THE DETROIT JEWISH NEW S — Friday, May 22, Center's 'Official Family' Dinner Opens Dedication Week albums showing the step-by-step eration leadership and - "my development of the new struc. wonderful staff of professional ture. workers." Frankel, president of the Architect Paul Tilds, contrac- for Samuel Linden, Sobeloff, Center, presented framed scrolls William Avrunin, assistant di- to principal donors to the Cen- rector of Federation, and Kei- ter, including the Helen DeRoy Foundation, Max M. and Mar- dan also received albums. Shaw, now marking his jorie S. Fisher Foundation, eighth year with the center, Shiffman Foundation, Allen In- paid tribute to the officers' and dustries Foundation, Samuel board of the Center, the Fed- and Louis Hamburger Founda- tion, the estate of Saul Sloan, Edward Rose Foundation, Holtz- man and Silverman Foundation Center to Close Concert Sectson and 27 other individuals and Tickets are available at the corporations. Two famous soloists will be featured in the sixth and final Center office. Opening the dinner program, The concert is a feature of Mrs. Abraham Cooper led in concert of the season's series, given by the Center Symphony the center's Dedication week the singing of the National Orchestra under the direction which runs through Thursday. Anthems, and Rabbi Joshua of Julius Chajes, on Tuesday S. Sperka gave the invocation. evening, at the Aaron DeRoy Young Area Artists Theater of the Jewish Commun- The CARIBE MOTEL to Show Work Here ity Center, 18100 Meyers. An art exhibition and sale of PROVIDES YOUR Marilyn Cotlow, soprano, has been singing leading roles at over 700 original works by tal- OUT-OF-TOWN GUESTS the Metropolitan Opera for two ented Detroit-area artists will be WITH . . . held in Bloomfield Hills May years. A year ago she was 23-30, under the sponsorship of CONVENIENT LOCATION soloist with the Detroit Sym- "Art Unlimited," a group form- Woodward near 7 Mile Rd. Minutes away from everything ed for the purpose of giving LUXURIOUS ROOMS young artists an opportunity to • Phones • Air Conditioning exhibit their work. • Complete Kitchens Organized by Ilona Altshuler, • Wall-to-Wall Carpeting a Ferndale art teacher, the show COMPLETE will feature oil paintings, water ACCOMMODATIONS colors, sketches, sculpture and AT NO EXTRA COST other media. Many of the art- • Parking • TV and Radio ists will be present to explain • Continental Breakfast their work. PHONE The show will be held on the grounds of "Hugo Hills," a lux- TO. 8-2662 ury home development on Up- dyke Road, 1-mile east of Moderate Woodward, near Square Lake Rates Rd. The exhibit will be open Start at on Saturdays and Sundays from $8.00 1 p.m. until 9 p.m., and on weekday evenings from 7 p.m. Rena, who lives with her hus- Totenberg Miss Cotlow 19630 to 10 p.m. Displays will be both band and two children on an outdoors and indoors and will Woodward Israeli kibbutz. phony Orchestra under Paul Near 7 Mile Road be lighted at night. Paray. Miss Cotlow will sing A major aspect of Sunday's Admission is free. annual meeting, held jointly songs and arias by Mozart, Bel- with Resettlement Service, was lini, Julius Chajes and Johann an address by Dr. Fritz Redl, Straus. For the Best Deal on a who said that "emotionally dis- Violinist Roman Totenberg, turbed children who have been has appeared as soloist with New helped by social workers and New York Philharmonic, Bos- psychiatrists to improve need ton Symphony, Cleveland Or- ONLY 6 Pass. Sedan - Incl. an atmosphere of community chestra and other major sym- Full Price Factory Equipment trust to maintain their im- phony orchestras. During the provement." past year he has made three An outstanding authority on European concert tours. For child welfare who is soon to his Detroit appearance he has return to his post in the selected Beethoven's Violin at Wayne State University school Concerto in D Major. of social work, Dr. Redl pointed The program, which is dedi- to three factors indicative of cated to the memory of Fred improvement: M. Butzel, will also include "Perception and assessment "Iphigenie en Aulide" by Gluck- TE 4-4440 12555 Gr. River of social order; capacity to per- Mozart and the Little Suite No. OPEN 'TIL 10 .P.M. ceive social mood and atmos- 1 for Strings by Hugo Kauder. phere and balanced reaction to it, and the ability to handle life experiences." Milford Pregerson, J F CS president, reported that 1,713 families were helped in agency departments. Re-elected to the agency's board were Max M. Shaye, Gil- bert B. Silverman and Mrs. J. J. Wainger. They will be joined by Mrs. William H. Frank, Mrs. Lewis S. Grossman, Merle Harris, Mrs. Samuel Liden, Dr. Now, Time Savings Accounts at Jack Ro, and William W. Wets- MANUFACTURERS National Bank man, who were • elected. earn a big, new, higher interest rate In his retiring address as effective April 1, 1959. If you do not president of the Resettlement Service, David Rosin called the have an MNB Time Savings Account, McCarran- Walter Immigration open one today! Act "the greatest stumbling block to a sane and responsible immigration policy." Nathan L. Milstein was elected president to succeed Rosin. Other new officers are Walter Herz, vice-president; Sidney J. Karbel, treasurer; and Mrs. Lewis Manning, sec- retary. Board members who were NATIONAL BANK re-elected are Mrs. Theodore Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Bargman, Mrs. Samttel Caplan, 41111111111111.1111111111111111 Sidney J. Karbel and Mrs. Emil D. Rothman. Elected were 38 Offices in Detroit and the Rabbi Milton Arm, Theodore Baruch, Mrs. Lewis Daniels, Metropolitan Area Mrs. Maxwell Katzen and Ru- ben Manko. Only a handful of Det.roiters the founding fathers of the yet recall the early years, community who met in a leaky- around the turn of the century, roofed building on Montcalm when local Jewish interests be- and Brush, the first communal gan to merge to form a cohe- structure in Detroit. Judge Butzel told of the sive unit. Judge Henry Butzel is one. events surrounding the acquisi- And on Wednesday night, tion of the Hannah Schloss when the Jewish Community Building, which was the first Center kicked off its week-long Jewish Center, and pointed to program of dedication for the the role played by his brother, new $3,500,000 Meyers-Curtis the late Fred M. Butzel, in the Center, the judge entertained early Center Movement. He re- . a dinner audience of some 500 called that Wednesday marked people with delightful stories 11 years to the day that his of these momentous days. brother had died. "The Aaron DeRoy Center The dinner, in the all-pur- pose auditorium of the new Cen- was the first large building ter, was attended by members that the Center had, but then of the Center's "official fam- we added new buildings. The ily," including officers, board culmination is this beautiful and committee members, staff Center—a sturdy oak grown and officers of the Jewish Wel- from a strong acorn," Judge fare Federation and other corn- Butzel concluded. Jacob Keidan, a past presi- munal agencies. Judge Butzel, retired Mich- dent of the Center and chair- igan State Supreme Court Jus- man of the dedication commit- tice, who at Sunday's formal tee, was toastmaster for the in- dedication ceremony will be formal evening, which also in- celebrating his 88th birthday, eluded a Concert by Cantor told how he was "town collec- Jacob Barkin, of Washington, tor" in the early 1900's, when D.C., and Julius Chajes, Cen- the Jewish community totalled ter music director, in the Aaron 2,500 persons out of a popula- DeRoy Theater. Keidan called on past pres- tion of some 250,000. idents of the Center for recog- "In those days," the judge nition, and introduced a num- quipped„ "we had one 'mil- ber of community leaders, in- lionaire' with about $100,000, eluding Mrs. Theodore Barg- and when we collected $2,000 man, a past president of the during a campaign we thought Jewish Family and Children's we had hit a high spot." He related the experience of Service which occupies a wing of the new Center as its head- quarters, and Isidore Sobeloff, director of the Jewish Wel- fare Federation. Members of the building com- mittee, including Samuel Fran- kel, chairman, Samuel S. Sim- mer, Nathan Silverman, Richard Sloan, Harvey H. Goldman, Irv- ing Rose and Irwin Shaw, ex- ecutive director of the Center, were presented with photo JFCS Cites 'Social Work Dean,' Harold Silver, for 26-Year Effort Harold Silver, considered the "dean of social work" in the city of Detroit, was cited for 26 years of service as director of the Jewish Family and Chil- dren's Service at the organiza- tion's 34th annual meeting Sunday. Along with the inscribed citation, the JFCS leader was given a Judaica Library to mark the oc- casion. Silver was among the first group to receive pro - fessional de- grees in so- cial work from the Graduate School for Jewish Social Silver Work, a pio- neer school of training for so- cial welfare workers in the community. Currently regional chairman for the White House Confer- ence, Silver has held many re- gional and national posts, be- ginning in 1934, when he was elected chairman of the De- troit Chapter, National Asso- ciation of Social Workers. He also has served as board member, treasurer, vice-presi- dent and president of the Na- tional Conference of Jewish Communal Service, and as chairman of committees of the Family Service Association of America and the Child Wel- fare League of America. Under Silver's leadership, JFCS, formerly the Jewish So- cial Service Bureau, pioneered in developing services for chil- dren, family, aged and new- comers to America. During his administration, the scope of the agency has grown, and is now a member group of the FSAA, CWLA, Jewish Welfare Federation and United Community Services. Silver's wife, Feigel, is also active in the agency's commit- tee of service to the aging and they combine their talents in other communal organizations. They have a son, Reuben, of Cleveland, and a daughter, '59 Chevrolet $11859 See "BERNIE" SHAYNE or MILT \LEVIN JOE MAY CHEVROLET NEW, HIGHER INTEREST! MANUFACTURERS