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July 10, 1964 - Image 21

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1964-07-10

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

Stanley Weinsteins
Honeymoon in East

MRS. STANLEY WEINSTEIN

At a noon ceremony recently.
Sharon Deena Rosenbaum a n d
Stanley Edwin Weinstein were
united in marriage. The newly-
weds are the children of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Rosenbaum of Mark
Twain Ave. and the William Wein-
steins of the Bronx, N.Y.
The bride wore a peau de soie
gown with long sleeves and fitted
bodice trimmed in Alencon lace,
with a full train. A puff rose held
her silk illusion veil.
Attending the bride were Phyl-
lis and Roni Maisel, Rayna
Meckler, Mrs. Charles Beerman
and Mrs. Kenneth Eton. Mrs.
Martin Kopitz and Linda Rosen-
baum served their sister as matron
and maid of honor.
Paul Kaplan, brother-in-law of
the bridegroom, was best man.
Ushers included Martin Kopitz,
William Koenigsberg of Washing-
ton, D.C., Charles Beerman, Ken-
neth Eton and Earl Koneing.
After a honeymoon in the East,
the couple will resume their
studies at Michigan State Univer-
sity, where the bridegroom is
working on his doctorate.

4 Local Men Reveal
$50-Million Project

Four local developers have an-
nounced plans for a $50-million
residential, commercial and recrea-
tional complex in Troy. It will be
the state's largest.
The project, to be started this
fall, was announced by Norman J.
Cohen, executive director for Bilt-
more Development Co. Principals
in the firm are Philip and Max
Stollman and Sam Franklel Asso-
ciates.
Adjoining Birmingham, the pro-
ject will contain a 2,000-unit multi-
ple housing complex and two shop-
ping centers on a 200-acre site.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, July 10, 1964
21

MU

activities in Society

Allan D. Arfa is visiting his mother, Mrs. George H. Arfa, and
sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. Abramson and family. For
the past three years he has been attached to the U. S. Information
Service in various parts of Asia.
Judge Theodore Levin, former president of the Detroit Jewish
Welfare Federation, left Paris after a five-day visit as a member of the
third Overseas Delegation of the Council of Jewish Federations and
Welfare Funds. Judge Levin was accompanied by his wife. The dele-
gation left for a short visit to Vienna, following which they will
spend two weeks in Israel, studying the needs in that country which
American Jewish organizations are helping to meet.
Miss Marcia Segall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Segall,
20065 St. Marys, is among the '74 American students who left for a
year's study in Israel at the Hebrew University, under the American
Student Program of the American Friends of the Hebrew University.
A student at Wayne State University, Miss Segall is the recipient of an
AFHU scholarship, awarded by the American Friends.
Rabbi Samuel H. Prero, spiritual leader of Northwest Young Israel,
left for Israel Tuesday to attend a conference on Jewish education in
Jerusalem and to lay the groundwork for the creation of a Young
Israel city in the suburbs of Haifa.
A surprise party in honor of the 25th anniversary of the J. George
Caplans of Santa Barbara Ave. was tendered by their daughter, Gloria
Ann. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Caplan, the Max
Caplans and Mrs. Shari Zuker and Rona of Toronto.
Rabbi and Mrs. Leizer Levin will leave July 20 for Israel where
Rabbi Levin will participate in the Knesiah Gedolah of World Agudath
Israel. Rabbi Levin will represent Agudath Israel of America, of
which he is a member of the presidium. They will return to Detroit
Aug. 10.
Mrs. Lillian Freeman and her son Tracy of East Jefferson Ave.
entertained a group of friends at cocktails and supper recently.
Rabbi and Mrs. Jacob Hoberman of Indiana Ave. have left for a
month's vacation in Israel.

U. S. Executive Hails Israel, Cites
Need for Middle-Income Housing

A need for Israel to make mid-
dle-income housing available and
allow the Israelis to become home
owners was expressed by an
American insurance executive re-
cently returned from a visit there.
E. L. Nicholson, president of
Fidelity Mutual Life, in a report
to his firm, said that there is "not
enough organized planning to take
care of the so-called middle in-
corrM group at all.
"This group is evolving and at
a very fast pace," he said. "Yet,
it has been very difficult for this
middle-income group to accumu-
late capital and what little ac-
cumulation has taken place has
been pumped into consumption
items such as refrigerators, cars,
clothing, etc.
"This has been a constant
drain on the economy and places
the entire state in a dangerous
position of continuous inflation
pressures."
Nicholson's firm recently pur-
chased $500,000 in 15-year secured
notes of a company owning and
leasing 4,000 immigrant housing
units in Israel. He was invited to
Israel by the Jewish Agency,
which is leasing the land made
available by the government for
the housing units.

BY HENRY LEONARD

The executive praised Israel for
its prOgress and predicted new
heights in its development, citing
immigration as the number one
problem to be solved.
He suggested that there is an
overabundance of low-cost housing
being built for the immigrants
"and the state has neither the
program nor the money to carry
on a good maintenance program."
Nicholson admitted that
temporary quarters are essential
for new, usually penniless ar-
rivals, but said that such quar-
ters are very pinched, with as
many as five or eight people
in a four-room apartment.
In addition to the very low rent
in these quarters, repayment of
notes by the tenants is over a long
period of timed he said. And people
are staying in the low-cost housing
units because there is no middle
income housing.
Nicholson also suggested that
Israeli businessmen, through a co-
operative effort, could assist in
skills training among immigrants
to fill a great need.
In addition, "It would be wiser
for Israel to shift some of her
financing to longer term financing
and at more moderate interest
rates." He felt that the dominant
role played by Histadrut should
be lessened and sympathized with
the problems of defense that take
a large part of the budget away
from the growth of the nation.
Nicholson encouraged both
philanthropic p r o g r a ms and
sound investment by American
businessmen to help keep the
Israeli economy on its feet and
said he could "envision Israel's
growing to new democratic
heights."
"After meeting such people, I
can say: Israel has the potential
and the determination to become
a self-reliant nation. Israel should
be able to produce enough food,
houses, schools, factories to show
the civilized world a thing or two
in the next decade," he said.

Registrations Accepted
at Akiva Day School

426

"And you my dear, should also meet a good-
looking Jewish man and keep a good Jewish
home and raise a good Jewish boy who should
become a good Jewish doctor."

Copr. 1964, Dayenu Productions

Registration for the fall term of
Akiva Hebrew Day School is being
accepted at the school offices in
the Labor Zionist Institute 1-4
p.m. Monday through Friday. For
information, call the school sec-
retary, Mrs. Samuel S. Aaron,
342-9119.
Rabbi Manfred Pick will arrive
July 22 to assume the duties of
principal.

Sharon B. Ginsberg
Iii Wed Dr. Hart

Brevities

MISS SHARON GINSBERG
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Ginsberg
of Wisconsin Ave. announce the
engagement of their daughter
Sharon Barbara to Dr. Martin
Hart, son of Mrs. Ida Hart of
Tuller Ave. and the late Theodore
Hart.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Wayne State University, where
she was affiliated with Pi Lambda
Theta, national education honor
society, and she is currently study-
ing for her masters degree.
Her fiance is a graduate of the
Wayne State University Medical
School, where he was affiliated
with Phi Lambda Kappa medical
fraternity.
An August wedding is planned.

LAWRENCE BECERRA, inter-
national marketing manager of the
Sprague Electric Company of
North Adams, Mass., announced
the appointment of RACOM ELEC-
TRONICS of TEL AVIV as ex-
clusive representative for Sprague
electric components related to
commercial and military use in-
cluding transistors. Swiss Electric
of Tel Aviv will be exclusive rep-
resentative for Sprague industrial
components.
* * *
There is still time to enroll chil-
dren in grades 1-8 for tutoring
classes at BOW SCHOOL. Reading,
mathematics, science, English and
spelling classes are available,
along with instrumental and play-
experience classes for children 4-
6. For information, call the School,
835-4593.
• *
Soprano ELIZABETH FISCHER
will be soloist with The Detroit
Symphony Orchestra at 8:15 p.m.,
July 14, at the Michigan State Fair
Grounds. Valter Poole will con-
duct.

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