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December 16, 1966 - Image 24

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-12-16

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

Rayna Meckler Weds Mr. Allen Joel Lippitt Silver-NathanII -edding
Dr. Kogan of Argentina Takes Bride, Ruth Jacob to Take Place June 18

MRS. NATALIO KOGAN

MRS. ALLEN LIPPITT

Rayna Meckler, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Meckler of Robson
Ave. recently became the bride of
Dr. Natalio Kogan, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Moses Kogan of Buenos
Aires.
Rabbi Morton Kanter officiated
in an evening ceremony at North-
land Inn.
The bride wore a silk organza
gown with matching full-length
coat, appliqued with lace and
seed pearls.
Preceding the ceremony, the
bride's sister and brother-in-law,
Ruth and Jaime Laredo, performed
a Bach Prelude for violin and
piano.
Mrs. Jerome Shaw served as
bridesmaid, and Mrs. Laredo was
matron of honor.
Dr. Armando Susmano of Chi-
cago was best man. Ushers were
Richard Stannard and Richard
Stannard Jr.
After a honeymoon in Argentina,
the couple will reside on Roslyn
Rd.

Ruth Ann Jacob and Allen Joel
Lippitt were united in marriage
Sunday at the Sheraton-Cadillac
Hotel. Parents of the couple are
Mr. and Mrs. Hiem Jacob, 18107
Wisconsin, and Mr. and Mrs. Mar-
tin Lippitt, 4030 W. 13 Mile,
Royal Oak.
Mrs. Gerald Jacob of Flint
served as maid of honor. David
Lippitt, brother of the bridegroom,
was best man.
After a honeymoon trip to the
•West, the couple will reside in
Albuquerque.

Try and Stop Me

By BENNETT CERF



TAMES GORDON BENNETT, high-living, old tyrannical

owner of the once fabulously successful New York Herald,
was accustomed to having his every whim gratified instant-
er. Arriving for a spot of
...AND THROW
luncheon one day at a
OUT THE
little restaurant in the
BOON DERV
hills above Monte Carlo.
lt
he found the table he
fancied occupied by some
unknown bounders. (A
bounder to Mr. Bennett
was anybody who had the
:
audacity to get in his
way.) He angrily sought
„Wat V
A l
out the owner of the res-
taurant, bought it on the
° 6% 174
spot for $40,000 in cash,
threw every person out
of the place and had his
luncheon in solitary gran-
deur at the table he favored.
Furthermore, when his meal had been finished off with a
couple of snifters of cognac, Bennett casually made a gift of

--
41
4 ■ #

the entire establishment to the waiter who had been lucky

enough to serve him that day. The waiter's name was Ciro,
incidentally, and he used his jackpot to open a restaurant of
his own—Ciro's of Monte Carlo—that in time became more
famous than James Gordon Bennett ever had been.



Herman Kogan, a Chicago spoil-sport who was determined to

reveal the shortcomings of the nation's book publishers, once
sent typed copies of the first two chapters of "War and Peace"
along with an outline of the rest of the novel to ten prominent
houses. Four publishers' readers caught on to the gag, but six
sent polite rejection slips.

*

*

QUICKIES:
Barry Nelson avers that he recently bought a copy of a book
called "The Italians," but had to put it down when his thoughts
began to Rome.
One of the very worst of this season's new TV series (and
that's going some!) drew this conclusive one-sentence brush - off
from a pitiless critic: "There's nothing wrong with this show
that cannot be cured simply by turning off the set."
1966, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate

O

Yeshiva U. Construction

to Total $31 Million in '67

NEW YORK (JTA) — Plans for dinner, which was addressed by
$31,000,000 in construction of new Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff of Con-
facilities by Yeshiva University necticut. Charles H. Silver, former
during the coming year were an- 1 president of the New York City
nounced here Sunday evening by I Board of Education, was guest of
Dr. Samuel Belkin, president, at honor at the event.
the university's 37th annual Hanuka ,
dinner.
Now . . .
Among the expansion projects
to be undertaken this year by the
There Are
university, Dr. Belkin declared,
Two
will be a $5,000,000 Mendel Got- I
Corners
tesman Central University Library;
a $15,000,000, 15-story science cen-
On
ter for the Beller Graduate School I
Livernois
of Science; a $4,500,000 new class-
With
room building for Stern College for
Internationale
Women; a $1,500,000 renovation of
the existing Stern College facility;
Fashions
and $5,000,000 in construction pro-
jects for the Albert Einstein Col-
lege of Medicine.
MISS .MARILYN SILVER
Some 1,000 civic, business and
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall A. Silver, communal leaders attended the
13309 Victoria, Huntington Woods,
announce the engagement of their
x;241
,
daughter Marilyn Carol to John
Stein-Way
the
Music
Goldsmith Nathan, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Aaron Nathan, 26625 York
Rd., Huntington Woods.
& ORCHESTRA
Miss Silver attended Michigan
19301 Livernois nr. 7
State University and Wayne State
EMILY BROWN, Bridal Consultant
University and is presently work-
ing on a masters degree at Wayne.
Her fiance is a graduate of Al-
bion College and Wayne State and
is now a PhD candidate at Wayne.
The couple plans a June 18
"Buy With Confidence"
wedding.

e3, -if.
gigft

DICK STEIN

LI 7-2770

For Your Fine Diamonds and Jewelry

An Ideal Hebrew Teacher

BY SAUL KLEIMAN
An ideal Hebrew teacher must
be observant of the moral, ethical
and religious teachings of the
Tora.
He must be as modest as Moses,
of whom God said: "The man
Moses was very meek above all
men that were on the face of the
earth." (Numbers, 12, 3.)
19th Century Explorer
He must be as patient as Hillel.
Edouard Foa, 19th Centurry The Talmud, Tractate Sabbath,
French-Jewish explorer, was one 30B says: "A person should always
be as patient as Hillel."
of the pioneering explorers who
He must be as dedicated as
opened up central Africa. He was
Rabbi Hiyya, of whom Rabbi
among the first to survey the
French Congo and Dahomey terri- Yehudah Hanassi said: "0, how
great are the deeds of Hiyya."
tories.

Friday, December 16, 1966-25

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

"They spread a knowledge of
Tora very extensively."
(Talmud, Tractate Bava M'tzia,
page 85B.)
He must be as discerning as
Rabbi Johannan ben Zakkai, who
discerned the merits of his five
pre-eminent, disciples (Book of
Ethics, chapter 2: Mishna, 10 to
14), and who saved the nation
from disintegration after the de-
struction of the temple.
He must be as versatile as Rabbi
Tarfon, whom Rabbi Yehudah
Hanassi compared to a heap of
many stones, which i if you will pull
out one stone all of the others
spread out; when a scholar asked
Tarfon to explain one subject, he
explained many, so that the schol-
ar's knowledge was greatly in-
creased (Avot D'Rabbi Nathan,
Chapter 18; Tractate Gittin 67A).
He must be as profound as
Maimonides, "Rambam"; as eluci-
dative as Rashi (Rabbi Sh'lomo
Yitzhaki), the greatest commen-
tator of the Bible and the Talmud;
as zealous as Elija Gaon, the
"Genius of Vilna"; as loving as
Rabbi Abraham Isaak Kook,
chief rabbi of Israel; as proficient
in the Hebrew literature, psychol-
ogy and pedagogics as Prof. Zvi
Sharfstein; and as hospitable as
Patriarch Abraham. He was watch-
ing for passers by and offered
them hospitality, refreshing com-
fort and best food. (Book of Gene-
sis, 18, 1 to 9).

Norman Allan Co.

DI 1-1330

17540 WYOMING

OPEN THURS., FRI. 'TM 9 P.M.

DOES IT or DOESN'T IT

You'll Never Know If The Best Costs More

Unless You Get Our Price.

SEE CEIL OR BEN STOCKER

CARatiOitti,

Party Flower Specialists
Bet.Sussex
15212 W. 7 MILE RD.
a. Whitcomb

ltitit ego . :44 ;, tr,*

345-4383

teteMili

Mau-,Rene, gnc.

Announces a
great opportunity

*Iv



A Collection of Couture
DRESSES

Shragai Refuses to Serve
Agency Aliya Department

JERUSALEM (ZINS) — S. Z.
Shragai of Hapoel Hamizrachi and
Zvi Lourie of Mapam turned down
the announced plan for the reor-
ganization of the Jewish Agency
Executive, rejecting all responsi-
bility for the plan. Under the re-
organization plan, the distribution
of portfolios for members of the
executive would be as follows:
Financial department, A. L. Pin-
cus; Hehalutz department, Zivia
Lubetkin and E. Dobkin; organiza-
tion and information, C. Levanon
and Z. Lurie; aliya, absorption and
economic department, S. Z. Shra-
gai, L. Dultzin and A. Ziegel;
Youth Aliya, I. Artzi; colonization,
R. Weitz; education in Diaspora, I.
Harkavi; religious education, Z.
Bet Aryeh; Keren Hayesod, Dr.
Israel Goldstein and W. Perry;
administration and personnel, I.
Klorman.
The heads of the departments
would serve on the basis of rota-
tion. Shragai declared that he
refuses to serve.

Diomontologists

Gemologists

Daytime, After 5's, Formals

i t

reduced to a fraction of ft
their original prices
For Year End Clearance

UP TO

*),1

e

11/3 OF F

HOURS: 10 to 5 DAILY — SUNDAY BY APPOINTMENT



9re/to and Maurice ectichho

17592 WYOMING

Four Doors South
of Thatcher
Across From Mumford Hi

UN 3-4545
,
r_
41, A-wog. -oa

UN 3-7477 O a

"git

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