Friday, January 31, 1964—THE DETROIT JEWSH NEW S-20 activities in Society Miss Phyllis Littky, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Littky, was honored at a tea recently at Rosenberg's, Oak Park, given by her future mother-in-law, Mrs. Mollie Fellows. Mr. and Mrs. A. Primack, 24271 Rosewood, Oak Park, hosted a dinner party honoring Rita Stollman and Michael Hoffer, who have set a March 14 wedding date. Guests included Mr. and Mrs. Max Stollman, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Hoffer, Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Baskin, Dr. and Mrs. Marvin Primack, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hoffer and Dr. and Mrs. Verne Primack of Saginaw. Among the committee chairmen for the seventh annual dinner of the 17th District Democratic organization are Leonard Edelman, Ben Kinzer, Mrs. Harold Koss and Mrs. Estelle Gubow. Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota will be guest speaker at the Feb. 8 affair at New Roma Hall. Richard Heideman, international secretary of Aleph Zadik Aleph for young men, who lives at 17352 Roselawn, was among the Bnai Brith Youth Organization delegates to the BBYO international executive board meeting recently. Also attending were Barbara Desow, 17304 Cherrylawn, Michael Gellis of Flint and Linda Rubin of Mount Clemens. Scholarships and the dangers of smoking were among chief concerns of the 34 participants. Mrs. Ayalath Silverman has returned to her home in Boston after a week's stay at the home of Mrs. Dora Dworkin, 8811 W. Seven Mile. She was visiting with her son, Eliezer Silverman. Sherman Family Club will meet 8:30 p.m. Sunday at the home of Mrs. Irvin Sherman, 17592 Roselawn. Elections will be held. Southfield Village Estates Home Owners Association will meet 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at the home of Dr. and Mrs. M. Bor- delove, 16159 Sherfield. Guest speaker will be Councilman Tom Rawley. Refreshments will be served. At the last meeting the following were elected: Jack Schon, president; Mrs. Edward Dworkin, vice president; Mrs. Bernard Becker and Mrs. Harold Tobias, secretaries; and Hubert Sidlow, treasurer. Serving on the board are Dr. A. Alper, Dr. Sidney Stone, Eugene Metz, Melvyn Forman and Aaron Kahn. Sandra Martin, Sol Plafkin, and JUdith Resnick are attending the national convention of Young Democrats of America as dele- gates from Michigan this week in Las Vegas, Nev. Bodzin Family Club will meet Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. David Bodzin, 23550 Kenosha, Oak Park. Democratic Club of Oak Park, Huntington Woods and Pleas- ant Ridge, will hold a cocktail party, 9 p.m., Feb. 15 at ,the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Green, 13340 Northfield, Oak Park. Guests of honor will be Sen. Phillip A. Hart, and Congressman Neil Stabler. Larry Pernick is chairman of the planning committee. For information, call Marvin Novick, LI. 6-3289, or Larry Pernick, LI. 4-3751. Arabs Warn French on Brezner Candidate Part in Tel Aviv Fair for New Judgeship PARIS, (JTA)—A number of French commercial firms which plan to participate in the forth- coming Tel Aviv Fair were re- ported to have received warn- ing letter from their agents in Lebanon of blacklisting if they did so. One Jewish-owned firm sent the letter it received to the French Foreign Office and to the Franco-Israel Alliance whose president, Raymond Schmittelin, wrote to Foreign Minister Mau- rice Couve de Murville and Maurice Schuman, President of Parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee, on the question. Samuel Brezner, chief assist- ant prosecutor, has announced that he will be a candidate for the state appeal judgeship that is to be formed under the new constitution. Brezner, 57, was a judge for a short time when he was elec- ted to the Wayne County Pro- bate Court in 1934 to fill an unexpired term. He became as- sistant prosecutor in 1936. He was chairman of the first Michi- gan State Bar committee to establish a criminal appellate court. Mechanical Trades Leaders Confer The Mechanical Trades Division of the Jewish Welfare Federation's 1964 Allied Jewish Campaign has as its chairman Eugene J. Epstein (center), who ishown briefing his co-chair- men, Malcolm S. Lowenstein (left) and Merle Harris. Epstein predicts that the division will go well over the million mark by the end of the campaign. Krim Brothers to Start on New Theatrical Mossman-Portnoy in Sterling Township Area Betrothal Announced Complex One of Detroit's oldest threat- same f e a t u r e will be high- MISS SARAH MOSSMAN Mr. and Mrs. Ben Mossman of Shrewsbury Rd., announce the engagement of their daughter Sarah to Bernard N. Portnoy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Port- noy of Dartmouth Ave. The bride-elect is attending Wayne State University, where she is affiliated with Delta Phi Epsilon Sorority. Her fiance is a graduate of the Wayne State University Law School. Center Acting Class to Perform at Meeting "Thunder on Sycamore Street," by Reginald Rose, will be performed by the Center Theater acting class 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Jewish Cen- ter. The entire class is participat- ing in the final project of, this session. Cast includes Morris Silorey, William Hart, Phyllis Kalko, Loretta Goldman, Sylvia Silorey, Ruth Levin e, Ann Gould, Alice Ross, Shirley Bel- kin, Seymour Raskin and Sam Katz. Instructor is Mrs. Evie Or- bach. Guests invited. The program previously an- nounced for this date, "An Eve- ning with Beth Laikin," will be presented April 1. Mrs. Orbach's class will start its second session 8 p.m. Feb. 10, at the center. The 15 classes are open to nonmem- bers. Registration will be taken at the first class meet- ing. Mrs. Orbach has worked in New York with Morris Carnov- sky and Sidney Lumet. Her New York credits include Sean O'Casey's "The Plow and the Stars," Chekov's, "The Cherry Orchard" and "Winterset" by Maxwell Anderson. Heal families, Krim, announces construction will start immedi- ately on a full-scale theatrical center in Sterling Township along Van Dyke and 19-Mile Rd. The world's largest panora- mic screen will be viewed from three locations: a 1,400-car drive-in; a unique living room auditorium; and the whisper studio, where adults can smoke and dine leisurely as they watch the show. Opening in the summer of 1964 also will be an ultramodern six-lane c a f et e r i a, garden- waterfall dining room and chil- dren's playground and teddy- bear wading pool. Car heaters and snow defrosters will es- tablish year-round operation. Special projection equipment will include such processes as 70-mm Cinerama, and 35-mm Cinemascope, allowing presen- tation of any first-run picture. Partners in the venture are Mac Krim of Beverly Hills, and his brothers, Harry, Leonard and Sol of Detroit. Sol pioneered the Krim Theater as the first art house in Michigan, and their father, the late Leon Krim, was one of Michigan's largest theater owners. Absent from Detroit's show world since leasing the Krim Theater in 1958 to the Trans- Lux Corp. of New York, the brothers also plan an additional 1,400-car twin theater with a second scree n. Simultaneous showing of two features or stag- gered starting times for the lighted. Shortly after the opening of the new theatrical c o m p 1 e x, ground-breaking for an adjacent shopping plaza will complete utilization of the 50-acre site. Heartfelt Thanks I wish to thank all my friends for their wonderful warm re- sponse to my tea given for the benefit of Yeshiva Bais Tora, of West Haven, Conn., under the excellent chairladyship of Mrs. Joshua Sperka. My special thanks to Rabbi Samuel Prero for his moving words and to Dr. Berton L. London for his enlightening lecture. Shirley Kar MUSIC ! ENTERTAINMENT ! SAMMY WOOLF and his orchestra UN 3-6501 If No Answer Call DI 1-6847 goundation,s hy Corsets-Brassieres Expertly Fitted 20127 W. 7 MILE RD. 538-5575 Parking in Rear Want ads get quick results! LI 8-1116 LI 8-2266 • MOVIES • COLOR • CANDIDS • BLACK & WHITE We Make Our Own Glasses HEADQUARTERS FOR • LATEST DOMESTIC AND IM- PORTED FRAME FASHIONS • PRESCRIPTIONS FOR GLASSES ACCURATELY FILLED • Immediate • Reasonably Priced Repair ROSEN OPTICAL SERVICE 13720 W. 9 MILE nr. COOLIDGE LI 7-5068 OAK PARK, MICH. Hours: Daily and Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesdays to 12:30 p.m., Thursdays to 9 p.m. Commissioners Dinner to Honor Governor; 1,-cal Groups Assist Michigan's Fair Employment Practices Commission, FEPC, will be given a "well done" and the new Civil Rights Commis- sion welcomed to Detroit at a Commissioners' Dinner 7 p.m., Monday, in the Rackham Mem- orial Building banquet hall. Dr. John Hanna, president of Michigan State University and head of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, will speak. Guest of honor will be Gov. Romney. FEPC chairman is Louis Rosenzweig. Previous mem- bers of the FEPC included Sidney Shevitz, the original chairman, who is now on the Civil Rights Commission. Among the groups sponsoring the affair are the Anti-Defama- tion League of Bnai Brith and the Jewish Community Council. Tickets are available from the Dinner Committee, 1106 Water Board Bldg., 735 Randolph. $S REALTY CO. ----..gsnonomaPww "Speedy Recovery," "Sympathy" or "Bon Voyage" more important than what you say is how you say it. Expressions of sym- pathy, best wishes or congratulations are much more effective with a gift basket that speaks for you . .. in an eye - appealing, taste - tempting and satisfying manner. We are Michigan's leader in GIFT BASKET PREPARATION There must be a reason!! can UNiversity 2-6800 .. and CHARGE IT 3205 W. McNICHOLS RD. (of DETROIT 21. 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