100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

May 03, 1968 - Image 46

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1968-05-03

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

46-Friday, May 3, 1968

MONUMENT UNVEILINGS

Unveiling announcements may be in-
serted by mail or by calling The Jewish
News office, 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd., De-
troit 48235, VE 8-9364. Written an-
nouncements must be accompanied by
the name and address of the person
making the insertion. There is a stand-
ing charge of $3.50 for an unveiling
notice, measuring an inch in depth,
and $7.00 for one two inches deep with
a black border.
*
*

The family of the late Aviva
Tepley announces the unveiling of
a monument in her memory 10
a.m. Sunday, May 5, at Northwest
Hebrew Memorial Park. Rabbi
Segal will officiate. Relatives and
friends are asked to attend.
*

The family of the late Frances
Lynn Katt announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in her memory
noon Sunday, May 5, at Beth Moses
Cemetery. Masonic Blvd., Rose-
ville. Rabbi Gruskin will officiate.
Relatives and friends are asked to
attend.
* *
The family of the late David
Nedelman announces the unveiling
of a monument in his memory 3
p.m. Sunday, May 5, at Machpelah
Cemetery, Section 22. Rabbi Gamze
will officiate. Relatives and friends
are asked to attend.

The family of the late George
Rosengard announces the unveiling
of a monument in his memory 1
p.m. Sunday, May 5, at Clover Hill
Memorial Park. Rabbi Lehrman
will officiate. Relatives and - friends
are asked to attend
* * *

The Family of the Late

MORRIS
WEINBERG

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in his
memory noon Sunday, May
5, at Beth Yehudah Ceme-
tery. Rabbi Spiro will of-
ficiate. Relatives and
friends are asked to at-
tend.

Eines. Cemetery. Rabbi Litke will
officiate. Relatives and friends are
asked to attend.

*

The family of the late Abraham
Davidoff announces the unveiling
of a monument in his memory 11:30
a.m. Sunday, May 5, at Hebrew
Memorial Park. Relatives and
friends are asked to attend.
* * *
The family of the late Isadore
Katzoff announces the unveiling
of a monument in his memory 1
p.m. Sunday, May 5, at Workmen's
Circle Cemetery. Rabbi Arm will
officiate. Relatives and friends are
asked to attend.

The family of the late Sophie
Pazner announces the unveiling of
4:
4,
*
a monument in her memory 1:30
The
family
of
the
late Saul H.
p.m. Sunday, May 12, at Chesed
shel Emes Cemetery. Rabbi Gold- Cohen announces the unveiling of
man will officiate. Relatives and a monument in his memory 11:30
a.m. Sunday, May 5, at Hebrew
friends are asked to attend.
Memorial Park. Rabbi Sperka will
*
*
:
officiate. Relatives and friends are
The family of the late Helena asked to attend.
*
*
Stein announces the unveiling of a
monument in her memory 1:30 p.m.
The family of the late Barnett
Sunday, May 12, at Chesed shel Goldman announces the unveiling
of a monument in his memory 2:30
p.m. Sunday, May 12, at Machpelah
Cemetery. Rabbi Syme will offi-
The Family of the Late
ciate. Relatives and friends are
asked to attend.
ANNA STERN
*
The family of the late Dora Lip-
Announces the unveiling
man announces the unveiling of
of a monument in her
a monument in her memory 12:30
memory 1:30 p.m. Sunday,
p.m. Sunday, May 5, at Machpelah
May 12, at Chesed shel
Cemetery. Rabbi Gorrelick will of-
Emes Cemetery. Rabbi
ficiate. Relatives and friends are
Gordon will officiate. Re-
asked to attend.
latives and friends are
asked to attend.

Stephen Cooper Assistant
Head at Camp Clarkston

The Family of the Late

FLORENCE PRAW

Announces the unveiling of
a monument in her mem-
ory 11:45 a.m. Sunday,
May 5, at Workmen's Cir-
cle Cemetery. Rabbi
Schnipper will officiate.
Relatives and friends are
asked to attend.

The Family of the Late

Jacob I. Schanes

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in his
memory 11 a.m. Sunday,
May 5, at Hebrew Me-
morial Park. Rabbi Schnip-
per and Cantor Henry
Weintraub of New York
will officiate . Relatives
and friends are asked to
attend.

The Family of the Late

AARON
KATZMAN

The Family of the Late

Announces the unveiling of
a monument in his mem-
ory 1 p.m. Sunday, May 5,
at Chesed shel Emes Ce-
metery. Rabbi Stollman
will officiate. Relatives
and friends are asked to
attend.

JENNIE MENACER

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in her
memory 2 p.m., Sunday
May 5, at Beth El Memo-
rial Park. Relatives and
friends are asked to at-
tend.

Keith Gendron, director of Camp
Clarkston, announces the appoint-
ment of Stephen Cooper as assist-
ant director of Camp Clarkston
and Clarkston Day Camp.
Cooper, 25183 Southwood, South-
field, is on the educational staff
of Shaarey Zedek Hebrew school
and is studying at Wayne State
University's school of law. He has
an extensive background in camp-
ing and outdoor sports in addition
to education at Brendeis University
and the Hebrew University of Jeru-
salem, as well as Wayne State.
Camp Clarkston operates Mon-
day through Friday, which allows
the children to be with their fam-
ilies over the weekends. The day
camp, which was inaugurated this
year, includes all camping and

communal experiences provided for

the resident children. Transporta-
tion is provided daily to and from
northwest Detroit suburban areas.

Dial Press Publishes
Judah's 'Bombay Clown'

Joe Hosea-hero of "Clown of
Fire" (Dial, 1967) has returned to
the literary scene. In "Clown of
Bombay" Aaron Judah relates
an earlier adventure of this re-
markable adolescent- the irrever-
ent only son of a Jewish family
living in Bombay. At 14, Joe is a
constant trial to the family, friends
and school officials and his witty
animosity toward the hypocritical
standards of the adult world lead
him through a series of antic and
bizarre situations. The Dial Press
published "Clown of Bombay."
Aaron Judah, born in Bombay,
has lived all over the world and
currently resides in the Canary
Islands. He has been an artist and
filmmaker as well as a writer and
has written books for children.

-

The Family of the Late

JENNIE
GREENBERG

The Family of the Late

HYMAN KATMAN

Announces the unveiling of
a monument in her mem-
ory 11 a.m., Sunday, May
12, at Beth Moses Ceme-
tery. Rabbi Schnipper
w i 11 officiate. Relatives
and friends are asked to
attend.

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in his
memory 11 a.m. Sunday,
May 19, at Oakview Ceme-
tery. Rabbi Lehrman and
Cantor Klein will offi-
ciate. Relatives and friends
are asked to attend.

The Family of the Late

The Family of the Late

SAM ROSEN

Announces the unveiling of
a monument in his mem-
ory 12:30 p.m. Sunday,
May 5, at Workmen's Cir-
c I e Cemetery, Turover
Section, Rabbi Arm and
Cantor Bermanis will of-
ficate. Relatives a n d
friends are asked to at-
tend.

7

ABRAHAM
MATTLER

The Family of the Late

Announces the unveiling of
a monument in his mem-
ory noon Sunday, May 5
at Clover Hill Memorial
Park. Rabbi Groner will
officiate. Relatives a n d
friends are asked to at-
tend.

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in his
memory 2 p.m. Sunday,
May 5, at Chesed shel
Emes- Cemetery. Rabbi
Litke will officiate. Rela-
tives and friends are
asked to attend.

HARRY G.
FELDSCHER

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

News Brevities

PIERRE L. de RENOUARD has
been appointed resident manager
of the Detroit Statler Hilton Hotel,
it is announced by Frank W. Teich,
general manager. De Renouard
comes to his new position from
New Orleans, where he was man-
ager of Le Downtowner du Vieux
Carre, located on Bourbon Street.
A native of Copenhagen, de Renou-
ard spent his youth in that country
but traveled to Sweden during the
last year of the German occupa-
tion, where he joined the Danish
Brigade, a military unit to assist
the Allied forces. His hotel train-
ing began in 1946 when he joined
the famous Palac-e Hotel in Copen-
hagen.

Detroit Bar Association Presi-
dent John Feikens has announced
the formation of a new bank-
ruptcy court committee, members
of which include Irving A. August,
Irving I. Boigon, George Brody,
Lawrence K. Snider and Herbert
N. Weingarten.

Winter Wonderland will present
"FIESTA ON ICE" 4 and 8 p.m.
Saturday. Sandra Shaw, Ice Capa-
des star, Mary Donnel and Jane
Kriebaum will be leading the show.
Hyman Shenkman will do a comedy
act, and there will be 16 other
musical numbers. For ticket in-
formation call S h e n k m a n, KE
5-8783.

St. John's Newest
160-Page Israel
Library Edition

Time-Life Books' volume "Israel,
20th Anniversary Edition," made
available this week, deals with the
paradox of the State of Israel-
the country's invitation to 11,000,000
people to come and live there, the
assignment of technicians and ex-
perts to help underprivileged coun-
tries, its emphasis on archaeology
as a hobby, the naming of a
woman as foreign minister.
To mark the arrival of Israel
at the threshhold of a third de-
cade-her actual birthdate was
May 14, 1948 (celebrated this year
by Israelis on May 2, on the Jew-
ish calendar) - Time-Life Books
published the special, updated, 160-
page edition of the Life World
Library volume, "Israel".
Written by noted author Robert
St. John, "Israel" also contains
a challenging new introduction
written especially for this book
by Israeli Foreign Minister Abba
Eban.
Despite the uneasy peace that
still hangs over the country, Israel
prepares to welcome 400,000 tour-
ists this year; one hundred thous-
and more than ever before. Visitors
to the country-and readers of the
new "Israel" edition-will find a
country constantly searching to
reconcile past with present, tradi-
tion with progress, the old inheri-
tance with a new potentiality.
Nowhere on earth is . there a
land with the distinctions, prob-
lems and potentialities of Israel.
Founded as a refuge for Jewish
people in poignant response to
the Nazi regime, its major task
is still the sheer business of sur-
vival. Yet, throughout its brief
and bitter history, with three
wars spanning the years since
1948, Israel has made a desert
bloom and moved toward leader-
ship as both an agricultural and
industrial community.
Robert St. John, distinguished
author of this new edition of "Is-
rael," is a veteran American cor-
respondent, writer and lecturer,
with intimate knowledge of the
Middle East and Israel-to which
he has traveled" 13 times. As a
newsman, he has personally cov-
ered all three Israeli wars-in 1948,
1956 and 1967. A visitor to Arab
countries, too, each year since
1939, St. John has written many
previous books on Israel and the
Arab' countries,

Foreign Minister ABBA EBAN
met with British Foreign Secretary
Michael Stewart during his two-day
stopover in London en route to
Norway and three other Scandi-
navian countries. The meeting was
requested by Stewart. Eban, who
will visit Scandinavia in an official
capacity, originally announced that
his stop-over in London would be
of a private nature. He leaves here
today and will visit Oslo, Stock-
holm, Helsinki and Copenhagen.
* * y.

JOSEPH M. FIRST was re-
elected to his third term as presi-
dent of the Jewish Publication So-
ciety of America at the society's
annual meeting in Philadelphia.
First is vice president, secretary
and general counsel of the Phila-
delphia Inquirer and Triangle Pub-
lications, Inc. The society is the
world's leading publisher of books
on Jewish subjects in the English
language. Chaim Potok was re-
named editor of the JPS and Les-
ser Zussman was re-elected execu-
tive director for his 19th term.
*
*
*
MARVIN MELTZER, former
staff member of the Jewish Labor
Committee, is a candidate for Com-
munity College trustee from the
2nd District. Meltzer, a mem-
ber of the community relations
committee of the Jewish Commun-
ity Council, is former executive
secretary of the Citizens Commit-
tee for FEPC. He is a graduate of
Wayne State University, a fellow
of the American Public Health
Association, and a member of the
Wayne County Board of Super-
visors.
* *
"Operas Coming to Detroit This
Season" will • be discussed by
JASON TICKTON, professor of
music at Wayne State University,
before the Friends of the Hunt-
ington Woods Library 8 p.m. Wed-
nesday at the Huntington Woods
Library. Admission charge. Re-
freshments will be served.
* *
The French motion picture
"NAISSANCE," showing the actual
birth of a baby using the Lamaze-
Pavlov method of psychoprophylac-
tic or painless childbirth, will be
shown 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Fern-
dale High School auditorium. The
film showing is being sponsored
by the Childbirth Without Pain
Education Association.
*
The RADOMER MUTUAL SO-
CIETY will hold its Mother's Day
dinner-dance 6 p.m. May 12 at
Cong. Beth Shalom. For reserva-
tions, call Edith Kozlowski, 356-
9033.

BUSINESS BRIEFS
I. Grodsky, well-known baker in
the Northwest area, is now located
in GRODSKY'S BAKERY, 13520
W. Seven Mile, two doors east of
Schaefer. Grodsky gives the per-
sonal touch to bread, rolls and
pastry he bakes daily on the
premises. He makes beautifully
decorated cakes for all occasions.
Featured daily are coffee cakes
at 39 cents per pound and tempt-
ing assorted cake squares at 39
cents each. Also featured are
dietetic cookies and coffee cake.

Now Possible To
Shrink Hemorrhoids

And Promptly Stop Itching,
Relieve Pain In Most Cases..

Science has found a medication
with the ability, in most cases--
to relieve pain, itching and shrink
hemorrhoids. In case after case
doctors proved, while gently re-
lieving pain, actual reduction took
place. The secret is Preparation
Ho. It also soothes irritated tis-
sues and helps prevent further
infection. Just ask for Prepara-
tion H Ointment or Suppositories.

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan