The Hadassah Harvest Ball,
to be held under the joint
sponsorship of the Detroit and
South Oakland County chap-
ters, on Sept. 8 at the Sher-
aton-Cadillac Hotel, will host
guest speaker Mrs. Moses Ep-
stein, former national presi-
dent of Hadassah.
Speaking again on Sept. 9 at
the opening fall meeting of the
Detroit chapter, Mrs. Epstein

MRS. MOSES EPSTEIN

will help put into orbit the
annual honor roll campaign.
The meeting is planned for
12:30 p.m. at Temple Israel,
Third and Manderson, an-
nounces Mrs. David J. Schach-
ter, president, and Mrs. Milton
Sorock, vice-president of fund-
raising.
Mrs. Epstein. editor-in-chief
of "Hadassah Newsletter," was
accompanied by her husband
on a recent trip to Israel,
where she was honored with
the dedication of a village in
in her name. In recognition of
the outstanding services ren-
dered the settlement of Mag-

diel during her national presi-
dency, the Youth Aliyah Vil-
lage there was named the
"Judith Epstein Village."
Comedian Milton Kamen, of
the Bon Soir Club in New
York, will be star entertainer
at the Harvest Ball, and the
Fenby-Carr Orchestra will pro-
vide the musical background.
Since table assignments for
the 8 p.m. dinner will be made
in order of the date of reserva-
tion, Mrs. Morris Brandwine,
chairman of seating arrange-
ments, suggests an early res-
ervation. All contributors of
$100 or more to the honor roll
campaign are invited to the
ball. •
Headed by Mrs. Sorock and
Mrs. Sander - Hillman, South
Oakland County's vice-presi-
dent of fund-raising, the plan-
ning committee includes the
following chairmen:
Mesdames Nathan Schlafer,
ball; Morris Brandwine, res-
ervations and seating arrange-
ments; William Deutsch, host-
esses; Irwin Green, decorations;
Robert Drews, publicity; and
co-chairmen Maxwell Jospey,
Samuel J. Greenberg, Norman
Steinberg and Donald West.
Under the direction of Mrs.
Sam Shekter, the Detroit Chap-
ter Honor Roll special gifts
committee includes vice-chair-
men Mesdames Herman Aug-
ust, Davis Benson, Sam Cohl,
Bert Colman, Harry Cowan,
Sam Feldstein, William Isen-
berg, Barney Keywell, Ben
Mossman, S a m u e l Rhodes,
Philip Slomovitz and Max
Zivian.
Honor roll committee chair-
men are Mesdames Sam
Schwartz, general solicitation;
Benjamin Bond, treasury gifts;
Dulcy Rosenfeld, honor roll
book; Harvey Lynn, bulletin;
Louis Luckoff, Fay Moss,
Nathan Schermer and Harry
Spector, secretaries; Alfred
Rosen, clerical; Harry Sucher
and Irwin I. Cohn, IMA's; Max
R. Frank, advisor, and Joseph
Ehrlich and Henry Wineman,
honorary chairmen.

Reshevsky Won't
Play on Sabbath

Smart brides select the
Sheraton-Cadillac for their
weddings and receptions. And
for good reason! First, the
staff of this famous hotel spe-
cializes in catering to wed-
dings — lifts so many nagging
details from the shoulders of
the bride and her family.
And whether you select the
magnificent Grand Ballroom
for a party of 750, or one of
our exquisite Parlors for an
intimate family group of as
small as twenty, you may rest
assured that the accommoda-
tions and service will be the
finest in Detroit.
Our prices are reasonable,
and you'll always be proUd to
remember that your wedding
was at the Sheraton.Cadillac.

For information and reservations, call
Herman Schwartz at Woodward 1.8000

SHERATON-CADILLAC
HOTEL

Washington Blvd at Michigan Ave.

Mark Schmidt, General Manager

NEW YORK, (JTA)—Samuel
Reshevsky, world-famed chess
master, said that he would not
be able to play in a tourna-
ment in West Orange. N. J., be-
cause the match was to start on
Friday evening and continue
through Saturday. Reshevsky.
an Orthodox Jew, said he never
played on the sabbath.
Frank Brady. business mana-
ger of the United States Chess
Federation, one of the tourney
sponsors, denied that there was
any discrimination a gains t
Reshevsky and said that "many
of the players are Jewish."
Reshevsky, saying that he
felt the schedule was "a per-
sonal insult," pointed out that,
in all the years he has been
playing, he was never faced
with breaking the sabbath, "not
even in Russia." He become
world's chess champion in 1935.

Denver's Nat'l Jewish
Hospital Gets $25,000

The Kresge Foundation of
Detroit has awarded a $25,000
grant to National Jewish Hos-
pital at Denver toward the con-
struction of new research lab-
oratories, it was announced by
Leon S. Wayburn, chairman of
the Detroit committee for the
free-care medical center for tu-
berculosis and chest diseases.
Wayburn reported that the
grant was made contingent
upon the hospital's securing ad-
ditional funds totaling more
than $1,000,000 for completion
of the project.

PAYENI

X

BY HENRY LEONARD

Milwaukee Family
Wins Athletic Honors

MILWAUKEE, (JTA) — The
Albert Adelman family is an
athletic squad in itself.
Lynn Adelman, 19, who plays
golf for Princeton, won the
country-wide tournament spon-
sored by the Milwaukee Sentinel
a few weeks ago.
Gary, 17, took the State jun-
ior singles tennis championship
last week in the Milwaukee
Journal's station championships
at Wauwatso, giving him the
title for the second consecutive
year.
In the same tourney Craig,
15, won the boys' championship,
a title he missed in the finals
last year.
As a result of their wins,
Gary and Craig were named to
compete in the national juniors
and boys tournaments at Kala-
mazoo, Mich., and in the na-
tional Junior Chamber of Com-
merce tournaments at Phoenix,
Ariz.

X

Aerial Judaism

Copr. 1957. Leonard Pritlkin

Dave Diamond

Orchestra - Entertainment

Plan Exhibit on Civil War Jewry
for 1960 Centennial Observance

Eight Jewish organizations
this week jointly announced
plans for a traveling exhibit
depicting the roles played by
American Jews during the Civil
War.
The exhibit is being prepared
as part of the nation-wide cen-
tennial observance of the war
period. It will feature Jewish
contributions to both the Con-
fedracy and the Union.
Through the initiative of the
American Jewish Historical So-
ciety, seven groups here joined
with it to establish the Jewish
Historical Commission on the
Civil War Centennial. The or-
ganizations will pool resources
from their archives and from
other sources to create the ex-
hibit that will open at the Jew-
ish Museum of New York in
November, 1960.
The following year the dis-
play will be moved to the ex-
hibit hall of the Bnai Brith in
Washington. Subsequently, it
will be available for public
showing in major Jewish com-
munities.
Justin Turner of Los Angles,
a co-chairman of Bnai Brith's
committee on Jewish Ameri-
cana, was elected chairman of
the Commission. He is a noted
collector of historical docu-
ments and a past president of
the Manuscript Society.
Philip Sang, of Chicago, was
named treasurer, and Robert
Shosteck of Washington, D. C.,
curator of the Bnai Brith
exhibit hall, secretary.
The commission also plans
publication of a manual outlin-
ing methods for local obser-
vance of Jewish community

participation in the civil war
centennial.
The commission's executive
committee, representative of the
eight sponsoring organizations,
includes Dr. Jacob R. Marcus,
director of the American Jew-
ish Archives; Pulitzer prize-win-
ner Dr. Allan Nevins of the
American Jewish History Cen-
ter; Dr. Bertram W. Korn, pres-
ident of the American Jewish
Historical Society; Dr. Leon J.
Obermayer, chairman of the
Bnai Brith Committee on Jew-
ish Americana; Joseph F. Barr,
national administrator of the
Jewish War Veterans, and Drs.
Koppel S. Pinson, Abram Kanof,
and Schlomo Noble, represent-
ing respectively the Conference
of Jewish Social Studies, the
Jewish Museum and the Yivo
Institute for Jewish research.

302 Fox Building
WO 2-4814
UN 4-4346

VE 5-7224

Greencraff Florists

13542 Greenfield
FLOWERS FOR . WEDDINGS,
BAR MITZVAHS, . SHOWERS.
CONTACT MISS SHIRLEY

Want The Best?

Ask the Folks Who've Had

SAM BARNETT

and His Orchestra

LI 1-2563

PHOTOGRAPHS by

BERNARD H.

WINER

KE. 1-8196

GIFT

of Min. Album
for Mom on all Candids

Zack's Kosher Catering Co.

Is Still Open For
1959-60 Bookings ..
AT 1950 PRICES!
Special Prices to Societies
CALL: TU 3-1242

For consultation at your
convenience without obligation

Call Lincoln 8-2266

State Body Told to Cut
Birthplace from Forms

TRENTON, (JTA)—The New
Jersey Division Against Dis-
crimination said the State Civil
Service Commission should re-
move the question "where were
you born?" from its job appli-
cation blanks.
The commission replied it
had to know where job appli-
cants were born because they
must be American citizens to
qualify for state jobs, and the
commission must know whether
it should demand submission
of naturalization papers.
The birth question is one of
a list of 38 questions and re-
quirements w hi c h employers
are barred from use by the
division and the Attorney Gen-
eral's office.

ALTHOUGH

We've modernized our stores and bakeshops . . .
we've lost none of our skill in the art of baking with
that old-fashioned taste and goodness — whether it
be breads, rolls or pastries!

Purity Is Our Watchword

BE SURE TO SEE OUR SUNDAY SPECIALS!

Special consideration given to organizations.

ALL SHOPS OPEN 6 DAYS—CLOSED SATURDAYS

Zeman's New York Bakery

12945 W. 7 MILE ROAD — UN 2-7980
9726 DEXTER
13137 DEXTER
TY 4-8567
WE 5-9102

2 1 -THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS—Frid ay, August 14, 1959

Mrs. Morris Epstein Here to Help
Hadassah's Gala Harvest Ball

