• Needy Jews of Detroit Area Get Helping Hand on Passover Jews scattered around the city of Detroit—aged persons who live in downtown slum areas, needy refugee families living in flats, re- tarded patients in state hospitals— will again benefit from the chari- table spirit of their fellow Jews on this Passover. Harry Shulman, president of the Mo'os Hitim Organization for more than 15 years, is assisted by his wife in supplying matzo pro- ducts, bottles of Passover wine and funds for holiday needs to 700 families. Funds are contribu- ted by synagogues, organizations and individuals. Those who are unable to pick up the parcels at the distribution point, Cong. Beth Tefilo Emanuel Tikvah, are serviced by truck. Assisting in this vast project, Mor- ris Dorn and young members of Beth Tefilo take the parcels to Jewish hospital patients, as well Mr. Weiskopf to Barbara Levenson Joseph Megdell, general cam- paign chairman, announced that Flint's United Jewish. Appeal total raised so far in 1967 has reached $237,000. This is ahead of the 1966 pace. Megdell said that with almost 80 per cent of this year's goal of $300,000 already secured, he felt that the goal would be reached. He urged all workers to complete their cards in the next two weeks. as needy residents of "off-Wood- ward" hotels. To reach all those requiring assistance, the volunteer organi- zation coordinates lists of names supplied by all relief-giving agencies in Detroit covered by the Wayne County Department of Social Welfare. These include some 300 elderly persons. Contributions will help provide the average family of five with a check for $28, plus 25 pounds of matzo and matzo products and two bottles of wine. The Co-operative Council of the League of Jewish Women, which also provides lists of names and contributes to Mo'os Hitim, will again sponsor its Passover seder luncheon for 220 patients from Ypsilanti and Northville state hospitals, Lapeer Home and Train- ing School and, for the first time, Wayne County General Hospital. The luncheon is to take place at Oak Manor Kosher Caterers Thursday. The 16 member organizations of Co-operative Council will provide the funds for the fourth annual function, at which Rabbi Solomon Gruskin, chaplain at the institu- tions, will preside. Traditional Passover foods will be served to the men, women and children, and there will be a brief service. Rabbi Gruskin, who also serves as chaplain for the federal prison at Milan, said the two Jewish prisoners will be serviced in Ann Arbor. B0/1111C KeiphillEngelgt'd to Glades N. Tapper MISS BARBARA LEVENSON Mr. and Mrs. Ben Levenson of Seneca Ave., Oak Park, announce the engagement of their daughter Barbara Jean to James M. Weis- kopf, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Weiskopf of Melrose Park, Ill. Miss Levenson attended UCLA and the University of Michigan. Mr. Weiskopf attended the Univer- sity of Illinois and is doing grad- uate work at Wayne State Univer- sity. A June 25 wedding is planned. Bnai Brith to Give 500-Book Library to Beth Isaac Friday, April 21, 1967-39 Andra If inkebnan Tred THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS to Lewis Barr of N.J. Flint U]JA Rea ches $237,000 * Services to Remember Six Million Martyrs The Flint Jewish Community Council, in cooperation with Cong. Beth Israel and Temple Beth El, will sponsor its annual joint service MRS. LEWIS BARR of commemoration 8:30 p.m. today Andra Wallace Winkelman, at Temple Beth El. The service is in remembrance daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Winkelman of Canterbury Dr., and of the 6,000,000 Jewish martyrs Lewis Barr, son of Mr. and Mrs. • Maurice Barr of Lake Hiawatha, *********4 N.J., were united in marriage Sat- * r• National and Local Talent urday at the Sheraton Cadillac ENTERTAINMENT Hotel. Rabbi Richard Hertz offi- 4C ciated. SEYMOUR SCHWARTZ ih, The bride wore a full-length, cap-sleeve, Empire gown of re- embroidered Alencon lace with scalloped hemline, short train and satin-covered buttons from high round neck to hemline. She carried a spray of Phalaenopsis. * MISS BONNIE KAPLAN Bnai Brith Provides Jewish Servicemen With Passover Food Parcels Bnai Brith provided more than 5,000 Passover food parcels this year for Jewish servicemen sta- tioned in Vietnam and at other overseas and isolated American bases, Solomon Rosenbaum of Fitchburg, Mass., national chair- man of Bnai Brith's commission on community and veterans ser- vices, reported. The packages — called "Solo Seders" — included mataot, gefilte fish, soup and chicken prepared and distributed by the National Jewish Welfare Board. AGENCY 356-8525 The Criterion Club, organization for single adults, will host a public dance and "Matzo Ball" 9 p.m. Saturday at Cong. Beth Hillel. Lee Trammell and the Five Spotlight Entertainers will play. Social mixers and refreshments will be included. For information, call Gertrude Edelstein, 535-6917. Critics are men who have failed in literature and art.—Disraeli THE NEWEST IN WEDDING • BAR MITZVAH CONFIRMATION AND PARTY ACCESSOR iES gsevOritk.oe.4- BY HATTIE SCHWARTZ 4( t*********** Matron of honor was Mrs. Dan- iel Goldberg of Fort Riley, Kans., sister of the bridegroom. Marjory Winkelman, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Carol Derin and Stephanie Kutzen of Ypsilanti. Dr. Daniel Goldberg was best man. Ushers were Roger Winkel. man, brother of the bridegroom, Lawrence Leeds, Eric Winkelman of Lake Forest, Ill., Harvey Levin of Kankakee, Ill., and Jerry Wal- lace of Grandville, Mich. After a honeymoon trip to Puer- to Rico, the couple will reside in East Orange, N.J. Bnai Brith will release a first- day cover of the Post Office De- partment's new 20-cent James - Audubon airmail stamp. The cover includes a portrait of Julius Bien, one of the leading American lithographers of the 19th Century and president of Bnai Brith from 1857-60 and 1868- 1900. Bien produced the first American folio of Audubon's "Birds of America," which con- tained the naturalist-artist's aqua- tint of the "Columbia Jay," the picture that will appear on the new airmail stamp. The "Columbia Jay" was ori- ginally used in 1963 on a five- cent stamp issued as part of a commemorative series on the works of noted American painters. The stamp, one of the most popular commemoratives ever offered by the Post Office, had a press run of 175,175,000. Copies of the first-day cover, cancelled at the Post Office's Au- dubon Station in New York City, are available at 50 cents each from the Klutznick Exhibit Hall, Bnai Brith, 1640 Rhode Island Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C., 20036. Purchasers should enclose a self- addressed stamped envelope with their orders. Plans for 'Matzo Ball' Roll for Criteron Club -74 Professional Shows for Any Occasion 356-8563 For Your Fine Diamonds and Jewelry "Buy With Confidence" Norman Allan Co. Diamontologists Gemologists DI 1-1330 17540 WYOMING OPEN THURS., FRI. 'TIL 9 P.M. FLORAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE HOLIDAYS AND EVERY OCCASION! Bnai Brith to Release First-Day Cover of New Audubon Airmail Stamp Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Kaplan of Lincolnshire Dr. announce the engagement of their daughter Bon- nie Lynne to Charles N. Tapper, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Tapper The Metropolitan Detroit Bnai of Worcester, Mass. Brith Council will present a library Miss Kaplan is a student in the of over 500 books on Judaica, as well as a number of contributions, college of education at the Univer- sity of Michigan. Her fiance is a to the Beth Isaac Rehabilitation graduate of New York University. Fund, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at the A June wedding is planned. council office. A special presentation of $250 from the District Grand Lodge Presidents Brunch Bnai Brith Emeregncy Relief Fund to Honor Lodge Chiefs will be made, as well as contribu- tions from many Bnai Brith lodges A Presidents Brunch will be and their membership, totaling sponsored by the Metropolitan De- troit Bnai Brith Council 11 a.m. more than $750. Beth Isaac Synagogue was al- May 7 at the Labor Zionist Insti- most destroyed March when an ar- tute. sonist set fire to the building. The brunch, honoring the 25 Bnai Brith lodge presidents and Bernard Panush, council president, Bnai Brith Maps Drive is being held in cooperation with to Increase Membership the Jewish National Fund. Admis- Bnai Brith will initiate a na- sion will be the purchase of one tionwide campaign this fall to in- or more trees to be planted in the crease its membership to 600,000, Bnai Brith Martyrs Forest in David M. Blumberg of Knoxville, a Israel. Max Lieberman, chairman of the Bnai Brith vice president and chairman of its membership cabi- council committee for Martyrs Forest, has urged each lodge to net, announced. The campaign seeks a 20 per plant a minimum of 100 trees in cent gain over its present member- honor of its president. Morris ship of 500,000 men, women and Direnfeld, past president of the metropolitan Detroit council, will youth. Bnai Brith has also set a goal be chairman of the Presidents of chartering 124 new units dur- Brunch. ing the year to commemorate its Democracy is based upon the 124th anniversary, Blumberg said. Bnai Brith today has more than conviction that there are extra- 4,000 lodges and women's and ordinary possibilities in ordinary people. Youth chapters in 45 countries. * and heroes of the Warsaw Ghetto. Services will be conducted by Rabbi William Greenebaum II and Rabbi Hillel Millgram. The com- munity is invited. Weddings, Showers, Bar Mitzvahs, Parties a Specialty SEE CEIL OR BEN STOCKER o zit EE Party Flower Specialists 15212 W. 7 MILE RD, Bet. Sussex S. Whitcomb 345-4383 • 0 • Ir • • • • • 0 THE BEST IDEA IN THE BARREL —is a trip to the -DAVIS FLOOR COVERING COMPANY to see about some new floor coverings for your home! 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