100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

May 27, 1966 - Image 26

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-05-27

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



Musical Comedy Star Sarah Rubine
to Perform for Yeshiva U. Friends

Israeli musical comedy star
Sarah Rubine will appear as guest
entertainer at the dinner spon-
sored by Detroit Friends of Ye-
shiva University 6:30 p. m. Wednes-
day at the Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel.
Born in Romania, reared in
Israel. Miss Rubine was the lead-
ing musical comedy star of the
.....,Do-Re - Mi Thea-
ter in Israel for
six years. A long
engagement at
the Israeli Cafe
abbra in New
York introduced
her to American
audiences. S h e
Sias appeared at
such hotels as
Miss Rubine the Fontainebleau
in Miami and the Concord and
Grossingers in New York, besides
appearing on the Ed Sullivan
Show, the Johnny Carson Show
and many others.
Dr. Morton M. Teicher, dean of
the Wurzweiler School of Social
Work of Yeshiva University, will
be guest speaker at the dinner, at
which Dr. Jacob E. Goldman,
director of research at Ford Mo-

,

accreditation from the Council on
Social Work Education in 1959.
Accreditation was confirmed with
a commendation in 1962.
Earlier, he had been with the
University of Toronto where he
served on the medical and social
work faculties of the University,
and as chief psychiatric social
worker at the Toronto Psychiatric
Hospital for eight years.
Born in New York, March 10,
1920, he received the Bachelor of
Social Science degree from the
City College of New York in 1940,
the Master of Social Work degree
at the University of Pennsylvania
School of Social Work in 1942, and
the Doctor of Philosophy degree at
the University of Toronto in 1956.
During World War II he served
with the army in the China-Burma-
India theater as a military psychi-
atric social worker and clinical
psychologist. Before going to To-
ronto in 1948, he was chief social
worker in the New England area
for the U.S. Veterans Administra-
tion.
An anthropologist as well as a
social worker, he has done field
work among the Eskimos in the
Canadian Arctic, and the Iroquois
in Ontario.

AJCongress Meeting
to Focus on Civil Rights

DR. MORTON I. TEICHER

Dr. Leon Fram, president of the
Michigan Council of American Jew-
ish Congress, announced that the
AJC will hold a public meeting on
"The Civil Rights to Housing," a
discussion of President Johnson's
proposed Civil Rights Bill, 8:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Northland
Community Concourse Auditorium.
The meeting will feature Joseph
B. Robison, director of AJ Con-
gress commission on law and so-
cial action.
There is no admission charge.
Robison, a nationally known
authority on housing discrimina-
tion, is general counsel of the Na-
tional Committee Against Discrim-
ination in Housing and has writ-
ten articles on housing and other
forms of discrimination for lead-
ing law reviews and magazines.
As director of CLSA, Robison
has appeared before the U.S.
Supreme Court and other courts in
cases involving legislative appor-
tionment and racial segregation,
North and South.

for Co., will preside. Abraham Bor-
man, Yeshiva University Trustee,
wit host the dinner. Reservations
for the dinner can be made by
calling the office of the Detroit
Friends of Yeshiva University at
35-6-0703 between 9 A. M. and
3 P. M.
Dr. Teicher joined Yeshiva Uni-
Life is half spent before one
versity in 1956, was appointed dean
knows what life is. — French
of the Wurzweiler School of Social proverb.
Work in 1959, and under his lead-
ership the school received its

RABBI CHASKEL
GRUBNER

SPECIALIZED MOHEL

Recommended by Physicians
Serving in Hospitals and Homes

3298_ Sturtevant

TU 3-1441

Rabbi
Shaiall Zachariash
Mohel

Phone: 863-0256
Detroit

Recommended by Physicians

RABBI
LEO GOLDMAN

Expert Mohel

Serving Hospitals and Homes

LI 2-4444

LI 1-9769

CERTIFIED EXPERT MOHEL

RABBI

Israel Goodman

334-4149

334-8266

Serving In Hospitals and Homes

REV. GOLDMAN L.

MARSHALL

MOHEL

Serving

at Homes and Hospitals

DI 1-9909

Rrtli

A nnouncements

Last Week's Winner of the

"RASKIN
BIG BABY BONUS"

MRS. SHELDON ALKON
(8 lbs., 3 oz)

congratulations on the birth of your
daughter and we hope the RASKIN
PRODUCTS you received helped
make your first week at home easier.

RASKIN FOOD CO.

May 17 — To Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Rosen of Chicago (Brenda Abram-
son of Detroit), twin son and
daughter, Darryl Scott and Dana
Beth.
* * *
May 17—To Mr. and Mrs. San-
ford Lutz (Ina Suhd), 17131 In-
diana, a son, David Gerald.
* * *
May 15 — To Dr. and Mrs. Arn-
old S. Grant (Barbara Margolis),
15322 Northgate, Oak Park, a son,
Steven Mark.
*
*
May 12—To Mr. and Mrs. Phillip
Goodman (Judith Brenner), 18615
Meyers, a son, Eric Scott.
* * *
May 8—To Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Waxman, 20111 Hubbell, a daugh-
ter, Sue Ann.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
26—Friday, May 27, 1966

Michelle White Is Bride
of Mr. Michael Stern

MRS. MICHAEL STERN

Michelle Doranne White, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lent-
zer, 17584 Sorrento, and the late
Mr. Sidney J. White, became the
bride of Michael Stern recently.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Leo Stern, 21761 Gard.
ner, Oak Park. The ceremony
took place at Temple Israel.
The bride chose an Empire gown
of organza, with beading and seed
pearls on the lace appliques. She
wore an organza coat with beaded
sleeves and long train. Her bou-
quet was of orchids and lilies of
the valley.
Mrs. Eugene Lukin, of Indian-
apolis, sister of the bride, was
matron of honor. Barbara Stern,
sister of the bridegroom, Andrea
Ross, Norrine Koven and Lynn
Collins were the bridesmids.
Best man was Melvin Freedman.
The ushers were Carl Stern, Doug
Oppenheim, Arnold Fink, Eugene
Lukin and Lloyd Lentzer.
The bride's niece, Rosanne Lu-
kin, was flower girl.
After a Florida honeymoon, the
couple will reside temporarily in
Oak Park and then will be moving
to Cleveland in September.

Friends of Akiva
to Hear Prof. Fox

Dr. Marvin Fox, professor of
philosophy at Ohio State Univer-
sity, will address the inaugural
meeting of "Friends of Akiva"
Monday evening,
June 6, in the
Community
House of Somer-
set Park, Troy.
Coolidge be-
tween 15 and 16
Mile roads.
Dr. Fox re-
ceived his de-
grees from
Northwest-
Dr. Fox
e r n University
and University ofChicago and has
been at Ohio State University since
1943. He was the recipient of the
"Professor of the Year Award" at
Ohio State University in 1962. He
has a special interest in Day School
education. The topic of his address
will be "Faith and Learning."

WSU Alumni Install
Officers at Reunion

More than 500 Wayne State Uni-
versity alumni attended the 98th
annual reunion May 21, with the
event held on the Wayne campus
for the first time in 13 years.
Walter Goodman, '46, was gen-
eral chairman of the event. Sam
Petok, '45, completed his term of
office as president of the alumni
and installed Ray Hayes, '37, as
incoming president.
Entertainment for the event was
provided by classical guitarist Carl
Bernstein, and the folk singers
"Jerry and Mike," Jerome Rosen-
thal and Michael Berke.
Added entertainment was also
provided by a group of future
alumni "The Bottles." The group
of 12-year-old students from the
Francis Scott Key School in Oak
Park included Mark Elson, David
Kaplan, Gary Keiman and Darrell
Marvel.

Reservations
Pouring in for
Simons Dinner

Maxwell Jospey, chairman of the
arrangements committee for the
dinner to be given by the Jewish
National Fund June 8, at the
Sheraton-Cadillac, in honor of
Leonard N. Simons, announces
that reservations are coming in
from scores of Detroiters repre-
senting all community groupings.
The response, Jospey states, is
an indication of the esteem in
which Simons is held here.
JNF plans to assure the planting
of a Leonard N. and Harriette
Simons Forest in Israel at the
June 8 dinner.
Guest speaker at the dinner will
be Dr. Nelson Glueck, president,
Hebrew Union College-Jewish In-
stitute of Religion. Judge Theodore
Levin will be the toastmaster.
Reservations for the dinner can
be made by calling the JNF office,
18414 Wyoming, phone 864-2767.

8n,gagements

Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Siegel,
14260 Vernon, Oak Park, announce
the engagement of their daughter
Judith Ann to Frederic Stephen
Pearson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Pearson, 13358 Kingston, Hunting.
ton Woods. Miss Siegel attends
Wayne State University, where she
is a member of Phi Beta Kappa
and will receive honors in English
at commencement in June. Her fi-
ance is a graduate of Oakland Uni-
versity, and is presently working
toward a doctorate in political sci-
ence at the University of Michigan.
An Aug. 7 wedding is planned. -
* * *
The announcement of the en-
gagement of Rose Rita Farkas to
Morris Margulies in last week's
paper carried a regrettable typo-
graphical error. Miss Farkas is the
daughter of Mrs. Lillian Farkas,
10645 Kensington, Southfield, and
the late Mr. Irving Farkas. Her
fiance is the son of Mrs. Minnie
Margulies, 18240 Ohio, and the late
Mr. Alex Margulies.

Flint to Send Aged
BY POPULAR DEMAND !
to Detroit Home

An agreement for admission of
Jewish aged from Flint to the De-
troit Jewish Home for Aged was
announced by Irving J. Geisser,
executive director of the Flint Jew-
ish Community Council.
He made that announcement as
part of his annual report for 1965.
In that report, he noted also that
the 1965 Flint United Jewish Ap-
peal had raised $211,000. That
amount, he said, was "the second
highest total in our history, ex-
ceeded only _ by the 1948 cam-
paign."
The council, he stated, had in-
vestigated the increasing needs for
care of the Jewish aged and has
found that "our community was
just not large enough, even on a
regional basis, to build a Jewish
home for the aged."
Consequently, he reported, the
agreement with the Jewish Home
for the Aged will fill that badly
needed service.

.
ED BURG

Now Booking - •

and His Orchestra

Good Music
for All Occasions

LI 4-9278

Max Schrut

MUSIC! ENTERTAINMENT!

For Good Photographs
and Prompt Service
Call Me at

SAINURY
WOOLF

Weddings - Bar Mitzvahs

AND HIS ORCHESTRA

UN 3-6501


If No Answer Call DI 1-6847

BLAIR STUDIO

We Come to Your Home
With Samples

TY 5.8805

UN 4-6845

. . The Greatest for
House parties, confirmations, weddings ...

artin

626-9662

Rosins

Oavicl Overton

EA 1-0239

CLEANING

Expert cleaning wall to wall carpets & furniture in your home. Free moth
proofing. Pick up carpeting & relay elsewhere. 20 years experience.

IUIN 4-6203

BENNIE or SAM

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan