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July 10, 1970 - Image 26

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1970-07-10

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

,

. .

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

26—Friday, July 10, 1970

Zivian Center Opens Final Unit

Dr. Cash succeeds Dr Samuel
Sinai Hospital opened a portion
of the third and final unit in its Bernstein, who has been chief of
99-bed Zivian Center for Continued pediatrics at Sinai since the hos-
Care Wednesday. The $1,800,000 pital opened in January 1953.
The new pediatrics chief was
wing opened Dec. 1, 1969 with an
initial 33 beds. Another 33-bed instrumental in the action of the
Food
and Drug Administration
unit opened in February.
The center is designed for short- for the removal of an anticon-
term convalescent patients who I vulsant drug after studies re-
need only minimal nursing care vealed an unsuspected toxic ef-
while requiring medical observa- feet. He has published exten-
sively in the field.
tion or hospital services. It repro-
Dr. Cash holds membership in
sents a major development because
of anticipated cost reduction and many professional and civic or-
ganizations, including the Medical
innovations in patient. care.
Patients transferred to the cen- Committee for Human Rights. A
ter from the acute hospital have diplomate on the American Board
the opportunity for receation and of Pediatrics, he is past chairman
socializing. Visiting hours are of the Oak Park Planning Com-
extended, and patients are mission and a member of Beth
allowed to eat in a central din- Shalom Synagogue.
ing room. The center is corn
pletely carpeted and air con-
ditioned.
During the first seven months of
operation, 1,500 patients have been
transferred to the center, represent- , Town and Country Club will
present "Hair Zach Tzoo! (Lis-
ing 10,034 days of patient care.
The opening of the third unit ten!), an original musical revue.
brings the center's capacity to 84 10 p.m., July 18 and 19.
Dinner and dancing for mem-
beds.
bers and guests starts at 7:30 p.m.
Producing director of "Hair" is
Dr. Ralph Cash has been appoint- Pat Lewiston; associate director,
ed chairman of the pediatrics de- Dr. Herman Bennett; coordinator,
partment at Sinai Hospital, it was Eileen Lehman; choreographer,
announced by Dr. Julien Priver, ex- Jean Bortz; musical director, Ray
ecutive vice president. Taylor; stagecraft and design,
Dr. Cash, 43, is a graduate of Irving Feldman and Sidney Ro-
Pennsylvnia State University and gin; publicity and program, Roz
the University of Pennsylvania's Ross; m a k e u p, Sam Dryman;
school of medicine. He served his sound. Ed Knight; and stage man-
internship at Sinai in 1956 and his ager, Morris Bloomberg.
Among the performers are: Jack
residency at Children's Hospital of Beckwith, Dr. John and Donna Cohen,
Philadelphia. . Nelson and Carol Chase. Manny and
g a
A member of Sinai's attending rit ,u•sj....A .Croslit,),ert,NiDaonnn,Faeornicakr; Al ealnd

Acre of Aquarius
at Town Country

Dr. Cash Named

staff since 1958, Dr. Cash has been '
- Kapfan. Frances s Kaye.
active with Wayne State University g rordsohneblonnd atti as,11,elis,1%)tenr,,z Lee Miller,
Robert .31Dosr.s.Lsalriye
as a clinical assistant professor of and Millie Moss. Dr.
pediatrics and an instructor in the and Eileen Nestor, Ruth Oleshansky,
R oss , D r.
S chneider,
graduate school of social work. He
' Burton
Dr.
tillman, Sue Sosnick,
b t ri cs a
is a I as
G
)
t vice
vi
c hi
e
f f o pod'
di
a
at Ro ert S e ! k and
anGeorge
e f f.
Crittenton General Hospital of
Michigan.
In his new post
at Sinai, Dr. Cash
will direct the de-
velopment of a
newborn int e n-
sive care nursery
facility, which
will serve the
n e w Northwest
Detroit Hospital
Quadrangle be-
twee Mt. Carmel,
Providence, New Dr. Cash
Grace and Sinai hospitals. He al-
so will provide cooperative super-
vision of the combined mi.dical
pediatric unit at Mt. Carmel. which
was formed July 1 as the first
phase of a shared services program
for the Northwest Quadrangle.

P

LETTER BOX

The Automobile Club of Mich-
igan has introduced car bumper
stickers which spell "BRING 'EM
BACK ALIVE" in several lan-
guages including Hebrew ... They
proved to be very popular and fast
disappeared from the main office
as well as the branch offices
throughout Michigan.
The only drawoack is that the
spelling is not very good: "Taksir
Otam Haim" the mem in otam is
not a mem soffit t final), as it sup-
posed to be, nor is the one in Haim
an "end mem." The net in Haim •
is rather a Teth.
To include Hebrew stickers was
a commendable idea, but the ad-
viser was no expert!
ERIC LIND

Alexander, Friedlands Co-Author
Susan Love Becomes
Three
European Center Guidebooks
Barry N. Lepler

& mina. e .o lum,

MRS. BARRY LEPLER

Susan Constance Love was wed
to Barry Norman Lepler in a re-
cent afternoon ceremony at Har-
per Hospital with Rabbi Richard
C. Hertz officiating. An evening
reception followed at the Sheraton
Cadillac Hotel.
Parents of the couple are Mr.
and Mrs. Seldon H. Love of Rue
Versailles Dr. East, Oak Park and
Mrs. Jacob (Kopal) Lepler of
Northfield Blvd., Oak Park, and
the late Jacob Lepler.

The bride wore a gown of silk
peau de soie with hand-beaded
clusters of pearls and a watteau
train. She carried a bouquet of
orchids, lilies of the valley and
ivy.

Marilyn Karp of Chevy Chase.
Md. served as maid of honor and
Teri Koosh of Chicago was brides-
maid.
Max Lepler served his brother
as best man and James Love,
brother of the bride, was usher.
The couple will reside in Royal
Oak.

Fil.'enson-Zeff ['au's Said List of Periodicals
at Con Shaarev Zedek of Jewish Interest
Published Here

MRS. MITCHELL FIVENSON

In a recent noon ceremony at
Cong. Shaarey Zedek, Ellen Sybil
7 .eff was wed to Michell James
Fivenson. Rabbi Irwin Groner and
Cantors Jacob Sonenklar and Ja-
cob Harkin officiated.
Parents of the couple are Dr.
and Mrs. M. B. Zeff of Shervilla
Pl.. Southfield, and Mrs. F. E.
Fivenson of Traverse City, and the
late Mr. Fivenson.
The bride wore a gown of silk
organza, bodice appliqued with
Venice lace and Victorian styling.
The gown's chapel train was bor-
dered with matching lace. The
',ride wore a mantilla and carried
a bouquet of orchids and ivy on
her consecration Bible.
Sandra Zeff served her sister as
maid of honor. Bridesmaids were
Sue Solarz and Sally Schneir.
Mark Thomas Fivenson of Ann
Arbor served his brother as best
man. Ushers were Lawrence Levy
of Fort Wayne, Ind. and Christo-
pher Cohen of Chicago.
The couple will reside in Trav-
erse City.

Three Detroiters have combined free-lance writer. He and his wife,
their skills to prepare interesting who grew up in Israel, have two
daughters.
guides to three European areas.
Jerome A. Friedland, 39, vice-
E. P. Dutton and Co. is the pub-
lisher of the three volumes, each president and director of market-
ing
research at D. P. Brother
of which is suitable for speedy
tracing of important places to eat, Company, D et r o i t, advertising
agency.
He came to Detroit from
worth-while nightclubs, sightseeing
recommendations, etc. In "Paris New Jersey seven years ago. He
was
born
in Germany and was
Discovery," "London Discovery"
and "Rome-Florence Discovery" graduated from New York Uni-
the compilers have incorporated versity and University of Pennsyl-
basic facts for selections of stores vania Wharton School. The Fried-
to shop in, hotels of merit, restau- lands have two children.
rants that are gaining fame for the
foods they serve.
It is especially interesting to
PHOTOGRAPHY
note that John Alexander, well
Weddings and Bar Mitzvas
known native Detroiter, and an
Prestige Color
advertising specialist, is co-author
477-6664
of two of the guides—Paris and
London—with another Detroit Ad-
vertising executive, Jerry Fried-
DICK STEIN
land. The third, dealing with
Presents
Rome and Florence, was compil-
ed by Alexander together with
THE DICK STEIN ORCHESTRA
Friedland's wife, Marianne Fried-
AND
land. A publisher's note indicates
THE JEEP SMITH ORCHESTRA
that Mrs. Alexander also was
LI 7-2770
helpful in gathering data for the
two books.
There is a special offer with each
of the guide books—a "Discovery
Leave Everything to Us
Courtesy Card" on the inside of
each of the books. It is detach-
able and upon signing and present-
ing it to selected nightclubs, gal-
leries, shops and restaurants a ,
special discount is offered.
Maps accompany the authorita-
tive guide books and the informa-
tion provided is concise and pro-
vides assistance to all travelers
mho wish to make the best or
overseas trips.
Resulting from studies after sev-
eral European trips, the authors
were able to secure best assistance
from people in the areas they
visited. It created intimate back-
WYN and HAROLD LANDIS
grounds for their works.
John Alexander, 41, son of Mrs.
Wilton M. Alexander, was gradu-
ated from Harvard College and
served with military intelligence in
Korea. A one-time television pro-
• STYLE
ducer for professional baseball and
• ELEGANCE
football games, and a specialist
• BEAUTY
in political campaign advertising,
he is now the copy director of a
WYN•HAROLD CATERING
Detroit advertising agency and a

A total of 619 titles of Jewish
periodicals in Wayne and Oakland
County libraries has been tabu-
lated by Sarah Bell, librarian of
the United Hebrew Schools' Mid-
rasha Library.
Mrs. Bell prepared the listing
in fulfillment of requirements for
a master's degree in library science
at Wayne State University.
"The Union List of Holdings of
Jewish Periodicals in Selected Re-
ligious. Educational and Public
Libraries in Wayne and Oakland
Counties in the State of Michigan
as of June 1969" was published by
the Midrasha Library.

WHY WORRY ••
tt

HOME CATERING

Phone EL 6-84U

SERVING ONLY
PRIME AND
CHOICE MEATS

SINGER'S

Kosher Meat Dealers Assoc.

JACK ATTIS PHIL SWARIN

13721 W. 9

Mrs. Bell pointed out in her
introduction that a growing in-
terest in the field of Jewish stud-
ies and lack of an adequate bib-
liography to meet the need
spurred her project. The Wayne
State University Library, for ex-
ample, is supplied—through a
federal act—with a copy of every
monograph and periodical pub-
lished in Israel that is or may
eventually be of research value.

The periodicals in the union list
concern Jews and Judaism and
relate to the fields of the social
sciences and humanities. Scien-
tific and technical journals are
excluded, with the exception of the
Hebrew Medical Journal (Harofe
Ilaivri), which contains scholarly
literary articles.
The library collections include
those from the Detroit Public Li-
brary's and Wayne State Univer-
sity's various departments, Mid-
rasha Library, Jewish Center, Oak-
land University, Cong. Shaarey
Zedek, Temple Beth El and the
University of Detroit.

The Upper Michigan Copper
Country is the largest commercial
Humor is consistent with pathos, deposit of native copper in the
world. It has yielded over 11,000,-
whilst wit is not.
—Samuel Taylor Coleridge. 000,000 pounds in the past century.

Kosher in tr n Meats
& Poultry Mkt.

MILE

LI 7-8111

at

RIDGEDALE

WE DELIVER

CONFIDENTIALI.1 YOURS

Helen Zinherg R. E.
The hair you pluck will come back to haunt
you. Before you tweeze again, remember this
Quotation from one of the foremost medical
authorities on the subject of human hair:
"Plucking out strong hairs should never be
advised." Why not? Because the long term
penalties for continued plucking can be so
severe:

1. You may stimulate the
the growth of additional
hairs around the one you
pull out.
2. You may cause succes-
sive generations of hair from
the abused follicle to grow
coarser, longer, darker.
3. You may cause skin irri-
rations, pits, scars.
4. You may make eventual
permanent removal slower
and costlier by pulling the
root and follicle out of

place.

Such risks are needless

now that Air-cooled jet
Stream Electrolysis is avail-
able to you. This is the first
method of permanent hair
removal with everything to
commend it. Air-cooled Jet
Stream is faster, more cons-
fortable.
Electrolysis is the only
medically approved method
to remove hair permanently.
Investigate this superior spe-
cialized service for the per-
manent improvement
and
confidence. You owe it to
yourself to look your best.

ANNOUNCING NEW LOCATION
16125 W. 12 MILE RD.—OPEN MON., WED. & FRI.

9 to 5 P.M. — 352-8115
8221 CURTIS OPEN TUES. & THURS. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. UN 2-8914

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