THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
26—Friday, April 20, 1973

Bine - Schwartz
Rites Planned

Bnai Brith Urges Restoration
of Slashed U.S. Welfare Funds

WASHINGTON—Bnai Brith
called for restoration of
federal funds cut from social
welfare budgets.
Protest of the sharp fed-
eral budget reductions came
from the commission on
community and veterans af-
fairs at its annual meeting
here.
The commission decried
the cut in federal funds as a
change in government em-
phasis on the needs of the
disadvantaged, "to an extent

J3nai
ACtivities

MISS ROCHELLE BINE

Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Bine
of Leslie Ave., Oak Park,
announce the engagement of
their daughter Rochelle
Carole to Sanford Schwartz,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Sher-
man Schwartz of Beverly
Hills, Calif.
A May wedding is planned.

ALBERT EINSTEIN
CHAPTER, at the recent
18th annual installation of

officers installed the follow-
ing: Mesdames Eli Kurtz,
president; David Rozenberg,
Sam Freedman, and Max
Gelman, vice president; Mor-
ton. Gilbert, treasurer; Harry
Tuchklapper, Roman Schloss,
George Birenholtz, Max Mine
and Steve Dell, secretaries;
Joseph Berman, junior past
president; Kusiel Yoffee, in-
stallation chairman, a n d
Charles Galinsky, past presi-
dent of the Bnai Brith Wom-
en Council of Metropolitan
Detroit, installing officer.

•

Marri ages

STEIN - WEXLER: Sheila
Wexler, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Hy Jacobs of W. Nine
Mile Rd., Southfield, became
the bride of Teddy Stein, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Stein
of Plumbrooke Rd., South-
field, in a recent ceremony,
after which they honey-
mooned in Las Vegas. The
couple will reside in South-
field.

* *

*

which endangers the social
welfare of our land."
It urged increases par-
ticularly in the current
budget of the Veterans Ad-
ministration and end to the
federal moratorium on sub-
sidized housing for the elder-
ly.

The moratorium threatens
30 nonprofit, nonsectarian
housing projects for the eld-
erly planned by Bnai Brith.
One such high-rise is already
completed and occupied in
Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Four
others are currently under
construction, E. Albert Pal-
lot, chairman of the commis-
sion, reported.

August Ifedding Return to Work Plan for Women
The Jewish Vocational begin the second week of
for Miss Ellen Peel' Service announces the forma- May in Southfield. To reg-

tion of two new groups in ister before May 4, call Bar-
"Project Return," a workshop bara Schwartz or Audrey
for women who are consider- Stein, 557-5341
ing entering or returning to
the world of work.
The workshop will explore
occupational and educational
opportunities for women in
today's job market. Sessions
for your party
will consist of small group
meetings to assist women in
gathering information a n d
By
making decisions necessary
for taking that "first step."
For the past 2 1/2 years, JVS
has been conducting these
groups for women. Because
call
of the response to earlier
MISS ELLEN PECK
sessions of this program, two
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Peck new groups are being or-
ganized.
of Avon Rd., announce the
The daytime sessions will
engagement of their daugh-
ter Ellen Andrea to Jeffrey
Brandwine, son of Mr. and
SPECIALIST
Mrs. Herbert Brandwine of
Foreign Car Service
IN
Greenfield Rd., Southfield.
VOLKS WAGEN
AND
Miss Peck was graduated
PORSCHE CARS
from Wayne State University
with a degree in special edu-
cation. Her fiance is working
CALL.
on his masters degree in
labor and industrial relations
548-3926
at Michigan State University.
548-4160
An August wedding is
541-9704
planned.

Caricatures

SAM FIELD

399-1320

Rep. James C. Corman
(D-Calif.), addressing the
commission, also criticized
the reduced social welfare
budgets. "In our sense of
priorities, we might have
given the crippled and ill the
same attention we will give
to aircraft carriers," Rep.
Corman declared.
He said that ending tax
incentives could provide
funds for government pro-
grams in both human re-
sources and national defense.
"We can't do much for the
10- or 15,000,000 poor unless
we are willing to tax our-
selves more heavily," he
warned.
Problems facing American
The commission also urged olim setting up a home in
the use of federal revenue Israel will be discussed by
sharing funds for aid to the Max and Miriam Littky at
elderly.
the monthly meeting of the
Detroit branch of the As-
sociation of Americans and
Canadians for Aliya 2 p.m.
April 29 at the Jewish Cen-
ter.
The Littkys, who have re-
sided in Israel the past two
Stephanie Katz of Strach- years, will cover purchas-
cona Dr., one of the 10 final- ing a home in Israel, setting
ists in the Detroit Edison Co. up a household and solving
Queen of the Kitchen Contest other problems during the
for Women Who Work, sub- initial stages of aliya. Littky,
mitted the following easy-to- a Detroit attorney for many
years, also will outline new
prepare recipe:
regulations for olim.

,Ars

1018 W. 9
le Rd.
Alfons G. Rehme

Olim to Relate
Aliya Problems

Bnai Brith JINT
Event to Have Snappy Snapper
Ramati as Guest One of 10 Best in

Cooking Contest

BY POPULAR DEMAND!
Now Booking . . .

ED BURG

and His Orchestra

851-6118

Weddings

Shaul Ramati, consul gen-
eral of Israel for the Mid-
west, will address the sev-
enth annual Bnai Brith Pres-
idents Brunch 10 a.m. April
CUSTOM
29 at Cong. Beth Achim.
Louis
Barden and Mrs. Har-
FRAMING
ry Bodzin, co-chairmen for
the event, said the brunch
RESTORATIONS
will feature the presentation
of citations to outstanding
chairmen and workers for the
Bnai Brith Martyrs' Forest.
The first Samuel G. Bank
Award also will be made. Ad-
Birmingham
mission will be by the plant-
ing of two or more trees in
the Samuel G. Bank Forest,
in the Detroit section of the
Classifieds Get Quick Results Martyrs' Forest.

.

CAND1DS

.

Brattitut

647-5730

Wishing All Our
Friends and Customers
A HAPPY PASSOVER

SINGER'S

KosherMeats n s•
& Poultry Mkt.

Member Detroit Retail
Kosher Meat Dealers Assoc4,

JACK ATTIS PHIL SWARIN

13721 W. 9 MILE at RIDGEDALE

LI 7-8111

WE DELIVER.

Criterion Sets
Passover Fete

Between Livernois
& Pinehurst '

Super Imposed
Silhouettes
Unique Poses
Bar Mitzvahs

SVUL 4101.2114N

,547 7054 or 398-1068

-

We Make Our Own Glasses

HEADQUARTERS FOR
• LATEST DOMESTIC AND
IMPORTED FRAME FASHIONS

JWV

PORTRAITS

•
•
•
•

Color

RED SNAPPER IN
CUCUMBER SAUCE

Those who are interested
in aliya on a permanent or
1 red snapper or 1 pound temporary basis are invited.
red snapper fillets, sprin-
kle with paprika and lemon
jucie
1 cup sour cream
3 /4 cup chopped cucumber
(remove seeds)
1 /2 teaspoon dry mustard
BLOCH-ROSE AUXILIARY
1 teaspoon dill weed
elected the following officers:
1 /4 teaspoon onion salt
president, Dorothy Goldberg;
Dash of lemon juice
vice presidents, Irma Pasick
Poach red snapper in small and Carol Burke; secretary,
amount of water for 10 min- Rose Wagner; treasurer, Lot-
utes or until white and fluffy. tie Harris; patriotic instruc-
M i x remaining ingredients tress, Sarah Stern; conduc-
for sauce. Pour sauce over tress, Sylvia Posner; histori-
fish and s e r v e. May be an, Hilda Wister and chap-
lain and counselor, Gerry
served hot or cold.
Mrs. Katz, who is a thera- Feldman. Post officers are
pist at Children's Orthogenic commander, David Goodstein
Center, won an electric ap- and vice presidents, Sam
Skupsky and Louis Wagner.
pliance.
Plans are being made for a
joint installation of post and
auxiliary officers. For infor-
mation call Gerry Feldman,
398-8955.
* *
Criterion Club for single
SOL YETZ-MORRIS CO-
adults will host a Passover HEN POST and AUXILIARY
Promenade 9 p.m. Saturday will hold their annual third
at the Southfield Civic Cen- seder Sunday at the Battle
ter.
Creek Veterans Hospital un-
William M. Fleisher, pres- der the direction of Rabbi
ident, invites the public.
Samuel Levenberg of Kala-
Joe Miller, vocalist, and mazoo, chaplain. Passover
orchestra will provide the food will be served by a com-
music for dancing, and an mittee headed by hospital
"April Follies" revue by the chairman Yetta Glass. To
Sara Paull entertainers, will assist, call Mrs. Glass, KE
5-4133. Commander Sal Al-
be staged.
Kosher for Passover re- pert and Chairman Charles
Glass will present an Ameri-
freshments will be served.
For ticket information, call can auditorium flag to Hamp-
Betty Weinberg, 559-5175, or ton Elementary School in
Detroit.
Pearl Greenstein, 399-3718.

FERNDALE,
MICH.

• PRESCRIPTIONS FOR GLASSES
ACCURATELY FILLED

I

Immediate Repair

• Reasonably Priced

ROSEN OPTICAL SERVICE

13720 W. 9 MILE nr. COOLIDGE

LI 7-5068

OAK PARK, MICH.

Hours: -Daily and Saturday 9:30 .m. to 6 p.m.
"Closed Wednesday

CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS

Helen Zinberg 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
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-
tations, 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 firs
method of permanent hail
removal with everything to
commend it. Air-cooled Jet

Stream is faster, more com-

fortable.
Electrolysis is the only
medically approved method
to remove hair permanently.
Investigate this suprior 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. — 557-8115
8221 Curtis Open Tues. & Thurs. 9 A.M. to 6 P.m. UN 2-8914

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