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August 09, 1974 - Image 32

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1974-08-09

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

32—Friday, August 9, 1974

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Fresh Air Society Annual Event
450 Attend First Delray Reunion to Be Highlighted by Dedications

Acquaintances from dec-
ades past were renewed Sun-
day night as more than 450
persons gathered for the Del-
ray-Downriver community's
first reunion since the com-
munity dispersed in the early
1940s.
Expecting only about 100
responses from former resi-
dents of the Hungarian-de-
cended community, the plan-
ners were surprised when
the more than 450 persons,
many of them non-Jews, re-
sponded to the call.
According to Mrs. Shirley

MICHAEL KAPLIT

Photography:

Gormezano, one of the plan-
ners, responses came from
throughout the U.S., and one
came from Israel.
The evening was highlight-
ed by a performance of Hun-
garian country folk dances
by the Dancers Hungaria
troupe, and a review of what
life was like when the neigh-
borhood flourished. Ziggy
Bela and his orchestra pro-
vided the music.
Members of the planning
committee included M r s.
Irene Astrein, Mrs. Betty
Berg, George Duchin, Shirley
Gill, Mrs. Gormezano, Mrs.
Pearl Goutman, Bernard
Jonas, Edith Rose, Eugene
Rose, Mrs. Muriel Auslander
and Mrs. Pearl Weinstein.

CABINS AT SILVERMAN VILLAGE

Weddings • Bar'Miivicii;

642-1039

Bloodmobile to Take
Donations in Area

Seeking a continual supply
of safe, volunteer blood, a
Red Cross bloodmobile will
be located at North Congre-
gational Church, Southfield,
10 a.m.-4 p.m. Aug. 12. For
an appointment, call the Red
Cross, 542-6700.

MUSIC BY

SAM BARNETT

AND HIS ORCHESTRA

968-2563

ISRAEL, U.S.A.,.
and EVERYWHERE

Plane, Bus, Car and Hotel
Reservations






"for your next affair"



While you relax Tom Newby will create

• the MAGIC for your Bar Mitzvas, Weddings,



Showers and Parties .. .

LET'S MAKE A DATE














TOM NEWBY

of Southfield
Flowers, Gifts
Distinctive Party Creations

29245 Southfield at 12 Mile

-

559-2560

CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS

Helen Zinberg

The hair you pluck will come back to haunt!
you. Before you tweeze again, remember this
uotation from one of the foremost medical
authorities on the sabjeet.of human hair:
"Plucking out strong hairs should never Ire
berm
advised." Why not? Because the long
penalties for continued plucking can be so
severe:

"T.— You may itirnaGie 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, dprker.
3. You may cause skin i'r ► i-
tations, pits, scars..
4. You may make evenlual
permanent removal slower
and costlier by pulling the
of
root and follicle out
place.
Such risks are needless

.

now

tliCir. Air-coaled
jet s
Stream Electrolysis is avail-
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method of permanent hair
removal with everything to
commend ,it. Air-cooled Jet

Stream is Master, more com-

fortable.
•Electrolysis is the only
medically approved method
to remove hair permanently.
Investigate this suprior spe-
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manent improvement and
confidence. You owe it to
yourself to look your best.

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

9 to 5 P.M.-557-8115
8221 Curtis Open Tues. 8 Thurs. 9 A.M. to 6 P.m. UN 2-8914'

People Make News











•,


6,










Highlight of the annual
meeting of the Fresh Air
Society, 1:30 p.m. Sunday,
will be the dedication of the
Esther and Nathan Silver-
man Village at Camp Tama-
rack, Ortonville.
Silverman Village serves
children who require closer
supervision and a higher
ratio of staff to campers.
This summer, Silverman Vil-
lage is providing 90 camper
periods for boys and seven
for girls. Where indicated,
some campers attend for two
or three sessions.
The Silverman Village pro-
gram was started six years
ago. For the first five years
it was held at Camp Tama-
rack in Brighton. From its
inception, the program has
been jointly sponsored by
Fresh Air Society and the
Orchards, a residential treat-
ment home sponsored by the
National Council of Jewish
Women Detroit Section. Ger-
ald Levin, director of the
Orchards, has been the pro-
gram's only supervisor.
The special projects com-
mittee of the Fresh Air So-
ciety has provided guidance
and planning. Members are
Dr. Joseph Fischhoff, chair-
man, Mrs. Theodore Birnk-
rant, Dr. David Faigenbaum,
David B. Hermelin, Miles
Jaffee, Mrs. Max Chomsky,
Dr. Morris Weiss, Robert
Kasle, Mrs. Maxwell E. Kat-
zen, Sol G. Kurtzman, Mrs.
Jack Robinson, Mrs. Irving
Adler, Mrs. Jerome Pershin,
Harold Weiss, Sidney J.
Winer, Samuel Lerner, Mrs.

Victor Shiffman, Mrs. Ar-
nold E. Frank and Harvey
A. Gordon.
Funding for the project was
provided by the capital needs
committee of the Jewish Wel-
fare Federation and United
Jewish Charities, along with
the following contributors for
whom dedications will take
place:
Esther and Nathan Silver-
man Village, by the Jack Al-
spectors, Joeby Herschmans
and Gilbert Silvermans; rec-
reation hall in memory of
John and Ella Imerman, by
John and Ella Imerman
Foundation; Sylvia and Ro-
bert Zell Arts and Crafts
Building, by Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Zell; staff housing, by
Greater Detroit Section, Na-
tional Council of Jewish Wo-
men; and Sheruth League
Cabin, by Sheruth League.
Also William H. Frank Jr.
Cabin, by Mr. and Mrs. Wil-
liam H. Frank, parents; Ab-
raham J. Redblatt Cabin, by
Erwin and Sylvia Harvith, in
memory • of their father;
cabin dedicated in honor of
Rose P. Skillman, by the
Skillman Foundation; cabin
dedicated in memory of Ar-
thur A. Gottesman, by Mon-
tefiore Lodge, Free Sons of
Israel; and waterfront, by
Samuel and Isabelle Fried-
m an.
The annual meeting will be
conducted by Sidney J.
Winer, president of the Socie-
ty. Lester S. turton, associ-
ate chairman of the Tama-
rack Hills Authority, will be
chairman of the dedications.

J4,

.

Broomfield to Continue Support
for Emigration of Soviet Jews

Representative William S.
Broomfield said he would
continue to oppose granting
most favored nation trade
status to the Soviet Union "so
long as the cold and calculat-
ing persecution of Soviet
Jews continues."
Speaking in the House of
Congress-
Representatives,
man Broomfield explained
that a story from one of his
constituents, Cantor Shabtai
Ackerman, of Cong. Beth
Abraham-Hillel made clearer
the plight of Soviet Jews.
According to Cantor Acker-
man, Yichil Kutchuk and his
wife and sister-in-law applied
for and were granted exit
visas for Israel, but 3 'hours
prior to their departure they
were denied permission to
leave.
The Kutchuks were told
they had to go to the cus-
toms office to have their bag-
gage checked, and when they
arrived they found that their
baggage had already been
opened.
Officials confiscated their

SHERWOOD .EPSTEIN, a
social worker with varied ex-
perience in the field of Jew-
ish communal services for
15 years •since he received
his masters degree from the
George Warren Brown School
of Social Work of the Wash-
ington University of St. Louis
in 1959, has been named con-
sultant to intermediate and
small cities for the Council
of Jewish Federations and
Welfare Funds.
. •
ROBERT • SLATKIN of T)e-
troit is among 15 new trust-
ees who were appointed to
the board of the American
Zionist Youth Foundation, it
was announced by Dr. Arnulf
Pins, chairman. The new
trustees will take their posi-
tions at the natipnal board
meeting at the AZYF offices
in New York.

KENNETH M. WISSBRUN,
whose specialty is trust tax,
has been appointed trust of-
ficer at MANUFACTURERS
NATIONAL BANK of De-
troit. Before joining the bank
last fall, Wissbrun was an
estate and gift tax attorney
at the Internal Revenue Serv-
ice. A member of the Amer-
ican Bar Association, the
Michigan Bar Association
and the Detroit Bar Associ-
ation, Wissbrun received a
BS from Ohio State Univer-

,

passports and papers, ar-
rested Kutchuk and sent his
wife home to an empty apart-
ment. Since that time, no
one is permitted to visit
Kutchuk who it was learned
is ill. No charges had been
made against him.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Kutchuk,
who • suffers from a heart
condition, has been forced to
appear at the police station
every day for questioning and
must return to a bare apart-
ment each evening.
Broomfield said he wrote
to the Soviet Embassay for
an explanation and received
a one-line note that his letter
had been referred to the
proper Soviet authorities.
"I am not holding my
breath waiting for a further
reply," he said. "We in the
free world cannot and must
not tolerate the continued op-
presSion that the Kutchuks
and thousands of others have
been subjected to."

Too frequently a tip tips
over a racing fan's fortune.

versity, a JD from the Uni-
versity of Iowa and an LLB
from Wayne State University.

• •

HOWARD SIDEN of Cooley
Ave. entertained at the re-
cent "Hot Pants" contest
held recently in Kennedy
Square. The son of Mrs. Sy-
dell Siden, Siden and his
group performed several
songs, four of which he com-
posed.

**************
MUSIC FOR ALL OCCASIONS

INVITATIONS • ENTERTAINMpa
• CARICATURES ,'
• ASTROLOGER
• CLOWNS
, • BELLY DANCERS
0LHENRI WAKNIK,

AL SIMMS BAND

'41 A tIE

saymoisi

SCHWARTZ

gHWARTZ

.356-8562.

AGENCY
Candy centerpieces 356.852*.

, BE HAIR FREE

ELECTROLYSIS
'7.50 1/2 hr.

Mrs. S. Steiner

35 Years Experience
Doctors Referrals

LI 5-4700

114artin-2)avici

O rtleitra

The Modern Sound of Distinction

From Solo Piano to Large Orchestra

MARTIN KOSINS

546-7558,

REFLECTIONS OF
THE PAST

Jdurt dhrcude naval()

S ilver E7)

)eweiry

HEAD 'n HAIR

21655 Coolidge Rd.

(between 8 & 9 Mile)

Tues.-Sat. 9-7

BAIME,AMI

1.P ■ dit /

544-4449

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