I omens Outs RADOMER LADIES AUXILI- ARY will hold a brunch at 12:30 p.m., Tuesday, in the home of Mrs. J. Wisotsky, 16851 Ilene. Co-hostesses will be Mesdames B. Wisotsky and J. Weintraub. Proceeds will go to charity. * * A luncheon and games party is planned by the WOMEN'S SABBATH LEAGUE for 12:30 p.m., Monday, in the home of Mrs. Irving Zeff, 1864 Oakman. Proceeds will go to the group's Lillian Kaplan Scholarship Fund at the Yeshivath Beth Yehudah. Co-chairmen are Mes- dames Milton Winston and Morris Servetter, who are as- sisted by Mesdames Rose Biele- wich, Harry Greenfield, B. Cronenwalt, Pearl Leader, Rose Slutsky and Jacob Winokur. Mrs. Isadore Levin will preside. * * * AVODAH CHAPTER, Pioneer Women, will hold a board meet- ing at 1 p.m., Tuesday, at the Cass Lake cottage of Mrs. Max Stulberg. Plans for the Sept. 11 white elephant sale and luncheon at the home of Mrs. Edward Stark, 24542 George Washington, Southfield Town- ship, will be discussed. For in- formation or transportation, call Mrs. Ben Meyers, UN 2-3312, or Mrs. Gerald Goldberg, UN 3-7642. Mrs. Albert Herman, president, was recently hostess at her cottage at Cass Lake to a board luncheon, at which plans for the year were dis- cussed. * * * Mrs. Max Schafer, 13830 Vas- sar, will be hostess to board members of SHERUTH LEAGUE at a dessert luncheon Tuesday afternoon. Co-hostesses will be Mesdames Sidney Fuller and Phillip Robbins. Mrs. Frank Roberts, board chairman, will announce plans for the group's annual fund-raising project, headed by Mesdames Morton and Robert Heydt. * * * EQUALITY CLUB will meet at 12 noon, Monday, in the home of Mrs. A. Z. Berkowitz, 2652 Monterey. Plans for the annual donor luncheon in December will be made. Jewish Children's Theater Plans Playwriting Contest junior Primrose Club Paul Deutschberger to Leave Bnai Brith Gives DARC Check for University Post Mrs. DAVID MOSCOW (left), new president of the Junior Primrose Club, and Mrs. GEORGE BLAIR (right), a past president, are pictured with Mrs. FRED ANDERSON, center director of the Detroit Association for Retarded Chil- dren, after having given Mrs. Anderson the second check during the year ter DARC activities. Plans are now being readied for the year's fund- raising program. `Care' Offers Food Parcels As Holiday Gifts to Israel Substantial New Year greet- ings can-be provided by Ameri- cans for relatives and friends- in Israel through the medium of CARE food packages. "Meat, sugar, shortening and other protein-rich foods are still greatly needed in Israel," it was pointed out by Richard W. Reuter, CARE executive direc- tor, who visited that country earlier this summer. "The Rosh Hashonah and Succoth holidays can be given a deeper meaning by the timely sharing of our own abundance with the people of Israel," Reuter said. The CARE standard kosher food package for Israel at $10 and the Israel Family food package at $18.25 contain a larger proportion of meat than ever before. Leave Everything to Us WYN and HAROLD LANDIS HOME CATERING • STYLE • ELEGANCE • BEAUTY WYN-HAROLD CATERING Pkoce DL 1-2155 Rosenberg Honored On 80th Birthday At Two Functions On the occasion of his 80th birthday, last Friday, Louis James Rosenberg was honored at a luncheon of the Philosophi- cal Society, which he helped or- ganize in 1900, at Hotel Statler. Federal Judges, including his brother-in-law, Judge Charles C. Simons, were present. That evening, Mr. Rosenberg's nephew, Selden H. Love, and Mrs. Love honored him at a dinner. Among the out-of-town guests were his nephew, Jack Rosenberg, Mrs. Rosenberg and their two daughters, of Chicago. Proceeds obtained by Mes- dames Joseph Tulcensky, Rob- ert Lewin, Miles Greenwald, Albert Kamer and Mitchell Bloom, of the Beth Shalom Sisterhood from a series of fund-raising parties will go to- ward the synagogue building fund. The new synagogue is now under construction on W. Lin- coln and- Tyler Rds., in Oak Park. The congregation hopes to occupy the building for High Holy Day services. Members interested in giving or attending any of these par- ties should call Mrs. Greenwald, LI. 6-1044 or Mrs. Murray Shu- bin, LI. 7-5367. Installations in Israel Mr. and Mrs. Harry Barnett, of 17365 Muirland, were recent guests in Israel of the Jewish Agency where they were taken on a tour of various installa- tions in the Jewish state. Mr. Barnett, who headed the steel division in the local Allied Jewish Campaign, expressed amazement at Israel's growth despite necessary preparations and expenditures for defense and the increasing immigration from North Africa. Large-scale immigration and absorption into the national economy and continued efforts at redeeming desert land must continue. Its success depends on aid from American Jewry, Barnett said. Labor Zionist Branch Seven Holds Annual Wienie Roast Branch Seven, Labor Zionist Organization of America, will hold its annual wienie roast at 9 p.m., Saturday, at Peterson Park, Curtis and Coyle. Friends are invited. For reservations, call Henry Faigin, VE. 6-6318. Ea hh tti WRUBEL KOZIN O tai 1-1 32nd Annual August ark Oft re. 1.4 es) OUTSTANDING NEW CREATIONS, Recent arrivals from the world's leading fur fashion cen- ters attractively low priced for this special pre-season event. Newest styles for Fall and Winter which are already the talk of designing cir- cles. FALL & WINTER LUXURIOUSNESS See a unique collection of fur coat s, jackets, capes and stoles in Minks, Persian Lambs, Alaska Seal and other breathtaking furs. 11RUBES KOZIN 1 9330 LIVERNOIS 1 1 /2 BLOCKS NORTH OF 7 MILE ROAD Open Thursday, Friday Evenings 'tit 9, Phone UN 4-2275 Beth Shalom Sisterhood Raises Building Funds The Jewish Theater for Chil dren will offer a prize of $1000 for the best full length play for children in English on a Jewish theme, according to an an- nouncement made by Jacob Stein, chairman of the Theater. The prize, to be known as "The Golden Pen Playwriting Prize," was made available by a friend of the theater and will be of- fered annually. Manuscripts must be submit- ted no later than Sept. 1. Rules of the contest may be obtained by writing to the Jewish The- ater for Children, 1776 Broad- way, New York 19. Detroit Couple Tours I WHY WORRY I ! Paul Deutschberger, director of the Bnai Brith Youth Organ- ization of Michigan for the past four years, leaves that program today to assume a position of associate professor of social work a t the University o f Tennessee Graduate School. A testimonial event is plan- ned to honor Deutschberg e r for the "out- standing c o re- tribution to the Jewish young Deutschberger people of Michigan." Members of Bnai Brith, BEY() Alumni and the community in general are invited to attend. For reservations, call UN. 2-0944 or LI. 4-2826. Deutschberger holds a mas- ter's degree in social work from Wayne University. Prior to join- ing BBYO, he was director of the Detroit Group Project and was associated with Merrill Pal- mer School. In his new assignment, Deut- schberger also will serve as con- sultant to the Mental Health Clinic of Tennessee. Hospital Gets $98,000 BOSTON, (JTA)—The Beth Service grants totaling $98,000. Israel Hospital Department of The grants cover the period be- Psychiatry here has received tween July 1, 1956 and June 30, the United States Public Health 1957. BELLE JACOB NEW SALON FOR FASHION LEADERS Belle Jacob extends an invitation to view the ultimate in boutique fashions. Exclusive imported collections, designer originals, imaginative casual and sport clothes, Italian and French designs. Exciting clothes in exquisite taste for those who shape the fashion trends. PRECIOUS PURE VICUNA crown jewel of fabrics. So meltingly soft and smooth, there's almost no basis for comparison. Rare beatify, this limited edition, exceptional at just $ 279 .. ULLE 'JACOB 19338 LIVERNOIS AVENUE