"Through Understanding We
Grow," the theme of this year's
conference of the Michigan
Branch of the National Wo-
men's League, United Syna-
gogue of America, will be con-
spicuous in all sessions and
workshops.
Each program of the confer-
ence, to be held May 16 and 17,
at the Henrose Hotel here, will
be geared to the theme, accord-
ing to Mrs. Joseph W. Markel,
of Detroit, president of the
Michigan branch.
Keynoting the conference ses-
sions will be addresses by Dr.
Edward Neufeld, rabbi of Cong.
7:q
.
•
presented by Mrs. Harold M.
Kamsler, national vice-president
from Norristown, Pa.
CEAC is a cornerstone of the
Women's League program since
it incorporates seven major sis-
terhood projects: adult educa-
tion, bookshop, library and peri..
odicals, ceremonial and gift
shop, Judaism in the home, pro-
gram, publicity and visual tech-
niques.
Mrs. Isadore Leeman, confer-
ence chairman, states that all
workshops will be presented
concurrently, as follows:
Adult education, Mrs. Abe Katz-
man, chairman; Mrs. Allen A. Char-
lip, recorder; Rabbi Halpern, key-
note speaker.
Judaism in the home, Mrs. David
Wolin, Flint, chairman; Mrs. Irving
Koper, Pontiac, recorder; partici-
pants, Beth Israel Sisterhood of
Flint.
Parliamentary procedure, Mrs.
Isadore E. Goodman, parliamenta-
rian; Mrs. Bernard Klein, recorder;
audio-visual drama by Mesdames Sol
Grand, Harry Meer, William Morin,
John Sender, Samuel Simon and
James Sobel.
Social action and Israel affairs,
Mrs. Philip Helfman and Mrs. George
Liss, chairmen; Mrs. Isadore Haupt-
man, Mt. Clemens, recorder; discus-
sants, Mesdames Milton Weiss, Israel
Wiener, Herman M. Canner and Ben
Z. Freeman.
Torah Fund, Mrs. Reuben Adel-
man, of Bay City, chairman; discus-
sion led by Mrs. Sidney Weinberg,
branch chairman, and panelists,
Mesdames Norman Allan and Adolph
A. Winkler.
.
Rabbi Halpern Rabbi Neufeld
Ahavas Israel in Grand Rapids,
and Rabbi Mordecai S. Halpern,
of Cong. Beth Shalom in Oak
Park.
A highlight of the two-day
gathering will be a general ses-
sion for all delegates, when a
discussion of the significance of
CEAC—the coordinated educa-
tional activities committee — is
Dr. Neufeld will speak at the
May 16 banquet, which also will
feature the appearance of Cir-
cuit Judge Ira G. Kaufman. The
choral groups of Beth Aaron
and Adas Shalom Sisterhoods,
under the direction of Mrs. Jo-
seph Markel and accompani-
ment by Mrs. George Bassin,
will perform.
Other local, leaders who will
participate in conference ses-
sions include Rabbi Benjamin
H. Gorrelick, of Beth Aaron
Synagogue; Cantor Louis Klein,
Cong. Bnai Moshe; and Mayor
Louis C. Miriani.
Mrs. Jacob E. Segal will in
stall incoming branch officers
and board members, and Mrs.
Moses Lehrman will present a
special song she composed at a
President's breakfast on May 17,
when outgoing and incoming
Sisterhood presidents will be
honored. Mrs. Sol Docks is
chairman, and is assisted by
Mrs. Irving Chaiken.
For information or the con-
ference, call Mrs. A. A. Winkler,
UN. 4-0157; or Mrs. Isadore Lee-
man, BR. 3-6318.
Court Walks Surely
on Ripple Soles;
Win Australian Suit
Victory for the Ripple Sole
Corp., upholding its patents in
Australia, was established by
the High Court of Australia, it
was announced by Nathan Hack,
board chairman of the corpora-
tion and inventor of the Ripple
Sole.
Hack, a former Detroiter who
now makes his home in Cali-
fornia, joined in the case while
on a visit to Australia with Mrs.
Hack.
Suit was. filed last June
against a retail chain which
imported, from Japan, shoes
bearing soles determined to in-
fringe on patents held by the
Ripple Sole Corp.
In addition to an injunction
against any further infringe-
ment during the life of the
original patent and any exten-
sion, damages and costs were
awarded to the corporation. The
defendant's counterclaim was
dismissed.
Word of the victory was an-
nounced by Morton Hack, pres-
ident of the Hack Shoe Co. in
Detroit, who is the son of
Nathan Hack.
Town and Country Shop
Has New Management
Herman Victor, well-known
Detroit merchant, has assumed
ownership of the Town and
Country Shop, at 19158 Liver-
nois. Victor is managing the
store himself.
The store, Victor said this
week, will feature all of the lat-
est styles in fine quality gar-
ments.
Dresses, sportswear, coats
and accessories will be gathered
from all- of the fine fashion 'cen-
ters of the world for the shelves
and cloak racks of the Town
and Country Shop, Victor con-
cluded.
Relief Society Banquet
Ben Fishman, president of the
Kozan Horodoker and Luli-
netzer Relief Society, invites
members and their friends to
the group's annual banquet this
Sunday evening, at. Cong. Shaa-
rey Hashomayim, 14200 W. 10
Mile, Oak Park. For reserva-
tions, call Mrs. Dinah Super-
stine, LI 6-3785.
g i
every
,
U11
the Ar
This Week's Radio and
Television Programs
of Jewish Interest
THE ETERNAL LIGHT
Time: 10:30 p.m., Sunday.
Station: WWJ.
Feature: "These Children,"
story of the founding of the
Maimonides Institute for Re-
tarded Children, which is lo-
cated in Middle Village, Queens,
N.Y., will be told. Dr. Leon
Charney, educational consultant
of the National Association for
Retarded Children, will speak
at the conclusion of the presen-
tation.
* * *
THE JEWISH HERITAGE
Time: 11:30 p.m., Sunday.
Station: WCAR.
Feature: "Roots of Western
Civilization," a dialogue be-
tween Dr. J. Russell B r i g h t,
associate dean of Wayne State
University, and Dr. Abram
Spiro, chairman of the WSU
department of Near Eastern
languages and literatures, will
emphasize the forthcoming
Bible conference on the WSU
campus.
* * *
COUNCIL-ALTMAN HOUR
Time: 10 p.m., Saturday.
Station: WJLB.
Feature: Dr. Abram Spiro,
chairman of the department of
Near Eastern Languages and
Literatures at Wayne State
University, will discuss the
forthcoming conference on the
"Near Eastern Background of
Western Civilization," being
sponsored at Wayne by Dr.
Spiro's department.
*
a
. . . TO DWELL TOGETHER
Time: 9:15 a.m., Sunday.
Station: WJBK-TV.
Feature: Dean J. Russ el 1
Bright, of Wayne State Univer-
sity; Rt. Rev. Carroll F. Deady,
pastor of Our Lady of Good
Council Church; and Dr. Abram
Spiro, chairman of the WSU
department of Near Eastern
Languages and Literatures, will
discuss the forthcoming confer-
ence at Wayne on the "Near
Eastern Background of Western
Civilization."
Robert Merrill, international-
ly-known baritone, will be guest
artist in a program sponsored
by the Men's Club of Adas Sha-
lom Synagogue, at 8:15 p.m.,
May 29, in the main sanctuary.
Star performer for the Metro-
politan, Chicago and San Fran-
cisco opera companies, Merrill
will sing Yiddish, Hebrew and
operatic selections.
All seats are reserved. Tickets
selling for both $3 and $5
may be obtained at the syna-
MR. AND MRS. DAVE ROOD gogue office, 7045 Curtis; Grin-
nell's downtown, and from all
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Rood, of board members. Joseph Koe-
17226 Steel, will celebrate their nig is concert chairman.
golden wedding anniversary
with a dinner this Sunday eve-
ning, when 100 relatives and
guests will join in the festivi-
ties at Springel's Patio Room.
The party will be given by the
couple's five children, Albert
Rood, Mrs. Morris Novik, Mrs.
UN 2-2850 UN 3-6283
Israel Abramson, Mrs. Eugene
White and Mrs. William Zol-
kower. The Roods also have 17
grandchildren.
WANTED
Married 50 years ago in Holy-
CHEF AND
oke, Mass., Mr. and Mrs. Rood
SECOND COOK
settled in Detroit some 45 years
Male or Female
Excellent Salary
ago. Mr. Rood, a builder, is a
Mt. Clemens
member of Pinsker Progressive
HOward 3-4505
Aid Society and the Bnai Brith.
The Counts
.1•111•11,
Lee J. Smits to Address
Hannah Schloss Old Timers
Lee J. Smits, public relations
director; Michigan Consolidated
Gas Company, former radio
commentator, will reminisce on
Detroit 40 to 50 years ago at the
next meeting of the Hannah
Schloss Old Timers, at 8:15 p.m.,
Wednesday, at the Jewish Cen-
ter.
WHAT EVERY BRIDE
SHOULD KNOW . .
For fine color movies
of your wedding
Call
SID SIEGEL
TO 8-2705
How can you come to know
yourself? Never by thinking;
always by doing. —Goethe
SPECIAL EVENTS FOR
MOTHER'S DAY AT
LIBERMAN'S
In The Morning 8 to 1 . . .
Smorgasbord Breakfast
From 2 to 9 p.m.
SPECIAL MOTHER'S DAY DINNERS
Judge Kaufman
Lectures at U. M.
We have a Live Plant for Every Mother.
The annual reunion of all
members of Windsor Lodge of
Bnai Brith will be held May 23,
at the Elmwood Casino, begin-
ning with a cocktail hour at
5:30 p.m.
Dinner will be served at 7:30
p.m„ and a program of enter-
tainment will follow. An award
ceremony is planned.
The program celebrates the
35th anniversary of Bnai Brith
in Windsor, and is being geared
to the current observance of
the 200th anniversary of Jew-
ish settlement in Canada.
Tickets and reservations are
available by calling L. Gold-
berg, CL 4-8696.
Judge Ira Kaufman, of the
Wayne County Probate Court,
was one of the lecturers in the
Institute of Continuing Legal
Education presented by the
Young Lawyers Seminar at the
University of Michigan, last
week.
Judge Kaufman lectured on
"Wills and Estates."
The program and arrange-
ments for the Young Lawyers
Seminar were developed by
Prof. E. Donald Shapiro, of the
Detroit College of Law, director
of the Young Lawyers Seminar.
LIBERMAN'S
Ahavas Achim Women
Slates Torah Luncheon
For the seventh successive
year, graduating students of
all seven branches' of the
United Hebrew Schools will
participate in a weekend outing
at Camp Tamarack.
This year's program 'will take
place May 13 to 15, according
to Dr. Emanuel Applebaum,
principal of the Adas Shalom
Branch and chairman of the
camp outing.
A cultural and athletic pro-
gram is being arranged for the
outing, which is designed to ac-
quaint all the students before
they meet at the Hebrew High
School, Albert Elazar, UHS su-
perintendent, stated.
Members of the teaching staff
and students of the Midrasha
will serve as counselors at the
camp sessions.
Windsor Bnai Brith
Sets Reunion Dinner
-
r
Dave Roods to Mark
Golden Anniversary
Engage Robert Merrill
for Local Performance
A combined Torah and in-
stallation luncheon is being
planned by the Sisterhood of
Ahavas Achim, at 12:30 p.m.,
Monday, at the synagogue. Mrs.
Thomas Partovich will be in-
stalled as president.
To assist Mrs. Partovich in the
coming year are Mesdames
Leonard Schrieber, Meyer Le-
vey and Larry Guttenberg, vice-
presidents; Edward Allen, Les-
ter Wolfe, Joseph Pleasant and
Arthur Weintrob, secretaries;
Ben Simons, treasurer; and
Harold Jeross and Barney Zat-
koff, elected board members.
Reservations for the luncheon
may be obtained from Mrs. Isa-
dore Goodman, UN 4-1422.
UHS GraduateS Set,
Outing at Tamarack
16 Varieties of Pancakes Anytime!
Full Course Dinners Served Daily
-13821 W. 9 MILE RD.
OAK PARK
LI 8-1111
PRIVACY & SAFETY ON OUR OWN CAMP SITE
Totem Pole
Day Camp
For Boys and Girls 3-12
ONLY 17 MILES FROM
DETROIT
at WIXOM
• Overnights — Saturday & Weekend Camping
• Archery • Air Rifles • Badminton • Cookouts
• Trained Mature Staff
• State Licensed
• Door to Door Transportation
• 11 Acres — Designed for Your Child's Enjoyment
Playground — Baseball Field — Nature Area
• Buildings on Grounds
DETAILED BROCHURE AVAILABLE ON REQUEST.
MARV LIBERSON, Director LI 6-6174
27 - THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS -- Friday, May 6, 1960
`Growth Through Understanding' Is
Theme of Women's League Parley
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t14111111.414 ■ 04111•11.0111111111.0•11411111110414,1/011111111 ■ 114111111H
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May 06, 1960 - Image 27
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- The Detroit Jewish News, 1960-05-06
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