People Make News
Dr. JOACHIM PRINZ, president
of the American Jewish Congress,
left for Germany at the invitation
of the Senate of West Berlin. Dr.
Prinz, a former rabbi of Berlin ex-
pelled by the Hitler regime in
1937 for his anti-Nazi activities,
will meet with West German Chan-
cellor Ludwig Erhard, West Berlin
Mayor Willy Brandt and other
German officials during a week-
long visit.
* * *
Councilman MEL RAVITZ and
ROBERT P. ROSELLE, Detroit
director, Total Action Against
Poverty, will be speakers at the
Sherwood Forest Branch Library,
7117 W. Seven Mile, Monday, 8:30
p.m.
* * *
J. Ted Eschels, CLU, state pres-
ident of the Life Insurance Lead-
ers of Michigan, announced the
qualifications of three local men
in this organization: JOSEPH
CAMDEN, agent for Northwestern
National Life Insurance Co.; HOW-
ARD HAROLD FINSILVER, Bus-
iness Men's Assurance Co.; and
HAROLD S. NORMAN, Provident
Life & Accident Insurance Co.
*
* *
Blue Shield of Michigan (Michi-
gan Medical Service) announced
the appointment of RICHARD AP-
TEKAR to administrative assist-
ant, pliblic relations division. Ap-
tekar, a former Jewish News staff
member, was with the Michigan-
Ohio division office of a national
supermarket chain and the head-
quarters of an international engi-
neering society. Married to the
former Linda Eisenberg, Detroit-
born concert pianist, Aptekar lives
in Lafayette Tower East.
*
* *
NORMAN H. ROSENFELD of
Sibley's Shoes was elected presi-
dent of the Greater Detroit Shoe
Retailers Association at its an-
nual election meeting held in the
Embassy Hotel on March 16. The
new vice-president is Sam Mars-
oupian of Sam's Shoe Sales in
Romeo. Allen Lee Netter of the
J. L. Hudson Company was elect-
ed secretary. Re-elected treasurer
was LEONARD HACK of the Hack
Shoe Company.
* * *
Tel Aviv University granted its
first honorary PhD degree to
MOSHE SHARETT, chairman of
the Jewish Agency, executive and
former prime minister. In pre-
senting the degree, Dr. George
Wise recalled Sharett's role as one
of the founders of the university.
* * *
MARVIN GELBER, member of
Parliament, has been named Can-
ada's alternate delegate to the
meetings of the Economic and
Social Council of the United Na-
tions. He and Paul Tremblay,
Canada's ambassador to the UN,
comprise the Canadian delegation.
*
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*
MURRAY I. GURFEIN was re-
elected for his sixth consecutive
term as president of United Hias
Service, worldwide Jewish migra-
tion agency. Gurfein, a prominent
American lawyer, served overseas
as chief of intelligence of psycho-
logical warfare during World War
II and as assistant to U.S. Chief of
Counsel Justice Robert H. Jackson
in Nuremberg war crimes proceed-
ings.
* * *
The appointment of SAM HUNT-
ER as director of the Jewish
Museum was announced by Dr.
Louis Finkelstein, chancellor of
the Jewish Theological Seminary
of America. Hunter is currently
director of the Rose Art Museum
and the Poses Institute of Fine
Arts, and professor of art history
at Brandeis University. He will
assume his duties at the New York
museum, which is under the aus-
pices of the Seminary, on Sept. 6.
He succeeds Hans van Weeren-
Griek whose interim appointment
as Acting Director expires in June
of this year.
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
26—Friday, March 26, 1965
GEORGE M. STUTZ has been
named to the committee on the
Synagogue Council of America by
the Large City Budgeting Confer-
ence.
* * *
HAROLD STUBENHAUS of
Westbury, N. Y., has been appoint-
ed chairman of the biennial con-
vention of the United Synagogue
of America to be held in Novem-
ber.
* * *
The Yeshiva University Rabbinic
Alumni honored Rabbi HER-
SCHEL SCHACTER of the Mos--
holu Jewish Center, Bronx, for
Sarah Lippit to Wed Unique History of Hack Co.
Stewart Frank in June It Began, as Store on Corner (Hastings)
but Does Business 'on the Square'
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service to Judaism in the United
States and abroad, at its annual
mid-year conference Wednesday.
4,
*
*
The illustrated Hebrew publica-
tion for children and youth, "Olam
Hadash," will present its first
annual award to OGDEN REID,
member of the U.S. House of Rep-
resentatives and former US. am-
bassador to Israel, in recognition
of his deep interest in the Hebrew
language and culture, it was an-
nounced by Jacob Kinzler, presi-
dent of the publication. The pres-
entation will take place at a
luncheon at Essex House, April 4.
* * *
Two representatives of the Pru-
dential Insurance Company will
attend the company's President's
Club Conference, at the Diplomat
Hotel. Florida, April 5-8. They
are J. ELI GRINBLATT and STAN-
LEY HERMAN.
* * *
The Congress for Jewish Culture
Sunday night honored A L E P H
KATZ, noted Yiddish poet and Yid-
dish editor of the Jewish Tele-
graphic Agency on the occasion of
the appearance of his latest book
of poems, "Di Emese Chassene,"
which received the Kessel Prize
for Yiddish Literature. The occa-
sion , in New York, also marked
40 years of his literary work.
*
DR. ITZHAK SOROKA, deputy
chief of the Haifa Tecnion build-
ing research station, will advise
the Turkish government's build-
ing research program, in coopera-
tion with the United Nations. Dr.
Soroka paid an initial visit to Tur-
key last year, studying the coun-
try's building problems.
* * *
More than 60 physicians and
medical technicians are taking re-
fresher courses at the Haifa
Technion, on subjects such as cell
structure, proteins, role of vi-
tamins • in metabolism, biosynthe-
sis of facts. The technion's chem-
istry 'department is sponsoring the
special courses, in cooperation with
Haifa Medical Association.
* * *
NELLY L. SACHS, the noted
Jewish poetess and dramatist, has
been awarded the 1965 Peace Prize
of the foundation board of the Ex-
change Association of the German
Book Trade. The German-born
writer, who fled her native Berlin
in 1940, is the first woman to be
awarded the prize since it was
established in 1951. After watch-
ing her relatives and friends de-
ported to their death in the gas
chambers, Miss Sachs devoted her
major works to the sufferings of
the Jewish people at the hands of
the Nazis. Among her books of
poetry, were "In the Houses of
Death," "Eclipse of the Stars,"
"And Nobody Knows More" and
"Flight and Transformation."
*
*
*
Among the law school alumni
taking part in ground-breaking
ceremonies for the new law school
building at Wayne State Univers-
ity were Reps. DANIEL S. COOPER
and ALBERT A. KRAMER of Oak
Park; LESLIE R. SCI-LIVIIER; and
Circuit Court Judge BENJAMIN D.
BURDICK. The $2,500,000 struc-
ture is scheduled for completion
in fall 1966.
There is a holy mistaken zeal in
politics as well as in religion. By
persuading others, we convince
ourselves."—Junius.
MISS SARAH LIPPIT
Dr. and Mrs. Albert J. Lippit of
Indiana Ave. announce the engage-
ment of their daughter Sarah to
Stewart Frank, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Frank of Woodingham Dr.
Miss Lippit is a graduate of the
University of Miami, and her
fiance is a graduate of the Univer-
sity of Michigan.
A June wedding is planned.
Paul Tisdale Points
to Delinquency Ills;
Seeks Area Judgeship
Attorney Paul A. Tisdale, 30-year
resident of Detroit and Southfield,
is seeking the position of associate
municipal judge for the city of
Southfield.
Tisdale'.: main concern for the
.-ity of Smithfield
nvolves the
growing juvenile
lelinquency prob-
lem developing
in the commun-
:ty. He believes
that the associate
judge should and
must take an ac-
tive interest in
expanding
Tisdale the parent-youth
guidance -- rogram into full juve-
nile probation department in
Southfield. At the present time
there exists no such department.
Tisdale said he believes other
problems do and will face the city
of Southfield's Municipal Court as
a result of the city's rapid popula-
tion expansion. (In 1964 South-
field residents totaled 46,000.
Statistics show that by 1970 over
80,000 people will live in South-
field.) These problems, he said,
include an understaffed and over-
worked police department and an
overburdened Municipal C "o u r t
necessitating more effective and
efficient Municipal Court adminis-
tration.
Tisdale, a member of Bnai Brith
and Temple Israel, is past secre-
tary of the Southfield Park Civic
Association.
On March 25, 1916, a family-type
shoe store was opened at 1967
Hastings Street, next to Knoppow's
Drug Store which was at the cor-
ner of Frederick.
The incorporators were Nathan
Hack, president; Dr. Emil M. So-
rock, vice-president, and Pauline
May Hack, secretary-treasurer. Dr.
Sorock was Mrs. Hack's brother
and the owner of the building in
which the store was located.
Two years later, when prohibi-
tion "enlightened" the land, the
business was moved to the double
store vacated by a saloon at the
corner of Farnsworth and Hastings.
Under the new numbering system
later, it was 5203 and 5205 Hast-
ings.
WALTHAM, Mass — Brandeis
University will create a medal and
a trust fund to underwrite a schol-
arship in memory of a white min-
ister and a Negro civil rights work-
er who lost their lives in Alabama.
The Jackson-Reeb Memorial
Scholarship will honor the memory
of the Rev. James Reeb of Boston,
who died last week in Selma, Ala.,
as a result of a beating, and James
Lee Jackson, who was shot to
death in Marion, Ala.
A second award, to be called the
Jackson-Reeb Medal, will be creat-
ed by the University to be given
annually to a student at Brandeis
whose activities in the area of civ-
il rights exemplify responsible
leadership in that field.
The Imminent Light
By HARRY MAXMAN
We hear the bells' tolling,
We hear the streets clangor.
Why don't we hear, and feed
Each our inmost hunger?
Love is the lock,
And love the key
That opens wide
This illumined mystery.
The dew in the morning,
The mist in the night,
Will never foreclose
' Time's imminent Light.
•
U
Topic: Ethics of the Bible
Wolf Snyder will discuss "Ethics
of the Bible" 9 p.m. Saturday at
the Labor Zionist Institute: A so-
cial hour will follow, and the pub-
The big sign on the side of the lic is invited at no charge, accord-
building heralded, "The Shoe ing to Maurice Gelfand, chairman.
Store on the Corner that Does The talk was postponed from an
earlier date due to weather condi-
Business on the Square."
On March 15, 1925, the move to tions.
a small suite on the fifth floor of
the Stroh Building was made and
Nathan Hack was specializing in
orthopaedic-type shoes.
Now, 49 years after its start,
the Hack Shoe Co. occupies most
of the fifth floor of the Mutual
a hen's
salon
oak park
center
li 2-1398
FOR THE BEST IN
MUSIC & ENTERTAINMENT
SAM EMMER
And His Orchestra
DI 1-1609
Have Your Family Portrait • Wedding
Tastefully Photographed by
Our Professional Staff
,
Form Civil Rights Memorial
Scholarships at Brandeis
Building, as the Stroh Building is
now known, and there are four
stores in all. The officers today are
Morton Hack, president and secre-
tary; and Leonard Hack, vice
president and treasurer. Grandsons
of the founders active in the busi-
ness today are James Hack, son of
Morton; and Lawrence and Robert,
whose father is Leonard Hack.
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Hack, now
81 and 80 respectively, reside in
Santa Monica, Calif.
19492 LIVERNOIS
UN 2-0660
THE
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ORCHESTRA
CALL: LI 7-0896 or LI 5-2737
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THOSE WHO ATTENDED LAST YEAR'S
SEDORIM WE ONLY HAVE A VERY FEW
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE FOR THIS :
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YEAR'S
SEDORIM
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FRIDAY, APRIL 16th andSATURDAY, APRIL 17th
Conducted By
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CANTOR
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SHABTAI ACKERMAN
(of Beth Abraham Synagogue) :
Don't Delay •
CALL
3toztha. Cashing,
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18451 Wyoming
UN 4-4757 • • •
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