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

January 17, 1969 - Image 30

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1969-01-17

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
30—Friday, January 17, 1969

Miss Holzman to 31a rry
11 I r. David Rose mg. 24

gewry

the

On

Yavneh to Hear Talk
Sharon Gaspas to Wed AJCommittee
on Problems in Israel
Mr. GoldenbergJuly 27 Picks Ex-Detroiter Yavneh of Detroit will hear Jew-
ish National Fund emissary Rami
to Head Cabinet
Amitz-Lev discussing "Current

This Week's Radio and
Television Programs

HIGHLIGHTS
Time: 9:45 a.m. Sunday
Station: Channel 2
Feature: "Israeli Dance" fea-
tures a demonstration by Jerry
and Stephanie Katz, members of
the Dance Theater of Detroit, Re-
pertory Company, illustrating the
source and scope of Israeli dance

.>"

I I,

/

;I

lit

ti.th

)1 •t

MISS ALLISON HOLZMAN

Mr. and Mrs. Erwin A. Holzman
of Beverly Ave., Oak Park. an-
nounce the engagement of their
daughter Allison Dee to David
Randall Rose, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Milton Rose of Southfield Rd.,
Southfield.
Both Miss Holzman and her
fiance are Michigan State Univer-
sity students.
An Aug. 24 wedding is being
arranged.

Harry Podolsky Heads
Southern Wayne County
Chamber of Commerce

Harold S. Podolsky, longtime
resident and businessman in the
Downriver area, has been elected
by the board of directors of the
Southern Wayne County Chamber
of Commerce to serve as presi-
dent in 1969. The announcement
was made by Larry Reed, execu-
tive director of the Chamber.
Podolsky is president of Bever-
age Distribution Co. in Southgate
and has been associated with the
Podolsky family firm for 24 years.
He has been active in the Allied
Jewish Campaign and in the Wyan-
dotte General Hospital Building
Fund Campaign, and is past
president of the Wyandotte Rotary
Club, Michigan Beer and Wine
Wholesalers Association and the
Metropolitan Beer Distributors.

( Anal ( Arid)
7 1' ettvituis

BUSINESS AND PROFESSION
AL CHAPTER will hold an open
meeting 8 p.m. Tuesday at Cong.
Beth Hillel. Maynard Gordon will
speak on "Negro Anti-Semitism:'
Gordon, who is editor and pub-
lisher of Motor News Analysis.
represents the Bnai Brith Anti-
Defamation League on the com-
munity relations committee of the
Jewish Community Council. For
information, call Hilda Wister,
547-8107.

. z

COMMUNITY CURRENTS
Time: 9:30 a.m. Sunday
Station: WJBK
Feature: "A Conversation With
Yitzhak Leor," consul for press
and information at the Consulate
General of Israel. Midwest region,
will be presented.

4

4

HEAR OUR VOICE
Time: 11:30 p.m. Sunday
Station: WCAR
Feature: "The Young Cantor
Moshe Koussevitzky" features
early recordings of the late cantor
who was dubbed ".Hazzan Hador"
(Cantor of His Generation) by his
fellows. Cantor Harold Orbach
will comment.
*
ETERNAL LIGHT
Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday
Station: WWJ
Feature: "Rabbi Israel Satan-
ter," a drama by the late Morton
Wishengrad relating the story of
a rabbi who instructed his con-
gregation in Vilna to break the
Yom Kippur fast to protect them-
selves against a cholera epidemic,
is presented as part of the "Man
in Protest" series.

MESSAGE OF ISRAEL
Time: 11:30 p.m. Sunday
Station: WXYZ
Feature: "The Compositions of
Reuven Kosakoff," a musical pro-
gram of recent works of the con-
temporary composer, sung by
Cantor Frederick Lechner of Cen-
tral Synagogue, New York City,
and the Message of Israel Choir,
led by Lazar Weiner.

Midrasha to Open
Registration for
2 Adult Courses

Registration will open Sunday
for the two courses offered by the
Midrasha, College of Jewish Stu-
dies, starting Jan. 28, in the Mid-
rasha building. The Judaic depart-
ment will continue registration
through Jan. 26.
Courses to be offered are "Jew-
ish Law and Contemporary So-
coiety" taught by Rabbi Simcha
Berkowitz and Solomon Schimmel;
and "Jewish Thought and Con-
temporary Society" taught by Dr.
David Kadosh and Daniel Sch-
wartz. The former will be taught
8 p.m. Tuesdays and the latter 8
p.m. Thursdays. A fee will be
charged.

4.

Bnai Brith Plans Bond Program

Leaders planning the 1969 Metropolitan Detroit Bnai Brith
Council Israel Bond program are (from left) George Tarnoff, presi-
dent of the Council; Sam Freedman, Council Israel Bond co-chair-
man; Felix Rosenberg, Council Israel Bond chairman, and Leon
Weberman, Israel Bond co-chairman. Not shown is Maurice Rosen-
der, also a Council co-chairman and Israel Bond chairman of Oak-
land-Century Lodge.

MISS SHARON GASPAS

Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gaspas of
Ramblewood Dr., Farmington, an-
nounce the engagement of their
daughter Sharon to Ronald Golden-
berg, son of Mrs. Ida Goldenberg
of Hart Rd., Huntington Woods,
and the late Mr. Louis Goldenberg.
Miss Gaspas and her fiance both
are students at Wayne State Uni-
versity, College of Education.
The couple is planning a July
27 wedding.

Museum Director Due
at International
Institute Meeting

Institute's
International
The
annual meeting of the corporation
7 p.m. Tuesday will be highlighted
by an address by Henry D. Brown,
director of the Detroit Historical
Museum since 1947, who will speak
on the `Twenty-Five Years and
More" of the institute's growth in
the cultural center.
In conjunction with the Inter-
national Institute's 25th anniver-
sary, a photographic exhibition,
"The Immigrant in America,"
will be on display at the institute
Tuesday to Feb. 20.
The collection of 50 black and
white photographs will include the
works of two well-known photo-
graphers of immigrants, Lewis
Wickes Hine and Jacob A. Riis.
Featuring those who arrived at
Ellis Island and the sections of
New York they later occupied, the
prints are documentation of the
large influx of newcomers at the
turn of the century.
The public is invited to attend
this show.

Test Notes Medical
Insurance Benefits

The monthly premium older peo-
ple pay for the voluntary medical
insurance part of Medicare will
remain at the present $4 for the
period July 1969 through June
1970, Sam F. Test, Detroit-North-
west Social Security district man-
ager noted.
The premium covers half the
cost of protection that helps pay
doctors' and surgeons' bills and
a variety of other health care
expenses. The other half is paid
out of Federal general revenues.
Of the population 65 and over,
95 per cent are now enrolled in
the - supplementary medical insur-
ance program, Test said, up from
the 91 per cent enrolled when the
Medicare program began on July
1, 1966. A new enrollment period
opened Jan. 1, Test said, and will
provide another chance for peo-
ple who missed out earlier to
sign up for the protection. For
some — those who were born Oct.
1, 1901, pr earlier, and those who
were enrolled but dropped out be-
fore Jan. 1, 1967 — it will be the
last chance to enroll.
Older people who delay in en-
rolling, Test said, pay a premium
that is 10 per cent higher for
each full year they could have had
the medical insurance protection
but were not enrolled. And those
who wait three years past their
first chance to sign up will not
be able to get the coverage at all.

Native Detroiter Sidney Zilber, a
Cleveland investment counselor
and civic leader, has been named
chairman of the American Jewish
Committee's national membership
campaign cabi-
iet, President Ar-
thur J. Goldberg
announced.
Zilber, a former
chairman of the
A J C's Cleveland
chapter and a
member of the
national executive
board, will head
the human rela-
tions agency's on-
going member-
ship effort. Zilber
A senior consultant with Scudder,
Stevens and Clark, Investment
Counsel, and a vice president with
Scudder Fund Distributors. Inc.,
Zilber is active in the AJC's pro-
grams to combat discrimination
in business.
A member of the housing com-
mittee of Plans of Action for To-
morrow's Housing (PATH) Asso-
ciation and the scholastic com-
mittee of the University of Michi-
gan, Zilber has been in the
leadership of the Jewish Commu-
nity Federation of Cleveland for
many years.
Zilber holds bachelor and master
of business administration degrees
from the University of Michigan
and has been a lecturer in invest-
ments at Western Reserve Univer-
sity.

JOCELYN

AND HER GYPSIES

Authentically Gypsy
Elegantly Unique

Military and Political Problems in
Israel" 8 p.m. Saturday at Young
Israel of Greenfield.
Amitz-Lev is a veteran of both
the 1956 Sinai Campaign and the
1967 Six-Day War, in which he
fought on the Jordanian frontier.
A native Israeli, he is a graduate
of the Hebrew University and has
worked for the Israel government's
industry and commerce depart-
ment as well as one of Israel's
largest banks, whose international
department he headed.

JER RY COop.

JEWELER

DIAMONDS - PEARLS - JEWELRY

PEARL AND BEAD STRINGING

406 Broderick Tower

963-2573

For the HY Spot
Of Your Affair
Music by

Hy Herman

And His Orchestra

;Hy Utchenik)

• Distinctive Ceremonies
a Specialty)

342-9424

PERSONALIZED
PARTY FAVORS

Ash Trays, Candy Dishes,

Matchboxes, etc.

Made from glass and antique
finished metals, ceramics. For
Weddings and Bar Mitvazs, etc.
Also personalized novelty pens.

INVITATIONS & ACCESSORIES

also available.

MARCIA MASSERMAN

646-6138

474-7638

FURNITURE & UPHOLSTERING CO.

CUSTOM MADE FURNITURE—DRAPERIES
INTERIOR DECORATING

273-1863

15345 W. 7 MILE

Our twice-a-year

Sunday Sale

begins a whole week of fantastic savings

tresses
Coats
Sportswear

mostly at

1 /2 OFF

Rabes

Sale Starts Sunda y

from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

and continues through next Sunday

26190 GRaENIPIE LT)
10 vL MILF- 7 -LINCOLN
Pvi tvel 399 2

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan