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September 08, 1967 - Image 26

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1967-09-08

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

26—Friday, September 8, 1967

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Start Balfour Concert Activities

People
Make News

STEPHEN LuDyp STULMAN,
- ,and active
an investment banket--
in various -Jewish causes joined
the board of dir4ctorS of. the Jewish
Agency, it was announced by Rob-
ert Arnow, JTA President. A grad
uate of Yale University who had
studied at the Graduate Business

School of Columhia University.
Stulman is vice president of Israel
Industrial Services, Inc., an affili-

ate of the Israel Discount Bank
Ltd. of New York. He is a director
and member of the executive corn

Activities started last week, at a branch at the home of Dr.
and Mrs. Sidney Leib in Southfield, for the annual Balfour Concert
of the Zionist Organization of Detroit, to be held at Ford Audi-
torium Dec. 3, with Robert Merrill as guest star, together with the
Detroit Symphony Orchestra. This year's Balfour Concert committee
chairman is Dr. Sidney Friedlaender (seated, third from left).
Other committee members, from left, are: Seated, Richard Kramer,
ZOD president; Mrs. Ira Kaufman, Dr. Sanford Bennett; standing,
Carmi M. Slomovitz, Judge Ira Kaufman. M. Ben Lewis, Louis
Panush, Dr. Alex Friedlaender and Dr. Leib.

Ex-Detroiter Arrives in Vietnam
as Marine Aircraft Chaplain

Chaplain Sheldon M. Kirsch ar-
rived in Vietnam this week to as-
sume his assignment as Jewish
chaplain of the First Marine Air-
craft Wing in that zone of combat,
according to the Commission on
Jewish Chaplaincy of the National
Jewish Welfare Board. Ile left for
that overseas post after serving

he served as part-time rabbi of
[ Congregation Beth Israel, Fremont,
O.
Chaplain Kirsch spent the junior
year of his rabbinical training
(1964-1965) in Israel, studying at
the Hebrew University, where he
[ met his wife, Joyce, who! was tak-
ing courses while on leave of ab-
sence from the University of Cali-
fornia. They were married May
8, 1966.
As an undergraduate, he taught
Hebrew and Sunday school here
and was president of the, Hillel
Foundation of Wayne State Uni-
versity from 1959 to 1960.

,Announcements

Aug. 30—To Mr. and Mrs. Rob
ert Meizler (Judy Moglovkin)
13810 Sylvan Ct., Oak Park, a son

Michael Eric.

• • *
Aug. 27—To Mr. and Mrs. Rob-
ert M. Radner (Barbara Sklover),
19210 Starlane, Southfield, a son.
Ronald James.
• •
CHAPLAIN KIRSCII
Aug. 24 — To Mr. a n d Mrs.
George
M.
Fuller
(Jo Ann Mege),
since July 1966 as Jewish chaplain
of the Marine Corps Recruit De- 15718 Hazelton, a daughter, Shelly
Ilene.
pot, Parris Island. S.C.



* • •

Chaplain Kirsch, a native of e-
Aug. 23--To Mr. and Mrs. Mur-
troit, replaced Chaplain David B.
Saltzman who, after completing ray Reiner (Jo Ann Neshkes).
19925
Lahser, a son, Gary Mar-
his tour in Vietnam, was released
shall.
from active duty.
• • •
A 1960 graduate of Wayne State
Aug. 21- To Mr. and Mrs. Rob-
University, chaplain Kirsch re- ert Aptekar (Bonnie Rosenberg).
ceived his master of Hebrew lit- former Detroiters of Silver Spring,
erature degree from the Jewish Md.. a son, Bryan David.
Theological Seminary of America
• • •
in 1965. He received his rabbinical
Aug. 18—To Mr. and Mrs. David
ordination from the seminary the
following year. From 1965 to 1966, Morowitz (Barbara Matter of De-
troit) of Chicago, a son, Joel Mat-

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• s •
Aug. 3—To Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Nessel (Sandra Zide), 13311 Al- I
bang, Oak Park, a daughter, Caryn
Leslie.
s • •

mittee of the United Jewish Appeal
of Greater New York - a member
of the UJA national young leader-
ship cabinet and Nevi York Lead-
ership Council: a trustee of the
United Israel Appeal: a divisional
vice chairman of the Israel Bond
Organization; a member of the

board of governors of the Weiz-
mann Institute of Science.
* * *
YOHANAN Bilewsky, 26, MS
student at the Hebrew University's
Faculty of Agriculture at Rehovot,
has been elected secretary general
of the International Association of
Agricultural Students (LAAS) for
a two year period.

* * •

Israel's Finance Minister PIN-
HAS SAPIR, who will attend the
national mobilization conference
for economic development in Is-
rael in New York Sept. 15, will
also go to Rio de Janeiro to at-
tend the annual meetings of the
International Bank for Recon-
struction and Development (World
B a n k) and the International
Monetary Fund, being held in the
Brazilian metropolis this year.
Also attending those sessions will
be David Horowitz, governor of
the Bank of Israel.
*
*
MRS. DAVID M. GOLDRING, of
Maplewood, N.J.. has been chosen
chairman of the 19th biennial na-
tional convention of Women's
American ORT to be held Sept.
25-28 at Conrad Hilton hotel.
Chicago.

* • •

A coronary care unit at the
Little Traverse Hospital will be
named for a Petoskey area sum-
mer resident of many years, AL-
BERT M. STEIN of Chicago. The
Schamberg-Stein Foundation gave
$31,834 in two separate grants
which. together with $250.000 from
an anonymous donor, will build
the unit.
* * ,*
MEYER LEVIN'S new novel.
"Gore and Igor," will be published
by Simon and Schuster. Gore and
Igor are, respectively, American
and Russian protest poets, each of
whom has aroused the anger of
his government through his out-
bursts and has been forced to flee
from his country. In this comical,
satirical novel, both outlaws head
for Israel where, as fugitives, they
meet. Gore, because of his state-
ments on Vietnam, had been ar-
rested on the charge of pornog-
raphy; Igor is sought by the Rus-
sian authorities because he has
spoken out for human liberty and
freedom of expression. As Levin's
book illustrates, writers are the
first to be attacked because they
are the first to speak out. And now
there is a new sweep of resistance
on the part of writers in the Com-
munist world.

To Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Pearl
(Linda Schiff of Saginaw), 24337
Rensselaer, Oak Park, an adopted Symposium Explores
son, Michael Steven.
Negro-Jewish Relations
"Negro and Jew: an Encounter
Reform Teachers Institute in America," which Macmillan will
publish
Sept. 25, attempts to ex-
The Religious School Teachers'
Institute for teachers of Reform plore various shades of opinion
congregations throughout Michigan concerning present-day Negro-Jew-
will be held Sunday at Temple ish relations.
The questions posed in this sym-
Emanu-El.
Guest speaker will be Robert I. posium involve the nature and
source
of Negro anti-Semitism, the
Cohen of the department of educa-
tion of Roosevelt College, Chicago. importance of the Jewish back-
lash, and whether Jews—with their
It was computed in March 1959 history as a persecuted minority—
that the total number of laws on owe a greater debt to the civil
the United States federal and state rights movement than their Chris-
tial. neighbors.
statute books was 1,156,644.

Choreographer
Karen Weiner Engaged
to Teach at Center to Howard D. Winkler

Charles Weidman, an important
figure in the development of con-
temporary dance in America, will
be artist-in- residence for the
Festival Dancers of the Jewish
Center Sunday through Friday.
Weidman will stage his satire,
"Mostly About Women," for the
Festival Dancers' repertory.
Weidman is well known as a
teacher and a Broadway choreo-
grapher ("As Thousands Cheered,"
"School for Husbands," "Sing Out,
Sweet Land"). He also danced as
Martha Graham's partner in the
Denishawn company. He is co-
founder and partner with Doris
Humphrey of the Humphrey- Weid-
man School and Concert Company.
Weidman will teach a special
master class open to the public
Sunday, at the Jewish Center. For
information call the Center, DI
1-4200, ext. 246.

• * *
Speaker's Aid Group
Organized at Center

Toastmasters International, the
organization which enables men to
master the art of effective speak-
ing, is establising a club at the
Jewish Center.
Chartered in every state in the
Union and in 49 other countries,
Toastmasters helps speakers make
a poised, self-assured appearance
before any audience.
The Center Toastmaster Club
will meet every Wednesday for
dinner at 6:15 p.m. beginning Nov.
1. Every member not assigned a
speech will have an opportunity to
speak extemporaneously on prear-
ranged table topics.
The toastmaster of the evening
will then preside over a program
which will include three or four
short speeches prepared in ad-
vance with the help of a training
manual. Following the program,
each speaker is evaluated by his
fellows.
Organizational chairman for the
Center chapter of Toastmasters is
Joseph Hirsch. For information,
call Gene Jaffe, DI 1-4200.

Music the Stein-Way

DICK STEIN

& ORCHESTRA

LI 7-2770

MISS KAREN WEINER

Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence J.
Weiner of Chat sf or d Circuit,
Southfield, announce the engage-
ment of their daughter Karen
Leslie to Howard David Winkler,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Wink-
ler of Berg Rd.
The bride-elect is a senior in
the college of education at Wayne
State University. Her fiance is a
senior in the school of business
administration at Wayne State
and is affiliated with Alpha Epsi-
lon Pi fraternity.
A June 23 wedding is planned.

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