• Jane Rosen Engaged to. Lawrence Trunsky G. Mennen Williams Named Recipient of AJCongress' Annual Amity Award Former Governor G. Mennen Williams and two Detroit civic leaders—Richard Simmons Jr. and Mrs. Richard Mittenthal—will be honored by the Detroit Women's Division of the American Jewish Congress at its 22nd annual Amity Award luncheon noon Feb. 26 at Adas Shalom Synagogue. Williams will receive the organi- zation's Amity Award, presented each year to an individual who has made a unique and long-standing contribution to the advancement of MISS JANE ROSEN - Mr. and Mrs. Marvin K. Rosen of Shrewsbury Rd. announce the en- gagement of their daughter Jane Carol to Lawrence Allan Trunsky, son of Mrs. Harold Trunsky of North Park Towers, Southfield, and the late Mr. Trunsky. Miss Rosen is a graduate of the University of Illinois' college of education, where she was affiliated with Delta Phi Epsilon Sorority, and presently attends graduate school at Wayne State University. The prospective bridegroom is a graduate of Michigan State Univer- sity. A June 8 wedding is planned. Posthumous Glory for Feuchtwanger Here and Abroad Posthumous honors are being ac- corded one of the great writers of this century, Lion Feuchtwanger. Leonard N. Simons, prominent Detroit advertising executive who is among the chief collectors of Feuchtwanger manuscripts in the world, has made it known this week that a Lion Feuchtwanger Street is being named in West Ber- lin, and Mrs. Feuchtwanger, who resides in Pacific Palisades, Calif., has been invited as West Ger- many's guest to attend the cere- monies of street naming._ Mrs. Feuchtwanger also has been invited by the Lord Mayor of the G. MENNEN WILLIAMS human rights and civil liberties and to the improvement of intergroup relations. The award is the oldest of its kind in the metropolitan area. The selection of Gov. Williams was announced by the Right Rev. Richard S. Emrich, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Michigan, chairman of the Amity Award judges committee, and by Prof. Harold Norris, both past recipi- ents of the award. In reporting the decision of the judges committee, they said Wil- liams would be cited for his service as citizen and governor ". . . in building bridges of communication Simmons Mrs. Mittenthal and reconciliation between all the People of his state and world, bringing together persons of di- verse religions, races and national origin, thus helping to enhance our unity by protecting diversity; and in advancing the integration of all peoples into the branches and pro- cesses of government, thus helping in his time to promote peaceful change by making government more representative, responsive and responsible to all forms of hu- man concerns." Gov. Williams, who is now the U.S. ambassador to the Phillipines, served under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson as assistant secretary of state for African affairs. His award will be presented by U.S. Circuit Court Judge George C. Edwards, a previous Amity Award winner and member of the Amity judges committee. Wayne County Circuit Judge Horace W. Gilmore will accept the award for Ambas- sador Williams, who is unable to attend. Special Amity Citations will go to Simmons and Mrs. Mittenthal for their efforts to promote amity, and for inspiring others to partici- pate in local projects for the reduc- tion of intergroup tensions. Mayor Cavanagh will present the citation to Simmons, who is director of the Mayor's Commit- tee for Human Resources Devel- opment, Detroit's anti-poverty program. Simmons holds mas- ters degrees from Wayne State University in social work and public administration. He is being honored for "his achievements in eliding the sense of self-worth and dignity of many who had lost hope, enabling individuals and groups to find ways to help them- selves and each other." Mrs. Mittenthal is the wife of a local attorney and labor arbitrator and mother of four children. A graduate of Vassar, Mrs. Mit- tenthal is an active member of the League of Women Voters, the Round Table of Catholics, Jews and Protestants and the Coordinat- ing Council on Human Relations of Detroit. She has also been instru- mental in the promotion of the 12th Precinct Police-Community Organi- zation and a variety of programs for community improvement. Her citation will be presented by Mrs. Sol Elkin, a former director of the Michigan regional office of AJCongress. The Amity luncheon is open to the public. For reservations, call AJCongress office, 965-3319. Alpha Omega Honors Founder of Project Hope, Dr. Walsh LION FEUCHTWANGER City of Mainz to attend the cele- bration of the 500th anniversary of Gutenberg's first Bible printing. Simons announced that West Berlin is establishing a Lion Feuchtwanger Collection in its Academy of Fine Arts. An exhibi- tion has been arranged, with Mrs. Feuchtwanger as guest. Other posthumous honors for Lion Feuchtwanger announced by Simons include: Presentation of his play "The Devil in Boston" by the West Ber- lin TV station; Bielefeld Theater's production of his play "Warren Hastings;" publication by the Uni- versity of Southern California of a Feuchtwanger Memorial Volume and an exhibition of his works by USC; re-publication in this country, Germany and England of his "Fla- vius Josephus Trilogy." Four hundred Jewish dentists of the Detroit Alumni Chapter, Alpha Omega Dental Fraternity, will honor the founder and the medical director of Project Hope, Dr. Wil- liam B. Walsh, at a formal dinner- dance Saturday evening, at the Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel. Dr. Sidney M. Spatz, of Pitts- burgh, newly elected international president of Alpha Omega, will be here to pay homage to Dr. Walsh, who first suggested in 1958 that a Navy hospital ship, then in moth- balls, be converted into the world's first peacetime hospital ship. With the agreement of President Eisenhower, Dr. Walsh founded the private, nonprofit People-to-People Health Foundation to raise funds for Project Hope and the soon to be renamed SS Hope. Since 1960 and the SS Hope's maiden voyage to Indonesia and Vietnam, the countries of Peru, Ecuador, Guinea, Nicaragua, Col- ombia, and presently Ceylon, have been visited. More than 4,000 physi- cians, surgeons, dentists, nurses and technologists have been train- ed by the unique teach-and-treat method employed by the SS Hope. Some 126,500 persons have been treated, over 12,646 major opera- tions have been performed on board the ship, and from the ship's "iron cow," which pro- duces whole milk from distilled sea water, 2,506,000 cartons of milk have been distributed to the children of developing nations. Detroit oral surgeon Dr. Herbert J. Bloom is serving on the national board of directors and has devoted much of his time visiting many of the nations prior to a Hope Ship visit, making the necessary ar- rangements and contacts with gov- ernment officials to expedite the international venture. Rita Jackson to Become Nathan Rossen Gives Wife of David Priver $10,000 to Annuity Nathan P. Rossen (right), long- time Detroit Histadrut supported, has contributed $10,000 to the Ilis- tadrut Annuity Fund, a branch of the American Ilistadrut Develop- MISS RITA JACKSON ment Foundation. Rossen turns Murray Jackson of Lincoln Mrs. over his check to Morris Lieber- Terrace Dr., Oak Park, announces man, chairman of the Detroit Is- the engagement of her daughter rael Histadrut Campaign. Rita to David Priver, son of Dr and Mrs. Julian Priver of Cam- bridge Ave. The bride-elect, daughter of the late Mr. Jackson, is a senior in Wayne State University's college of nursing. Mr. Priver is a junior in WSU's medical school. The couple plans to wed June 22. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 26—Friday, February 14, 1969 Max Schrut MUSIC DESIGNED TO PLEASE For Good Photographs and Prompt Service Call Me at and PERSONALIZED TO SUIT YOUR PARTY BLAIR STUDIO by HY HERMAN Weddings — Bar Mitzvas (Hy utchenicio We Come to Your Home With Samples AND HIS ORCHESTRA UN 4-6845 TY 5-8805 342-9424 SALE! 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