activities in Society
Phi Gamma Chapter, Tau Epsilon Phi Fraternity's pledge class at
Wayne State University, took the orphans of the Sarah Fisher Home
to the Mother's Day Tiger Game between the Baltimore Orioles and
Detroit Tigers. President of the pledge class is Harry Lebowitz.
Iota Alpha Pi Sorority's Nu Chapter, at Wayne State University,
recently installed Barbara Gradis, Rosalie Jacobs and Sharon Kaufman
as pledges for the spring quarter. At its Mothers and Daughters Ban-
quet, the sorority presented Harriett Cohen, Elaine Galinsky and Linda
Magy with awards as most active pledges in the 1963-64 pledge classes.
At the same titme, Paula Goldman received the Alumnae Award as
"most active active." Officers for the coming year are chancellor,
Paula Goldman; scribes, Harmriet Cohen and Helene Abrams; and
bursar, Marilyn Lahr.
Mr. and Mrs. Moray Kutzer of Cross St., Ypsilanti, were hosts
at a recent brunch honoring Dame Judith Anderson, internationally
famous actress, at the Washtenaw Country Club. The event helped
launch Ypsilanti's Greek Theater project. Among the guests were
Greek vice consul Alexios Zakyphirnios and Torn Patterson, founder
and consultant for the Stratford Theater Festival. Mr. Kutzer, a
Greek Theater director, is formerly of Detroit.
Oakland University student Mary Finkelstein has been awarded a
Woodrow Wilson Fellowship for graduate study in the coming year.
Miss Finkelstein is the daughter of Solomon Finkelstein, 454 Auburn,
Pontiac, and the late Mrs. Sonia Finkelstein.
Among the 73 graduates of Temple Israel high school is Miss
Sylvia Dvoskin, an exchange student from Buenos Aires, Argentina,
who spent her senior year in Detroit as the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Lebowitz. Their daughter Catherine also is a member of the
graduating class.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tink, 23171 Pa•klawn, Oak Park, will enter-
tain at a cocktail party Sunday in honor of their nephew Morton
Weisberg and future niece Fern Baron, both from Toronto. Among the
guests from out of town will be Mrs. Al Weisberg, the future bride-
groom's mother, and Mrs. Harry Baron, mother of the bride-elect.
S. R. Reznik of 2940 W. Chicago has returned from a seven-week
tour of Israel.
News Brevities
The DETROIT SYMPHONY OR-
CHESTRA will present a special
concert in the Mackenzie High
School auditorium 8:15 p.m., May
22. Valter Poole will conduct, and
GORDON STAPLES will be violin
soloist. Staples will play the Tchai-
kovsky Violin Concerto in D Major.
Admission will be by ticket for
which there is no charge. Send a
request, including a self-addressed
stamped envelope to: Music Office,
Mackenzie High School, 9275
Wyoming, Detroit 48204 .
*
DR. ALBERT ELLIS, New York
psychotherapist, will give a public
lecture 8:30 p.m. May 23 at North-
land Auditorium. His topic will be
"Reason and Emotion in Sex-Love
Relations."
* * *
REVUE AVANGUARDE, a cos-
mopolitan, slightly cockeyed com-
mentary on the tribulations of con-
temporary American life, opened
Wednesday at Vanguard Theater
for a four-week run.
FREE
GUIDE
For Bride
And Groom
This new booklet "How To
Be Sensible About Best Man
and Ushers' Gifts" is adver-
tised in BRIDE'S Magazine.
Its many helpful
hints on Wedding
•
Etiquette will
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selecting the
Perfect Gift for
your Best Man
Ushers.
FOR YOUR FREE COPY
STOP IN AT
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Certified Master Watchmaker
and Jeweler
18963 LIVERNOIS AVE.
UN 1-8184
OPEN THURS. TO 9 P.M.
DEBORAH HOLZEL, 18915
Parkside, is in the cast of "Caesar
and Cleopatra," which opens to-
night at Wayne State University's
Bonstelle Theater. Miss Holzel, a
graduate of Cass Technical High
School, is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Saul Holzel. She is a sopho-
more at Wayne. The play will also
be presented Saturday and May
21-24.
5' * *
The KENNETH JEWELL CHOR-
ALE will present its spring concert
8:30 p.m. Monday at the Wayne
Mate University Community Arts
Auditorium. The program will be
dedicated to DR. KENNETH JEW-
ELL in celebration of his 30 years
of dedicated service to music.
C * *
The DETROIT-GOLD AGENCY
of the Massachusetts Mutual Life
Insurance Co., headed by REUBEN
GOLD, ranked 13th among the
company's 117 general agencies in
production of individual life in-
surance last month.
* * *
One of the cultural highlights
of MICHIGAN WEEK will be an
art exhibition by a large group of
leading contemporary Michigan
artists at Grinnell Galleries, May
17 - 23. The exhibition will include
displays of lithographs, fine prints,
graphics, paintings, sculpture and
pottery by such artists as Katy
Keck Arnstein, Mildred Friedman,
Rodney Landsman, Bruce Magid-
sohn and Sharon Rosenthal.
`Majority of One'
at Temple Israel
"Majority of One," written by
Leonard Spigelgass, will be pre-
sented by the Temple Dramatic
Group, 8:30 p.m., Wednesday and
Thursday, at Temple Israel.
Directed by Evelyn Orbach, the
cast includes Rosemary Selburn,
Evelyne Tobias, Mimi Hozrnan,
Donald Schiff, Esther Graef,
Charles Davis, Joe Hacker, Tom
Mitteldorf, Dorothy Horwitz, Mar-
cia Mintz, Karen Kahn, Sam Katz,
Abe Katz and Rema Burk.
Working on production are Har-
old Adler, Newton L. Freedman,
Philip Kaplan, Natalie Schiff and
Morton Genser. Victor Bloomfield
is ticket chairman.
For tickets, call Bloomfield,
342-8620, or the Temple office,
UN 3-7769.
Britisher Ca rol Probe
to Marry Detroiter
MISS CAROI ANN TROBE
Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel J. Trobe
of Leeds, England, announce the
engagement of their daughter
Carol Ann to Bruce Henry Keidan,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Baer Keidan
of Fairfield Ave.
Miss Trobe attends Wayne State
University, and Mr. Keidan, a
gra .:'itate of Michigan State Uni-
versity, attends Wayne State Law
School.
A December wedding is planned.
LETTER BOX
Editor, The Jewish News:
Contrary to some views, it is my
opinion that prayer and religion
has a place and an important one
in public schools, and it is to re-
gret much of the discussions of
both for or against turns on issues
that are trivial.
Religion and prayer, in my opin-
ion, does not constitute only ritu-
als, dogmas and doctrines accepted
by people of various faiths and of
many religions. This view, seemed
to me, grossly misunderstood.
Religion, to me, means educa-
tion, morality, ethics, human dig-
nity, law and order. It is a part of
the life of man, here on earth, and
it has a prominent place in the
material as well as in the moral
and spiritual world.
Not to teach the Bible, not to
teach about religion — this attitude
is a silly attempt to escape reality.
May I ask? How can anyone pre-
sume to teach, history, economics
or government or law and order
without reference to the religious
teaching of the Old and the New
Testaments?
Instead of prohibiting the teach-
ing of religion in public schools
and in many other public gather-
ing, it would be much wiser to
divorce the meaning of prayer and
religion, from the concept that
prayer means an ideology of dog-
mas, ritual and doctrines that
breeds hate and antiracial and anti-
religion which separates all of us.
To prohibit the teaching of true
religion and to deny the rights to
say or to read prayers in public
schools, is to deny the opportunity
to mold the character and the
habits of our children in the pub-
lic school, where parents shame-
fully neglect the teaching into their
homes.
Children and youngsters who
pray and those who receive reli-
gious teaching, grow up to be law-
abiding citizens and men of peace
and goodwill to all society.
WOLF LEVITAN.
Local Physicians Invited
to Assembly in Israel
All physicians in the community
are invited to the sixth World As-
sembly of the Israel Medical Asso-
ciation in August, it was announced
by Dr. Bernard Weston, chairman
of the Detroit Chapter, American
Physicians Fellowship.
Tours leaving July 29 for Israel
and Europe can be arranged by
calling Dr. Weston, 342-5359.
William Wyler has put his pro-
duction of "The Collector" before
the cameras at Columbia Studios.
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
31
Friday, May 15, 1964
JT Got You Down?
Formula Solves Jewish Problem
By CHARLOTTE HYAMS
It's absolutely foolproof.
At long last a formula has been
derived to solve that dilemma of
dilemmas among modern Jewry,
that deep furrow on the brow of
Jewish communal life, that im-
ponderable about which thinking
Jews speak in angry whispers but
can do little: Jewish Time.
Formulated on the basis of actual
casework studies, the theorem was
the result of extensive research by
a field worker who spent much
time waiting for local functions to
begin.
The formula for Jewish Time
is as follows: JT equals PT (pub-
lished time) multiplied by NJE
(number of Jews expected) plus
MI (mishpachah involved).
At an interfaith gathering, IT
(interfaith time) is barely dis-
tinguished from PT.
On the other hand, if The Jew-
ish News announces that the final
meeting of the season is scheduled
for 8 p.m. by the Ruda-Wolfe-
Sendler - Kruger - Miller - Haskin
Family Club, no one will meet
you at the door till 9:30.
There are a number of vari-
ables noted by the researcher.
For sake of brevity, these will
be known as DH (dinner hour),
CH (cocktail hour) and AE (Albert
Elazar).
If the particular communal
activity is a dinner, participants
are more likely to make the DH.
However, a CH preceding the
DH throws off the JT.
Any event over which United
Hebrew Schools Superintendent
Albert Elazar presides will start
way before JT (ie. according to
PT) especially commencement
exercises.
Thus, an AE-UHS DH with a CH
can throw JT into complete con-
fusion.
Usually the formula works. Just
come a half-hour later than the
Joneses.
Want ads get quick results!
SAM ROSENBLAT
Master of Ceremonies
And His
Dance and Entertainment
Band
Party Arrangement
UN 4-0237
'.
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Specialist
KE 8-1291
PLASTIC FURNITURE
COVERS
MADE TO ORDER
or READY MADE
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HOME:
OFFICE:
U 7-0896
U 5-2737
INVITATION TO .. .
OPEN HOUSE
at
TOTEM POLE DAY CAMP
SUNDAY, MAY 24 - 1 -5 p.m.
47300 West Twelve Mile Road
REFRESHMENTS — SURPRISES — FUN
Bring Your Friends!
(Alternate date Memorial Day, Saturday, May 30, 1964)
DIRECTIONS:
Grand River Expressway to Beck Road exit OR 12 Mile Road West
to Beck Road OR James Couzens to 696 Expressway and merge
with 1-96 to Beck Road exit. For further information, call 535-8877.
LOVELY, BEAUTIFUL HAIR
AT A MOMENTS NOTICE!
from wet
to w ow
SWIMMING AT 11:30 A.M. . .
Ready for That Dinner Date,
Beautifully Coiffured at 12:00 Noon!
"Latest Hollywood Styles"
Too Busy to
Come In?
Phone 962-3900
For a free home
demonstration
4
,,A
Time payments
available. Up to
24 months
to pay.
Detroit's
Most
Fashionable
Wig Salon
SALON OPEN
LARGEST Selection
OF WIGS IN THE
For your convenience Mon.-Wed.
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
Tues., Thurs., Fri. Sat.
9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
WIGS INTERNATIONAL
1540 WOODWARD AVE.
Next to Telenews Theater
DETROIT