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FACE 10 THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE January 17, 1986
People in the News
The Bar Mitzva of David
Adam Paul of Atlanta will take
place at 9 a.m. Saturday, Jan.
25, at Ahavath Achim Synagogue.
A congregational kiddush will
follow.
David is the son of Judy and
Alan Paul. Grandparents are
Sylvia Neuhausand Lee Neuhaus
of Atlanta, and Anne and Leonard
Paul of Plantation, Fla.
David will share his Bar Mitzva
with Mark Yuzefovich of Moscow.
Newcomers
Reva and Jeffrey Dykan of Atlanta
announce the birth of a daughter,
Sara Rachel, on Jan. 2.
Grandparents are Rabbi and Mrs.
Munay Atik of New York, and
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dykan of
Florida. Maternal great-grandmother
is Mrs. Breindl Atik of Jerusalem.
Sara was named in memory of
her materal grandmother, Sara,
and her paternal great-grandmother,
Leah Rachel.
* * *
Jo and Frankie Worley of Austell
announce the birth of a daughter,
Elizabeth Lane, on Sept. 7.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Katz of Atlanta, and Liz
Worley of Mableton, Ga., and the
late Frank Worley. Great-grand
mother is M. Bell O’rear.
Elizabeth was given the Hebrew
name Elisha Golda in memory of
her maternal great-grandmother,
Gertrude Klinger, at a naming
ceremony at Congregation Etz
Chaim, with Rabbi Shalom Lewis
officiating.
* * *
Elizabeth Louise and Jeffry
Howard Brown of Sandy Springs
announce the arrival of a daughter,
Emily Marie, on Jan. 1 1.
Grandparents are Sue and Morton
Wolfe, and Lila and Robert Brown,
all of Atlanta. Great-grandparents
are Rose and Harry Deaner of
Rockville, Md., Eleanore Brown
of Hollywood, Fla., and Shirley
Gross of Del Ray Beach, Fla.
Emily was given the Hebrew
name Esther M iriam in memory of
her great-grandparents, Lillian Estelle
and Maurice Wolfe of Rockville
and Brooklyn, N Y.
The Bar Mitzva of Adam David
Block of Stone Mountain will take
place at 10 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 25,
at Temple Beth David. A congre
gational kiddush will follow.
Adam is the son of Sheila and
Richard Block. Grandparents are
Alice and Ted Peisach of Cranston,
R. I., and Stella Block of Boca
Raton, Fla.
* * * *
Recently re-elected for two-year
terms by Women’s American ORT
were Mrs. Reese Feldman of Tenafly,
N. J., chairman of the national execu
tive committee; and Mrs. Gertrude
S. White of Springfield, N.J., national
president.
Mrs. Feldman serves on the boards
of the Bramson ORT Technical
Institute in New York and LAOTI,
ORTs newest school in Los Angeles.
In 1966, Mrs. White joined the
Women’s American ORT national
executive committee as chairman
of the special campaign for the
Israel deficit. She served as member
ship chairman, recording secretary,
vice president and chairman of the
Committee on Organization. In
1979, and again in 1981, she was
elected chairman of the national
executive committee.
Emory University senior Scott
Howard Segal of Dallas, J exas, is
ranked as one of best college debaters.
He is working toward a double
degree in history and art history.
Segal, who is president of the
55-member Emory Barkely Forum
debate team, and his partner, Michael
Weiss of New York City, form the
top-ranked Emory team and are
ranked the number one team na
tionally at mid-season.
Last year, Segal received the
“Outstanding Organizational
Contribution Award” for helping
do everything at competitions from
van driving to excellence in research
and presentation.
Segal is also president of Delta
Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha, the
honorary forensic society, and Phi
Alpha Theta, the history honor
society. He belongs to Phi Beta
Kappa and is a senior interviewer
with the Emory College office of
admissions. He has received the J.
Gordon Stipe scholarship for creative
work and a four-year award based
on his high school excellence in
debating. He is a candidate for the
Hatten W. Sumner Scholarship at
the Southern Methodist University
law school.
♦ * *
The Bar Mitzva of Frank
Hurt Worley IV of Austell will
take place at 9:30 a.m. Saturday,
Jan. 25, at Congregation Etz
Chaim. A congregational kiddush
will follow.
Frank is the son of Frankie
and Jo Worley. Grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Paul Katz of
Atlanta, and Liz Worley of
Mableton, Ga., and the late
Frank Worley.
Frank will share his Bar Mitzva
with Vladislav Genin of Leningrad.
Larry Lowenstein (left), program chairman for the 1986 Big
Heart Award, and Charles Smithgall III (right), president of
WCNN Radio and co-chairman of the 1986 Big Heart Award, with
Yankee pitcher Phil Niekro and his wife, Nancy. Niekro is the 1986
Big Heart Award honoree.
The banquet, sponsored by WCNN Radio and Georgia District
North/C ivitan for the benefit of Georgia Special Olympics, will be
held on Saturday, Feb. 15, at the Omni International Hotel.
Academy-award winning actress
Patricia Neal has been named
recipient of B’nai B’rith Women’s
Perlman Award for Human Achieve
ment. Ms. Neal is being honored
for her outstanding contribution in
support of rehabilitation of the
physically disabled.
Ms. Neal has been recognized, in
particular, for her support of the
Fort Saunders Regional Medical
Center facility named in her honor,
in her hometown of Knoxville,
Tenn.
Ms. Neal’s own rehabilitation
from three successive strokes in
1965 was an inspiration to millions,
but she insists that she is no heroine.
The real heros, she said, are the
professionals and patients at rehabi
litation centers across the country.
■ - h mia, a< m iun neintiaisi
church arc (from left): Matt Be,mien, Ralph Daniels. Ron Chanin, Rand, P.dawer, Matthew Green Rick
II,ipern Bar, Apron J „ Z .ndm.n, Jeff lebon.Mildred^ompson,Michael Lorn.,soffice), Howard
Gibbs, nous Ross, Marshall Hyatt, Hank Steinberg, Richard Solomon and Mike Cohen
The lodge, together withI the Fulton County Commission and the church, sponsored the charity meal
for over 500 need, people from downtown shelters. The entire meal was donated b, Capitol Foods ,„d
Big Star. Maurice i.evitt is president of Capitol Foods. ’ P 00< »s and
Craig E. Aronoff of Marietta
will receive an award from the
Freedoms Foundation at Valley
Forge, Penn. Aronoff, a manage
ment professor who holds the
Georgia International Life In
surance/Cobb County Bankers
Association Chair of Private
Enterprise at Kennesaw College,
will receive the Leavey Award
for Excellence in Private Enter
prise Education, which includes
$7,500.
Aronoff, who received a Ph.D.
from the University of Texas in
1975, was the founding president
of the Association of Private
Enterprise Education, established
in 1978.
For the past decade, he has
dedicated himself to helping high
school and college students,
teachers, union and non-union
industrial employees, journalists,
physicians, clergy and the general
public gain a better understanding
of economic principles.
He has also co-authored or
edited eight books in the fields
of private enterprise and business
communications.
Marsha Linkwald Schlosser of
Atlanta has been listed in the 1986
Southeastern edition of “Who’s
Who in America.”
She is manager of training and
education at Lithonia Lighting,
the largest division of National
Service Industries. She is responsible
for the design and coordination ol
Lithonia’s sales, management,
development and technical seminars,
and administration of the marketing
trainee program.
Ms. Schlosser is past vice president
of her company’s management club,
and has served on the board of
directors of the Georgia Chapter,
American Society of Training and
Development. She recently received
A.S.T.D.’s service award for her
booklet on career changes and
resumes, “Putting Your Best Foot
Forward.”
She received a bachelor’s degree
in education and a master’s degree
with highest honors from Kent
State University in Ohio.
She is the daughter ot Lena
Linkwald and the late William
Linkwald, and has two children,
Melanie and David.