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February 01, 1974 - Image 31

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1974-02-01

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

Passover 11/IOC's Ilium Aid Extended;
Mizrachi Provides for Israel Needy

Criterion to Have
a Midwinter Ball

Criterion Club will inaug-
urate its social season at a
Midwinter Ball 9 p.m. Satur-
day at the Oak Park Com-
munity Center. The public is
invited.
Johnny "C" and his or-
chestra will provide the
music for dancing, and there
will be social mixers, prizes
and refreshments.
For information, call the
president, Ruth Traison, 538-
6765, or Betty Weinberg, 559-
5175.

Increasing needs for assist-
ance to needy in Israel,
caused by the increasing im-
migration and the difficulties
created by the war for many
new settlers, prompted De-
troit Mizrachi-Hapoel HaMiz-
rachi to commence its annual
Passover Mo'os Hitim cam-
paign ahead of the previous
similar undertakings.
Zvi Tomkiewicz, executive
director of Mizrachi in De-
troit and the executive offi-
cer of Detroit Friends of
Classifieds Get Quick Results Bar-Ilan University, stated
thht the needs are so press-
ing at this time that there is
an urgent need to increase
assistance so vitally need-
MIA HAIR the
ed for those who have been
RMANEINITLY affected by the economic
conditions created by tempor-
REMOVED
ary economic handicaps in
eyebrows—Neckline—Arms—Legs
Israel.

"We have -confidence that
Israel's economy will gain
new strength and will have
American Jewry's full en-
couragement, but the needy
who depend upon our Mo'os
Hitim aid must not be aban-
doned," Tomkiewicz said.

M anon Hornstein
Now Mrs. Schwartz

'Recommended by Physicians

FREE CONSULTATION

.

SHIRLEY PERSIN

Registered Electrologist

MUSIC BY



y i

AuVANCE BUILDING

23077 GREENFIELD

'Room 260'

Nr. Northland & Providence Natalia!

SAM BARNETT

AND HIS ORCHESTRA

1

PHONE 557-1108

968-2563

. 15 Yeqrs Downtown

R

S

1

0111004101/1111101111••••••••01





Get Your Sunday



•BAGELS,
Bialy's elk :

: - NEW YORK TIMES
• •
,










DETROIT BAGEL'S •

0 Newest Factory, 11 Mile & Greenfield ' 557-1950

0

Good Bagels — The Paper ---

Your Cream cheese, Lox, etc.
"One Quick Stop, You Got 'em"

Windsor UJA Event

0

Women's Division of 'the
United Jewish Appeal in
Windsor will have an "Up-
• date '74" program 10 a.m.
Wednesday at the Windsor
Jewish Center.


1111/0•••••••••••••••••



•NATIONALLY ADVERTISED PRODUCTS AT LOW, LOW EVERYDAY PRICES

Extra Super

Special

FEINBERGS

Strictly Kosher

HOT DOGS
or KNOCKS

12-oz. $ 1 19
Cello Pkg.

CANADA DRY

DIET
POP

All Flavors
Your Choice

16-oz.
No Return
Bottles

Geisha Imported
Green Tipped
and White

DEXTER DAVISON

MARKETS

ASPARAGUS

SPEARS

590

15-oz.
Can

Ir




Specials
Good
thru
Wed.
.

41.

We Reserve
Right to Limit
Quantity

PRODUCE SPECIALS•* —

SWEET JUICY

Consul Brand

, IMPORTED

SPRATTS

351/4-oz.$ 1

Gans

00

For Salad or
Cooking

CRISCO
OIL
Decanter Bottle

$ 35

48-oz.

A

FRUIT-
CREST'
Prune

38°

■ 1•1111•

For your veva, parries or ofhe ► events try our

DELICIOUS MEAT OR DAIRY TRAYS

We Use only Kosher-Wilno-Best-Zion or Feinberg:
Kosher Products on our Meat Trays

FOR FREE DELIVERY CALL JO 6-4640

TASTY BAR-B-0 CHICKEN

You'll Also Re Delighted with
Our Very, Very nest Delicious
(We Use Empire Kosher Poultry Only)

TEMPLE ORANGES.

100 Size

49

DOZ.

GREEN CRISP CLAIFORNIA

Apple Juice

Bottle
Qt.

,

MRS. SCHWARTZ

Marion Ellen Hornstein
and
William Philip Schwartz
original personalized center-
were married in a recent
pieces, favors, & invitations for . ceremony at the Raleigh
House.
all occasions.
The bride is the daughter
I INVITATIONS 20% OFF
of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin H.
Hornstein of Pearson Ave.,
by Bev Kurtis 353-9199
Oak Park. Parents of the
bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs.
silk & artificial flower arrange-
Pine Schwartz of Cloverlawn
ments to suit home or office
Ave., Oak Park.
decor.
Mrs. Gerald Tolle was her
SUE KUTINSKY DORSEY MENKEN sister's matron of honor.
6-7312 —
626-5536
6 26-7312
Bridesmaids were Mrs. Abra-
BAZAARS
ham Weberman, Elyse Mal-
lin and Jane Ellis of New
York.
Best man was Dennis
Lerner. Ushers were David
Hornstein, brother of the
bride, Gerald Tolle, Daniel
Rockman, 'M e 1 v in Gitler,
Glenn Jacobs, Robert Van
Ness and Howard Babock.
Following a honeymoon in
(and your local papers)
Toronto, the couple will live

at
in Clawson.

F
A
FAVORITE
0

Tomkiewicz explained that
on the lists of Mizrachi in Is-
rael are thousands who await
American generosity to be
assured of the Passover ne-
cessities.
"There is a traditional ob-
ligation to assist the less for-
tunate on Passover, and we
are confident that Detroit
Jewry, as in the past, will
fulfill a great obligation for
the approaching Passover,"
he added.
Special arrangements have
been made by Mizrachi in
Israel, with leading super-
markets, to fulfill the orders
for Mo'os Hitim food pack-
ages which will include the
basic needs for the sedorim
and the entire Passover fes-
tival week.
The current urgent appeal
asks for generous gifts to this
fund.
Contributions to the Pass-
over Israel Mo'os Hitim Fund
are to be made to Mizrachi,
23125 Coolidge, Oak Park,
phone 398-7180.

PASCAL CELERY I

L

24 Size
Ex.
Lge.

2 9

STALK

..seTurday, aurvfity)

FRESH FISH DEPARTMENT

The finest and largest selection in the
area. We4lean, bone, skin and grind
all fish free of charge. For special
service call

JO 6-4640

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, February 1, 1974-31

Magazine Cites
Heart Surgeon
Kantrowitz

Dr. Adrian Kantrowitz,
chairman of the department
of cardiovascular and thor-
acic surgery at Sinai Hos-
pital, was the subject of a
six-page, illustrated article
in the current issue of The
Smithsonian, for his contri-
bution and use of the tem-
porary balloon pump on
heart patients.
The pump, first used by
Dr. Kantrowitz in 1967 while
he was still at Maimonides
Hospital in Brooklyn, is used
on patients who have suffer-
ed from myocardial infarc-
tion, an obstruction of blood
supply to the heart tissue,
causing the surrounding
tissue to die: When infaction
occurs, the patient suffers a
heart attack.
(The first balloon-pump
patient, a 45-year-old woman
who had seemed certain to
die of shock associated with
a severe heart attack, re-
covered and left the hospital,
and has been using the pump
ever since.)
Anchored to the aorta, the
balloon pump can help the
patient suffering the infarc-
tion by reducing the heart's
work load, increasing the
amount of blood pumped into
the body, and increasing the
flow of blood through the
coronary arteries to the
heart itself.
Dr. Kantrowitz and his re-
searchers have found that if
pumping is started quickly,
it can reduce the eventual
size of the infarct, the area
of tissue that dies from the
loss of blood.
Although he was not the
originator of the balloon
pump, Dr. Kantrowitz has
been cited as its chief clini-
cal developer, I ‘w•

Seated at the head table at the party honoring Louis
Levitan are, clockwise from lower left, Mr. and Mrs.
Levitan, David Pollack and Mrs. Pollack, Samuel Ham.
burger and Mrs. Hamburger, Leonard Simons and Mrs.
Simons and Emma Schaver,

Associates Acclaim Levitan
on 16 Years' Service in Detroit

Louis E. Levitan's 16 years'
directorial work which raised
Detroit's Israel Bonds stand-
ards among the highest in
American communities was
acclaimed by a group of
friends who honored him and
Mrs. Levitan at a farewell
dinner at the Standard Club,
Jan. 23.
David Pollack, chairman
of the Detroit Israel Bond
Committee, speaking for the
hosts at the dinner, present-
ed the Levitans with a set of
the new 16-volume Encyclo-
paedia Judiaca as a mark of
appreciation for their labors
here in behalf of many com-
munity and Israeli causes.
Levitan is scheduled to as-
sume the mangerial role for
Israel Bonds for the Pacific
Coast area.
Heads of Israel Bond com-
mittees in leading organiza-
tions here, who worked with
Levitan during his entire per-
iod of service here joined in
the expressions of apprecia-
tion for his efforts.
Among the attendees were
Prof. and Mrs. William Ha-
ber of Ann Arbor, who had
shared in Israel Bond efforts
in Michigan, and Gen. and
Mrs. S. L. A. Marshall, whose
numerous trips to Israel were
inspirations to Israel Bond
workers whose gatherings
they addressed during the
years.
With Eric Rosenow at the
piano and Max Sosin narrat-
ing stories and serving as
master of ceremonies, the
evening was one of entertain-
ment, while the Bond chair-
man, David Pollack, reiter-
ated that the drive for the
current year is about to begin

and vastly larger Bond in-
vestments are expected here.
The gathering was deeply
moved when Emma Schaver
sang "Reizele," which was in-
cluded in her repertoire
when she sang for survivors
from Nazisim in displaced
persons camps in 1947. She
recalled, w hen she an-
nounced her selection of this
song, that she first met Levi-
tan in the DP camps where
he represented the U. S. re-
lief agencies after World War

II.

Hosting the farewell dinner
for the Levitans were Messrs.
and Mesdames Norman Al-
lan, Louis Berry, Allen Char-
lupski, Henry Dorfman, Na-
than L. Fink, Irwin Green,
Samuel Hamburger, David
Hermelin, David Pollack and
Felix Rosenzweig and Mrs.
Morris L. Schaver.
It was announced that Lev-
itan, together with Phillip
Stollman and Nathan P. Ros-
sen, will represent the De-
troit Israel Bond Organiza-
tion at Prime Minister Golda
Meir's special conference for
Israel Bonds, in Jerusalem,
Sunday and Monday. The bil-
lion dollar U. S. Israel Bond
drive will be launched at
that conference.

Israel Is Defended

by German Bishop

MUNICH — Cardinal Julius
Doepfner of Munich, presi-
dent of the West German
Bishops' Conference, said
"that each German has a
duty to aid Israel; and the
Jews threatened With isola-
tion on the world political
scene."

Annual Show to Draw 140 Artists

Center Has Class
in Speed Reading

The Jewish Center will
offer an eight-week speed-
reading course 7 p.m. Tues-
days at the 10 Mile branch.
The course is designed for
those age 13 and older who
wish to increase their read-
ing speed and comprehen-
sion.
Susan Brusk will teach the
course. For information, call
the Center, 341-4200, ext. 269,
or 545-8780.

Plans for the showing of works by more than 140
Michigan professional artists are on the minds of these
planners for the 11th annual Sholem Aleichem Art Show
and Sale, Feb. 8-10 at the Labor Zionist Institute. They
are, from left, chairman Mrs. Harry Roth, Irving Panush,
Herbert Schein and Irving Edgar. A "Meet the Artists"
night is scheduled 8 p.m. Feb. 8, and there will be art
prizes the following evening. Tickets will be sold at the -
door.

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