i'fj i-ii
THIS CAKAD1AK JEWISH REVIEW
"� t~f\fff '-r?/e*'
*;''./<*�
fa*i:-r':-&
Mr. *nd Mrs. 6T4"Punn Avenue,' Lancanter, N. $� announce the engagement of their daughter, Mt�i Marsha Su-san Jacobson, to Benjamin Swir-sky, son of Mr. and lira. Morris Swlraky, 4120 Isabella Avenue, Montreal, Quebec. The marriage will take place on September 34, iri Saint John, N. B.
Mrs. Ray Vender, and her, son, Issie Vender, of Edmundston, N, B., visited her son-in-law, and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Moe Hart, 710 D'^stree Street, Montreal, Quebec.
Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Vender, of Edmundston, N. B., visited her parents, Mr. and" Mrs. H. Click-son, !|867 Bedford Road, Montreal, Quebec.
Mr. and Mrs. Barnett Jacobson, and their daughter, Miss Marsha Susan Jacobson, 674 Dunn Avenue, Lancaster, N. B., visited Mr. and Mrs. Morris Swirsky, 4120 Isabella Avenue, Montreal, Quebec, whose son, Benjamin Swirsky, is the,fiance of Miss Jacobson.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Budovitch, 143 Charlotte Street, Fredericton, N. B., entertained seventy-five guests at a cocktail party, at the Lord Beaver brook Hotel, to celebrate the marriage of their daughter, Miss Marlene Zelda Budovitch, to Gordon Robert Fiachel, 130'Rose-dale Valley, Toronto, Ont., son of Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph G. Fischel, 4324 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Quebec. Mrs. Budovitch was in a pink, silk sheath gown. Mrs. Fischel wore a blue, crepe gown. Mrs. Gordon Robert Fischel wore a white, silk gown. Pink roses, and white, and pink carnations, and pom-poms decorated the table.
Entertaining for Miss Marlene Zelda Budovitch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Budovitch, of Fredericton, N. B., prior to her marriage . to Gordon Robert Fischel, 130 Rosedale Valley, Toronto, Ont, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph G. Fischel, 4324 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Quebec, were: Mesdames Saul Brown, Abe Levine, Freda Budovitch; aunts of the bride-elect; Samuel Budovitch, and Joseph Pressman, cousins of the bride-elect; all of Fredericton; at a luncheon, with forty guests present, at the Lord Beaverbrook Hotel The table adornment consisted of pink, and white carnations, and roses.
Miss Sandra Budovitch, and her sister, Sherril Eileen, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Budovitch, 143 Charlotte Street, Fredericton, N. B., are spending the summer in Jackson, New Hampshire.
Mrs. Gertrude Dankner, 68 Wellington Street, Halifax, N. S., is visiting/ her sons-in-law, and daughters: Mr. and Mrs. J. Pin-chuk, 660 Caven Circle; and Mr. and Mrs. A, Cohen, 5207 Grenier Street; Montreal, Quebec.
Mrs. J. Budovitch, of Frederic-ton, N. B., visited her son-in-law, and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Soicher, and Harvey, Melvin, Bernard, and new-born son, Avrum Aaron, 130 Houde Street, Montreal, Quebec.
6920 inglewood Drive. ifWp*v|d Sherman, 65^1 Norwood Avenue, president, received. Mesdames Leonard Goldberg, and Jack Stone, 2696 Connaught Avenue, were tn charge of arrangements. Proceeds will help to provide funds to erect the Mathiide Schecter Residence Hall tn New York, where women are trained for the teaching of Hebrew in schools throughout Canada, and the United States.
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Zaichick, of Edmundston, N. B., visltetf hfs sister, Mrs. Ethel Lazarus, 2700 Bedford Road, Montreal, Quebec.
Gandson, Oscar Hammentein 2d, ter became Mr. Rftdgertfr associate on nine Broadway snows; including ''Oklahoma!/' "South Pacific" and "The Sound of Music." t "Those three were a triple dead V heat/' he said when he was asked'! which of his thJrtarrnine show* could be called his tyggest hit " His gesture in proposing to give the- city a complete theater has been approached in part only by George T. Delacorte, head of the Dell Publishing Company. Mr. Delacorte gave |160,0i00t toward the erection of the 2,263-seat Delacorte amphitheater in Central Park, The city put up $860,000, says the New York Times. With Mr. Rodgers'a gift, the city will have to pay only for maintenance of the'theater.
THE HISTORICAL VIEW OF INTERMARRIAGE
some resentment because some of the front-ranking Soviet virtuosos such as David Oistrakh. Mr. Ko-
q, Mr. Richter, .and Mr. Gllels been prevented from coming/
Last December, a Soviet violinist named Klimov turned up and the Israeli orchestra was less amenable. He was told that the Philharmonic and ita concert hall were fully booked. Accordingly, he played with a radio orchestra in a smaller hall.
A short time later, the Soviet ambassador informed M.r. Haftel that he had been invited by the Ministry of Culture to visit Moscow. :
The visiting -Soviet Orchestra will substitute for the Israel Philharmonic at subscription concerts. A Soviet plane will take the Russians and fly back with the Israeli ensemble, says the New York Times. Then an Israeli plane will' take the Russians home and pick up the Israeli musicians.
ye*. .<*�
DY of PA
TAX-FRII <JHt All Brands ef Hie ftaett French
PERFUMES
�' � . A fantetric choke ef
GLOVES and BAGS
ClwrMi
rfl|Cf0fy
CvtitMl, *fo, ... Untowltof/ Tl��, Uu��t� Sfclrti, Dvp��t i
�, MM Hl�VMB4� �( .MTV***! P�Hll��
AMAXINO UPOtT DISCOUNT
1A M.� AIIRfD DADIC n�irt to.A��rl<�ii I�>�H� -
10 rO� AUWW> rAKIS Op�ra, tw* ntRVtot frMi HM OraM
f��f Raffakl* Ask fa>
tPICIAL ATTINTION
. *nf�r D*jMrfoi*�t t�l�r�J cotafofl.
FHONIi MIC. 71-01 and 41-41
fill tEMUHI SIFT TO CANADIAN JIYHIH IIYIIW WfiCtllfU
I
PATRONIZE REVIEW ADVERTISERS, SAY: "1 SAW fOVK AD IN TUB CANADIAN 1EW1SH REVIEW".
IN MY PLACE: A STORY
(Continued from Page Ste) together by a perforated paper guard. More parents arrived with more marriageable daughters, their handshakes all languid, which is what they'd been brought up to believe was polite behavior. All carried posies.
Jim turned to Mr. Phillips and asked: "Why are the girls all carrying those little bouquets?"
"Perhaps I should have explained earlier," said Mr. Phillips. "These are our debutantes. And this annual ball is the equivalent of Buckingham Palace for us."
"But even at Buckingham Palace," replied Jim, "there aren't any formal presentation parties any more, you know."
"Well, there are here," said Hy-mie, "and you represent Her Majesty." Jim smiled wanly: he knew what an effort that would be.
Meanwhile more guests were waiting to shake his hand, among them young married couples. "Doc-tah and Mrs. Morris Moss," announced the Toastmaster.
"Oh, I do so want you to meet Cherry Moss/' gushed Mrs. Phillips with patent insincerity. "She's quite one of our best workers on the Committee;; aren't you, Cherry?" - '
"Well, we all do what we can for Rosalind," Cherry answered, taking up her cue. "She's such a wonderful chairman. Without her we wouldn't know how to even get started,"
A little man in a black yarmulka who had been scurrying about in great agitation now came up and spoke into Mr. Phillips' ear. Their whispered conversation became more and more vehement. Hymie ended it by saying: "All right, Mr. Soloveichik, Just for this once. But, mind you, I won't stand for it on the next occasion. Ill complain to the Chief Rabbi!" (Continued Next Week)
(Continued from. Page Eight) Jewishness adorned by a periphery of dynamic sympathy for mankind's underprivileged.
Intermarriage, a grave problem today, might gradually assume less dark hues as the united nations of the world, each true to its own religion and culture, will cooperate to abolish war, poverty, and disease and to prepare for a happier period of human relations in all the continents.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Jack cher (nee Sylvia Budovitch, formerly of Frederkton, N. B.), 180 Houde Street, .Montreal, Quebec, on June 9, at the Royal Victoria Hospital; a son, Avrum Aaron; brother of Harvey, aged eleven years; Melvin, nine; and Bernard, six; grandson of Mr. and Mrs. J. Budovitch, of Fredericton; and of Mrs. A. Soicher, of Montreal, and the late A. Soicher. Godparent* are Mr. and Hrs. G. Metalin, untie, and aunt, of Montreal. A. Laade, of Montreal, held the baby during the ceremony.
Mr. and Mrs, Nathan Kasner, of Edmoadston, N. B., are on a three-week holiday in Montreal, Quebec; Cornwall, Ont; and the Catakfll Mountains of New York.
The annual tea and fardea party sponsored by the Wonea's League of Shaar Shalom Syna-in Halifax, N. &, was held of Mrs, Joeej* Ohihe,
FAMOUS COMPOSER
TO BUILD AND GIVE
PARK THEATER TO
NJW YORK
(Continued from Page One)
climbing its steep hill and sledding down its slopes.
"I met Larry Hart [Lorenz Hart, the lyricist!, when I was sixteen," Mr. Rodgers said. The late Mr. Hart lived just a block away on 119th Street, says the New York Times. They were introduced by a mutual friend, Phillip B. Leavitt, now a retired broker, who became a painter. Mr. Rodgers and Mr. Hart later collaborated in the creation of 26 Broadway shows.
Another neighbor was Oscar Hammerstein, international ..impresario, who lived on 120th Street Mr. Rodgers said he never knew Mr. Hammerstein, but hi*
SOVIET SUDDENLY ENDS BOYCOTT OF ISRAEL ORCHESTRA
(Continued from Page One) During the last two or three years, however, the Russians sent some artists to Israel by arrangement with a private Israeli impresario. The visitors, including Mr, Oistrakh's son. Igor, and Mikhail Vaiman, violinists, and Jakov Fiie-re and Lev Vlasenko, pianists, appeared during their tours as guest soloists with the Philharmonic.
However, the orchestra was not satisfied with the situation. The Russians' tours had not been coordinated in time to permit their inclusion in subscription programs, tiie backbone of the Philharmonic's existence. Moreover, there was
VIA LISBON � NAPLES � MESSINA PIRAEUS � CYPRUS
H.21 KNOTS. FUaYWR NEW �!-*�*� M�WU"r*' 932O ,,lf.roOh�lttlp.Touri.tThrittS..�.n-
Tourist or First Claw, you'll enjoy.all the comforts of this completely modern cruise ship! Chooeeyour own indoor weather for there are individual temperature controls in every stateroom. The ship is stabilizer equipped for smoother sailing. 22 lavish public rooms, 2 swimming pools, theatre. Superb service and cuisine. Full Kosher kitchen under the supervision of a Mash-giach. Rabbi and Synagogue on board.
from New York to HAIFA July 28t, August 24*, September 23t*.
fNext doy from Boston
See your TRAVEL AGENT or
GREEK LINE
400 Craig Street West, Montreal, Quebec 89 King Street East, Toronto
Far Ahead in Career Opportunities: THE GRAPHIC ARTS INDUSTRIES
^^^^�����RPP!^** - �� *$�
MANAGER SALESMAN
' v v ,y <f :yV* $S.
, DESIGNER CRAFTSMAN
-
tnd miny other occaps-
....._r If you 6t�t ttteet *wl
drive, you can get ahwd In the
LooK-ahead people regard print-In^ and the allied araphte arts tfid{atrle& a& the? place to find* career opportunities, beoauw.
* thdre te a yowlng iwed ftw more hJghty tralneo' managemen.! and supervisory personnel fn
,ftftanclat, *ates, production and personnel rote$.
* These industries employ more creative personnel and *K�Hed men �nd women at higher wages than any other trmmrfacfiffins fo* dtntry in Canadau
* They employ nxw peppte than any other Canadian manutectur* ing industry�more than tOi.OOD employee* In over 3,400 pf
foes, and over ttd mlllkxt w^9*� end ftata �ales ol ow $1 -year. _t -
� Tne OrtpWc Am
;de�i0ft^artd ^.co<nn)ei^|ttt^|l
Km^&�2&*^^ '�";
uOOtftt
';;^�i^g