•
Zide-Nessel Betrothal
Alfred Werner
Schafberger-Sorock
Troth Told in Arizona to Discuss 'Art and Announced at Party
Jew' at Festival
An exhibition of contemporary
Israeli art will be featured in the
Jewish Center's Winter Cultural
Arts Festival, according to Lester
S. Burton, chairman.
The exhibition, to be shown the
entire month of February, will
present the works of more than
40 contemporary Israeli artists, in-
cluding oil paintings, water colors,
drawings and woodcuts by Moshe
Gat, Jacob Pins, Zvi Raphaeli,
Ruth Schloss, and others.
Art critic and lecturer Alfred
Werner will be presented in a
special illustrated lecture 8 p.m.
Feb. 7. Werner.
w h o is senior
editor of "Art
Voices," contri-
buting editor of
"Arts Magazine'
and art critic of
Congress Bi-
Weekly, will
speak on "Art
and the Jew."
Werner has tra-
•
veled widely in
I
Europe and Is-
rael and is the
author of a num-,
ber of art books. Werner
Another feature of the Winter
Cultural Arts Festival is the Jew-
ish Museum's traveling exhibit of
Anatoli Kaplan's 18 lithographs.
Kaplan, known throughout Russia,
has had his paintings and litho-
graphs exhibited in many of the
foremost American museums.
The present collection. consist-
ing of a part of his illustrations'
for Sholem Aleichem's "Tevye,"
is the first exhibition of Kaplan's
works in Detroit.
MISS PAMELA SCHAFBE GER
The engagement of Pam la Ann
Schafberger and Robert Bruce
Sorock was announced at a family
dinner recently in Tucson.
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs. Frank Schafberger of Scotts-
dale. Ariz.. and the late Mr. Schaf-
berger. Parents of the prospective
bridegroom are Dr. and Mrs. Mil-
ton L. Sorock of Sherbourne Rd.
The couple, seniors at the Uni-
versity of Arizona. plan a June 20
wedding in Phoenix.
•
&ngagements
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Matz of Gar-
dener Ave., Oak Park, announce
the engagement of their niece
Denise Radomski to Bernard L.
Krause, son of Mr. and Mrs. Syd-
ney A. Krause of W. Outer Dr. A
March 7 wedding is planned.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Braverman of
Outer Dr. announce. the en-
gagement of their daughter Bar-
bara Toby to Sheldon Glen Larky,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Irving Larky
of Ravine Dr., Livonia. The bride-
elect attended Mount Ida Junior
College. Mr. Larky is a graduate
of the University of Michigan. An
April 25 wedding is being plan-
ned.
* • •
Mr. and Mrs. Morris W. Morger
of Balfour Ave.. Oak Park, an-
nounce the engagement of their
daughter Ellen Sue to Robert
Charles Solomon. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles M. Solomon of Wyn-
cote. Pa. Miss Morger is a senior
at the University of Michigan. Mr.
Solomon. a graduate of the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania. is pursu-
ing further studies at the Univer-
sity of Michigan. The wedding will
take place May 2.
* * *
Dr. and Mrs. Myron Hauser of
Northlawn Ave. announce the en-
gagement of their daughter Joann
to William Greenberg, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Greenberg of Fort
Lee. N. J., and formerly of Hunt-
ington Woods. The bride-elect and
her fiance attend the Massachu-
setts College of Optometry, Bos-
ton. A June wedding is planned.
W.
$1,000,000 in Shares Sold
by Israel Investors Corp.
BEVERLY MILLS, Calif., (JTA)
— More than $1,000,000 in addi-
tional capital has been subscribed
to at a report meeting of Israel
Investors Corp. held Monday night
at the Beverly Hilton Hotel.
_More than 1,250 people were in
attendance to hear a report on the
progress of the company presented
by Samuel Rothberg of Peoria,
president of the corporation. The
meeting took place on the eve of
the departure of Louis Boyar.
chairman of the board, and Roth-
berg to Israel to discuss further
investment programs with Finance
Minister Pinhas Sapir.
702
0169
S
t
Clip
i e
I
Marguerite Chajes
Gains Acclaim at
Vienna Performance
Special to The Jewish News
VIENNA — On the occasion of
the first performance of Dvorak's
Opera House, an affair took place
in a palace at which an illustrious
m u s is a 1 audience, composed of
opera directors, musicologists, ar-
tists and lovers of Dvorak's music.
were present.
The chairman, Dr. Marcel Prawy.
vice-director of the Volksoper, ex-
plained the work by the greatest
of Czech composers, when sudden-
ly he called on Marguerite Kozenn
Chajes, who had sung the first
"Rusalka" in the Western Hemis-
phere in Detroit under the patron-
ship of the late Jan Massaryk, at
that time Czech minister of for-
eign affairs.
In the audience were many
Czechoslovaks, the conductor. stage
director and scenery designer; they
recognized her from the "Ru-
salka" performance, which she
gave in 1947 in Prague, singing
in English while the entire cast
was Czech. After her description
she received a long round of ap-
plause. At the Viennese premiere
she was the honored guest of the
director.
Next month Mrs. Chajes will
start her work at the State Acad-
emy of Music in Munich. She will
hold seminaries about "American
Music Since Its Inception Up to
1965." She has chosen to speak
about leading American composers
such as Leonard Bernstein, Sam-
uel Barber, Norman Dello Joio,
Paul Creston, Aron Copland, Gian-
Carlo Menotti and various repre-
sentatives of American church
music. Her title will be guest-
professor, and it will be for the
first time in Munich's musical life
that a woman will undertake such
an ambitious program.
Mrs. Chajes has been invited to
Budapest, Warsaw, Prague and
other European capitals for lec-
tures and for meetings with their
respective leading composers.
MISS SANDRA ZIDE
The engagement of Sandra Hel-
ene Zide and Martin Nessel was re-
cently announced at a dinner
party.
Miss Zide is the daughter of Mrs.
Sylvia Zide of Stoepel Ave. and
the late Mr. Carl Zide. Mr. Nessel
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Abe
Nessel of Whitcomb Ave.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Wayne State University's college
of education; and Mr. Nessel is a
graduate of Walsh Institute of Ac-
countancy.
A June wedding is planned.
Tribute to JDC
in .Dr. Handlin's
`Continuing Task'
On the occasion of the 50th anni-
versary of the American Jewish
Joint Distribution Committee, Ran-
dom House has is-
sued a volume by
Prof. Oscar Hand-
1 i n entitled " A
Continuing Task."
This is in es-
sence a history of
the JDC fro m
1914 to 1964. But
it really is much
more than that
It is an histori-
cal evaluation of
events that trans-
pired during the
past 50 years. It
<is a description
of JDC which has
``meant many
things to many
men."
Dr. Handlin
It is an account of the great re-
lief efforts, of the devotion of two
generations of leaders who have
dedicated themselves to the task
of rescuing lives.
The work of JDC in many lands
is reviewed by the eminent scholar
who shows how the great organi-
zations leaders have made zedakah
a term of social justice.
When no counsel is taken, plans
But tw
hehyensucth
eeeerl are
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
many radvisers ,
n n l i y r y;
—
JWV Activities
SOL YETZ-MORRIS C O H E N
AUXILIARY will meet 8 p.m.
Monday at the home of Faye Blau,
17366 Cherrylawn. Senior Vice
President Ruth Wolfe asks mem-
bers to turn in money for the de-
partment's Feb. 6 fund-raising af-
fair at Cobo Hall.
* * *
Lt. RAYMOND ZUSSMAN
AUXILIARY will meet 8 p.m. Mon-
day in the home of Mrs. Nellie
Kolb, 19323 Warwick.
* * *
OAK PARK POST will hold a
"Meet Your Candidate Night" 9
p.m. Tuesday in the Oak Park
Comunity Center. Incumbents and
new candidates for the offices of
mayor, municipal judge and the
Oak Park city council will be pres-
ent. Other JWV post members in-
vited. Refreshments will be served.
Like
c
c c a di ily Cocktail's got it!
42 PROOF
5 QUART
$10
Proverbs Mr-Friday, January 29, 1965
a • • • • • • • ••.•••• .•••.. .
•
-
• ART CLASSES • •
.
:MILDRED FRIEDMAN:
:will teach experimental painting:
• In the new media of acrylics and.
• other creative materials.
••
• •
•
•
SAM FIELD
will teach
CHILDREN'S ART
CLASSES
(Academic Drawing)
•
•
•
•
•
•
• •
• •
• •
•
ROBERT RUKAVINA
will teach
PAINTING and
DRAWING
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
BRANDY
•
ROSE LEVINE
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
• • •
• •
• • •
•.
will teach
CHILDREN'S ART
•
CLASSES
Drawing) :
(Creative Painting
•
•
: FIELD ART STUDIO
49 C°6D6'88"
18090 WYOMING at Curtis •
•
UN 3-1031
•
•
•
UNITED BRANDS • DETROIT • U.S.A.
••••••••••••••••••••••/
PEOPLE
for yourself why we
"Find out
are called 'the People's Dealer.' "
SALE .. . SAVE
$1174 DOWN, $54 MO.
DICK
CANAAN
MOTOR CITY DODGE
1 3380
GRAND RIVER • BR 3-2180
Naturally good!
Tastiest snack. with any dish...
grand for canapes, dips, and munching!
0
;
t
op i'l
N.! *'--11
Two wholesome
"naturals"
in a delicious
combination...
the sensational
Egg-Onion
Crackers...
naturally from
Horowitz-Margareten!
— _
■ 714
OLD FAVORITE
NY Educators Adopt
Resolution to Hold
Students Until Age 15
NEW YORK (JTA)—A resolu-
tion urging that boys and girls
seeking certification as Bar Mitz-
vah or Bat Mitzvah must commit
themselves to continue their Jew-
ish education until age 15 was
adopted here by the sixth annual
School Board Chairmen's Confer-
ence of Jewish Schools, held un-
der the auspices of the Jewish Edu-
cation Committee of New York..
The plan was proposed by Ar-
thur E. Friedland, a member of
the board of the JEC. He deplored
the fact that, in most instances,
the age of 13 is considered "a
terminal point of religious train-
ing" culminated by Bar Mitzvah
or Bat Mitzvah.
He suggested that the terminal
point" be changed to age 15, at
Which time the pupil would take
a standard examination for a Ben
Torah certificate to be awarded
in a religious ceremony at a syn-
agogue.
Ear Specillst
Paul Manasse, a 19th century
German-Jewish scientist, was the
leading authority of his time on the
anatomy of the human ear.
KASHA
ROASTED BROWN
BUCKWHEAT GROATS
Man,
that's
a
dish!
Treat your family to a good Jewish meal!
Kasha makes the difference—real traditional ta'am. Hearty Ses
Kasha Soup. Or Kasha instead of potatoes or rice. How traditla
good it smells and tastes with pot roast, chicken or fish! recipes ,
And as easy to make as chopping an onion and beating an New W i
Packago'r 4 .
egg. So nutritious and economical, too.
FREE
KASHA COOKBOOK--26 recipes and menu ideas
for modern meals and entertaining with Kasha. Ad4ress request
to Phyllis Wolff, Penn Yan, New York