illyraKanarekEngaged toEdwardGaryShapiro 41•1=.4 ■ 0 ■ 1111...1111111.411111111.0MOO ■ 0.1111.1.0•Mi1111•1•1•0.11 ■ 04X eiVfy Oa SzeAt- Bresler--Stahl IfTedding Planned for fa /wag MESSAGE OF ISRAEL Time: 8 a.m. Sunday Station: WXYZ Feature: "The God Who Prom- ises," the third in a four part ser- ies in the month of June on the overall theme "The Radical Theo- logy of Genesis." Rabbi Byron T. Rubenstein of Temple Israel, West- port, Conn. is guest speaker on the series. * * MISS MYRA KANAREK HIGHLIGHTS Time: 9:45 a.m. Sunday Station: Channel 2 And Time: 9:15 a.m. Sunday Station: WJBK Feature: "Emphasis on Youth," a series of four programs in which the Jewish community looks at its youth. Hostess for the series is Mrs. Lewis Grossman, chairman of the broadcasting committee of the Jewish Community C o u n c i 1. This episode will view the work of The Detroit trustees of Belle- teens in the volunteer candy strip- faire Treatment Center in Cleve- ers program at Sinai Hospital; land — Samuel W. Leib, Arnold members of the Bnai Brith Youth Organizations, represented by Faudman, Mrs Richard Victor, vice president of Isadore Winkel Detroit AZA Council; and Nancy man and Mrs. Zeldner, tutoring co-ordinator and Samuel S. Aaron member of the Jewish Community — invite the com- Center youth leadership organiza- munity to honor tion, who will discuss the current Maurice A. Eng- tutoring program by the Davison gass 8:30 p.m. School by her group, with Mrs. Tuesday at the Jane Lett, teacher, co-ordinator of Town and Coun- that school. try Club. * * * Enggass h a s CHAPEL HOUR served Bellefaire as a trustee for Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday the past 35 years Station: WJR and has g iv en Feature: "A Tribute to Sholom service to the Aleichem" on the occasion of the cause of treat- 50th anniversary of his death. How- m e n t for emo- Enggass ard Da Silva and company will tionally disturbed children. present the stories. "The Boy in the Doorway" film * * * on Bellefaire will be shown, with ETERNAL LIGHT RADIO Mrs. Betty MintZ, vice president of Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday Bellefaire, to narrate. Refresh- Station: WWJ ments will be served. Feature: "The Role and Nature For information, call Mrs. Aaron, 862-5543, or Mrs. Winkelman, 863- of Dreams and Visions," is a part 8998. There will be no solicitation of the annual summer series "Words We Live By." The 1966 of funds. summer series is entitled "Dreams and Visions in the Bible." This epi- Israeli Professionals sode will deal with the meaning of the word "vision," implying ethical Being Lured Aboard behavior. Mark Van Doren and HAIFA (JTA) — Six hundred Maurice Samuel will carry on their trained professionals leave Israel radio conversations for the 14th every year, and only about 40 per consecutive year. cent of them return here, Alexand- er Goldberg, president of Technion, the Israeli Institute of Technology, Grants to Send Leaders declared here. to Relations Workshops Addressing a round-table forum Tuition grants totaling $3,000 of students Sunday night, Goldberg will enable 43 teachers, school ad- said that 300 Technion graduates ministrators and community' lead- are now working in the Untied ers to attend human relations States, most of them graduates of workshops to be held in Michigan the Technion's faculty of electri- universities this summer. cal engineering. Mrs. Shirley Shapiro of Hartwell The main reason for the emi- gration, he declared, is due to Ave., a teacher at Henry Ford the fact that only 46 per cent High School, was among the group of the electrical engineering presented with the grants at a graduates have found employ- Scholarship Awards Tea sponsored ment in Israel, and that these by the Detroit Round Table of the are being employed in Israel as National Conference of Christians technicians, not as engineers. and Jews. The Helen DeRoy Foundation, "There is no coordination," he told the students, "between de- Harrison Jules Louis Frank and velopment of Israeli industry Leon Harrison Frank Memorial Corp., Sigmund and Sophie Rohlik and Technion." Data revealed at the forum Foundation and Mrs. Joseph B. showed that 5,500 Israeli profes- Schlotman were among the major sionals with academic training are contributors to the fund which now working abroad, 1,500 of them provides the tuition scholarships. being engineering graduates from Noted Portrait Painter Technion. B. S. Marks, a prominent 19th He who follows his own advice century British-Jewish artist, was must take the consequences. a leading portrait painter of the —Spanish Proverb British royal family. Maurice Enggass to Be Honored for Belief sire Service - Gordon, received an honorary doc- Dean Allen Jackson of Morning- torate from his alma mater, He- side College. brew Union College, at commence- ment ceremonies recently. Rabbi FOR THE BEST IN MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT Gordon, whose brother, Lou, is the Detroit broadcaster, is spiritual leader of Mount Sinai T e in p 1 e, And His Orchestra Sioux City, Ia. At a special temple DI 1-1609 service in his honor, greetings were extended by Msgr. Newman Flanagan of the Catholic Diocese, Rev. Richard Pearson, president of SAM EMMER LEATHER GOODS' BY POPULAR DEMAND ! HEAR OUR VOICE Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Kanarek of San Juan Dr. announce the engage- ment of their daughter Myra Flor- ence to Edward Gary Shapiro, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Shapiro of Cortland Ave. The future bridegroom is a grad- uate of Wayne State University, where he is currently attending graduate school. He is an alumnus of Tau Epsilon Phi Fraternity. An Aug. 28 wedding is planned. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, June 17, 1966-27 Rabbi Albert A. Gordon son of Mrs. Anna Gordon of San- ta Maria St. and the late Abraham the Ministerial Association and • This Week's Radio and Television Programs Time: 11:30 p.m. Sunday Station: WCAR Feature: "Jan Peerce Singing More Yiddish Folk Songs" with an orchestra conducted by Abraham Ellstein. Cantor Harold Orbach, host of the series, will comment on the renditions to be heard. * * Rabbi A. Gordon Honored • HAND BAGS • BRIEF CASES • BILLFOLDS • LUGGAGE • REPAIRING Now Booking — MISS . ANDREA BRESLER At a dinner party, the engage- ment of Andrea Michele Bresler, daughter of Mrs. Sol Bresler, 23561 Beverly, Oak Park, and the late Mr. Bresler, was announced by her mother. The future bridegroom is Allan Edward Stahl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stahl of Beverly Ave. Oak Park. A January wedding is planned by the couple. Lelands-Fords Battle Depicted in Nei.v WSU Book Much discussion is certain to be aroused by the biographical sketch of Henry M. Leland, published by Wayne State University under the title "Master of Precision." It was written by Mrs. Wilfred C. (Ottilie 1VI.) Leland, widow of Henry M. Leland's son, with Minnie Dubbs Milibrook, a social worker and a teacher in Detroit and in Grosse Ile. The introduction is by Allan Nevins and Frank E. Hill. This is the first time that the story of the creator of the Cadillac and Lincoln cars is told in a large- sized volume. Offered here is a de- tailed account of the litigation be-. tween the Lelands and the Fords. Roles as attorneys were played by the late Leo M. Butzel and by Henry Gallagher. There are many historical details regarding the battles over the ac- quisition of the Lincoln by the Fords. The court action is interest- ing. And there is this noteworthy comment: "Senator James Couzens made a speech in Philadelphia on Jan. 28, 1923, which now makes strange reading. Couzens invested a few thousands in the Ford Motor Co. and came out with many millions. But in his speech he stressed the fact that the Lelands had invested so little of their own money and made such a great profit. He ques tioned the salaries paid the Le- lands. 'Now the reason I am point- ing this out is to try to indicate to you that public officers in any political subdivision anyWhere in the United States could not pull a thing like this; in fact they would not have the temerity to try it.' Senator Couzens shouted that there were possible grounds for criminal proceedings. But the Lelands had not been public officers, they were private businessmen with a govern- ment contract. At the end of the war when the contract had been terminated, their agreements had been arrived at re a d i l y and openly." The tenor of the story becomes evident, and the many conflicts that were involved combine to pro- vide details about one of the most interesting court battles in Detroit. Solving Health Problem According to UNICEF, children in the underveloped countries are getting shortchanged in mental de- velopment because of insufficient protein. Their responses are not the same as those of healthy chil- dren and they may never be . . . 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