Community Relations
Board, which was set up here,
after lengthy debates in the
general community, to deal with
racial tensions.

Day Camp Carnival

The Day Camp of the Jewish
Community Center will present
a Circus Carnival Thursday,
from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. The pro-
gram will include a side show,
clown and animal acts, and spe-
cial booths. Parents, friends and
guests are invited to attend.
The Day Camp is located at
15110 West Ten Mile Rd., Oak
Park.

MUSIC ! ENTERTAINMENT I

SAMMY
WOOLF

and his orchestra

UN 3-6501

when you plan your wedding or
"Can I Get There by Candle-
bar mitzvah party repeat after
me — movies by howard triest,
light?", a new novel by Julius
movies by howard triest, movies
Horwitz, has been acquired by
by howard triest, movies by how-
ard triest, call — LI 2-7874 and
Atheneum for publication early
ask for
in 1964.
HOWARD H. TRIEST
The narrative, placed in the
MOTION PICTURES
Soho and Bloomsbury sections
of London during World War
II, evokes the peculiar sense
of aliveness and mystery that
London's blackout produced in
all who knew it.
Horwitz' novel has been taken
for Britain by the first English
publisher who saw it, Andre
Deutsch, who described "Can I
Get There by Candlelight?" as
PLASTIC FURNITURE
Orchestra &
"the London wartime novel
COVERS
-...;
which we've all been waiting
MADE TO ORDER
Entertainment
for . . . and it's by an Ameri- x
or READY MADE
4,,..
can."
LI 7-2899
The protagonist, an enlisted . 6 CALL ANNA KARBAL
LI 2-0874
"
man in the Eighth Air Force, .v.
!!:*X::K4NJ;::i2OY;:A:: ■ :K:>Z.W;::K4o>V,iR ■ .:K*.1
seeks to dispel the grey, level-
ing quality of military life by
objets d'art • UPHOLSTERING • DRAPERIES
plunging into a close relation-
INTERIORS
ship with a group of artists and
in particular with a young wo-
by Phil Morganroth
man. At the turn of events in
Residential and Commercial
the story, she will lay no claim
Professional Member N.S.I.D.
upon him despite her preg-
(National Society of Interior Designers)
nancy. Consequently he must
Lincoln 1-1953
RESIDENCE
19520 ROSEMARY
face the question: What do I
Lincoln 7-8858
OAK PARK, MICH.
do with this freedom?
Horwitz revealed his talent
for recreating the mood of a
city in his collection of stories,
UNWANTED HAIR REMOVED—PERMANENTLY, SAFELY
"The City," published in 1953.
In 1960 Horwitz published his
Special Technique for Sensitive Men and Women
FACE — ARMS — LEGS — HAIRLINES CORRECTED
first novel, "The Inhabitants."
EYEBROWS ARCHED PERMANENTLY
A Public Welfare consultant,
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY — PHONE • .
Horwitz recently published
"The Grim State of Welfare,"
an article in Look, which arous-
ed a good deal of controversy.
8221 CURTIS cor. ROSELAWN
UN 2-8914

g

Larry
Freedman

.





ti

,

HOLLYWOOD METHOD

HELEN ZENBERG, R.

Eshkol Presented
Facsimile of 1st
U.S. Psalm Book

JERUSALEM, (JTA) — A
facsimile of a Psalm Book pub-
lished in 1649, the first to be
printed in the United States, was
presented to Prime Minister
Levi Eshkol here by Harry Zai-
denburg, on behalf of an Israel
Bond leadership group from Chi-
cago.
Premier Eshkol, who was giv-
en a standing ovation by the
group at a reception in his of-
fice, told the visitors that it
was a source of great joy that
Israel was repaying the 1951
bonds "through the toil and
achievements of Israel's popu-
lace." He added, however, that
this did not signify the end of
the country's development needs.
David Zysman, director of the
Chicago Bond campaign, predict-
ed that Israel bond sales in Chi-
cago would reach $5,000,000 in
the current year, representing
an increase of $700,000 over last
year's figure.

SAM K PPELMAN SAYS ...

DON'T FUSS • • •

DON'T CUSS • • •

CALL US 'I

7—Mendota Shell Service

10520 W. 7 MILE ROAD
UN 2-9558

7—Lauder Shell Service

14802 W. 7 MILE ROAD
VE 5-9666

Free Pickup and Delivery

23 -- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS—Friday, August 16, 1963

V elvet Peanut Completes New Plant;

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