22—Friday, January 20, 1967
Marsha WhiteEngaged
to Jeffrey Hale Miro
MISS MARSHA WHITE
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard White of
Bradford Lane, Southfield, an-
nounce the engagement of their
daughter Marsha Beth to Jeffrey
Hale Miro, son of Mr. and Mrs.
David Miro of Strathcona Dr.
The bride-elect attended the
London School of Economics and
is a senior at the University of
Michigan. Her fiance was grad-
uated from Cornell University and
is a senior at the University of
Michigan's law school.
A May wedding is planned.
Education Crisis Is Topic
at Parents Group Meeting
Parents Without Partners will
meet 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Jewish Center. Otis A. Crosby,
of the Detroit Board of Education
will speak on "Crisis in Educa-
tion."
Parents Without Partners meet-
ings are open to divorced or
widowed parents under age 55.
There is a nominal charge for non-
members. For information, call
Bernice Robbins, president, KE
8-0038.
S
Swig
Sauce Is
Meatless
fliechayele,
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Judge Baum to Air
Problem for Seniors
Catholic Parishioners at Bnai Brith Series
Told to Fight Hatred The Metropolitan Detroit Bnai
Brith Men's and Women's Coun-
in Pamphlet Series
cils, in conjunction with Kaidan
A unique series of pamphlets,
published under the auspicies of
The John XXIII Center of Ford-
ham University, is aimed at Catho-
lic parishioners across the country
and designed to attack "the evil
of anti-Semitism as a thought as
well as an act."
The pamphlets, called the "Spir-
ititual Heritage Series," represents
an attempt to implement the Vati-
can Declaration on Non-Christian
Religions at it applies to Jews.
Illustrated with color reproduc-
tions of religious and other art
works, they discuss the spiritual
bonds between Jews and Chris-
tians, the deicide charge and per-
secution of Jews by "the ancient
church," through the Middle Ages
and into modern times. They con-
demn anti-Semitism as "many
times a sin" and urge Catholics to
engage in "brotherly dialogue"
with Jews in order "to learn about
one another as human beings."
The series bears the imprimatur
of Bishop Russel J. McVinney of
Providence, R.I. The Rev. Edward
Flannery, member of the U.S.
Bishops' Secretariat for Catholic-
Jewish Relations and author of
"The Anguish of the Jews," is
editorial director. The editorial ad-
visory board includes Dr. Joseph
Lichten, director of the intercul-
tural affair department of the Anti-
Defamation League of Bnai Brith.
The John XXIII Center has ask-
ed American bishops to endorse
the project and to urge priests and
educators in their diocese to dis-
tribute the pamphlets to their
parishioners.
Bnai Brith's Women
Form Bombay Group
A Bnai Brith Women's group was
established in Bombay, India, and
another is being organized in Salis-
bury, Rhodesia, Mrs. Leonard Sims
of Detroit, BBW international co-
ordinator, announced.
Creation of the new chapters
brings to 14 the number of new
Bnai frith Women groups that
went into operation in various parts
of the world during the past year,
Mrs. Sims said. Included are six
in Israel, three in Great Britain,
two in continental Europe and one
in Australia.
Mrs. Sims, who recently met in
London with the presidents of Bnai
Brith Women groups of England
and Australia, said that overseas
programs like those of BBW in
North America are concentrated
in the areas of Jewish education,
human rights and community serv-
ice with variations springing from
different local needs and tradition.
"Molders of the Jewish Mind"
Published by Bnai Brith
Who else
But Chef
BoyitilINDee
Could Create
Such Fluor?
Deep, rich, "simmered all-
day" flavor! Delicious toma-
toes, onions and spices, en-
riched with the Italian touch
of pure olive oil. Great with
spaghetti, omelets, fish—
meat loaf, tool
HAVE SOME SOON!
The lives, philosophies and teach-
ings of 10 great Jewish personali-
ties; from Moses of Biblical times
to the 20th Century's Brandeis, are
presented in "Molders of the Jew-
ish Mind," a new Bnai Brith book
published in paperback this week.
The. 245-page book contains selec-
tions from the first two volumes of
the Bnai Brith Great Book Series.
The subjects and the contem-
porary scholars who write - inter-
pretively about them, include Moses
by Dr. Harry M. Orlinsky, Akiba by
Rabbi Louis Finkelstein, Rashi by
Dr. Samuel M. Blumenfeld. Moses
Maimonides by Prof. Salo W. Baron
and "The Baal Shem Tov" by Rab-
bi Louis I. Newman, Moses Men-
delssohn by Rabbi Alfred Jospe,
Sholom Aleichem by Louis Fal-
stein, Hayyim Nahman Bialik by
M. Z. Frank, Theodor Herzi by
Marvin Lowenthal and Louis D.
Brandeis by Prof. Milton R. Kon-
vitz.
ORT Schools' Students
A total of 46,000 students were
enrolled last year in institutions
of the Organization for Rehabilita-
tion through Training (ORT) in
Israel, France, North Africa and
other European and Asian coun-
tries.
Lodge and Chapter, will sponsor
another in their series of "Going
Like Sixty" older
adult programs
1:30 p.m. Sunday
at Cong. Beth Hil-
lel.
T h e program
will be presented
by Cantor Moses
Serensen of Beth
Aaron Synagogue.
T h e committee
for the program
includes Bernard
Panush, president
Judge Baum f the Metropoli-
tan Detroit Bnai Brith Council - Mrs.
David Levine, president of Bnai
Brith Women's Council of Metro-
politan Detroit; Mrs. Joseph Dorf-
man, Leonard Edelman and Morris
Berk. Philip Chapnick and Mrs.
Harry Farber are the presidents
of Keidan Lodge and Chapter.
Bnai Brith Utilizes
Electronic 'Slate' to
Long-Distance Teach
CHICAGO—An electronic "black-
board" that transmits written im-
pulses by telephone is being utilized
by Bnai Brith to teach Hebrew
simultaneously to three separate
classrooms.
One class is in Chicago. The
other two, widely separated, are
more than 100 miles _ away in
Michigan.
At the Chicago College of Jewish
Studies, Dr. David Weinstein illus-
trates his classroom lectures by
jotting Hebrew letters on a trans-
lucent scroll attached to a sensi-
tized telephone transmitter.
Some 40 students in the room—a
Bnai Brith adult study group—see
the Hebrew characters in facsimile
on a projector screen.
So do—at the same moment-
Bnai Brith study groups of 20
persons each in Grand Rapids and
East Lansing.
Dr. Weinstein, who is president
of the Chicago school, speaks to
the classes in Michigan through
"Tele - Lecture," an inter - city
communications technique cre-
ated by the Bell Telephone
System that Bnai Brith has ex-
perimented with for three years
in adult Jewish education dis-
cussion courses.
The 10-week pilot project is
being assisted by a $7,500 grant
from the Department of Health,
Education and W e 1 f a r e. HEW
hopes to learn from the experiment
if the electronic devices can be
used in the teaching of languages„
mathematics and other courses in
which written instruction is essen-
tial.
None of the students in the Grand
Rapids and East Lansing groups,
which are using campus facilities
provided by Michigan State Uni-
versity, has any literacy in He-
brew. Each student's progress will
be gauged in mid-term and final
examinations against the record of
the study club in Chicago.
New 'Son of Covenant'
Room 21'7 at Sinai Hospital turn-
ed into a virtual Bnai Brith "white
house" when the Detroit Women's
Council presidents, Mrs. David Le-
vine, became a mother for the
fourth time Jan. 12.
Mrs. Levine, the former Evelyn
Prinstein, gave birth to a 7-pound-
3-ounce boy, Robert Lawrence,
with hardly a pause in her round
of activities for Bnai Brith.
The council's publicist, Mrs.
Maynard Kalef, reports that the
phone to Mrs. Levine's room is
constantly tied up and suspects
she is sitting with her datebook
in her lap, running committees
from her bed.
The Levines, who live at 29370
Prestwick, Southfield, have plenty
of babysitters for the new addition
(their eldest is 14), with the entire
women's council for godmothers.
Evelyn Siegel to Mary
New Yorker in June
MISS EVELYN SIEGEL
Mr. and Mrs. Harry D. Siegel
of W. Outer Dr. announce the
engagement of their daughter
Evelyn Jane to Jack Charles For-
stadt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Yale
Forstadt of Westbury, N.Y.
Miss Siegel is a senior at the
University of Michigan, where her
fiance is doing graduate work in
actuarial science. The couple plans
a June wedding.
Women's
Chubs
(Continued from Page 19)
UNITED HEBREW SCHOOLS
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY will hold
a paid-up membership petite lunch-
eon and open meeting noon Wednes-
day at the Esther Berman Building.
Mrs. Gertrude Hyams, membership
vice president, states that all new
members- will be honored. Mrs.
Harry Oberstein, chairman of the
day, will review "Everything but
Money" by Sam Levenson. Mrs.
Erwin Friedman, social chairman,
and her committee will prepare and
serve • the lunCheon. Mrs. Isadore
Goren, president of the auxiliary, —
invites all women to attend. Due
are payable at the door.
* *
CLUB 2, PIONEER WOMEN will
hold a Histadrut meeting noon
Wednesday at the Labor Zionist
Institute. Pauline Liberson will
introduce the speaker, Louis Le-
vine. An Israeli movie will be
shown. Friends are welcome. Re-
freshments will be served.
THE LIGHT TOUCH
by
JULES PASSERMAN
Your Neighborhood Pharmacist
Marriages
BERLIN-DRECKMAN: At a re-
cent ceremony at Anschi Israel
Synagogue, Tucson, Dr. Sanford
Herman Berlin, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Berlin, of Charlton
Sq., Southfield, and Diane Dreck-
man, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
T. H. Dreckinan of El Paso, were
united in marriage.
Don't complain when the
coffee is cold. Your wife
may make it hot for you ...
* * *
After all, a honeymoon is
what a man goes on before
working for a new boss . .
* *
Sign in an undertaker's win-
dow: "Pay now, go later."
Music the Stein-Way
DICK STEIN
& ORCHESTRA
LI 7-2770
What some girls want is a
foreign sports car with the
foreign sport still in it . . .
* * *
His wife hasn't changed
much — just his habits, his
clothes, and his friends .. .
YOUR CANDID
ALBUM
FINER
WILL BE
LINCOLN DRUGS
WHEN PHOTOGRAPHED
BY BERNARD H.
WINER
Lincoln at Coolidge
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ORCHESTRA
CALL: LI 7-0896 or LI 5-2737
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