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June 17, 1966 - Image 24

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-06-17

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
24—Friday, June 17, 1966

Mr., Mrs. Eliot Fuller
Honeymoon in Cdndda

Hymn Dedicated to Rabbi Adler
Set for Hillel Concert on June 23

Hillel Day School Founders Day
Chairman Saul Waldman an-
nounced the program of the June
23 Hillel Founders Day Concert
will include a
special prayer,
"Hymn to Learn-
ing," chanted by
tenor Jan Peerce
and dedicated to
the memory of
Rabbi Morris
Adler.
Set for 8:30
p.m. at the Ford
Auditorium, t h e
Waldman
concert is a trib-
ute to Mrs. Emma Schaver, hon-

MRS. ELIOT FULLER

Jeanette Susan Wexler, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. David L. Wexler,
1316 Roselawn, became the bride
of ,Eliot Marvin Fuller, son of Mrs.
Jeati Fuller, 25425 Catalina, and
Mrs. Harold Fuller of Van Nuys,
Calif. The ceremony took place
Wednesday at Mayfair Caterers
With Rabbi Gorrelick officiating.
The bride wore a gown of re-
embroidered Alencon lace with
pearl and crystal beading accent-
ing lifted waist-chapel sleeves
and removable train. She carried
a cascade of carnations and
roses with an orchid at the
center.
Maid of honor was Lorraine
Stern. Bridesmaids were E 11 e n
Fuller, sister of the bride, Lauren
Kretzmer, Rochelle LaBell and
Elaine Friedlander.
Allen Lover was best man, Elliot
Simkans, Fred LaBell and Alan
and Larry Wexler, brothers of the
bride, were ushers.
The couple will honeymoon in
Canada and then reside in Center-
line.

Rothschild Asks for Aid
to French Jewry to Settle
North African Emigres

oring her 45 years of service to the
community. An opera virtuoso in
her own right, Mrs. Schaver will
join Peerce in a duet at the con-
cert.
Also performing in the concert
will be Italo Babini and Gordon
Staples, first cellist and assistant
concert master, respectively, of the
Detroit Symphony Orchestra, and
pianist Rebecca Frohman.
The fifth through eighth grade
choirs of the Hillel Day School will
sing the anthem and a special
opening selection preceding
Peerce.
Concert chairman Sherman Sha-
piro reports that a limited number

Community Council Survey Shows
Greater Jewish Response to City's
Educational Needs, Voting Appeals

Results of a survey conducted
by the Jewish Community Council
in a study of the May 9 vote on
board of education millage and
the community college district—
which resulted in rejection of the
former and "adoption" of the lat-
ter (but without funds to operate
it)—showed that 24 Jewish areas
supported the three educational
proposals on the ballot.
Voters in Jewish neighborhoods
supported both proposals by im-
pressive margins. In these areas,
70 per cent of those who voted
supported the community college
district plan and 65 per cent sup-
ported the millage request. This
compares with citywide figures on
the same two proposals or 51 per
cent and 44.8 per cent respectively.
The "yes" vote in the non-Jewish
comparison neighborhoods was 42
per cent and 36.7 per cent respec-
tively.'
Detroit voters rejected the
board of education millage re-
quest. Only 45.9 per cent of the
voters favored this measure, while
only 36.1 per cent of the voters in
the non-Jewish comparison areas
supported the proposal for a 2.5-
mill increase for operation of De-
troit city schools. However, this
same issue was supported in the
Jewish areas surveyed, where 66.5
per cent of the voters favored the
request. All of the 24 "Jewish pre-
cincts" included in the survey sup-
ported the board of education re-
quest as well as the two com-
munity college issues.
In suggesting that these figures
provide continuing evidence of
traditional Jewish support for the
public school system, the Com-
munity Council report took note
of the impact of the Northern High
School boycott on the Detroit mill-
age proposal. Conceding the like-

Kraizman Announces
Judgeship Candidacy

LAND FOR

Miki/ah

German-Israel Center
for Youth Open in Munich

BY HENRY LEONA17171

1

LEASE
Pill/ Suia

FO R
INTERESTED
PA RTY

?

MUNICH, (JTA)—A West Ger-
man-Israel Youth Center has been
established here to increase un-
derstanding between youth of the
two nations. Sponsors are Alfons
Goppeln, premier of Bavaria; and
the German poet, Erich Kaestner.
It is also planned to establish soon
a West German-Israel Cultural
Center.

4-

of seats are still available for the
program and may be obtained at
the Hillel concert office„ 353-3105.

give is honor, to lose is grief.
—Spanish. Proverb

For the HY Spot

Of Your Affair

Music by

Industrialist to Give
1,000 000 to Technion

Hy Herman

And His Orchestra
(Hy Utchenik)

,

HAIFA (JTA)—Alexander Kon-
off of New York, an industrialist
who has been a member of the
board of governors of Technion,
the Israel Institute of Technology,
and vice president of the American
Technion Society, announced at
the board's annual meeting here
that he is contributing $1,000,000
for the advancement of Technion's
junior technical college and for
the promotion of vocational and
technical training "of the highest
order."
He said he will pay the funds
over a 10-year period, at the rate
of $100,000 annually.
Another highlight at the meet-
ing of the board of governors was
the dedication here of the J. R.
Sensibar sanitary engineering
laboratory. That facility has been
established by the Chicago chapter
of the American Technion Society,
in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Sensibar.
The latter were guests at a recep-
tion marking the dedication.

lihood that the Northern situation
focused greater attention on inner-
city school problems, the report
speculated that some of the events
surrounding the Northern incident
probably had a negative effect in
white neighborhoods. The fact that
the vote in Jewish neighborhoods
remained favorable suggests that
in addition to traditional support
Truth is stranger than fiction.
of public education, there was an — Amer. proverb.
element of understanding of inner
city problems which this vote re-
flected.
A disappointing factor in the
election was the low percentage of
voters who went to the polls on
May 9. City-wide totals show that
only 20 per cent of all registered
voters bothered to vote. 30.3 per
cent of the registered voters in the
non-Jewish comparison areas went
to the polls as compared with an
average of 26.4 per cent for the
24 "Jewish precincts."

Jack J. Kraizman, a practicing
attorney here for 20 years, pres-
ident of Cong. Bnai David, an-
nounced his can-
didacy for the
Recorder's Court
bench at the
Aug. 2 prima-
ries.
A graduate of
the public
schools of Ann
Arbor and the
U n i versity
of Michigan lit-
erary and law
colleges, Kraiz-
man was city at-
torney of Saline,
Mich., from 1938
until he entered
the army in 1943.
He is associat-
Kraizman
ed with the na-
tional state and city bar associa-
tions, is a member of Pisgah
Lodge of Bnai Brith and of
Knights of Pythias.
Ile served as state commander
of the Jewish War Veterans of
Michigan and presently is judge
advocate of JWV Post 230. He
is a former national JWV, judge
advocate.
Kraizman was re-elected Bnai
David president for a second
term two weeks ago.
Mr. and Mrs. Kraizman have
one son, Sidney, a junior at the
University of Michigan.

PARIS (JTA) Baron Guy de
Rothschild, president of the Fonds
Social Juif Unifie, the central fund-
raising body of French Jewry, has
called on the world Jewish com-
munities, especially those in the
United States, to help French
Jews carry the burden of aiding
the North African Jews in this
country.
Addressing the FSJU's general
assembly here, Baron de Roths-
child pointed out that 250,000
North African Jews have emigrated
to France. He reminded world
Jewry that the need for aid to the
North African Jews is a common
responsibility.

Medical Aid in 14 Lands
The Conference on Jewish Ma-
terial Claims Against Germany last
year allocated a total of $423,000
for medical aid projects in 14
different countries.



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