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December 31, 1965 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1965-12-31

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

C. Martin Rose, Bride
tional Auxiliary,
Honeymoon in Montreal Led by Detroiter,

Boosts GI Morale

MRS. C. MARTIN ROSE

Susan T. Taitelbaum, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. William B. Taitel-
baum of Northlawn Ave., became
the bride of C. Martin Rose in a
candlelight ceremony Sunday at
Cong. Ahavas Achim.
Rabbi Seymour M. Panitz and
Cantor Simon Bermanis officiat-
ed at the ceremony uniting Miss
Taitelbaum and Mr. Rose, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Ely Rose of Mar-
lowe Ave.
A Montreal honeymoon follow-
ed the ceremony.
The bride wore a wedding
ensemble of peau de soie and
hand-corded Alencon lace em-
broidered with pearls. A bolero
jacket of lace with a Watteau
panel, court-length train was
worn over an Empire, sheath
gown fashioned with a sleeveless
lace bodice and edged at the hem
with a deep lace border. Her
headpiece of matching lace
leaves and flowers held the full
petal veil of imported silk il-
lusion. She carried a nosegay
of baby sweetheart roses.
Carole Taitelbaum was her sis-
ter's maid of honor. Debbie Rose,
sister of the bridegroom, Mrs.
Charles Newman and Mrs. Stanley
Meretsky were bridesmaids.
Best man was Robert Bader, and
ushers were Michael Zonder, Al-
lan Solomon, Donald Solomon,
Frederick Raymond and Gordon
Sandborn.
The couple plans to live in
Oak Park on return from their
wedding trip.

Buildings' Magazine (the nation-
al construction and building man-
agement journal) in its first an-
nual awards program, has given
JACK CAMINKER, real estate
management specialist and vice-
president-general manager of Fish-
er-New Center Co., an award for
modernization excellence. Camin-
ker also was recently elected to
serve as a director of the Build-
ing Owners and Managers Associa-
tion for the coming year.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
18—Friday, December 31, 1965

The Air Force has delivered a
shipment of 5,000 "living letter"
recording tapes to Vietnam for use
by U. S. servicemen, courtesy of
the National Ladies Auxiliary,
Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A.
Early arrival of the tapes would
enable Americans serving in Viet-
nam to send spoken messages to
loved ones in time for Christmas or
Hanukah.
"This 'talk a letter' program
is just one tangible expression of
gratitude to the men and women
who fight at the outposts of free-
dom," said Detroiter Mrs. Sarah
Nemon, national president of the
JWV Auxiliary. "We who live
safely at home can do no less;
rather, we must do more to
demonstrate our united support."
The National Ladies Auxiliary
is among the first national or-
ganizations to respond to an appeal
by the U. S. Defense Department
for morale-building programs and
donations to the growing con-
tingent of American troops in Viet-
nam. Surveys suggest that the pop-
ularity of recording tapes rivals
the "V mail letters" of World War
II as a favorite method of com-
municating with loved ones at
home.
"The tapes we donated and will
donate will of course be avail-
able to all our American men and
women in Vietnam", Mrs. Nemon
said. "Our members all over the
country will supply thousands more
of the 'talk a letter' tapes, and,
in fact, the U. S. Defense Depart-
ment and the commanding of-
ficers of the airlift who made pos-
sible the timely deliveries".
Clubs maintained by the U.S.O.
in Vietman provide the equipment
on which servicemen can record 15-
minute messages. In off-duty hours
the 'tape rooms' at USO clubs in
Saigon, Du Nang and Tan Son
Nhut are the most popular spots
in town.
Each reel is wrapped in a self-
mailing envelope for speedy re-
turn delivery to the United States.
Recipients can listen to the mes-
sage on virtually any kind of home
equipment. Then the tape can be
re-used to send a reply.

JWV Activities

YETZ-COHEN LADIES AUX-
ILIARY will meet 8 p.m. Monday
at the home of Mary Shulman,
20501 Stansbury.

Hootenanny at Center

Another in the series of monthly
hootenannies will be held 8 p.m.
Thursday, at the Jewish Center.
It will be led by Moishe Last, the
Center's guitar supervisor.

BRAVERMAN'S
KOSHER MEATS

ALL SPECIALS GOOD WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

SUNDAY ONLY

1st CUT LAMB CHOPS
CHUCK ROAST
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Kaploe-Grayson Vows
to Be Exchanged in Fall

activities in Society

Members of the Beth Abraham Hebrew School and youth groups
who attended the Canadian Winter Seminar sponsored by the youth
bureau of Yeshiva University, at Carousel Motel, London, Ont.,
were Sharon Goldstein, Paula Ravin, Lynn Farber, Joan Kurtz,
Ronald Kopelman, Joanne Blau, Risha Ring, Harry Young, Peggy
Krohngold, Arlene Gross and Joseph Fleisch. Shelley Bank, president
of Beth Abraham Young Adults, attended the Eastern Seminar at
the Monsey Park Hotel, Monsey, N.Y.
Mrs. Wallace Nathan of North Norfolk Ave. recently returned
from a 30-day vacation visiting friends in California and then flying
to Hawaii.
Former Detroiters Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Sloan and their five chil-
dren, of Dallas, Tex., are the guests of their parents and grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Sloan of Santa Clara Ave.
Local leaders prominent in the UJA Midwest Conference to be
held Jan. 14 in Chicago's Palmer House Hotel, include Abraham
Borman, Alfred L. Deutsch, Sol Eisenberg, Irwin Green, Lewis S.
Grosman, George D. Keil, Jack 0. Lefton, Hyman Safran, Max M.
Shaye, Richard Sloan, Phillip Stollman, A. Alfred Taubman and Paul
Zuckerman. Max M. Fisher, also of Detroit, will be a guest speaker.
MISS ROSEMARY GRAYSON
Mrs. Marguerite Kozenn Chajes will be the guest of Consul Gen.
Panos Lanitis in Limassol, Cyprus, after New Year's, and following an
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Gray-
audience with President Makarios will stop in Athens to lecture on
son of Ardmore Ave. announced
American music over the Greek radio station.
at a family dinner the engagement
of their daughter Rosemary to
Douglas M. Kaploe, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Kaploe of Briar Dr.,
Oak Park.
Miss Grayson is a senior at
In addition to conferring its high- Nurse Association; and Philip Arizona State University. Mr. Kap-
est meritorious service (Myrtle Slomovitz, editor and publisher loe attended Wayne State Univer-
sity, where he was a member of
Wreath) awards upon four out- of The Jewish News.
Epsilon Pi Fraternity. An
standing local citizens at its an-
Mrs. Harold Hoffman, vice-presi- Alpha
nual membership event Jan. 11, dent of membership, said the stan- October wedding is planned.
the Detroit Chapter of Hadassah dard of selection for the citations
will present a musical program was the awardees' records of faith
PHOTOGRAPHY by
starring Julius and Annette Chajes. and service which parallel the
BERNARD H.
Annette Loring Chajes, a native epic of Hadassah in the fields of
of Pennsylvania, began singing health, welfare, medical research,
child rehabilitation and education.

Mr. and Mrs. Chajes to Perform
at Hadassah'sMembership Event

.

More children are hospitalized
for birth defects than for all in-
fectious diseases combined.

WINER

KE 1-8196

Bar Mitzvahs — Weddings

SAM BARNETT

LI 1 2563

Music

-

Entertainment

WHO SHOULD YOU
"SEE ON SIMCHAS?"

CALL

SIEGEL for MOVIES!

MR. AND MRS. CHAJES

lessons at age 15, appeared in con-
certs and recitals throughout the
East and was a star of her own
radio program there. Mrs. Chajes
was soloist in the largest Conser-
vative synagogue in Philadelphia
for eight years prior to coming to
Detroit.
She has appeared as soloist be-
fore many organizations here and
in Canada and in February will
solo with the Center Symphony
Orchestra under the direction of
her husband.
Julius Chajes, conductor of
the Center Symphony Orchestra
since November 1940, has earned
widespread fame as pianist and
composer as well. In recent
years, Chajes played and also
conducted his compositions in
Paris, London, Glasgow, Brus-
sels, Zurich, Vienna, Jerusalem
and in more than 300 concerts
throughout the United States
and Canada.
Myrtle Wreath recipients will
be Robin Carl Buerki, executive
director, consultant and trustee of
Henry Ford Hospital; Max M.
Fisher, communal leader and phil-
anthropist; Emile G. Sargent, di-
rector emeritus of the Visiting

LI 3-3400

EXPECTING OUT OF TOWN GUESTS
FOR A WEDDING OR A BAR MITZVAH?

Cranbrook House Motel

Is

Conveniently Located at

20500 JAMES COUZENS

(8 Mile & Greenfield—Across from Northland)
Call 342-3000 For the Finest Accommodations!
Dine at the SCOTCH & SIRLOIN RESTAURANT
Airport Limousine Service Available

MEETING and BANQUET ROOMS
To Rent

Beautifully newly decorated air-conditioned building,
central location, kitchen facilities, ample parking. Large
room will accommodate banquet of 250 or meeting of
350. Smaller rooms from 30-100. Ideal for organiza-
tions, caterers, weddings, Bar-Mitzvahs, etc.

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