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October 15, 1965 - Image 23

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1965-10-15

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

Sharon Samoss Now
Mrs. Sheldon Satovsky

MRS. SHELDON SATOVSKY

At a recent evening ceremony
at Cong. Shaarey Zedek, Sharon
Dorinne Samoss, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Abraham Samoss of Bur-
ton Ave., Oak Park, became the
bride of Sheldon B. Satovsky, son
of the Abraham Satovskys of Muir_
land Ave.
The bride wore a sheath gown
of peau de soie with a hand-corded
Alencon lace bodice studded with
pearls. Lace and pearl clusters
trimmed the detachable, chapel-
length train, and a jewelled lace
tiara held her imported silk il-
lusion veil.
Attending the bride were Bar.
bara Lawrence, maid of honor;
and bridesmaids Rita Sheyer and
Cheryl Brown, Marcia Eder, Lynn
Satovsky and Susan Nayer.
Best man for his brother was
James Satovsky. Ushers were Dr.
Ronald Benson, Howard Baron,
Harold Gordon, Joel Levi, Harold
Waller, Neil Satovsky and Ronald
Samoss, brother of the bride.
After a honeymoon in the East,
the newlyweds will reside ton Lin-
coln Rd., Oak Park.

Midrasha Offers
Courses to Adults

Louis LaMed, chairman of the
Midrasha Board of Directors, an-
nounces registration now is taking
place for classes offered by the
Division of General Jewish Studies
of the Midrasha. Class will begin
Oct. 26 and will meet once a week
for eight weeks.
The following courses, conducted
in English, are being offered:
Literature of Contemporary Yid-
dish Writers, instructor, Moshe
Haar; Jewish History, since the
Renaissance, Solomon Schimmel;
Bible — Book of Jeremiah, Prof.
Shlomo Marenof; Jewish Philos-
ophy, from Saadia and Maimon-
ides to Buber and Mordecai Kap-
lan, Dr. Shlomo Steinberger;
Talmud—Methodology, Philosophy,
Rabbi Charles Rosenzveig.
This y e a r, the Midrasha has
added to its staff two instructors
from Israel, Dr. Shlomo Stein-
berger and Solomon Schimmel. Dr.
Steinberger, who received his PhD
from the University - of London,
previously taught at the. Midrasha
for three years as an exchange
teacher from Israel.
Schimmel who received his
MA in Talmud and rabbinic
literature from the Hebrew
University, is the author of "The
Life and Works of Moses Mai-
monides: Introduction to the
Treatise on Poisons and Their
Antidotes."
In addition to the abov- e courses,
two workshops designed primarily
for teachers and youth leaders,
but open to the general public are
being offered. Yael Biederman,
dance instructor of the United
Hebrew Schools, will conduct a
workshop on how to teach children
Israeli folk dances and interpre-
tive dances of Jewish themes.
Esther Widenbaum who has ex-
tensive experience in the arts and
crafts- field, will demonstrate tech-
niques for teaching of Jewish holi-
days.
Classes will meet in the Kasle
High School Midrasha Building,
8:30 to 10p.m. Tuesdays. For in-
formation, call the school, UN I
4-1115 or DI 1-3407.

.

Book by Salisbury,
Middle East Account
Among New Volumes

A new series of books, New
York Times Byline Books, will be
presented on Nov. 10. Prepared
under the general direction of the
New York Times, the books will be
published by Atheneum.
The first three titles, which will
appear in October, are: "Russia"
by Harrison E. Salisbury, "China"
by Harry Schwartz and "The
Middle East" by Jay Walz.
In his new book, "Russia,"
Salisbury presents the eternal veri-
ties about the country, showing
how it is constantly changing in a
context of changelessness, how
Ivan the Terrible,
Lenin, Stalin,
Khrushchev a n d
his heirs have all
had to cope with
problems that are
new and yet dis-
tressingly old. He
examines every
important aspect
of the Soviet
Union, from the
Salisbury
origins and im-
plications of the Moscow-Peking
rift to current economic trends.
From his pages spring the tolkach,
the fixer who can get chrome fit-
tings for a factory manager, and
the modern Moscow youngster,
eyes riveted on the West, renaming,
Gorky Street "Brodvay." Charac-
ters like these combined with the
author's deft delineation of the
Soviet scene make a whole country
come alive.
In a word-association test "Mid-
dle East" would be likely to pro-
duce such responses as "sand,"
"oil," "Arabs," "Israel," "Nasser."
The Middle East is all of that and
a great deal more besides, as Jay
Walz of the New York Times makes
clear in his new book, "The Middle
East."
Walz deals with the crisis situa-
tions that flare up periodically into
page-one headlines: the Arab-Is-
raeli conflict, Nasser and Nasser-
ism, communism and cold-war poli-
tics. But he also points out that
the Middle East is more than a
"bubbling stewpot," a "chronic
crisis area"; and he brings the
whole of the vital region vividly
alive: the super-acfluent society of
Kuwait, the desert war in medieval
Yemen, the "white revolution"
under way in Iran, the aftermath
in Turkey of a forced march into
modernity, the Egyptian peasant
with his 4,000-year-old hoe and new
transistor radio, the dissension-torn
Arab League producing (of all
things) a monumental translation
of Shakespeare.
'e Middle East" is contemp-
orary history with a difference.
The author goes clear back to the
Crusades, the crucible of Arab
unity, to illustrate the central fact
of present-day Arab life: the fer-
vent but failure-prone efforts to
recapture that unity. He brings the
same expertise and insight to bear
on Israel, oil, water and the lack
of it, and every other subject he
touches.

* * *
Salisbury to Address
Town Hall Wednesday

Harrison Salisbury, New York
Times assistant managing editor
and a Pulitzer Prize winner, will
be Detroit Town Hall's second
speaker of the season, Wednesday,
11 a.m., in Fisher Theater.
Salisbury will give a timely re-
port on the three social revolutions
taking place in the U:S. today: the
war against poverty; the fight for
racial equality; and the techno-
logical problem of lessening neces-
sity of physical labor through auto-
mation.
The former national affairs edi-
tor of the Times was also Moscow
correspondent for five years, the
city where he wrote his prize-
winning articles on Russia.

With 85 species of hard and
softwood trees, more than any
other state, and some 19,000,000
acres of forest land, Michigan is
America's autumnshowplace, ac
cording to the Michigan Tourist
Council.

Cooper-Marx Betrothal ACLU to Fight Law on School Services; Aid;
Church-State Principle Being Violated
Announced in Southfield Claims
Services range from street
The American Civil Liberties

MISS LINDA COOPER

Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Cooper,
17684 Adrian, Southfield, announce
the engagement of their daughter
Linda Joyce to Melvin Marx, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Siegmund Marx,
19376 Patton.
The bride-elect is in the college
of education at Wayne State Uni-
versity, and her fiance is a senior
at Lawrence Institute of Tech-
nology.
A December wedding is planned.

crossing guards to remedial read-

Union will start a suit this month
against Michigan's new school Aux-
iliary Service Law. This law re-
quires public school systems to ex-
tend their health, remedial and
other services to private and par-
ochial schools.
The ACLU claims the law, signed
by Gov. Romney in July, violates
provisions for separation of church
and state in both federal and state
constitutions.
Ernest Mazey, executive director
of the Michigan ACLU, said the
suit will argue that the statute
"threatens the strong safeguards
of religious liberty guaranteed by
the First Amendment of the Con-
stitution."
Jewish day schools would be
affected by the law.

Border Settlements
Five Nahal (Army Pioneer Set-
tlers Corps) outposts will be set
up along Israel's borders by the
Jewish National Fund within the
next four years.

Music- the Stein-Way

MOVIES, SINCE 1946

ing.

Superintendent of Schools Sam-
uel M. Brownell announced Tues-
day he has taken steps to carry
out the provisions of the law.

TRADITION! TRADITION!

SID and
NAOMI SIEGEL

_DICK STEIN

WEDDINGS • BAR MITZVAHS

& ORCHESTRA

CALL

LI 74770

LI 3-3400

IL

11.0.1 ■ 4,41 ■0■0■ 11=1.4=1HYMIN•0411111•1•0 ■

Kirwan Urges Action
on Residential Speeder

John R. Kirwan, nominee for
judge of Detroit's Traffic Court
in the Nov. 2 election, urged this
week a more vigorous program to
prevent excessive
speed on resi-
!ential streets.
Noting the real
problem here is
not so much new
laws as it is the
obtaining of evid-
ence of law
violation, Kirwan
emphasized that
while this was
undoubtedly dif-
ficult, much could
Kirwan
be done by
selective, vigorous enforcement.
"This is a problem in which Traf-
fic Court can and should take the
lead," Kirwan said.
"The type of accident that results
from speeding on residential street
is particularly tragic. It usually in-
volves a pedestrian injury and in
most cases that pedestrian is a
child."
Kirwan, 37, is an attorney with
14 years' experience in government
law enforcement. He led the field
at the recent primary, receiving
a vote of 76,703 while the next
candidate received 28,311 votes.
He is rated "Preferred and Well
Qualified" by the Civic Searchlight,
is recommended by both daily
newspapers and is supported by
most leading Detroit attorneys, in-
cluding four past presidents of the
Detroit Bar Association.

Are Pleased to Announce

The Opening of

A unique studio featuring a fine couture

selection of daytime and evening fash-

ions in Misses and Junior sizes .. with

personalized attention in a relaxed at-

mosphere.

`Civil Rights Leaders,
Police Have Same Goals '

Political opportunists, right-wing
extremists and segregationist
groups are attempting to promote
the `completely false impression
that a wholesale battle is being
fought by the civil rights com-
munity to destroy the police de-
partment" and that these extremist
groups are the only defenders of
the men in blue, Michigan Civil
Rights Commission's Community
Services Director Burton Levy says
in the current Newsletter of the
Detroit Archbishops' Committee
on Human Relations.
"The reality is that virtually
every Michigan police chief and
civil rights leader has the same
goals of equal protection of the
laws, equal enforcement of the
laws and equal treatment under
the law." In spite of this, Levy
says, some policemen tend to view
all Negroes as criminals and some
Negroes tend to view all police-
men as oppressors.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, October 15, 1965-23

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