Web/garden-Cohen Vows Are Exchanged Akiva PTA to Hear Review of James Michener Novel activities in Society William Gershenson, Detroit chairman of Project HOPE, and Dr. Herbert J. Bloom, oral surgeon and vice chairman of HOPE's national medical advisory committee, were taken on a personally conducted tour of the white hospital ship, S.S. HOPE, with Dr. William B. Walsh, founder and president of the project. Mr. Gershenson and Dr. Bloom were on hand to bid the ship and its medical staff Detroit's bon voyage shortly before its departure Jan. 9. During the next 10 months the S.S. HOPE will be assisting the people of Nicaragua with their problems of health by training local medical personnel in the latest advancement in American medicine. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Weiss, 2005g Stansbury, have as houseguests this week their great uncle and great aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Hall of East Troy, Wis. Mr. Hall, a former Detroiter, is in town to attend the Bar Mitzvah of his great-great nephew, Edward Glassman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Glassman of Turner Ave. MRS. MICHAEL WEINGARDEN Linda Jean Cohen and Dr. Michael Allan Weingarden were recently united in marriage at a candlelight ceremony in the Grand Ballroom of the Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel. Rabbi Milton Arm and. Can- tor Simon Bermanis officiated. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Cohen of North- lawn Ave. and Mr. and Mrs. Sam- uel Weingarden of Sorrento Ave. The bride wore a long-sleeve, floor-length, princess-line gown of silk peau de soie with a Sabrina neckline and long sleeves of Duchess lace bands. Her matching train was attached at the should- ers. A cap of matching lace held the chapel-length veil of silk illu- sion. Sandra Zollman served as maid- of honor. Bridesmaids were Jo- anne Saperstein and Linda Silvers. Brother of the bridegroom, Dr. Terry Weingarden, served as best man. Ushers were Robert Cohen, brother of the bride, David Saper- stein, Dr. Leonard Lochover and James Mellec. After a honeymoon in Mexico City and Acapulco, the couple will reside on Crooks Rd., Royal Oak. ARNOLD WALD, a prominent Jewish attorney and professor of jurisprudence at the University of Rio de Janeiro, has been appointed by Governor Negrao de Lima of the Province of Guanabara as prosecutor of the province, which includes the city of Rio De Janeiro. Wald, 35, is the son of immigrant parents from Warsaw. THE NEW Dr. Israel M. Biderman of New York, national director of the youth and education department of the Jewish National Fund of America, and a member of the national execu-mint„., tive of Farband L.Z.O., will ad- dress the Detroit Landsmanshaften annual JNF event Thursday, 8:30 p.m. at the Labor Zionist Institute. Aaron Rosen- berg, attorney, who has become popular as a hu- morist, will be master of cere- monies. Young Dancers' Guild of the Jewish Com- munity Center, under direction of Harriet Berg, Dr. Biderman will be featured in a series of dances. The program will be part of Jew- is National Fund Month in Michi- gan, which began Jan. 22, with the first day of the Hebrew month of Shevat, and will continue until Feb. 20. It will also serve as a culmination of a number of Lands- manshaften activities in behalf of the JNF program of land reclama- tion in Israel. Refreshments will be served. Dr. Biderman, a native of Po- land, is graduate of the University of Warsaw and the Institute of Higher Jewish Learning. Arriving in the U.S. in 1950, he assumed By BENNETT CERF P RESIDENT LYNDON JOHNSON tells of a day when his brilliant political career was just dawning and he was seeking to win favor with his rural Texas audience by em- phasizing the beauties of its landscapes. He started with the beautiful piny woods of East Texas, moved lovingly through the bluebonnets and out to the plains and down the hill country to the Gulf Coast and back to the piny woods where he started all over again. When he got going on his third time around, an ex- asperated little cuss in the back of the hall hol- lered, "Say, Lyndon, the next time you pass through Lubbock, how about letting me off?" * * * Studied insult department: Alexander Woollcott, after listen- ing to an interminable torrent of self-praise from a garrulous lady of the stage, finally interrupted to snarl, "Pardon me, but both my legs have gone to sleep. Do you mind if I join them ' * * THAT'S NEW ENGLAND: "In the spring in New England I have counted 136 different kinds of weather inside of 24 hours."—Mark Twain. "Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes."—Henry "The only tourist we don't like is the kind who comes with a five-dollar bill and a clean. shirt and never changes either one." —Horace Busby. "The most serious charge which can be brought against New England is not Puritanism but February."I—Joseph W. Krutch. "Marriage is a damnably serious business—particularly around Boston."—John Marquand. 0 1966, by Bennett Cert. Distributed by King Features Syndicate Rabbi Paneth, formerly spiritual leader of Bnai Israel Synagogue, is a staff member with the Jewish Center adult educational division and serves on the educational ad- visory committee of the Akiva. Hebrew Day School. so Green-8 Center Only ! %diet Greenfield/8 Mile Rd. S uburban Shop Sunday, 12 to 5 p.m. Dr. I. M. Biderman, JNF Youth Head, to Be Landsmanshaft Speaker Jan. 27 Try and Stop Me Thoreau. The PTA of Akiva Hebrew Day School will meet 8 p.m. Monday at the Labor Zionist Institute to hear Rabbi Isaac Paneth review "The Source" by James Mitchen- ET. A social hour will follow, and PTA business will be discussed. 0" 4.# the post of consultant to the Jew- ish Education Committee in New York, was the director of the New York City Folk Schools and joined the JNF in 1958. He received his doctorate in Hebrew Culture - and Education at New York University. He is a member of the administra- tive committee of American Sec- tion of the World Jewish Congress, and of the Brith Ivrit Olamit and Ichud Olami, and is the author of books and articles on Jewish liter- ary and historical subjects. Harry Kaminer, chairman of the committee of Landsmanshaften for JNF, will open the meeting. Mem- bers of the committee are J. Bal- beror, Louis Bassin, Sam Belkin, A. E. Betensky, Abe Boesky, Israel Burnstein, Louis H. Cohan, Israel Finkelstone, Harry Gonte, Ben Grant, Benjamin Halpern, Julius Honeyman, Joshua Joyrich, Philip Kaplan, William Keller, Philip Le- vine, Louis S. Lifshitz; and Mes- dames A. London, Jack Ormond, Sam Rubin, Sol Rubin, Mrs. S. Sborow, Bert Seedberg, Morris Sklar, I. Sosnick and Nathan Wiss. 1.- I ■ ,,,z • Tassled Cocktail Travel Knit Ideal to take on a cruise or trip, packs beautifully and always looks fresh Fashioned in black or white season - spanning ace- tate knit. 8 to 16. $50 w. .M..M1.0.11110.04111.04 ■ 0411.11.41MIHAMMOiM..M. every On the Air This Week's Radio and Television Programs ETERNAL LIGHT - RADIO Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday Station: WWJ Feature: "The Guardian Angel of Genessee County," by Marc Siegel will dramatize the story of an angel and the circumstances under which he brings a rabbi to heaven for reassignment. * * * HIGHLIGHTS Time: 9:45 a.m. Sunday Station: Channel 2 and Time: 9:15 a.m. Sunday Station: WJBK Feature: Edwin Shifrin, member to the executive board of the Jew- ish Community Council, hosts "Do You Have An Ending?" in the final program of this community issues series. * * * HEAR OUR VOICE Time: 11:30 p.m. Sunday Station: WCAR Feature: Selections by Cantor Pierre Pinchik will be heard as part of a series on great cantors. Cantor Harold Orbach will com- ment on the man and his per- formance. * * * MESSAGE OF ISRAEL Time: 6 a.m. Sunday Station: Channel 4 Feature: "The Sound of Other Drums" will be the topic for re- flection by Rabbi Maurice Eisen- drath, president of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. Frederick's Agreement My people and I have come to an agreement that satisfies us both. They are to say what they please, and I am to do what I please.—Ascribed to Frederick the Great. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, January 21, 1966-23 FAMOUS LABEL and DESIGNER WALKING SUITS Were $60 to $300 NOW 1 /3 t° 1/2 OFF ! 12 to 5 p.m. VO' Green-8 Center Only! Greenfield-8 Mile Rd. Security Charge Available