Activilico in Soddy

Out-of-town guests who were in Detroit during the past week,
to 'attend the wedding of Miss Babette Kopple and Bernard Wein-
berg, included Dr: and Mrs. Harry' Rothschild of St. Paul, Minn.;
Dr. Samuel Stern, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Mann and their daughter
Adele of Kingston, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Al Resnick of Laurelton, N.
-Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Fishman and daughter, Carol, of
Patterson, N. J.
Mrs. Irving Greenbaum of Sturtevant Ave. is spending a week
in Philadelphia and Boston.
. _ Mrs. Nathan Spevakow of Renfrew Road is visiting with fami-
ly and friends in Boston.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Warner of Calvert Ave., are
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Mandel of Far Rockaway, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Bargman.of Burlington Drive spent the
•past week-end in Chicago.
Mrs..Louis Stern of Atkinson Ave. is vacationing for a fort-
night in Washington, D. C., and New York City.
Mrs. R. Desenberg of Buchanan, Mich., has been in Detroit
visiting her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Desen-
.berg, of Wisconsin, Ave.
Mrs. Charles Robinson of Calvert Ave., is in Baltimore where
she is visiting her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Beryl
Robinson of that city.
During the past fortnight, dinner-parties honoring Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Weinberg were given by Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Ar-
den, Mr. ,and Mrs. Peter Altman, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cohen, Mr.
and Mrs. Sidney Morris.
Mrs. Benjamin Laikin. of LaSalle Blvd., is visiting with her
daughter and son-in-law in Baltimore.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Abel of Curtis Ave., are spending the week
in New York City. •
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee Frank of. NeW York City. are the
guests of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Frank of Shrewsbury
Road. -
Miss Lillian Mendelsohn of Los Angeles, formerly of -Detroit,
is the guest for a few days of her brother and sister4n-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Abe Mendelsohn of 18420 Littlefield. At home Sunday,
2 to 5 p.m. No cards.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Kaplan, formerly of Pleasant Drive, Ypsi-
lanti, are now residing in their newly-completed home on West-
Moreland Rd., Ypsilanti.
Four generations attended -the 75th birthday celebration of
Mrs. Fannie Richard, of 2737 Gladstone, a surprise party given
Oct. 15.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Halberg, of 18691 Tracey, were honored by
their children at a surprise 25th wedding anniversary party at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Monis Goldman, 18450 Fairfield. The
children, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Halberg and. Sydell, invited mem-
bers of the family and a guest from Canada for the occasion.
Miss Pearl Cohen, of 18490 Monte Vista, spent the last week-
end in New York attending the wedding of her cousin, Helen
Kantor.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Gantz, of 2724 Elmhurst will be honored
their children on their 50th wedding anniversary. A dinner on
Nov. 11 at the Mayfair Room will be attended by their many rela-
• ives and friends. Mr. • and Mrs. Gantz will share their golden
,j:;•)Q, ; wedding .day with their nine children, 18 grandchildren and three
great grandchildren.
Judge Gad Frumkin of Jerusalem, Israel, was a guest in De-
troit on Tuesday and. Wednesday. On Tuesday- he was honored
at a dinner by Detroit judges and was the guest that evening at- the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Feinberg. On Wednesday he was
honored at a luncheon at Detroit Women's City Club by Mrs. Aaron
DeRoy and Mr. and Mrs. Julius Chajes. That afternoon he was a
guest of Judge Theodore Levin at a cocktail party.

,

JWF Women's Gro
- up
To Hear Israel Report

March Wedding

.

Mrs. S. A. .Brailove, chairMan
of the National Women's Divis-
ion of the United Jewish Appeal,
will address the new board of
the Women's Division of the
Jewish Welfare
Federation a t
12:15 p.m. next
Wednesday, a f
t h e
Davison
Jewish Center.
-Recently re-
turned from Is-
rael, Mrs. Brail-
ove will give her
firSt-hand re-
port of progress
Mrs. Brailove in the new
state, Mrs. Leonard H. Weiner,
Division president, announced.
Isidore Sobeloff, executive di-
rector of Federation, will pre-
sent a summary. of important
decisions reached at the Wash-
ington National Planning Con-
ference for Israel and Jewish
Rehabilitation, and of resolu-
tions adopted at regional meet-
ings of the Council of Federa-
tions and Welfare Funds.
Progress reports will be heard
from the education, collection,
and program committees. The
board will elect two of its mem-
bers to serve on the executive
committee of the Women's Div-
ision.

Detroit Prompt in Return
Of Remittances to UJA

Detroit is among the com-
munities which have participat-
ed in prompt cash remittances
to the United Jewish Appeal.
The Allied Jewish Campaign has
remitted the sum of $250,000.
Other Michigan communities
have sent the following sums:
Bay City, $7,500; Benton Harbor,
$5.000: Jackson. $5,000,

Mizrachi Women Adopt $1,500,000
Budget for Year's Israel Activities

Music Study Club Gives
Artist Concert Nov. 30;
Violinist, Pianist to Play

- Mrs. Samuel Shetzer has been
appointed chairman for the Mu-
sic Study Club annual artist
concert to take place Nov. 30 at
the Art Institute. Her co-chair-
man will be Mrs. Ezra Lipkin;

MRS. SAMUEL SHETZER

patron chairman, Mrs. Julius
Green; and ticket chairman,
Mrs. Oscar Kahan.
The launching of the concert
will take the form of a luncheon
'at 12:30 p.m. Oct. 30 at the home
of - Mrs. Ezra Lipkin, 17599-Green-
lawn. Mrs. Adeline -Hirschfield,
dramatist, will- be featured.
This year's artists will be
Esther Glazer, violinist, and Kurt
Saffir, pianist Miss Glazer will
be accompal..ied by Rebecca
Fineberg.
The two major objectives of
the annual concerts are to give
young artists of merit an op-
portunity to be heard by Detroit
music lovers and to raise funds
fox the Sylvia Simons Memorial
S c h o l ar ship Fund, through
which many young talented mu-
sicians of Detroit have been en-
abled to continue- their studies
in and out of town.
One of the artists thiS year,
Kurt Saffir, was the recipient of
arjoint scholarship offered by
the Detroit Music Study Club
and the Jewish Community. Cen-
ter. This season, too, in cooper- .
ation with the Jewish Welfare
Federation, the Music Study
Club is supporting a young dis-*
placed person from Germany at
the Curtis Instilfute of Music in
Philadelphia.
The proceeds of these Concerts'
are also being used to supply
programs for hospitals and other-
philanthropiC institutions. A re-
cently added project is the sup-
plying of music for Israel.

ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.—Mrs.
Lionel Golub of Brooklyn, N. Y.,
was re-elected national presi-
dent of Mizrachi Women's Or-
g ani zation of
America, as the
silver jubilee
convention of
the women's re-
ligious - Zionist
organization'
came to a close..
After listening':
to Israel's For•-•:-
e i g n Minister, Mrs. Golub
Moshe Sharett;
Mrs. Abba Eban, wife of the Is-
raeli Ambassador to the U. S.;

Leon 9ellman, world Mizrachi
leader, and other authorities on
the American and Israeli scene
outline current Holy Land needs,
the convention approved a
budget just short of $1,500,000
for activities in Israel during
the coming year.
Bartley C. Crum, designated
by the White House as the chief
Executive's personal representa-
tive for the occasion, accepted
a certificate marking the com-
pletion of the Harry S. Truman
Forest in Israel.

Young Adult Council
Meets at Sunday Brunch

Appointment of A. V. Cauhorn,
president of A. V. .Cauhorn Co.
and director of the Detroit
Round Table of Catholics, Jews
and Protestants, as chairman of.
attendance for the 22nd anni-
versary dinner of the National
Conference of Christians and
Jews at the Masonic Temple,
Nov. 13, was announced by Jo-
saph Q. Mayne. The $25 per
plate dinner will honor Benson
Ford, vice-president of the Ford
Motor Co. and general manager
of Lincoln Mercury Division.

Chairman Named
For Round Table Event

Presidents and delegates of
organizations affiliated with the
Jewish Young Adult Council will
mix at a brunch Sunda_y at
the Mayfair Room.
It will be a get-acquainted op-
portunity for officers of the 24
constituent organizations a n d
for James Senor, new young
adult worker of the Jewish Com-
munity Center, and executive
secretary of the Council.
The council serves as spokes-
:man for th'e young adults of the
JeArish Community, and works
for such community projects 'as
the Allied Jewish Campaign and
the Torch Drive. Natalie Gaines
is president of the Young Adult'
Council and Milton Ludow is
chairman of its community ser-
vice committee. Evelyn Stoll-
man is chairman of the ar-
rangements committee for the
brunch. .

For a Delightful" Evening of
Musk and Entertainment .. .

.

:

MISS CHARLOTTE KAUFMAN

Mr. and Mrs. Ira Kaufman- of
Collingwood Ave., announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Charlotte, to Nathan Feldman,.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Feld-
man of Collingwood Ave. The
couple is planning a March wed-
ding.

Fried, JNF 'Director,
To Address Tea for
New Members Tuesday

Louis Fried, new executive di-
rector of the Jewish National
Fund Council of Detroit, will be
guest speaker at the member-
ship tea of the Ladies' Auxiliary
of the JNF, at 12:30 p.m. Tues-
day, at the home of Mrs. Leon
Kay, 18053 Wildemere.
Prospective members are in-
vited.
Mrs. David Cohen, member-
ship chairman, announces that
the program also will feature
Rosina Lakritz, vocalist, accom-
panied by Mrs. Herman Breg-

'

•

•

MICKEY WOOLF

- -and -His Orchestra

Ably Asiisted by Sammy Woolf

- Some Dates Available
For Nov., Dec., Jan., Feb.

CALL NOW . .

TO SECURE YOUR DATE

UN. 3-3737

THE JEWISH NEWS - 13
Friday, October 2'7, 1950

Strictly Kosher
Approved by
Vaad Ha rabonim

May We Help Plan
Your Perfect Party?

•
• •
• • •
•

8231 Woodward
TR. 3=5800

Fine catering in your
I Home or. Synagogue or`
in our lovely
AIR CONDITIONED
•
TERRACE ROOM

We are the exclusive kosher caterers for
the beautiful FLAMINGO ROOM and
Woodward Room of the new Hotel De-
troiter. Call Sally Klein for information.

Owe Life to JCRS
Says Sick Gentile

Al Bryant, 33 year-old former
all - around athlete at Norton,
Kan., high school, whose life
was saved by the Jewish Con-
sumptives' Relief Society, never
met a Jewish person until he
came to Denver in 1936.
The existence ,,
'
of the Jewish
people always
seemed far re-
mote until his
health broke
down from
overwork _ a n d
long hours in
the spring of
1948, and his
family physic-
Al Bryant
ian, Dr. Eli Nel-
son, arranged his admittance
to the JCRS in Denver.
He tasted Jewish cooking for
the first time in his life, he met
many Jewish, as well as non-
Jewish patients, and he learned'
that ju'At as the tuberculosis
germ respects no color line or
religious barriers, so the nation-
ally-supported Denver institu-
tion treats all men and women
alike, irrespective of race or
faith.
Al's romnate was a young
Jewish refugee from Czechoslo-
vakia. They became close
friends. Al smoothed the kinks
out of his roommate's English,
and in return was told many
things about life in Europe, the
Jews and the Jewish religion.
Al will be going home soon,
perhaps in a month, the tuber-
culosis cured and no danger of
infecting his wife and two sons.

•

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Thursday — Saturday Evenings

