Framson- Weiss Vows Isaac Schaver to Wed Susan Weiss to Marry THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, November 4, 1966-23
Planned for December Eve Milikowsky in Israel Mr.RobertHandelsman U-M Heart Expert on Team Reviewing
s, s

Study of Heart Disease in Israel

4s .4ta,

MISS MICHELLE FRAMSON

MISS SUSAN WEISS

MISS EVE MILIKOWSKY

The engagement of Susan Weiss

At a dinner party in Tel Aviv, to Robert Handelsman of Seward
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Framson,
of Houston, announce the engage- the engagement of Eve Milikowsky Ave. was announced at a cock-

ment of their daughter, Michelle
Sandra, to Daniel Sanford Weiss,
on of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin
Weiss, of Pennington Dr.
Miss Framson attends Wayne
State University. Her fiance at-
tends Wayne State Law School. A
December wedding is planned here.

to Isaac Schaver was announced
by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Zeev
Milikowsky of Haifa..
Mr. Schaver is the son of Mrs.
Morris L. Schaver of Ingleside Dr.,
Southfield, and the late Mr.
Schaver.
Miss Milikowsky attended the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
and her fiance is a graduate of
Wayne State University. He served
with the Peace Corps in West
Africa.
The couple is planning to marry
Nov. 24.

Shulman Leaves
USSR; Professor
Was Not Detained

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Prof. Marshall D. Shulnian, son
of Detroiters Mr. and Mrs. Harry
M. Shulman, left Russia safely
Wednesday after charges of spy-
ing were leveled at him by the
Soviet govern- .‘
ment newspaper
Izvestia.
Dr. Shulman,
associate director
of Harvard Uni-
versity's Russian
research center,
was on a visit to
Russia with his
wife Colette
when Izvestia
made the charge Shulman
that he had used blackmail and
threats to try to get a Soviet stu-
dent studying at Harvard to defect
to the United States.
Monday night, the Harry Shul-
mans told The Jewish News, they
received a telegram from the
State Department advising them
that "our embassy in Moscow
reports he (Marshall) has not-
repeat—NOT been charged with
any crime and plans to depart
Moscow Nov. 2." The telegram
was signed by James W. Pratt,
acting country director of Soviet
Union affairs, Department of
State.
Prof. Shulman, who had been
in Moscow since Oct. 3, said his
visit was "part of a long-term
effort in the field of disarmament
and arms control, as a member
of the study group under the
American Academy of Arts and
Sciences."
A graduate of the University of
Michigan in 1937, Dr. Shulman, 50,
worked in psychological warfare
in the China and India-Burma
theaters during World War II. He
received his doctorate at Columbia
University with a study of Soviet
press controls.
Special assistant to Secretary
of State Dean Acheson, he wrote
most of President Truman's
1951 speech that opened the
Japanese Peace Conference in San
Francisco. He has held his Har-
vard post since 1954.

MAURICE A. BETMAN, agent
for Northwestern Mutual, recently
attended a one-week seminar con-
ducted by Lawrence Knecht, of
Cleveland on the "Powers of Es-
tate Analysis," and has become a
Powers System Analyst.

tail party at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney
Awerbuck of Carol Ave.
Miss Weiss, the daughter of the
late Michael Weiss, is studying to
be a medical technician. Her
fiance, a senior at Wayne State
University, is the son of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Handelsman.
A July wedding is planned.

Judge .Wise Lauds
Colleague; Urges
Aid for Yeshivah

Judge John M. Wise, In a state-
ment issued this week, urged com-
munity-wide support for the Busi-
nessmen's Council dinner for Ye-
shivath Beth Yehuda, to be held
Nov. 20 at Cobo Hall.
Commending the selection of
Judge Victor Baum to be honored
that night, Judge Wise said:
"When my good friends, Daniel
Laven and David Goldberg, re-
quested that I accept the chair-
manship of an affair, I hesitated.
However, on being informed it
was for Yeshivath Beth Yehudah
and that the guest of honor was
to be my colleague, Judge Victor
J. Baum, I readily acepted.
"The Businessmen's Council was
founded to promote, as an object
of primary importance, the con-
tinuance of the Beth Yehudah
Schools for the general diffusion
of knowledge, and particularly
provide for the traditional educa-
tion of our youth.
"As the soil, however rich it
may be, cannot be productive
without culture, so the mind with-
out cultivation can never produce
good fruit.
"I am honored to be the gen-
eral chairman of the Business-
men's Council of Beth Yehudah
School's annual dinner to be held
Sunday, Nov. 20, at Cobo Hall."

Prof. Felix E. Moore of the Uni-
versity of Michigan is on a four-
man team of American heart ex-
perts presently in Israel to review
a joint Israeli-American study on
heart disease.
The study of 10,000 Israeli male
public servants age 40 and up
should prove of great value in de-
termining the causes of heart
disease, Prof. Moore reported in
News From Israel.
The project involves the National
Heart Institute of Bethesda, the
Hadassah Medical Organization in
Israel and the Israel Ministry of
Health.
"If the Israelis," Prof. Moore
says, "can find any single group
— for example, the Yemenites—
suffering less from heart disease
than another group, such as the
European-born, and can find out
the reason, they will have made
a major contribution to our
knowledge."
The study is considered unique
because the country has a divers-
ity of population which is not found
in American projects.
Those being studied have a wide
range of food habits, cultural pat-
terns, work habits, ethnic back-
grounds, social and economic

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comparatively small and definable
area with the same climates. This
eliminates the difficulties caused
by major geographical differences
encountered in studies in America.

LEONARD BERNSTEIN will
leave the New York Philharmonic
where he is director at the end of
the 1968-69 season, it was an-
nounced at a press conference
Wednesday. Bernstein will continue
to be associated with the orchestra
as laureate conductor, a post and
title created especially for him.
Bernstein, 48, said he wants to
concentrate more on composing.

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Holiday Seal Campaign
in Its 60th Season

Between the dates of Nov. 21
and Dec. 31 the Tuberculosis and
Health Society will conduct its cam-
paign, bringing seals and a message
into 900,000 homes and Detroit
area firms.
Intensified anti-TB measures —
which ultimately can lead to eradi-
cation — are the first big job for
the Holiday Seal fund in 1967.
The more than 1,500 new cases of
communicable TB discovered this
year in Wayne County will impose
the staggering task of protective
services to more than 10,000 per-
sons who are contacts of the new
cases or are at high risk of re-
activation.
Case-finding by tuberculin test
and chest X-ray is being acceler-
ated. Social problems in the fam-
ilies stricken will require attention,
and rehabilitation of the growing
number of unskilled victims points
up a challenge.
TB is on the increase in many
parts of the U.S. as well as in
Wayne County.
Respiratory Diseases also chal-
lenge to new effort with Holiday
Seal funds. We are learning
more about them, with resultant
new services directly for sufferers.

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