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October 24, 1969 - Image 46

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1969-10-24

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



46—Friday, October 24, 1969

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Bernard Rosenblatt, Leading Zionist

NEW YORK (JTA)—Bernard A.
Rosenblatt, a life-long Zionist, the
first American elected to the
, N•World Zionist
Executive in
Jerusalem, and a
for mer judge.
died here Oct. 14
at age 83.
Born in Poland,
Judge Rosenblatt
came to this
country at age 5
and was gradu-
ated from Colum-
b i a University
Law School in
1909. In 1919, he
accompanied Fe-
1 i x Frankfurter
Judge Rosenblattto the Versailles
Peace Conference to assist his
efforts to have a clause included
in the Pa7estine Mandate opposing
land speculation.
He becarne a New York City-
magistrate in 1921 and was elected
to the World Zionist Executive
that same year. He floated the
first Palestinian municipal bonds
in the United States, the forerun-
ner of the Israel Bond campaign.
Mr. Rosenblat served at various

Dr. S'alemon Pereira,
Sephardic Chief in Holland

AMSTERDAM (JTA)—Dr. Sale-
mon Rodrigues Pereira, chief rab-
bi of the Sephardi congregation
here, died at age 81. Dr. Pereira.
a noted classicist, served as chap-
lain to Dutch military forces in
Britain during World War II. On
several occasions he served as
acting chief rabbi of the Ash-
kenazi congregations in Amster-
dam and the Hague.

50—BUSINESS CARDS

VIENNA FURRIER. Remodel and re-
pairs. Reasonable prices. 398-7975.

SMALL JOBS, basement ceiling and
floors tiled, wall paneled. Reasonable.
Ron, LI 3-4576.--

EXPERT PAPERHANGING
PAINTING

INTERIOR ONLY

REFERENCES

CHAS. CADOTTE 874-3281

ELECTRIC repairs, all types. Residen-
tial, commercial. EL . 6-7228

WINDOW cleaning and wall washing. 20
years experience. Commercial and resi-
dential. LI. 7-5100.

Interior & Exterior Painting
Paperhanging

JOHN EDWARD CO.
State Licensed Contractor

547-3520

55—MISCELLANEOUS

PERSIAN Lamb Cciat, size 14-16, latest
fashion, $150; Acqua beaded cocktail
dress, long size 16; French style chair
frame suitable for needlepoint. 353-5733.

56—ANTIQUES

Attend the 51st presentation
of the

DETROIT ANTIQUES SHOW

at Detroit's Showplace.

THE MASONIC TEMPLE

Temple at Second

— 1 p.m.
October 23, 24, 25,
to 10 p.m., Sunday to 6 p.m.

"Finest Dealers from Coast to
Coast"

87—PETS

SCHNAUZER miniature ARC, male, 10
weeks. Healthy, intelligent housepet and
watchdog. LI 2-2287.

OLD ENGLISH SHEEP DOGS
Beautiful champion sired AKC

puppies. Wonderful with chil-
dren. $350. (1 pet $250.)

358-2394

times as president of the Jewish
National Fund and Keren Ilayesod
and was a vice president and hon-
orary secretary of the Zionist Or-
ganization of America. He was an
officer of several Jewish business
enterprises in Palestine and was
the first president of the Ameri-
can Zion Commonwealth, a land
purchasing and settlement agency
he founded in 1915 which estab-
lished the communities of Bal-
fouria, Afula and Herzlia and the
Haifa Bay settlement in Palestine.
Mr. Rosenblatt's autobiography,
"Two Generations of Zionism,"
was published here in 1967. He
will be buried in Haifa next to his
wife, Gertrude, an organizer of
hadassah, who died in 1955.

Brevities

The AFRICAN DANCE COM-
PANY of GHANA comes to the
Masonic Auditoriumfi 3 p.m., Nov.
2, with a display of exciting dance,
music and song from Ghana and
neighboring countries. On stage
will be a troupe of 45 dancers and
musicians, drummers, flutists and
singers. Their performance was
hailed by critics as "an experience
separate from all others." The
dance company made its American
debut in New York's Madison
Square Garden in the spring.
• * *
Roger Wagner, founder and di-
rector of the famed ROGER WAG-
NER CHORALE which comes to
the Masonic Auditorium 8:20 p.m.,
Nov. 7, was born in LePuy, France,
the son of the organist of the great
cathedral of Dijon. In addition to
his work with the Chorale, Wagner
is recognized as an authority on
religious music of the Medieval
and Renaissance periods.

4

4

4.

One of the Soviet Union's major
attractions, the OSIPOV BALA-
LAIKA ORCHESTRA, will be join-
ed by stars of the BOLSHOI
OPERA and Russian dancers in a
folk festival of song and dance at
the Masonic Auditorium, 8:20 p.m.,
Nov. 15, as part of the State De-
partment's cultural agreement.
• *
Bethel AME Church will host a
United Nations Day observance at
7:45 p.m. today. Entertainment
will be provided by the Cass High
School brass ensemble and wood-
wind quintet. Choral works will
also be featured. Dr. Joseph H.
Douglass, staff director of the 1910
White House Conference on Chil-
dren and Youth, will speak on
"CHILDREN AND YOUTH IN
THE '70."
• *
A free series of PUBLIC HOME
WORKSHOPS sponsored by the
Oak Park Jaycee Chapter will
begin 8 p.m. Wednesday in the
Oak Park Community Center. The
first workshop, "Painting and
Decorating Your Home" will fea-
ture experts in interior and ex-
terior painting, decorating, wall-
coverings and color scheme.

Soviet Warships ,Exit
From Mediterranean—
Possibly for Winter

NAPLES (JTA) —NATO sources
reported that the Soviet Navy has
moved the bulk of its warships out
of the Mediterranean in recent
weeks. The fleet has been reduced
from an unprecedented strength of
55 to 60 combat units to what was
described as a mere "token" pres-
ence of 10-12 combat vessels in the
area.
Some submarines have been left
in the Mediterranean along with
10 to 14 supply ships which would
permit the Soviets to rapidly re-
assemble their Mediterranean fleet
if necessary.
The rapid Soviet naval build-up
in the Mediterranean last spring
and summer alarmed NATO. It
represented the largest concentra-
tion of Russian sea power in the
Mediterranean in history.

People
Make News

As part of the ongoing program
of the National Jewish Welfare
Board to provide the best possible
support services to Jewish person-
nel in the U.S. Armed Forces,
Rabbi ARVEH LEV, director of
JWB's commission on Jewish chap-
laincy, will leave Monday on a
five-fold mission for Jewish chap-
lains and Jewish servicemen at
military installations in the Far
East.
r • •
An article on "What Play Re-
veals About Your Child," by Dr.
ALBERT SCHRUT, Los Angeles
child psychiatrist, recently appear-
ed in Parents' magazine. Dr.
Schrut, son-in-law of Rabbi and
Mrs. Manuel Neiman of Maryland
Ave., Southfield, is assistant clinic-
al professor of psychiatry at the
University of Southern California
school of medicine and faculty
member of the Southern California
Psychoanalytic Institute. This ar- 1
tide was derived from a paper
which won the Franz Alexander
Psychoanalytic Prize for original
contributions by the Southern Cali-
fornia Psychoanalytic Society. Dr.
and Mrs. Schrut, an artist and
teacher, have two children, 10 and
16.
*
Rabbi ARTHUR HERTZBERG.
a Conservative rabbi from Engle-
wood, N.J., has been co-opted as a
nonparty member of the Jewish
Agency executive. Rabbi Hertz-
berg. 48, will replace Rabbi Simon
Greenberg, vice chancellor of the
Jewish Theological Seminary of
of America, who has resigned for
personal reasons.
• * 4
Rabbi JOHN D. RAYNOR has
been elected chairman of the
Council of Reform and Liberal
Rabbis, a group established in
Britain last year to speak for
liberal Judaism in this country.
Rabbi Rayner is a former vice
chairman of the council of senior
ministers of the Liberal Jewish
Synagogue.

Joseph Lebowski, Prominent Figure

in Owosso, Dead; `Westown Mayor'

Joseph H. Lebowski, a prominent
citizen of Owosso, died Monday at
age 85.
Mr. Lebowski, known for many
years as the "Mayor of Westown,"
the western area of Owosso where
he lived, served nine terms as su-
pervisor from the 4th Ward.
Born in Russia, he arrived in
Owosso in 1904 and built up a
business as tailor and clothing
merchant. He owned the Capitol
Theater Building, which he built
in 1926, and dealt in real estate.
Mr. Lebowski was past mas-
ter and life member of Owosso
Lodge of the Masons, life mem-
ber of both the Rotarians and
Elks, board member of the Ma-
sonic Temple Association and
Salvation Army and a member
of Bay City Consistory and Elf
Kharafeh Shrine in Saginaw.
Spending his winters in Florida,
Mr. Lebowski joined Temple Sinai
of Hollywood and the Home for

Theodore Friedman,
Tax Consultant, 44

Accountant Theodore Friedman,
owner of Ted Friedman Tax Co.7-
sultant, 19356 James Couzens, died
Sunday at age 44.
Mr. Friedman, 5170 Cold Spring.
Birmingham, was born in Poland
and lived in the Detroit area 21
years. He was a member of Cong.
Shaarey Zedek and Suburban
Lodge, Bnai Brith.
He leaves his wife, Martha; a
son, Steven; a daughter, Iris; his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lazer Fried-
man of Windsor; and a sister,
Mrs. Sanford (Rose) Rosenzweig
of Boston.

Samuel Wolf, 73

Samuel Wolf, an attorney with
offices in the First National Build-
ing and a partner in Wolf Wiping 1
Cloth Co., died last Saturday at
age 73.
Mr. Wolf, 19250 Afton, was a
member of Perfection Lodge of
the Masons, Moslem Shrine, Bou-
levard Shrine Club and Temple
Israel. He was a graduate of the
Detroit College of Law.
4-
4'
Survivors are his wife, Au-
DR. JACOB LORCH, associate gusta; a son, Marvin; two
professor of' botany and the his- brothers, Edward and Nathan;
tory and philosophy of science at and three grandchildren.
Hebrew University, BERTHA UR-
DANG, a noted Israeli art collec-
tor and .exhibitor, and YAACOV
The Family of the Late
ORLAND, a distinguished Israeli
poet, playwright and musical lyri-
LEONA M.
cist, are currently on a lecture'
GALLISON
tour of college campuses under
the joint auspices of the United
with grate-
Acknowledges
Jewish Appeal and the Bnai Brith
ful appreciation the many
Hillel Foundations.
kind
expressions
of sym-
*
*
pathy extended by rela-
An audience of artists and Ju-
tives and friends during
daic scholars paid tribute to Dr.
the family's recent be-
WILLIAM KOLODNEY at a recep- '
reavement.
tion in his honor given by the 92nd
Street YM-YWCA, marking his
70th birthday and his retirement
as the Y's educational director. He
has been recognized for his revival
The Family of the Late
of such arts as poetry reading,
chamber music and modern dance.
SANFORD
* * *
FRIEDMAN
Election of MORRIS L. LEVIN-
SON, New York industrialist and
Acknowledges with grate-
Jewish civic leader, as a member
ful appreciation the many
of the board of directors of the
kind expressions of sym-
Jewish Telegraphic Agency was
pathy extended by rela
announced by Robert H. Arnow,
lives and friends during
JTA president. Levinson is presi-
the family's recent be-
dent of the United Jewish Appeal
reavement.
of Greater New York and treas-
urer of the national UJA. He is a
vice president of the Council of
Jewish. Philanthropies of New
York.
The Family of the Late
* * •
The children of metropolitan De-
ISAAC GLUCK
troit who ring the doorbell on
Halloween carrying UNICEF's
Acknowledges the grate-
orange and black canisters have
ful appreciation the many
chosen to share their fun so that
kind expressions of sym-
other kids will have a chance for
pathy extended by rela-
a better future. Trick-or-treaters
tives and friends during
know what a single UNICEF
penny will provide—six glasses of
the family's recent be-
milk. A nickel means the peni-
reavement.
cillin to cure a child of yaws, a
crippling tropical disease.

the Aged in Miami. He also be-
longed to Temple Israel in De-
troit.
He was married 60 years ago
in Detroit to the former Bessie
Rubenstein. Besides his wife, Mr.
Lebowski leaves four daughters,
Mrs. Irving (Lina) Small of De-
troit, Mrs. Norman (Sylvia) Lee,
Mrs. Joseph (Helen) Linden, and
Mrs. Morris (Bernice) Arnkoff of
Detroit; a brother, Andy LeBove
of Detroit; two sisters, Mrs. Rose
Rubenstein and Mrs. Hyman
(Becky) Leibowitz of California;
12 grandchildren and eight great-
grandchildren.
Interment Detroit.

Monument
Unveilings

Unveiling announcements may be in
serted by mail or by calling The Jewish
News office, 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd., De
trot[ 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 $4.00 for an unveiling
notice, measuring an inch in depth,
and $7.50 for one two Inches deep with
a black border.

The family of the late Jake
Bagleman announces the unveiling
of a monument in his memory at
1 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 26, at Beth
Tefilo Emanuel Cemetery. Raboi
Gordon will officiate. Relatives
and friends are asked to attend.
* * *
The family of the late Samuel
Zuckerman announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in his memory
at noon Sunday, Oct. 26, at Chesed
shel Emes Cemetery. Cantor Ad
ler will officiate. Relatives and
friends are asked to attend.
• * *
The family of the late Gussie
Pitrich announces the unveiling of
a monument in her memory 2 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 26, at Chesed shel
Emes Cemetery. Relatives a n d
friends are asked to attend.
• * *
The family of the late Jacob
Spalter announces the unveiling
of a monument in his memory at
11 a.m. Sunday, at Machpelah
Cemetery. Rabbi Schnipper will of-
ficiate. Relatives and friends are
asked to attend.
✓ *
The family of the late Harry N.
Gantz announces the unveiling of
a monument in his memory at
12.30 p.m., Nov. 2, at Oakview
Cemetery. Rabbi I. Halpern and
Cantor Ackerman will officiate.
Relatives and friends are asked to
attend.
* * *
The family of the late Lena
Morritz announces the unveiling of
a monument in her memory 1 p.m.
Nov. 2, at Clover Hill Memorial
Park. Rabbi Gruskin will officiate.
Relatives and friends are asked to
attend.

The Family of the Late

ALAN ZALLA

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in his
memory 2:30 p.m. Sun-
day, Oct. 26, at Chesed
shel Emes Cemetery
(Beth Yehudah section).
Rabbi Gorrelick will offi-
ciate. Relatives and
friends are asked to at-
tend.

The Family of the Late

LEON JAY
SIMON

Announces the unveiling
of a monument in his
memory 11 a.m. Sunday,
Nov. 2, at Clover Rill
Memorial Park. R a b b i
Woheelernter will offici-
ate. Relatives and friends
are asked to attend.

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