Jerry A. _i4ppel Takes : Lesley Appleton asBrid e MRS. JERRY APPEL Lesley Barbara Appleton be- came the bride of Jerry A. Appel in a recent ceremony at Cong. Shaarey Zedek. The bride wore a gown of peau de soie trimmed with Alencon lace 'and seed pearls with a matching coat and chapel train. She was attended by her sisters Wendy and Janis Appleton and Lorene .Appel rand Patti Oppenheim. The ushers were Maurice Gott- lieb, David Fried, Samuel Appel, : Lyle Sumner, David Sumner, Gary Oppenheim, David Apple- ton and Ron Coden. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Norman M. Appleton of Kenwood Ave., Oak Park, and Mr. and Mrs. William Appel of Shrews- bury Rd. Following their wedding trip, the couple will make their home in Kansas City. Criterion Club to Dance at Yam Kippur's Close The Criterion Club, organization for single adults, will hold a Yom Kippur Night Ball Sept 24 at Cong. Beth Hillel. The public will be wel- come. Larry and his Seven Sounds will provide the music for dancing ; with a floor show, refreshments, social mixers, favors and prizes also fea- tured. The season's first issue of the Criterion publication, The Pace Setter, will be distributed during intermission. 0114••••••••••0111•000000••••••••••••••••••••••• 11001116 • • Friday, September 16, 1966-35 • THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 1 4 THE NEW Strong Expose of Nazi Crimes • • in 'Landscape in Concrete' • • • • Jakov Lind was a mere child of 11 when the Nazis came to his na- tive Vienna in 1938. He survived the holocaust as a refugee in Hol- land, later settling in England. He did gather enough material to pro- vide him with knowledge to be able to interpret the Nazi mind and to expose the cruelty of the perverted in powerful fashion. He did just that in his first novel, "Soul of Wood, and he does it now in his newest work, "Land- scape in Concrete," published by Grove Press (80 University Place, NY3) In a splendid translation from the German by Ralph Manheim, the new novel introduces Nazis and their collaborators, cruelty and fail- ure to acknowledge the human ele- ment. Homosexuality among some Ger- man officers plays a role in this story which is filled with the ter- ror that accompanies war. The hero of the novel, who stems from a family of silver- and gold-smiths, cold-bloodedly mur- ders innocent people. He comes to Norway, after fleeing from the Russian front, begins anew to' search for his regiment, and in the process of his wandering meets a Quisling, is ordered to kill and does it, and later, when he meets up with his girl friend, is assured by her: "You worry your head about that? If you were ordered to, you're not responsi- ble". The element of inhumanity is covered in powerful fashion in this splendid work. Lind exposes the cruelty of homosexual Germans, the indecency of Norwegian Quislings, the bar- barity against human beings, not Berent-Lupiloff Rites Held at Temple _Israel MRS. MELVYN BERENT " At a recent candlelight cere- mony at Temple Israel, Barbara Faith. Lupiloff became the bride of Melvyn Berent. Rabbis M. Robert Syme and Jacob E. Segal offici- To Our Many ated. Parents of the couple are Mr. Friends and and Mrs. Harold Lupiloff of Briar Customers Dr., Oak Park, and Dr. and Mrs. Louis Berent of Sherfield Pl., Southfield. May The bride wore an Empire gown with the bodice of re-embroidered Alencon lace. encrusted with pearls and crystals and a 'skirt of peau de JULES PASSERMAN soie. A shoulder-length mantilla of matching • lace was worn as the Your Neighborhood Pharmacist bridal headpiece. Serving as matron of honor was her sister, 1V11- s. Harvey Rose. Maid of honor was Andrea Gilbert. Bridesmaids included Mrs. Paul Berent, Ellen Krinsky, Marlene Lupiloff and Ronna Berke. Paul Berent served his brother , . as best man. Ushers included And The Staff at Harvey Rose, Joel Schavrien, Rod- ney Getz, Marc Firestone and Howard Lupiloff, brother of the LINCOLN AT COOLIDGE bride. LI 3-7847 25901 COOLIDGE After a honeymoon in New York, PAY ALL UTILITY . BILLS HERE ! , the couple will live in Oak Park. You Be Blessed With a Good Year LINCOLN DRUGS JIM ®O •--,. .,. The New 1 Tent Dress N $26 dramatic! Our new wool jersey .r tent dress in black •. 4 « with . white. Sizes .-- • • • • :2;.raii. M 4. 11 -.A • • • • • . •-:i 4s --;:s4. • • ".. • • • : • : • • • • • • • • • • • - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Juliet Charge Security Charge Michigan Bankard • • : • I I : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Jerome Eldens Honored • • • The Lloyd Eldens of Pacific Pali- sades, Calif., Paul Eldens of Wash- ington, D.C., and Sandorf J. Eldens of Ann Arbor, the children of Mr. and Mrs. Jerome J. Elden, 19180 Appleton, honored their parents with a champagne dinner in cele- bration of their 50th wedding an- niversary Sunday at the Rubaiyat Continental Restaurant, Ann Arbor. Mrs. Elden is the former Blanche Sandorf of Bay City. Mr. and Mrs. Elden were married in Detroit and have been residents of the city for 54 years. Mr. Elden, now re- tired, was former vice president of the original Linda Lee Shops. The Eldens' five grandchildren and great-children and great- grandson visited them for the event. • • : • 6 to 12. • • : • • • • • • • • • • • • • ..., f,' •4 . Deliciously • • on 50th Anniversary SUNDAY September 18th Only • • • • • • Helen Lynn Wirt and Robert Gary Lee were married by Rabbi Jossef Kratzenstein of Temple Is- rael, Saginaw, recently at the Hotel Bancroft. They are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wirt of Saginaw and Mr. and Mrs. Norman Lee of Santa Barbara Ave. The bride's gown was fashioned of.tiros de Londres with sleeveless bodice and modified bell skirt. A matching full-length coat with back shoulder and neckline detail of blitterfly bows with seed pearl knots swept into a tri-panel ca- thedral train. A floor-length man- tilla of Alencon lace and French illusion complemented her gown, and she carried a lace • and tulle fan, topped with a cluster arrange- ment of butterfly orchids and Stephanotis, centered with an or- chid. Bridal attendants were Mrs. David Berent of Detroit, matron of honor, and Linda Pasick, Linda Surath, Rhonda Cash of Midland, Judy Shapiro of • Houston, Tex., Linda Schwartz of Toledo, and Mrs. Richard Shell of Detroit, bridesmaids. Best ,man was Dr. Martin Lee of Dansville. Pa., brother of the bridegroom. Another brother, Dr. Lawrence Lee of Ann Arbor, and Stephan Wirt, brother of the bride, were groomsmen along with Ralph Pittle of Orange, N.J., Daniel Stew_ art and Daniel Silver, both of De- troit, and Kenneth Silk of Ann Arbor. Guests were seated by George Economy, Joel Bennett and David Drachler, all of Detroit. The newlyweds will live in Ann Arbor. • • • • • • • • ..;:;:, ,..1.0:...,. • • • • MRS. ROBERT LEE : HOLIDAY GREETINGS Lee illarfies • • He len Iri r t in Saginaw 4,- • • • • • • • • • Robe rt Green-8 Center Only! Greenfield/8 Mile Rd. Suburban Jews alone, the loss of pride and • self-respect in the German proc- : • esses o' the last war. • "Landscape in Concrete" adds • immensely to the literary reputa- •• tion of Jakov Lind. Once again he • emerges as a powerful writer and • an able evaluator of the Nazi mind • • and the Germ an crimes. Fall Lipreading Classes Adults may now enroll for fall classes in lipreading and auditory training at the Detroit Hearing Center, a United Community Serv- ices-United Foundation agenc y. Classes will meet once weekly for 10 weeks beginning Sept. 19. Call FA 1-1436 for information about enrollment and registration. 1315T • itP1 • TOR VIISHIS:1-1 5727 I a • : i • : • • i - • • • • • • • • • • • • SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 18 ONLY! • • • • • • • One Day Sale! • • • • •, • Sportswear Sale! Very Famous Maker! One- • : :day only! Angora cardigans 7-- Pu 1 I ove rs --- • • • • d -cable stitch Pant tops. Ripple stitch and • • • • • cardigans Wool slim — A-line -- stitched • • • • • pleated skirts—Wool slacks. • • • • • 0 • $19 . Monday — $10 • • •• • • to • : • • • • • • • • • • • • SUNDAY ONLY! EXACTLY 1 PRICE. - • • • SUNDAY $5 TO $9.50 Green-8 Shopping Center, Greenfield/West 8 Mile p; m. Mon., Thurs., Fri., and Sat. til 9, Shop Sunday 12 to 5 p.m.. - • • : • • • • • • • ° •••••••••••••••••••e•e•••••••••••••••••••••e