22 Dedicate Ehrlich Auditorium at Linda Taylor Will Dr. Haber Will Be Guest of Honor Annual UHS Mee ting; Edwin Wolf Wed Don Smart at State Women's ORT Imperial Ball The Imperial Ball, sponsored he has starred. Mrs. Harry Guest Speaker at May 21 Program by the Michigan Region of Becker, national executive THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Frid'ay, Nay 10, 1963 — r The auditorium of the Esther Berman Building of the United Hebrew Schools will be named in honor of Dora Ehrlich and in memory of Joseh H. Ehrlich, at at the schools' annual meeting at the Berman Branch on Tues- day, May 21. A buffet dinner will precede the annual meeting at which Ed- win Wolf II, of Philadelphia, president of the National Foun- dation for Jewish Culture and past president of the Jewish Publication Society of America, will be guest speaker. Participants in the Ehrlich Auditorium dedication ceremon- ies will be Abe Srere and Man- dell L. Berman. Officers will be elected at this meeting, to which the public is invited after 8 p.m. Nominated as members of the board of directors for a three- year term ending June 1, 1966,' are: Mandell L. Berman, Morris J. Brandwine, Irwin I. Cohn, Law- rence W. Crohn, Alfred Deutsch, Mrs. Stanley Friedman, Philip Gilbert, Gordon Ginsberg, Harry Pfeffer and Ball to Debate Issue of Church, S tate Gunsberg, Jacob Kellman, Jay Rosenshine, David Safran, Louis Schostak, Jack Tobin, Benjamin Weiss, and Harry Yudkiff. Chairman of the nomination committee is Gordon Ginsberg and chairman of the planning committee is. George M. Zeit. zer. Women's American ORT, will be held 7 p.m. Saturday at the Sheraton Cadillac Hotel, accord- ing to Mrs. Eugene Epstein, chairman. Guests will dance to Hal Gor- don's music. Broadway singer- actor David Atkinson will sing numbers from shows in which Commitment of Retarded Youth Study Begins 160 Honor Kent at Center Fete The Michigan Department of Mental Health, in cooperation with Plymouth State Home and Training School, received a federal grant of $155,000 for .a two-year project to try and de- termine factors which cause par- ents to seek commitment for their children. This grew out of the first year's study of the Out- Patient Clinic's efforts of the Plymouth State Home and Train- ing School by the staff of that institution who realized that large numbers of infants were being committed in spite of pres. ent day knowledge which be- speaks against this type of pro- gramming for the mentally re- tarded. Because of the delay in com- munity acceptance and utiliza- tion of new information and knowledge, and because of the overcrowding in installations, it was felt that a study of commit- - ments, especially of children under the age of ten, was in order to try and effect a pro- gram of education and imple- mentation of new information which recommends community service programs as opposed to residential programs for young children. Results of the study will be used to direct efforts of a limited staffing to the more pertinent areas in the com- munity which produce such deci- sions. The ideas which were devel- oped at Plymouth State Home as the result of their Out-Patient activities were organized and ap- proved by the Central Office which prepared the grant. The study will be under the direc- tion of Dr. V. A. Stehman, dep- uty director of the Department of Mental Health, State of Mich- igan, and Dr. R. I. Jaslow, medi_ cal superintendent at Plymouth State Home. Dr. Gwen An- drews, Chief of the Depart- ment's Research section will conduct the survey and Leroy Watts, social service director at Plymouth State Home and Train- ing School, will direct the col- lection of information. "Two Views on Church-State Problems" will be debated next Thursday, at 8 p.m.; by Leo Pfeffer and William B. Ball, at Cooley High School, 15055 Hubbell. Pfeffer is di- rector and gen- eral counsel of the American Jewish C o n- gress. Ball is executive d rector and gen- eral counsel of the Pennsyl- vania Catholic Welfare Com. Pfeffer ittee. The discussion will deal with a variety of church-state prob- lems, including the public bus transportation for private and parochial school students, shared time programs, federal aid to parochial schools, reading and distribution of the Bible in pub- lic schools, and prayers in the public schools. The recent action of the Michigan Legislature in approving the school bus bill; and the Cherry Hill experiment with "shared time" add to the timeliness of the public discus- sion. There will be a question pe- riod to permit audience. partici- pation. The meeting is being Friedman Is President sponsored by the Metropolitan Detroit Branch of the American of Camping Association Civil Liberties Union. It will be Bernard Friedman, attorney held in the auditorium of the and owner-director of Camp Cooley High School, located at Tanuga, has been elected presi- 15055 Hubbell, near Fenkell. dent of the Michigan Camping As- Kaufman to Speak at sociation for a Farband Rally May 11 two-year term. A veteran of Probate Judge Ira G. Kauf- camping f o r man' will be the guest - speaker 23 years he at the Yom Ha-Atzmaut celebra- is the past tion sponsored by Farband chairman Branch No. 114 at 8:30 p.m. to- Friedman of the legis- morrow at the Labor Zionist In- lation committee of the Asso- stitute. The affair, on behalf of Is- ciation. The Association ob- rael Bonds, is in advance of the served American Camp Week Harry L. Schumer Labor Zionist May 1-8. "Man of the Decade" testimoni• al. The Israeli Ensemble will Elazar to Lecture furnish a program of Israeli music. All members and friends for Arlazaroff Farband are invited. . . "The Middle East in the Light Morris Gelfand is president of Recent Developments" will be and Mrs. Movsas Goldoftas is discussed by Albert Elazar, sup- Israel anniversary chairman, erintendent of United Hebrew with L. Jacobs as co-chairman. Schools, at a meeting of Arlaz- aroff Branch of Farband, LZO, Michigan produces and sells Wednesday evening at the Labor 75% of all the small fruit plants Zionist Institute. Refreshments marketed within a 600 mile will be served. Friends are in- radius of its borders. - MISS LINDA TAYLOR At a recent cocktail party, Mr. and Mrs. J. Taylor of Wis- consin Ave. announced the en- gagement of their daughter, Linda Naomi, to Don Duane Smart, son of Mr. and Mrs. A.M. Smart of Mallery Rd., Flint. An Aug. 11 wedding is planned, after which the couple will re- turn to their graduate studies at Michigan State University. JiNif Activities SGT. MORTON A. SILVER- MAN AUXILARY recent ly elected Mrs. Sam Wagner as president. Other officers include Mesdames William Sniderman and Marvin Adler, vice-presi- dents; Hy Bialick and Maurice Shepherd, secretaries; Alfred Stanley, treasurer; Sol Shpargel and Joseph Gorrelick, conduc- tresses; William Levitt, chap- lain; Louis Bialick, historian; and Morris Baker, guard. * * * BLOCH - ROSE AUXILIARY announces newly elected offi- cers are Mesdames William Greenberg, president; -Morris Elken and Sol Goldberg, vice- presidents; Louis Wagner, treas- urer; Morris Greenberg and Jack Spiro, conductresses; Bur- ton Chassin, guard; Martin Ros- enfeld, chaplain; and John Mil- halton, historian. * * * DETROIT LADIES AUXIL- IARY elected Mesdames Rose Packman as president; Frances Green and Ruth Klepner, vice- presidents; Vera Zendel, chap- lain; Minnie Hart, instructor; and Hannah Seinwel and Eliza- beth Shapero, installing officers. Institute Announces Lectures by Zeltzer, Haar, Camp Opening George M. Zeltzer, president of the Sholem Aleichem Insti- tute, will speak 9 p.m. today on "Ahad Ha-Am: Yesterday and Today—The Continuing Impact of His Secularist Philosophy." The public is invited. Moishe Haar, director of the Sholem Aleichem Institute, will speak on "The Epic Theatre of Bertolt Brecht" 8:30 p.m. May 15. For tickets call VE 8-7440. Camp Sashua, the day camp of the Sholem Aleichem Insti- tute, will open on June 24 under the direction of Elliot Burns. For information and registration, call VE 8-7440. Name Shaarit Haplaytah Dinner Dance Committee The Shaarit Haplaytah, Sur- vivors of 1945, Mother's Day dinner dance, at 8:30 p.m., Sat- urday, at Adas Shalom social hall, will star Jan Bart. Eric Rosenow and his orchestra will play for the dancing. The committee in charge of the affair, on behalf of Israel Bonds, consists of: Joe Gold- schmid, Martin Rose, Joseph Kagan, Norman Adelsberg, Irv- ing Mandell, Gene Klein, Carl Friedman, JackWalcsberg, Louis Stern, and Je4ve ,Roth. _ Far in advance of Father's Day, a warm father-son rela- tionship was in evidence on May 2, when, at a luncheon at the Jewish Center, a father sponsored the event in honor of his son who rose to communal esteem and a judgeship. Jonas Keywell was host to 160—members of his family, many friends and members of the Retired Men's Club at the Center, in which he is active— in honor of his son, Judge George D. Kent. With former Governor John B. Swainson as principal speak- er and Arthur Robbins as toast- master, the luncheon program featured as speakers Jonas Key- well himself, who told of his son's collegiate work to attain his law degree and his having acquired recognition first in the Prosecutor's office and then as judge; Rabbi Jacob E. Segal, Jennie (Mrs. George D.) Kent, Philip Slomovitz, Irwin Shaw, Judge Nathan Kaufman and Morris Horowitz. The musical program fea- tured Ruth Goldman as soloist and Bella Goldberg as accom- panist. Judge Kent, in his response, told of his father's encourage- ment to him in his studies and in his life's work. board chairman in charge of southern states expansion, will give the invocation. Dr. and Mrs. Nathan H. Schla- fer will return from a European trip, where they visited the ORT installations, to attend the af- fair. Dr. William Haber of Ann Arbor, president of the World ORT Union and newly appoint- ed dean of the College of Liter- ature, Science and the Arts at University of Michigan, will be guest of honor. A new ORT group, the Fair- view Chapter, was recently or- ganized with Mrs. Irving Keene, president. ORT now has 13 chap- ters with a total membership of 2,015 in Michigan. Reservations for the ball may be made by calling Mrs. Harry Solomon, LI 2-8272. 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