Rita _Burns Betrothed to George K Belenson MISS RITA BURNS Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burns of Lauder Ave. announce the engage- ment of their daughter Rita Marsha to George Edward Belenson, son of Mrs. Bessie Belenson of Sussex Ave., Oak Park and the late Mr. Daniel Belenson. The couple both attend Wayne State University. The future bride- groom will begin Detroit College of Law in the fall. The wedding is planned for July 4, 1967. Bow-Coffey Council to Explore NW Problems Real-estate problems in the Northwest section of Detroit will be the topic of the Bow-Coffey Community Council meeting 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Advent Lu- theran Chtirch. A program, "The Selling Season Is Here, What Will You Do?" will feature a panel of real estate agents and a member of the De- troit Commission on Community R e 1 a t i o ns answering questions from the audience. Problems, in- cluding integrated housing, will be discussed by Richard Elsea, William Gross and John Humph- rey representing the' agents, and the Rev. Theodore Daniels, pastor of the Outer Drive Faith Lutheran Church, representing the commis- sion. Hawkins Steele, chairman of the Bow-Coffey Council's legisla- tive committee and owner of Hawkins Steele Real Estate, will serve as moderator. All owners of real estate in the Bow-Coffey area between Seven and Eight Mile Roads from James Couzens to Southfield are asked to attend. THE LIGHT TOUCH by JULES PASSERMAN Do you know the prime requisite of a good chef? A big vocabulary! How else can you give the soup a new name every day? There's one thing about baldness: it's neat . . . Bartender: psychiatrist w h o works in an apron .. . There's often a family tie between father and son, but the son is usually wearing it ... One of history's great busi- ness men was Noah: he floated a company when the whole world was in liquida- tion! LINCOLN DRUGS Lincoln at Coolidge 25901 Coolidge LI 3.7847 Zionists-Revisionists Plan Meeting With Cocktails activities in Society Marguerite Kozenn Chajes left on an extensive trip throughout Europe. She will be the guest of the Vienna Council's Mme. Gertrude Sanders, at the Czechoslovak Music Fund at the "Prague Spring Festival." Afterwards she will appear over radio stations in Bel- grade, Yugoslavia, and Budapest, Hungary, with lectures on "American Music Since 1620 Up to the Present Time." As in previous years, Mrs. Chajes will attend the Salzburg, Munich and Bayreuth music fes- tivals, where her hosts will be the government agencies for cul- tural exchange. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Fishman of Los Angeles are visiting here as the guests of their family, having come to attend the Bar Mitzvah of their grand-nephew, Lawrence David Tyner, which was solmenized in Temple Israel last Saturday morning. A luncheon in honor of the Bar Mitzvah, son of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Tyner of Lauder Ave., was given at Town and Country Club Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Max Conway of Balmoral Dr. will be leaving shortly for California to attend the swearing-in ceremonies of their son, Sherwin B. Conway of Beverly Hills, who recently passed the 1966 California State Bar examination. Dr. Irving M. Sorscher, who graduated from the University of Michigan's school of dentistry this month, was honored at an open house recently. The party, given by his mother, Mrs. Shirley Sorscher and his sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Irwin S. Alpern, was held at the Alpern home, 15110 Dartmouth, Oak Park. Many out of town guests attended. The May meeting of the Cornfield Family Club will be held Sun- day, 8 p.m., at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Donald Ketai, 14061 Clover- dale, Oak Park. Fourteen members of the Detroit-Gold general agency of the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, headed by Ruben Gold, are attending the company's Leaders Club conference at the San Francisco Hilton Hotel. Those attending from the Detroit-Gold agency are: Ruben Gold, Donald B. Baker, William C. Cunningham, Andrew G. Farkas, Joseph F. Hirsch, Girard Marcozzi, Henry J. Meurer, Mario Oliverio, Donald W. Runde, Paul L. Sherizen, Morris I. Silverman, Melvin Weisz, Robert E. Wilcox, Jan B. Green. ADL, Community Council Fight Bill Giving Tuition Grants to Students at Private Colleges not be • restricted to those private colleges and universities. "The test," the Free Press edi- torial stated, "is whether the pri- mary effort of the law is to affect an establishment of religion." A bill awaiting final action in the House Ways and Means Com- mittee in Lansing has drawn a deluge of mail favoring it, but the condemnation of several commu- nal organizations, including the Jewish Community Council and the Anti-Defamation League. The measure, Senate Bill 780, calls for the giving of tuition grants of up to $500 per year to students who attend private col- The fight against the crippling leges within the state. disease of muscular dystrophy will In explaining their opposition be carried out in this area June to the bill, which has already 7; and the local zone chairmen are passed the Senate, the commun- now seeking volunteers to "March ity council and ADL pointed out Against Time." that "this bill represents another Assisting in the Muscular Dys- step in a continuing effort by trophy Associations of America certain groups to make the campaign are the following chair- constitutional concept of sep- men from this area: Dystrophy Drive Volunteers Sought aration of church and state meaningless." By providing for special grants to students of private schools, such legislation "damages the public school system as well." The cost estimate for this bill has gone as high as $29,700,000 for the first year, which its opponents contend "could be better used in aiding an already beleaguered public school system." Senate Bill 780, sponsored by State Sen. Raymond Dzendzel, was attacked in a Detroit Free Press editorial March 7, in which it was stated that "the effort of the law is obviously to help parochial col- leges survive." Besides the Jewish Community Council and ADL, opponents of the bill include the Michigan Council of Churches, American Civil Li- berties Union, individual Protes- tant denominations and public school educators. The bill passed the Senate by a vote of 27-4. - Private colleges favoring the bill have sent out appeals to par- ents and alumni urging their support. Mercy College, in its letter, pointed out that "students electing to attend private insti- tutions would have greater free- dom of choice if tuition costs were more closely aligned." Mesdames Sylvia Braverman. 20285 Bentler, KE 5-7810; Marion Rich, 20036 Fenton, KE 3-2693; Ruby Zak, 26020 Radclift, Oak Park, 398-9398; Dora Hamburg, 16834 Santa Rosa, UN 2-6137; Charles Blauer, 19947 Asbury Park, 838-7283; Gertrude Rocklin, 18400 Strathmoor, UN 4-9528; Carmen Dod- son, 14012 W. Outer Dr., KE 4-4539; and Bella Hoenig, 15893 Indiana, 341- 9532. Volunteers are asked to call the MD March headquarters, WO 1- 5400. Muscular dystrophy is a chronic disease of the muscles that is man- ifested by gradual weakening of the voluntary muscles. Over a per- iod of years the wasting and re- sultant weakening becomes pro- gressively apparent and the pa- tient is confined to a wheelchair and eventually to• his bed. Al- though MD is not in- itself fatal, the weakness it causes makes even a trifling disease very dangerous. To the MD patient, a simple cold may be a grave illness, as the wasted muscles make it difficult to cough or sneeze, and there is a great danger of suffocation. Ap- proximately two thirds of the known MD victims are children between the ages of 3 and 13. Of these, few will reach adolesence and almost all will die before reaching maturity. MD is not a contagious disease but rather is a genetic disease. Once it appears in a family, it may be transmitted to future gen- erations. The association provides , comprehensive service and funds for research. The letter asked that parents and alumnae write their repre- sentatives at Lansing — "like the letters to the senators" — making it "totally clear that the aid is to the individual student, not to the Observe the face of the wife to institution." know the husband's character. Groups against the bill argue —Spanish Proverb that its intent is clearly to benefit THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS the schools rather than the indi- viduals. Otherwise grants would Friday, May 20, 1966-29 The Zionists-Revisionists of De- troit will hold a cocktail party 9 a.m. Saturday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mayer Silberberg, 24171 Ridgedale, Oak Park. Rabbi James I. Gordon,• spiri- tual leader of Young Israel of Oak-Woods, will be guest speaker. The organization's summer pro- gram will be outlined, and a report will be given on the progress of the Jabotinsky memorial building in Tel Aviv. Friends of the Jabotinsky move- ment are invited without charge. For information call Steven Gol- din, president, LI 7-3606. 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