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February 17, 1967 - Image 26

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1967-02-17

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

26.—Friday, February 17, 1967

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Probus Club Awards to Be Presented
to Medical Researcher, Sociologist

Dr. A. Martin Lerner, associate served on the staffs of several
professor of medicine at the hospitals and was a senior assist-
Wayne State University, school of ant surgeon for the U.S. Public
Health Service. Dr. Lerner is a
medicine, and Dr. Eleanor P. Wolf, graduate of Washington Univer-
WSU associate professor of sociol- sity, St. Louis.
ogy and anthropology, will receive
Dr. Wolf, an authority in urban
$500 grants at the annual Probus
Award Dinner Saturday at the sociology, is the author of several
research projects in that field. She
Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel.
recently completed a two - year
The two recipients were selected study on the social impact of urban
by a seven-man committee, three renewal projects with Prof. Charles
from the Detroit community and N. Lebeaux of WSU.
four from the Probus Club. Com-
Joining WSU as a special- in-
mittee members were Judge George
C. Edwards of the U.S. Court of structor in 1945, Dr. Wolf received
Appeals for the Sixth Circuit; her BA and PhD degrees from
Robert Frehse, executive director Wayne State and was named an
of the Detroit Roundtable of Cath- associate professor in 1963. As an
olics, Jews and Protestants; and undergraduate she was associated
Willis F. Woods, director, Detroit with the UAW during its early
organizing period and worked with
Institute of Arts.
the Detroit Housing Commission.
Probus Club members on the
Dr. Wolf was also a profes-
committee were Herbert Kaufman,
Charles Perlman, Martin K. Stein sional intergroup relations
and Circuit Judge John M. Wise. worker, serving as Michigan di-
Arthur J. Rubiner served as non- rector of the Jewish Labor
Voting chairman of the committee. Committee, a community rela-
tions agency.
Dr. Lerner, nationally recog-
In 1959-60 she was a visiting pro-
nized for his research and con-
tributions to the field of virol- fessor at the Merrill-Palmer Insti-
ogy, also serves as an associate tute of Human Development.
in microbiology and pathology at
the WSU school of medicine. Immigration FroM Iran
In addition, he is an associate in
JERUSALEM (ZINS)—Some 302
medicine and pathology, and di- families
— 1,081 persons — immi-
rector of the bacteriology labo- grated into
Israel from Iran in
ratory at Detroit General Hos- 1966, according
an announce-
pital and a consultant at the ment by the aliya to department
of
Veterans Administration Hos- the Jewish Agency. The number
pital, Dearborn.
of olim from the United States
Before coming to WSU in 1963, for the same year is 1,915 as com-
Dr. Lerner was a research associ- pared with 1,985 in 1965. The
ate in the department of biology American olim include a number
at the Massachusetts Institute of of professionals who obtained em-
Technology. He had previously • ployment in their respective fields.

HEBREW SELF-TAUGHT

BY

heart

AHARON ROSEN

cinema

=12 .176

lehv

_pray (m.s.)

meet-pah-lehl

z7'nri7]

kohl-no/1,2h

17iti7 .171

light (noun)

.177

.172

ohr

n'pnr) .173

prayer

was (m.s.)

T

hah-yah

.178

t'fee lah

T • :

-

-rr4

synagogue

more

nr)i' .179

yoh-tehr

understand (m.s.)

p7?

meh-veen

.174

beht k'ne set

-

-

silence

.180

uRtri

she-ket

,

tt•?7,

.175

p!tnirr my.; rirp

nix rz: n vi2L?i7n,
.nininn4

, 4x-

u7tg ,n,7.7y7`1' nininn4

,nizt .•171 n.-)s?

;74171

.r7r7?

:tor/

np.t

int?1 -2-),
nix te!
.r)p47 - ri, nix ri,ri
4t-?
i
V:: ,4trt

.1117t) .....

- •nL••

.? 51.17?

,r1L7'?nr)1?

r) 27i's1
74
PTP. •:"1?
ni'4
?nr.tn '2'2nr)n rirIkt.
ni'pprin

,

Reading material in vocalized Easy Hebrew; and also material for
advanced students may be obtained through your local Hebrew
Organization or by writing to : Brit Ivrit Olamit, P.O.B. 7111,
Jerusalem, Israel,

Published

by Brit Ivrit

ewry

Olunit

Mizrachi Sending
Israel Kosher
CARE Packages

Gelberg-Berlin Vows
to Be Spoken in June

(9n Sze Jr
i

Mizrachi-Hapoel Hamizrachi an-
nounced this week that CARE
packages are being sent through
the local office to needy families
in Israel.
The $12 kosher for Passover
packages include a variety of food
products especially selected to pro-
vide the necessities for the needy
thus to be aided.
CARE packages may be order-,
ed from the Mizrachi office at
17596 Wyoming.

This Week's Radio and
Television Programs

IN CONTACT

Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday.
Station: WJR
Feature: William Cahalan, Wayne
County prosecutor - Clarence Fisch-
er, director of social services, Luth-
eran Children's Friend Society; and
Fr. Ronald L. Heidelberger, Cath-
olic Charities, will discuss "Youth
and Drugs" with Hal Youngblood,
host.
• * *
HEAR OUR VOICE
Time: 11:30 a.m. Sunday
Station: WCAR
Feature: "The Style of the Mod-
ern Synagogue" is the first in a
new series on "Living Music of
the Synagogue." Cantor Arthur
Wolfson of Temple manu-El of
New York City will render selec-
tions. (See story)
* * *

HIGHLIGHTS

Time: 9:45 a.m. Sunday
Station: Channel 2
and
Time: 9:15 a.m. Sunday
Station: WJBK
Feature: "Four Disputes — the
Evolution of a Faith" continues
with "Pharisees and Sadducees."
A story of Hillel, comparing his
liberal approach to the more literal
interpretation by the Sadducees,
is presented in a dramatic vingette
written by Penina Frankel and
portrayed by members of Center
Theater of the Jewish Center, Leon-
ard Bradley, Barry Levine and
Gene Rosenberg. The host of the
series, Rabbi Morton M. Kanter,
associate rabbi of Temple Beth El
and formerly an instructor of phi-
losophy at Adelphi College, inter-
prets the story as well as the
relevance of the two approaches
to the issues faced today.
* * *
MESSAGE OF ISRAEL
Time: 8 a.m. Sunday
Station: WXYZ
Feature: Rabbi Maurice N. Eisen-
drath, president of the Union of
American Hebrew Congregations,
will speak on "To Pursue Peace."
*
*

ETERNAL LIGHT

Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday
Station: WWJ
Feature: "The Bible Blueprint of
the Holy Land" is the last of a
series of biblical dramas. This one
is a drama of the pursuing of Isra-
el's tomorrow with the help of yes-
terday, guided by the Bible blue-
print of the Holy Land.

* * *

Synagogue Music
Featured in Series

na

t);?.to ra5

;1-0=1.11 ■ 11.0.1011.0• ■ 0 4 ■ 011=1.0•111•••• ■■ 111101.041 ■ 0•11•10.0.1110.01/

"Hear Our Voice" begins a new
series "Living Music of the Syna-
gogue" with "The Style of the
Modern Synagogue" 11:30 p m
Sunday on station WCAR, pres-
ented by Cantor Harold Orbach
of Temple Israel and produced
by the Jewish Community Council
of Detroit.
The music of the modern syna-
gogue is exemplified in selections
by Cantor Arthur Wolfson of
Temple Emanu-El of New York
City. Cantor Wolfson is a graduate
of Temple. University and the
Hebrew Union College—Jewish
Institute of Religion.
In 1949 he was called to serve
at Emanu-El. He is a member of
the faculty of the Hebrew Union
College and has been a visiting
lecturer at Union Theological
Seminary (Protestant). Cantor
Wolfson is past president of the
American Conference of Cantors
and the Jewish Music Forum.
The liturgical settings will be
discussed by Cantor Orbach.

Auto Licenses
New York was the first state to
license motor vehicles. In 1901
that state sold automobile license
plates at a cost of one dollar,
which added $954 to the state
treasury.

Pittsburgh Ordinance
Would Bar Job Bias

MISS MARIE GELBERG

Mr. and Mrs. Eddy Gelberg,
20291 Mansfield, announce the en-
gagement of their daughter Marie
Ann to Gerald Berlin, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Berlin, 460 W.
Outer Dr.
Miss Gelberg attended Wayne
State University. Her fiance, a
graduate of the University of
Michigan, is affiliated with Lamda
Omicron Gamma Fraternity at the
College of Osteopathic Medicine
and Surgery in Des Moines.
A June wedding is planned.

Business
Brevities

DAVID S. BURNSTEIN of Sun
Life Assurance Co. of Canada, has
been named man of the month for
January and was the leader in
sales for the -state of Michigan.

Radio Course in Hebrew
to Be Broadcast in NY

NEW YORK—"Let's Talk Heb-
rew" is the title of a radio course
for beginners to be presented over
New York station WEVD by the
Tarbuth Foundation for the Ad-
vancement of Hebrew Culture in
America.
The course will be offered in
cooperation with the department
of education and culture of the
Jewish Agency as a public service
of station WEVD.
Reuven Bar-Seve r, linguist,
author and broadcaster of Hebrew
instruction for new immigrants in
Israel over radio Kol Yisrael in
Jerusalem, will conduct the course.
Preparations are under way to
make tape transcripts of the
course available to other radio sta-
tions throughout the country.

JOCELYN

AND HER GYPSIES

Authentic Gypsy Orchestra
Strolling Violins or Concert Group
Floor Show and Dance

GR 4-7638

PITTSBURGH (JTA) — A com-
prehensive ordinance designed to
streamline this city's anti-discrimi-
nation regulations and bring them
into conformity with state laws,
has been introduced to City Coun-
cil here.
The measure, proposed by the
Mayor's Commission on Human
Relations, covers employment
practices, housing, and public ac-
commodation and increases penal-
ties for violations. Employers who
are required to conform to the
regulations are defined as "any-
one who hires five or more per-
sons," rather than "one who hires
more than five persons," as at
present.
The new regulations would pro-
hibit real estate brokers from
serving discriminatory orders from
any property owners, regardless
of the number of units involved.
It would outlaw "block-busting,"
defined as an attempt to get a
property owner to sell or rent his
home under the threat that a
change is taking place in the
neighborhood that will lower prop-
erty values.
The new law also increases pen-
alties from $100 to a maximum of
$300.

Music the Stein-Way

DICK STEIN

& ORCHESTRA

LI 74770

BALLROOM

DANCING
JACK BARNES

BY

COOLIDGE AT 9 MI.
LI 7-4470

FOR THE BEST IN
MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT

SAM EMMER

And His Orchestra

DI 1-1609

EXPECTING OUT OF TOWN GUESTS
FOR A WEDDING OR A BAR MITZVAH?

Crunbrook House Motel

is Conveniently Located at

20500 JAMES COUZENS

(8 Mile & Greenfield—Across from Northland)
Call 342-3000 For the Finest Accommodations!
Dine at the SCOTCH & SIRLOIN RESTAURANT
Airport Limousine Service Available

PRESCRIPTION OPTICAL CO.

1 DAY SERVICE

Bernard Pat Benton

DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTIONS
FILLED

LENSE.iS GiU AURA N TEAD

1 YEAR AGAINST BREAKAGE

PHONE 543.3343

26001 COOLIDGE, OAK PARK

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