Carol Haas Engaged to Daniel P. Berch MISS CAROL HAAS At a recent cocktail party in their home, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Haas of Indiana Ave. announced the engagement of their daughter Carol Annette to Daniel Bruce Berch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Saul Berch of Parklawn Ave., Oak Park. Miss Haas is a student at the University of Michigan, where her fiance will receive his BA in psy- chology this spring. 71e plans to begin ,graduate school in the fall. A May 31 wedding is planned. Yeshivah to Lay Cornerstone in Southfield. Sunday The laying of the cornerstone of the new Torah Center of Yeshivath Beth Yehudah, Southfield, will take place 11 a.m. Sunday, it was announced by Hillel L. Abrams, president of Beth Yehudah. Guest speaker at the cere- mony will be Hy Safran, presi- dent of the Jewish Welfare Fed- eration of Detroit. Laying of the cornerstone will be don e by Edward I. Fleischmen, local reli- gious, civic and communal lead- er, who is president of the Jew- ish note for the Aged and patron oti, Yeshivath Beth Yehu- dah for more than a decade. Others participating in the cere- mony will include Rabb _ i Leizer Levin, chairman of the board of education of Yeshivath Beth Yehu- dah and chairman of the Beth Din of the Council of Orthodox Rabbis; James Clarkson, mayor of South- field; Rabbi Jack Goldman, direc- tor of public relations for Yeshi- vath Beth Yehudah; Max Biber, chairman of the board of directors; and Rabbi S. P. Wohlgelernter, executive vice president. The new building, expected to be completed by early spring, is located at 101/2 Mile lid. and Fair- fax. The public is invited. Single Adults Form Group Detroit of Fun, Inc., a new group of single adults age 30-50, will meet 8:30 p.m. Nov. 12 at the Jew- ish Center. The group, for both Detroiters a n d suburbanites, is planning a program of s o c i a 1 activities. "He who weds for money will have delinquent offspring."— Kiddushin. YOU MISSED MEYER'S BAR MITZVAH ! L. Detroiters Bring Glowing Reports of Progress at Bar-Ilan, University Bar-Ilan University Reports Increase of 30 Pct. in Student Body to 1,500 Alder said that the university's LONDON (JTA)—Bar-Ilan Uni- versity in Israel increased its stu- current budget had reached 4,500,- dent body this year by 30 per cent 000 pounds ($1,500,000) and its to 1,500 but was compelled to re- development budget 5,000,000 fuse admission for lack of facili- pounds ($1,666,000). He reported ties to some 500 qualified candi- that the university student body dates, Matityahu Alder, the uni- included 200 from overseas and that 18 per cent of Sephardic or versity director-general, reported. Alder, en route to New York to Oriental origin. attend a meeting of the univers- ity's board of governors, also re- Brandeis U. Establishes ported that the teaching staff had Waltham 'Talent Bank' been expanded by 35 per cent and W AL TH A M, Mass. (JTA) — virtually complete. Four more Brandeis University has establish- Detroiters at Bar-llan University in Ramat Gan, Israel: Max M. buildings will be completed next ed a "talent bank" comprised of Fisher, Dr. and Mrs. Jerome Hauser, Mrs. Sidney Allen, Mrs. Max year. faculty members to assist schools Stollman, Paul Zuckerman, James Permutt of Birmingham, Ala., The board of governors meeting in Waltham whenever they are Max Stollman, Dr. J. Adler, university administrator, and Fred will be attended by Moshe Shapiro, needed for consultation, it was an- Ginsburg. Israel's interior minister; Dr. Sam- nounced by Lawrence J. Kane, a • • uel Belkin, president of Yeshiva assistant to the president. during the first nine years of the University of New York; Prof. Saul Reports on the progress made at university's existence. Lieberman of the Jewish Theo- Bar-Ilan University in Israel were Mrs. Stollman noted that more logical Seminary of America; Ast- brought here by members of the than half of the orre Mayer of Milan; Prof. M. Jam- UJA Mission who returned this Bar-llan students mer; and Malik Prize winner Dr. week from visits of Israel's major now are women Baruch Kurzweil, he said. areas. and that many of A large group of Detroiters took them are from time from the mission's deliber- Oriental c o u n- ations to go to the university at :EN'T1 and ENTERTAINMENT tries, indicating Ramat Gan. In addition to those BY the successful in- in the photo, Detroiters who tegration of peo- visited the university as a group ple from various included Frank Bernstein„ Dr. and UN 3-5730 backgrounds. Mrs. Hyman Mellon, Esther Prus- UN 3-8982 . The annual sian, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Satovsky, Dr. and Mrs. Peter Shifrin and Bar-Ilan dinner Benjalmin Gould who visited his here will be held Want Ads Bring Results! niece, Ricky Rozman of New York, at the Shaarey Zedek, Nov. 18. a Bar-Ilan student. Dr. Joseph H. Mrs. Max Stollman and Paul when you core enough to remember Dr. Haber Lookstein, Bar- Zuckerman, on their return visit as guest speaker.g u e s t speaker, marked , to Bar-Ilan, noted the achievements. They reported that will be introduced by Prof. Wil- Dr. Cecil Roth, the eminent his- liam Haber, dean of the College torian who will be in Detroit for a , of Literature, Science and the Arts. lecture series in January, and Dr. University of Michigan. Hanna Ahroni, Israeli artist, Eliahu Elath, president of the He-1 by HERMAN JAFFEE brew University, joined in com- will be featured on the program of L1 2-6373 mending the Bar-llan attainments entertainment. GORDON CANDID ART photography of distinction Weddings • Bar Mitzvahs • Horne Portraits Warren, Mrs. Meir Due at UJA Parley Chief Justice of the United States Earl Warren, and Israel Foreign Minister Mrs. Golda Meir will head the list of distinguished American and Israeli leaders who will address the United Jewish Ap- peal's 27th annual national confer- ence at the New York Hilton Ho- tel, Dec. 10-13, is was announced by Joseph Meyerhoff of Baltimore, UJA general chairman. Featured at the conference will be special programs honoring the 50th anniversary of the Joint Dis- tribution Committee, major over- seas relief and rehabilitation or- ing roles in the work of the Con- ference include William Rosen- wald of New York, and Dewey D. Stone of Boston, Honorary Chair- men; Rabbi Isadore Breslau of Washington, D.C.: Melvin Dubin- ski of St. Louis, Israel D. Fink of Minneapolis, Edward Ginsberg of Cleveland, Jack D. Weiler of New York and Philip Zinman of Cam- den, N.J., National Chairmen; Jo- seph H. Kanter of Cincinnati, Chairman of the Young Leader- ship Cabinet, and Mrs. Jack Karp of Los Angeles, Chairman of the National Women's Division. A record number of representa- tives from committees throughout the nation are expected to attend the three-day sessions. They will bring to a close the UJA's 1964 campaign, set the objectives and national campaign goal for 1965 and elect officers for the coming year. From preliminary indications of refugee, relief and resettlement aid requirements during the next yar, the 1965 UJA goal predictably will exceed the $105,000,000 total sought in 1964 to assist 751,000 Jews in need the world over. Mrs. Meir Justice Warren In setting the new goal, the dele- ganization founded by the Amer- gates will have two guide lines: ican Jewish community in 1914, (1) the report of the 10th UJA which has been a constituent Overseas Study Mission, which agency of the UJA since WA's spent most of October in a first- hand survey of UJA-supported aid inception in 1939. Joining Chief Justice Warren, programs in Israel, Europe, North Meir and Africa and the Middle East, and Foreign Minister Meyerhoff on the roster of speak- (2) the budgetary presentations of ers will be Edward M. M. War- the UJA's beneficiary agencies. UJA aid programs are carried burg of New York, JDC Chairman and UJA Honorary Chairman; Max out by its three member agencies: M. Fisher of Detroit, WA associ- the United Israel Appeal-Jewish ate general chairman; Dr. Joseph Agency for , Israel, Inc., which J. Schwartz, JDC director-general helps to receive, settle and absorb immigrants to Israel; the Joint from 1940 to 1951, who is serving Distribution Committee, which aids as chairman of the ,JDC's 50th an- niversary committee: Louis A. Pin- Jews in 31 countries, including Israel, where it conducts a special cus, treasurer of the Jewish Agen- welfare program for aged chron- cy for Israel; Rabbi Herbert A. ill and handicapped immi- Friedman, UJA executive vice ically chairman; Moses A. Leavitt, JDC grants; and the New York Associa- tion for New Americans, which executive vice chairman, and Charles H. Jordan, director-general assists Jewish refugees to the United States. The United Hias of JDC overseas operations. UJA officers who will take lead- Service, which provides for the re- settlement of Jewish regugees to countries other than Israel, also THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS benefits 'from the UJA campaign. 34—Friday, October 30, 1964 Serving the Community for 1 S Years at 6 Mile and Cheyenne NOW LOCATED AT 7 MILE RD and LAHSER Offering Guaranteed Marathon Products and the Same Fine Service! FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY CALL: 532-9821 or 531-6425 STRICTLY FRESH READY TO COOK POULTRY 311 nruvro vevertre onst- rrs YOU PAY ONLY FOR THE WEIGHT YOU PURCHASE! NOTHING ADDED '11r3 MKT :1110Wri NO WASTE Gov't inspected. Soaked and salted under the supervision of the union of Orthodox Rabbis. Available at Your Detroit Retail Kosher Meat Dealer Association Member Distributed in Detroit and Michigan by U.S. POULTRY HOUSE, Inc. TY 4-3877-8 YOU CAN ORDER YOUR FRESH or FROZEN POULTRY KOSH-R-BEST From BOXMAN BROS. KOSHER MEATS 13515 W. 7 MILE nr. HARTWELL UN 4-9054