Nila Magidoff, Russian-born wife of former National Broad- casting Company correspondent Robert Magidoff, will relate her personal experiences in "Siberia to Broadway" at a program planned for 1:15 p.m., Monday, in Temple Beth El. Under spon- sorship of the Beth El Sister- hood, Mrs. Magidoff will describe h e r wi del y-d i ver- gent experi- ences in Rus- sia, during which she de- signed clothes, worked in fac- tor i e s, ex- plored the wil- Mrs. Magidoff der n e s s of central Asia, traveled around Europe as a Merchant Marine sailor, became an author and a Moscow newspaperwoman. Her interesting life was the subject of the book, "Nila," which is being made into a musical comedy to play Broad- way during the next season. Originally planned as straight drama, the play's producers were so impressed with Mrs. Ma- gidoff's "show" at New York Town Hall that they are re- writing it as a musical and even asked her to play the lead which she turned down. For a time, Mrs. Magidoff was exiled in Siberia. She re- turned to Moscow where she met her husband, and they were married in 1937. After coming here before Pearl Har- bor, she rejoined her husband in Moscow during the war. They both left in 1948, when he was expelled on charges of spying for the U.S. Government. Mrs. Major Siegel, who is chairman of the afternoon's program, invites the public to attend at no charge. Plan Dance to Swell Louis Marshall Fund The annual fund-raising pro gram of the Louis Marshall Benevolent Fund will this year take the form of a Spring Dance, to be held on Sunday evening, at the Sheraton-Cadil- lac Hotel. The fund, now in its Bar Mitzvah year, was organized 13 years ago to aid members of Louis Marshall Lodge and Chapter of Bnai Brith in fi- nancial distress because of pro- longed or serious illness. According to Ludwig Boraks, president, the non-publicized fund has provided funds with "no red tape or strings at- tached." Most of the cases in- volved people who could not or would not accept public charity. Planned for this year's dance are music by Sammy Woolf and his orchestra, entertain- ment and prizes. Tickets are available from Boraks, TY 8-8100, or Mrs. Ben Dorf, fund- raising chairman, UN 3-7186. activities in Society Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Hack, former Detroiters now of Cali fornia, have sailed for an extended tour of Europe, during which they will spend three months visiting in 15 countries including Israel. Mr. Hack, chairman of the board of the Ripple Sole Corp. and founder of the Hack Shoe Co. here, will, during his travels, talk to and inspect facilities of franchised merchants of his famed Ripple Sole. Mr. Jules Doneson, manager of the travel agency bearing his name, left last week for visits to Copenhagen, Athens, Vienna and Tel Aviv. Mr. Doneson was one of 20 travel agents in the Western Hemisphere to win a winter sales contest free trip to Athens, inaugurating the Scandinavian Airlines' Services from New York to Greece. After visiting Copenhagen and Athens as the guest of SAS, Mr. Doneson will fly to Israel for his fifth visit to the Jewish state and will spend several days in Vienna before returning home. Miss Evelyn Gurvitch, Detroit pianist and teacher, will join with Shirley Lachman Fink in a piano recital at 8:30 p.m., Wednesday, in the lecture hall of the Detroit Institute of Arts for a benefit performance for the Children's Leukemia Folinda- tion. They will present for the first time in Detroit a Sonata by Francis Poulenc, in addition to works by Mozart, Saint-Saens and Rachmaninoff. Tickets may be obtained at Grinnell's or the Evelyn Gurvitch Studio, 2633 W. Grand Blvd., TR. 2-2900. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Zide, of 18214 Ohio, have just concluded a stay at the Riviera Hotel, in Las Vegas, Nev. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Yanich and their children, formerly of this city, are now residing at 12680 N.E. Miami Ct., North Miami, Fla., where Mr. Yanich is a field representative with the Greater Miami State of Israel Bond office. Before moving to Florida, the Yaniches were in Jerusalem, where he worked as chief community organizer for the Hadassah Medical Organization's division of community health services from 1953 to 1957. Mr. Yanich's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Yanich, also former De- troiters, are residing at the same address. Cardinal Owner Supports Project to Bring Baseball to Israel August A. Busch, Jr. owner of the St. Louis Cardinals base- ball team, will be honored at a dinner here June 4 to hail his support of the introduction of baseball in Israel. Among those attending the dinner will be Herman Fish- man, of Detroit, a member of the national board of the U. S. Committee for Sports in Israel, who last spring was one of the originators of the idea to start baseball in Israel. In organizing the Detroit Chapter, Fishman and other sportsminded Detroiters had agreed to work for this idea, and are currently working up Wayne State to Hold Seminar on Professors A two-day symposium on "The College Professor" will be sponsored by Wayne State University this Wednesday and Thursday, in the Rackham Bldg. and the Detroit Institute of Arts. Among the featured panelists will be Dr. David Riesman, so- ciologist from the University of Chicago, and Dr. Norbert Wiener, mathematician and cy- berneticist from the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology. Dr. Riesman is widely known for his "The Lonely Crowd," an analysis of the changing character of American Society. He was a former law clerk to the late Supreme Court Jus- tice Louis D. Brandeis. Dr. Wiener and Dr. Riesman will join with Dr. Harold Taylor, philosopher and presi- dent of Sarah Lawrence Col- and Dr. Helen White, Northland ORT Group lege, chairman of the University of Slates Fashion Show Wisconsin English department Northland Chapter of Wom- in a panel discussion which en's ORT will hold a fashion concludes the parley at 8 p.m., show on Wednesday afternoon, Thursday, in the Art Institute. April 23, in the social hall of Temple Beth El, announce co- Mrs. Joshua Sperka chairmen Mesdames Richard to Review Eban Book Lurie and Robert Stone. Mrs. Joshua Sperka will re- Twenty-four children and 15 mothers will model the latest view Abba Eban's "The Voice in children's and women's of Israel," at an open meeting of the Sisterhood of the Young clothes. President Mrs. Robert Metz Israel Center of Oak-Woods on announces that a luncheonette Wednesday. A slate of officers will be will be served at 12:30, preced- ing the show and prizes will be presented for the coming elec- tion, and the Sisterhood con- awarded. For tickets or further infor- stitution will be read for ratifi- mation, call Mrs. Norman Stern, cation. A social hour will follow the business meeting. UN 3-0137. a substantial local membership to back the baseball project. Although seriously handi- capped by a dearth of "big money" support, the Detroiters are helping to select coaches and players who will go to Israel to teach the game and bring Israeli players here to study techniques of playing. At a luncheon meeting last Thursday, University of Michi- gan track coach Don Canham, who has been in 37 foreign countries to help develop sports, spoke of the "absolute neces- sity for sports interrelationship between Israel and America." Meanwhile, in New York, Marvin Kratter, chairman of the "Baseball in Israel" group of the sports committee, stated that the central baseball sta- dium to be established in Israel will be named Busch Stadium in honor of Busch and his contri- butions toward the project. The stadium will be con- structed on the grounds of the Orde Wingate Institution for Physical Education, which will overlook the Mediterranean Sea some eight miles north of Tel Aviv. An enthusiastic supporter of the baseball promotion cam- paign is U. S. Ambassador to Israel Edward B. Lawson, who, impressed with the results of basketball, track and swimming projects, is given credit for initiating the idea of sponsoring baseball in the new democracy. Dr. Maurice Shudofsky to Speak on Israel Dr. Maurice Shudofsky, Wayne State University profes- sor of Semitics, will address a meeting of the Zionist Organiza- tion of Detroit at 8:30 p.m., Wednesday at the Esther Ber man branch of UHS, 18977 Schaefer. His topic is "Gazing into Israel's Future." Dr. Shudofsky is a noted Semitics scholar and the au- thor of several books, the lat- est, "The Hebrew Impact on Colonial America," now in the process of publication. He has also lectured throughout the U.S., Israel, Canada, France and Italy. ZOD president, Milton Mar- wil and program chairman Rabbi Milton Arm invite any- one interested in Jewish cul- ture to attend. Betrothal Told Mattathias Tent Hive to Hold Family Night Mattathias Tent Hive, of the Maccabees, has sched- uled a family night program at 8:30 p.m., Thursday, at Lutzker Hall, on James Couzens. Live entertainment and refreshments will be featured. Friends are in-, vited at no admission charge. 40 ■, ..........-.......•......... FOR THE FINEST — IN ENTERTAINMENT—It's BEN KATZMAN and his Orchestra LI 7-2943 V1111111.11.1111•••041•••0•1111•1.•••• ■ flillin1 ■ 17 ∎ 1 I JACK GORBACK MISS CHAR.LENE BALK Mr. and Mrs. Max Balk, of 3791 Fullerton, announce the engagement of their daughter, Charlene Faith, to Myer J. Bloom, son . of Mrs. Phillip Bloom,- of Harrisburg, Pa., and the late -Mr. Bloom. An August wedding is planned, after which the couple will reside in Harris- burg. I i UN 3 _ 8532 Dave Diamond Orchestras-Entertainment 302 Fox Building UN 4-4346 WO 2-4814 Harold Berke to Speak in Habonim Series Harold Berke, of the Israel Bond Office and formerly as- sociated with the Detroit Israel Histadrut Campaign, will be guest speaker at a meeting of Habonim this Sunday evening. The program, open to the Bonim and Noar groups (ages 15 to 23), is the fourth in a series of lectures on Histadrut and American labor. The meet- ing will begin at 7 p.m., in the Hayim Greenberg Center, 19161 Schaefer. Berke will speak on "Histadrut Policy Toward Pri- vate Enterprise." Following the program, there will be a rehearsal for a four- part cantata, being presented as a feature of Habonim's 19th annual "neshef" (conference), which is slated for May 3, in the Greenberg Center. Applications are currently being taken for Camp Habonim, Three Rivers, Mich., for youth between 10 and 17. For in- formation, call DI. 1-9666. PHOTOGRAPHY Weddings - Bar Mitzvahs Our Specialty Quality Work - Moderate Prices Personalized Service ,„ A PLASTIC FURNITURE ...,) COVERS ; ry ‘. . 1 MADE TO ORDER OR READY MADE CALL ANNA KARBAL I TO. 7-0874 M WEDDINGS BAR MITZVAHS For the best in Dancing pleasure, the BILL LEONARD ORCHESTRA TY 5-0755 TO 6-1373 111111•6. Music — Entertainment and his Orchestra UN 4-9485 MEETING AND BANQUET ROOMS To Rent Beautiful new air-conditioned building, central location, kitchen facilities, ample parking. Large room will accommo- date banquet of 250 or meeting of 350. Smaller rooms from 30- 100. Ideal for organizations, caterers, weddings, Bar-Mitzvahs, etc. Sholem Aleichem Institute 19350 Greenfield VE 8-7440 DI 1-3556 GOLDEN BRACKEN 5-piece setting $16.50 Royal Worchester OVER 250 PATTERNS Yes, there ore over 250 patterns in fine, imported bone chino to choose from at Lords. We've Royal Doulton, Crown Derby, Wedgwood, Shelly, Royal Albert, Royal Worcester, Rosenthal and Coalport. Other 5-pc. place settings at Lords as low as $4.95. CHINA * CRYSTAL * SILVER * WEDDING GIFTS Special for BRIDES TO BE CHINA IS LESS IN CANADA BRIDES-TO-BE are cordially invited to take advantage of the BRIDAL REGISTRY at Lords; staffed by ex- perienced personnel. Let us keep a record of your selec- tions in china, glass, silver, etc., to prevent duplication and for the convenience of your friends. LORDS CREDIT JEWELLERS 533 OUELLETTE Phone CL 2-9702 WINDSOR, CANADA Only 3 minutes from downtown Detroit Opposite Tunnel Exit 19 -THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS—Friday, A pril 11, 1958 Nila Magidoff Here for Beth El Women on Monday Afternoon