Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 23, 1964 Page: 8 of 12
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Pag* 8-Dallas Texas Jewish Post Thursday, April 23, 1964
dallas doings
WITH CLARE
In a few short weeks the magic of June will regally enter
the aisle of summer. With it comes roses, wedding bells and
brides. As evidenced by the many bride-elects being honored
with pre-nuptial parties it promises to be a gay month.
BRIDES — After graduating from the University of Texas
Miss Rochelle Lynn will be married June 7 to Walter Pye Jr. at
Temple Emanu-El. Her parties begin April 25 with a Brunch and
kitchen shower at the Columbian Club given by Mrs. Erwin
Donsky. Miss Lynn is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William
Lynn, 5610 Greenbriar. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pye of Houston are
parents of the prospective groom.
Miss Brenda Mann will befuture groom, Hal Zelazny,
honored April 25 with a lunch- M>« Mann daughter of Mr. and
eon at the Chateaubriand by ^rs. Jacob J. Mann, 7d32 Ma
u>c Walter Stone and Mrs. sOn Dells, and Mr. Zelazny, son
:^urkx Maz„y 'un?S of the of Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Zelazny
_______! 7147 Azalea, will be married
June 14 at Shearith Israel .
Another June 14 bride - elect,
Miss Adele Sharon Hoffman, be-
gan her bridal parties recently
with a cocktail-buffet given by
Mr. and Mrs. Chick Hurst, Mr.
NOW 2 LOCATIONS
TO SERVE YOU
JOHN COBB’S
AIRWAY DRUG
515 Preston Royal Village
EM 3-4318
Hillside Village Drugs
319 Hillside Village
TA S-9916
• Registered Pharmacist*
• Complete Prescription Dep’t.
• Leading Cosmetic Lines
• Gift Department
• Fountain—Lunch—Snacks
Air. Sea. Land
TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
ANYWHERE
IN THE
WORLD
call
NATHAN
WYLL
TRAVEL.
1213 Adolphus Tower^
RI 1-1053 Dallas
and Mrs. Bill Carb and Mr. and
Mrs. Martin Glass at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Glass.
Mrs. Leon Mellow and Mrs.
Samson W7iener were luncheon
hostesses Tuesday at S & S Tea
Room. Misses Caroline Brooks
and Elaine Rice will be lunch-
eon hostesses April 25 at Vesu-
vio’s. Miss Hoffman, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Hoffman
of Houston will be married to
Melvin K. Hurst HI, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin K. Hurst
Jr., 6814 Tulip Lane, at Beth
Yeshuran Temple in Houston.
Miss Carol Gene W’aldman,
bride-elect of Howard Sheldon
Cohen, continues her parties
prior to her June 21 wedding
at Shearith Israel. Mrs. Adolph
Teitelbaum was hostess to 25
guests for luncheon at Chateau-
briand on April 18. On April
22 Mrs. Irving Gold and Mrs.
Sam Kessler were luncheon
hostesses at the Columbian
Club. Mesdames Albert Fox,
Morris Bock and George Lis-
sauer will host a luncheon at
Vesuvios on April 25. Miss
Waldman is fthe daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Waldman,
7231 Azalea. Mr. Cohen is the
son of Mrs. Edward Cohen of
Glencoe. HI.
Miss Carol Ruth Brooksaler,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Fred
Brooksaler, 4332 Grassmere, and
bride-elect of David S. Alkek,
was honored with a lingerie
shower, in Austin, on April 11.
Mrs. Roger Henderson was hos-
tess for the 50 guests. Mr. Al-
kek is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
D. C. Alkek of Victoria. The
couple plan a June wedding.
Dr. and Mrs. M. H. Blend
entertained with a family par-
ty honoring their son, Michael
Marc Blend, and his fiancee,
Miss Celeste Carol Bimbaum of
San Antonio. Her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. I. S. Birnbaum,
TTflY s.ii All A.ii 1A All aS~Sa AAl 'AIL Th/ _
THE DALLAS COMMITTEE FOR STATE OF ISRAEL BONDS,
ACKNOWLEDGING ITS THANKS AND APPRECIATION
FOR YOUR SUPPORT OF THE BOND PROGRAM
. . . AND IN CELEBRATION OF
ISRAEL S 16TH BIRTHDAY
Extends This Cordial Invitation
to you to attend
“A NIGHT
OF WINE AND ROSES”
—STARRING—
LEWIS NORMAN
EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION
SMALL - FRY FASHION SHOW
Congregation Shearith Israel
Sunday evening, April 26, 1964
8:00 o’clock
CALL EM 3-5295 FOR RESERVATIONS
TICKETS: $1.00 per person
includes
Israeli Wine
Nosherie
Mixes
s£
If
•of'
A'*
,.r
-* Gf
Or
grandparents and family of San
Antonio were here for the par-
ty at the Blend home, 6614
Tulip Lane. A wedding in Agu-
das Achim Synagogue in San
Antonio is planned for August
30. |
The marriage of Mrs. Eva D.
Feffer and Charles Greenberg,
was solemnized April 10 in the
Rabbi’s study at Tiferet Israel
with Rabbi Sidney Weinsch-
neider officiating. After two
weeks sightseeing at the World’s
Fair in New York, Mr. and
Mrs. Greenberg will he at home
at 6423 Northwest Highway.
POTPOURRI — It makes for
lots of fun when two little sis-
ters can share their birthday
party. That is what happened
for Shelley and Kathy Shwiff.
Shelley was six years old April
2 and Kathy five on April 15 so
an Officer Friendly party on
April 11 made a gay time for
50 of their schoolmates. Cup-
cakes and ice cream were serv-
ed by their mother, Mrs. Mar-
vin Shwiff at their home, 7254
Mimosa.
It’s congratulation time — to
Linda Shanbaum on receiving
the Founder’s Day award aft
Hockday School! Linda is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Shanbaum. To Gary Friedman,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fried-
man, 4162 Valley Ridge, on be-
ing one of the finalists in the
district championship spelling
contest. Gary attends Walnut
Hill School and qualifies to con>
pete in the Dallas County con-
test.
CRIB CROWD NEWS—brings
us two future contestants for
the good things in life.
Mr. and Mrs. Waler L. Solo-
mon, 5627 Lindenshire, wel-
comed their third son, Barry
David on April 10. Completing
the happy threesome are bro-
thers, Steven Lawrence and
Ronald Bruce. Proud grandpar-
enfts are Mr. and Mrs. Paul ^
Greenberg, New York City and
David Solomon of Dallas.
Mr. and Mrs. William I. En-
gelberg, 417 Malden, Richard-
son, proudly welcomed their
first son, Samuel Abrum on
March 27. Sister Kathy Annette
joined the happy grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Eng»elberg
and great - grandfather Dave
Wolfe of Dallas in the welcome.
COMINGS, Goings and Guests
Mrs. Calmon Landa, 6078
Averill Way and Mrs. Elsie
Leahman, 6407 Bandera, left
last week for an extended tour
of Mexico and then on to Gua-
dalajara to visit friends. Mr.
and Mrs. Julius Coleman and
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Golman
are packing “comfortable shoes”
for a visit to the World’s Fair.
They leave this weekend for
two weeks at The Concord and
the Fair. Have Fun!
ART LOVERS — On exhibit
at the Julius Schepps Communi-
ty Center Art Gallery through
May 115 are the art works of
Mrs. Joanne Koclanes. Mrs.
Koclanes received the top a-
ward from Governor John COn-
nally in a statewide art contest
in September, 1963, sponsored
by the Women of the State Dem-
ocratic Executive Committee.
Her works have been exhibited
at the Fort Worth Savings and
Loan Association and Golden
Acres, Dallas Home for the Jew-
ish Aged. The Schepps Art
Gallery is open daily from 9
a.m. to 10 p.m.
ORGANIZATION ROW—The
Sigma Alpha Mu Mothers Club
held a Cocktail party last Sat-
urday evening, April 18, pre-
ceding the Mu Alpha Chapters’’
25th anniversary Spring Formal.
The Cocktail party was held at
the home of Mrs. Ben Bold,
Northaven Rd. honoring out of
town parents: Mr. J. Layman,
Norwalk, Conn., Mr. and Mrs,
J. Stippel, Chicago, 111., and
Mr. and Mrs. T. Stickler, Glen-
coe, 111., also all the local par-
ents of alumni and actives.
AT PRESSTIME—We hear
that Dr. Irving Brodsky is in the
Empire Cityas one of six nation-
al optometrists who have been
picked as a standards committee
for the National Contact Lens
Manufacturers Association. Add
Crib Crowders: A son, Stephen,
born to Mr. and Mrs. Travis
Lynn. Mrs. Lynn is the former
Hilda Lou Cohen, of Fort Worth.
She delighted children as the A-
manda half of TV’s “Mickey and
Amanda.”
jess jawin
— TATOOING THE WIND —
. . Continued From Page 4
into the gas chambers upon arrival.
^termination camp was one square mile. Slave laborers
worked at l^eblmka at the SS-owned German Earth and Stone
Works (Deutsche Erd-und Steinwerke, DEST), which produced
gravel from the area. All work was done by Jews under exasper-
ating conditions. The Commander of this labor camp — not of
the extermination camp — was LL Col. Karl Mummenthey. After
the war, Mummenthey was sentenced by a US Military Court to
life imprisonment.
This, like many other sentences, was reduced to 20 years
by a Clemency Board.
Treblinka was a maximum security camp. It was under the
jurisdiction of SS chief for Warsaw and was guarded bv about
700 men, including Ukrainians.
Despite these precautions, between 150 to 200 Jews made a
dash for freedom on August 2, 1943, a few months before the
camp was shut down. Twelve of these escaped.
Whether they were later caught or perished in some other
Nazi camp, is not known.
What is known is that sometimes on a clear night if one
listens real closely, one can hear the wails of the children crying
for their mothers . . . the anguished cries of mothers for their
children . . . the heartbeats of the fathers in a crescendo tabooing
the winds of time . . .
And those cries can not be soundproofed into oblivion re-
gardless of complacency or political intrigue.
For this is the eternal cry of humanity!
Family Life Insurance and Estate Planning
J. STUART BRAND, C.L.U.
CONNECTICUT MUTUAL LIFE INS. CO
[
1820 Adolphus Tower Bldg. RI 2-9123 |
VOTE MAY 2
TO RE-ELECT
GOVERNOR
JOHN
miimm
S. /FOR MORE JOBS ypOR BETTER EDUCATION OR HELP FOR ELDERLY jFOR A BALANCED BUDGET [
3
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Wisch, J. A. Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 23, 1964, newspaper, April 23, 1964; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth754888/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .