TIE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, Janaary 1, 1971,-21
DICK STEIN
THE DICK STEIN ORCHESTRA
THE JEEP SMITH ORCHESTRA
LI 7-2770
Student Panel to Be on Agenda
of Council Delegate Assembly
A panel of youth group repre-
sentatives will discuss communal
issues and their organizations'
goals at the Jewish Community
Council's delegate assembly 8:30
p.m. Wednesday at the Jewish
Center.
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Participants in the panel in-
clude Leonard Felder, Mark
Pionskier, Dan Drachier, Laurel
Brainin, David Reed, David
Walt, Barbara Siegel and Dana
Wolfson.
Stanley Frankel, immediate past
president of the Jewish Welfare
Federation's junior division and
a current member of the Federa-
tion Board of Governors, will
serve as panel moderator.
The assembly is under the chair-
manship of Council President
Judge Lawrence Gubow.
The Community Council has
been involved increasingly with
high school and college-age stu-
dents in a variety of cooperative
projects. Sudent groups have
played a major role in helping
plan and carry out Council-spon-
sored demonstrations and com-
munal programs. Panel members
will discuss how this relationship
fits together in terms of what
Jewish youth groups see as their
own organizational goals.
Preceding the panel discussion,
Council Executive Director Walter
E. Klein will present a summary
report of recent Council activity,
particularly with respect to the
community's response to the prob-
lems of Soviet Jewry.
Miss Rotenberg's Troth
c Announced at Brunch'
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MISS ROBERTA ROTENBERG
The engagement of Roberta Sue
Rotenberg and Gary Feldman was
announced at a recent champagne
brunch given by their parents.
Miss Rotenberg is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Rotenberg
of Twining Dr., Southfield. Her
Dance is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Feldman of Sherfield PL,
Southfield.
The couple plans a fall wedding.
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FOR YOUR SPECIAL PARTIES OR OTHER EVEMTS ...
Mrs. Max Schenk, national president of Hadassah, presented the
eighth annual Myrtle Wreath Awards for distinguished contributions
in their fields to Dr. Julianne Densest-Gerber, founder of Odyssey
House youth addiction rehabilitation centers and Metropolitan Opera
Star Roberta Peters at a life membership brunch in the New York
Hilton. Oier 2,500 new life members attended of the 13,500 enrolled
this year.
JNF Women's Tea to Feature Artists
Julius and Annette Chajes on Jan. 19
Julius and Annette Chajes will
highlight the Women of Jewish
National Fund donor tea to be
held noon Jan. 19 at Cong. Shaarey
Zedek.
A concert pianist and composer,
Chajes has been conductor of the
Center Symphony Orchestra since
1940. In recent years, he has con-
certized and conducted -his compo-
sitions in major European capitals,
in Israel and throughout the
United States and Canada.
Mrs. Chides has been a soloist
with the Center Symphony Or-
chestra, Temple Beth El and
Temple Israel. Her repertoire
U-M Prof Relates
Find: Writing Older
Than Dead Sea Scrolls
Also 3 Other Locations
to Serve You
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Myrtle Wreath Winners Honored
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The discovery of eight manu-
scripts several centuries older than
the Dead Sea Scrolls has yielded
a previously unknown and unde-
ciphered writing system, says Uni-
versity of Michigan Prof. George
E. Mendenhall.
The new documents were pur-
chased for the department of an
tlquities of Jordan in 1966 by Prof.
William Brownlee of the Clare-
mont (Calif.) Graduate School
from a Jordanian citizen who be-
lieved them to have come from an
ancient site in the district of Heb-
ron.
The similarity of the writing to
ancient Carian and Etruscan was
first recognized by Prof. Menden-
hall, who was then director of the
American School of Oriental Re-
search In Jerusalem. Taken into
partnership by Dr. Brownlee for
the study of the manuscripts, Prof.
Mendenhall has now nearly com-
pleted a computer tabulation of
the distribution of each character
of the alphabet.
Five of the documents are
written in ink on leather but
three are Incised with a sharp
instrument on a crude parch-
ment. The writing system seems
to be alphabetic and consists of
over 40 signs.
The alphabet may well be the
earliest known example of that
which the Greeks and Etruscans
borrowed, and which eventually be-
came the one we use today," Prof.
Mendenhall points out.
Attempts at dating can only be
tentative, the U-M professor says.
However, on the basis of similar-
ities of the writing system to in-
scriptions from other regions
which seem definitely related, it
appears difficult to date theMlater
than the 7th Century B.C. and they
could well be a century or two
earlier, Mendenhall says.
Mendenhall believes it is possible
that after several generations of.,
archeological work, we finally
have recovered some documents of
the Philistine language. .
"The similarity of the writing
system to contain archaic inscrip-
tions from Crete would support
this conclusion," he notes.
Mr. and Mrs. Chajes
includes songs in Hebrew, as
well as arias, art songs and
musical comedy selections.
Guest speaker will be Herman
L. Weisman, president of the Jew-
ish National Fund of America and
president of the Zionist Organiza-
tion of America.
The goal of the Women's Chap-
ter, a 1,000-member organization
now in its 48th year, is the com-
pletion of its Women's Forest and
Park, a $75,000 development near
the village of Kiryat Shmona on
the Lebanese border.
For information on the donor
tea, call the JNF office, 399-0820.
Mr. Paul Foltyn Takes
Leah Krauss as Bride
MRS. PAUL FOLTYN
Leah Ruth Krauss and Paul Fol-
tyn were married in a recent cere-
mony at the Sheraton-Cadillac
Hotel. Rabbi Moses Lehrman offi-
ciated.
Mrs. Foltyn is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Burnett Krauss of
Lauder Ave. The bridegroom is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Foltyn of Hartslock Wds. Dr., Bir-
mingham.
Mrs. Perry Krauss was matron
of honor. The bride's attendants
were Mrs. Melvin Shari, Mrs. Je-
rome Lewis, Audrey Foltyn, and
Gail and Lynn Jacob.
David Foltyn served his brother
as best man. Dr. Ivan and Peter
Green and Michael and Perry
Krauss were ushers.
Following a honeymoon in Puer-
to Rico, the couple will reside in
Southfield.