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November 22, 1963 - Image 27

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1963-11-22

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

The trustees of a $4,000,000
estate left by a former Detroit
attorney announced a contribu-
tion has been made to the Fresh
Air Society for the construction
of a new cabin to be named in
honor of the late Robert S.
Marx.
The new redwood cabin at
Camp Tamarac k, Ortonville.
with all modern facilities, will
now be able to expand their
camp program for an additional
10 children and two staff mem-
bers. Because the new building
is winterized it can be used
year-round for other groups,
such as an older adult camp,
sponsored by the Jewish Center,
yOung adult weekends and over-
night trips for day campers.
The Fresh Air Society has
been sending underprivileged

Loewy Will Create
Designs for Israeli
Gift Merchandise

Wolsky and Leron

Israeli giftware, already wide-
ly sold throughout the U.S. and
Canada, will get a substantial
boost as a result of a joint effort
of private and governmental in-
terests to update designs and
merchandising and obtain a lar-
ger slice of this expanding
market.
Under a tripartite agreement
signed by Dr. Max Leron, Israel
Consul and Trade Commissioner
in the U.S., Israel Wolsky, presi-
dent of Israel Creations, Inc.,
New York, and James F. Fulton,
representing the internationally
known design firm Raymond
Loewy, William Snaith Inc., New
York, the latter firm will create
and design a new and distinctive
line of gift and art merchandise
for manufacture in Israel and
sale in the U.S. and elsewhere.
The agreement provides for
Israel Creations, Inc., to be the
exclusive licensee to manufac-
ture the items in Israel and to
sell them throughout the world.

r

MENU

children to summer camp for
the past 60-years.
Although Marx never mar-
ried, he was known during his
lifetime to spend much of his
time with young people. He had
personally supervised and chan-
neled the futures of many
promising youngsters.
The four trustees of the
Marx estate thought it only
natural to make a contribu-
tion in honor of their late
friend to a cause that so en-
courages the development of
young people physically as
well as emotionally and men-
tally.
The four trustees are Law-
rence I. Levi, law partner and
close friend of the late Robert
Marx and partner of the Detroit
law firm, Marx, Levi, Thill,
Wiseman and Rollins; Howard
Kaichen, an insurance execu-
tive; Hugh A. White, president,
Allied Investment Corporation,
Royal Oak, and Samuel Hutten-
bauer, Sr., owner of E. Hutten-
bauer Co., Cincinnati.
In the past two-years the trus-
tees for the foundation have
contributed money in Detroit
and throughout Michigan to the
following:

Children's Hospital, Boy Scouts of
America, Detroit. Institute of Tech-
nology, Detroit Orthogenic School,
Archives of American Art, Founders
Society of Detroit Institute of Art,
Jewish Welfare Federation, The
Dominican Sisters (religious order
of nuns in Grand Rapids), Detroit
Symphony, Detroit Ballet Theatre,
Detroit Chapter of Brandeis Uni-
versity, Campfire Girls of Detroit,
Cranbrook School (Bloomfield), Holy
Trinity Church, Franklin Settlement,
Jewish Home for the Aged, National
Cultural Center, Orchard Lake Sem-
inary,• Women's American ORT,
Project Hope, The American Cancer
Society, Cancer Research Depart-
ment of Wayne State University,
University of Michigan Speech Im-
provement Camp, Michigan Muscular
Dystrophy and the World Education
Committee.

Marx, a well-known trial law-
yer, Judge of the Superior
Court of Cincinnati, World War
I hero, founder of the Disabled
American Veterans and its first
national commander, died at the
age of 71 of a heart attack, Sept.
6, 1960, at his summer home
in Charlevoix.

Stark Chapter to Hold
`Hootenanny-Dance'

Michael C. Stark Chapter of
the Children's Leukemia Foun-
dation will hold a "hootenanny
square dance" 8 p.m. Wednes-
day at the Labor Zionist Insti-
tute.
The caller will be Jim Schul-
theis. Proceeds will go to the
Foundation. For tickets and in-
formation, call Diana Berlinberg,
LI 8-5096.

Want ads get quick results!

BY HENRY LEONARD

Hias Sees 3 Million
Jews as Potential
Migrants to Israel

Alpert-Soloway
Troth Announced

MISS SUSAN ALPERT

Mr. and Mrs. Louis E. Alpert
of Prevost Ave. announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Susan Hope, to Ronald Soloway,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Sol-
oway of Rensellor Ave., Livonia.
The bride-to-be is a senior at
the University of Michigan. Her
fiance attends Lawrence Insti-
tute of Technology. The couple
plans to be married on Aug. 23.

Letter Box

NEW YORK, (JTA) — More
than 500,000 Jewish survivors
of Nazi persecution have been
rescued by the United Hias
Service since the end of the
Second World War, Murray
Gurfein, president of the agen-
cy, reported at the 34th annual
convention of the Hias Council
of Organizations.
Gurfein said that hundreds of
thousands of the estimated 3,-
000,000 Jews in Eastern Europe,
North Africa and the Middle
East are potential migrants.
Many with close family ties in
the United States, Canada, Bra-
zil and Australia seek reunion
through Hias aid with their
families in these countries, he
declared.
James P. Rice, executive di-
rector of the United Hias Serv-
ice, who recently returned from
an overseas inspection trip,
stressed the heavy responsibil-
ities facing the agency as a re-
sult of the new influx of refp-
gees and migrants from Eastern
Europe and North Africa. Mrs.
Vladka Meed, author of "On
Both Sides of the Ghetto Wall,"
who at the age of 17 played a
prominent role in the prepara-
tions for the Warsaw Ghetto
uprising, was presented with a
scroll of honor.

AAA Names Burnstein
to Northwest Office

Fred Burnstein has joined the
sales staff of the Northwest Of-
fice of the Automobile Club of
Michigan, announced Edward
Boiteau, manager.
Burnstein has spent almost 2,5
years selling AAA memberships
and insurance in the downtown
office of the
company. For
the past four
years, he has
devoted much
of his time
training n e w
salesmen.
Bur nstein's
selection f o r
assignment to
Burnstein
the James
Couzens branch location was
hailed as a special appointment.
Well known in the community,
Burnstein is a charter member
of Louis Marshall Lodge of Bnai
Brith and is a member of the
Men's Club of Temple Israel.

FOR THE ULTIMATE
IN GOOD MUSIC

SAM EMMER

And His Orchestra

DI 1-1609

WANTED

Kosher food distributor for Pass-
over canned foods line. 20 varie-
ties with no competition.

Sees Hope for Man
The biggest lake trout ever
Write:
EDITOR, THE JEWISH NEWS: caught in the world, weighing
Festive Finer Foods
106 W. Barre St.
Anti-Semitism is a treacherous 80 pounds, was taken in the
Baltimore 1, Mo.
denial of the dignity and of the Straits of Mackinac in 1878.
sacredness of man's soul, may
he be Jewish or Christian. It is
the maximum of hatred for a
minimum of reason.
"Buy With Confidence."
No man has a place in this
world who tries to keep an-
other man out of his place. The
Gemolog ists
concern for the dignity of man
Diomontolog ists
P . ■
Adi OTIS .,1*.
must be explicitly recognized
17540 WYOMING
DI 1-1330
that it is not a matter of re-
OPEN THURSDAY
ligion or origin, not at all, it is
FRIDAY TILL 9 P.M.
a matter of life here on earth,
given to all men.
I dare say that very few
people, Jew or non-Jew are
familiar with the words of
Prophet Amos, who lived many
centuries ago, and he said: Let
justice roll down like waters,
Now you can enjoy original oil painting in your home
and righteousness like a mighty
by some of Europe's most famous artists $in
$1/5
stream." In the eyes of the
and priced within everyone's budget
II w- to m
Prophet the moral basis of ra-
cial and religious equality are
• SEASCAPES • LANDSCAPES • PORTRAITS
not in the temples and not in
• STILL LIFES • STREET SCENES
the churches, but, "in the heart
and soul of man."
The writer sees a change is
coming because people of good-
2612 North Woodward—Royal Oak-549-5970
will and with malice to no one,
Near 12 1/2 Mile Road
want their ideals to be mean-
ingful in their awn lives.
Open Daily 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.; Sunday, 12 to 10 P.M.
WOLF LEVITAN

For Your Fine Diamonds and Jewelry

Norman Allan Co.

ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS
BY FAMOUS FOREIGN ARTISTS

GALERY INTERNATIONALE

now hopen for business

alien's salon

operators

alien

eleanor

lucy

roger

kim

terry

sylvia

esther

manicurists

jean

kay

sylvia

ALLEN LOVER

22106 coolidge highway

"I lust can't take it anymore,
Molly ... I'm throwing in the Tallish'

Copr. 1963, Dayenu Product/ono

in the oak park shopping center

call: 542-1398 or 356-3974
—•

27 -- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS -- Frid ay, Nov. 22, 1963

Trustees of Robert S. Marx Estate
Announce Tamarack Contribution

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