Women Dream Up Antique Sale United Order True Sisters Due in Area for Parley .... ... ..... A doll's house dining room with filigree furniture, and an iron candelabrum are among the antiques to be offered for sale at the Midsummer Day's Dream Sale of the National Council of Jewish Women, Detroit Chapter, June 22. To be held at the home of Mrs.. Samuel Katkin (right), 1441 Balmoral, the sale is being planned - with the help of (from left) Mesdames David Howard, Carl Rosman and Louis Hamburger. 4' A Midsummer Day's Dream Sale, at which an assortment of fine antiques will be feature at- traction, will be held 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 22 in the gardens and around the pool of Mrs. Samuel Katkin, 1441 Balmoral. Sponsored by the Resale Shop committee of the Detroit Section, National Council of Jewish Wo- men, the sale will include "almost- antiques," contemporary accesso- ries, paintings, china, crystal. silver, brass, pewter and wood — all in excellent condition. Mrs. Arthur Bloom, Resale Shop coordinator, whose committee has been preparing this event for months, also is completing plans for a "Culinary Cupboard." Here, unusual cheese cakes, tortes, and home-made baked goods, contrib- uted by gourmet cooks, will be offered for sale. Under the chair- manship of Mrs. Alvin Rodecker and Mrs. Aaron Nathan, the Cul- inary Cupboard also will offer lunch in the early afternoon and tea later in the day. Small tables will be set among the trees for visitors to rest and dine with friends. One of the events which cele- brates the 30th anniversary of the Council Resale Shop, now located on Puritan and Fair- field, the Midsummer Day's Dream Sale will offer such items as a French china egg mounted in bronze, a French crystal box of cobalt blue, and an 18th Century old ship's clock in a dark oak case, made by Morris Tobias, official clock maker for the English admiralty. The sale is open to the public. Council members will be admitted at no charge. In the event of rain, the sale will be held the following Tuesday. Chairman of the day is Mrs. Samuel Tatkin. Other committee chairmen include Mesdames Carl Rosman, Jerome Grossman, Wil- liam Frank, Louis Hamburger, David How a r d, Horace Haber, Irving Bittker, Samuel Rands. Herbert Kallet, Irving Goldman, Kay Frank, Avery Gordon, Mar- vin Frankel and William Parnos• Assisting the hostess and sales committee will be the new officers of the National Council of Jewish Women, who were installed last month at a luncheon at the Town and Country Club. President is Mrs. M. M or t on Barak, who served as executive vice president this year and has held numerous other offices. Other officers are Mesdames Ben Weintraub, Clement Hopp, Richard Prentis, Melvin Kolbert and Frederick Shevin, vice presi- dents: Melvin Rosenhaus, Norman Katz, Samuel Rands, Bernard Isenberg and Alan Katz, secre- taries, and I. Irving Bittker and Peter Rubin, treasurers. On the board of directors are Mesdames •Jerry Disner, Harold Gelman, Hugh Greenberg, Harry L. Jackson, Fred Keidan, Louis Rosenzweig, Murry Sachs, Oscar Silverman, Robert Alpern, Arthur Bloom, Myron Burnes, William Harris, Harold Kauf- man, William Parnos and Gerald Steinberg. Proceeds from the "Dream" sale will help support council's pro- grams of philanthropy here and abroad. United Order True Sisters, Inc., which is the oldest fraternal and philanthropic Jewish women's or- ganization in the United States, will hold its annual Western Con- ference at Stouffer's Northland Inn Tuesday and Wednesday. The Detroit Lodge, whose presi- dent is Mrs. Leonard Pinter of Huntington Woods, will be host- ess to delegates from Los Angeles. San Francisco, St. Louis, Dayton, Cleveland, Cincinnati and Chicago. In addition, the national president, Mrs. Harry Greene of Newark, N.J., and the national first vice president, Mrs. H. Simon, of Brooklyn. will be in attendance. Workshops on future planning and leadership will be chaired by national trustees Mrs. Albert Lin- dar of Chicago and Mrs. Herbert Hauptman, also of Chicago. Mrs. Hauptman has served as leader- ship consultant to the U.S. Army, has been president of the Illinois , Federation of Temple Sisterhoods and chairman of the Welfare Lahser & Coral Gables SUNOCO SERVICE SOUTHFIELD Put Your Automobile Care in Our Hands Andy Gocharian PHONE: 357-9866 to medically indigent cancer pa- tients, regardless of race, color or creed, has endowed a radio-iso- tope laboratory and a radio-isotope storage suite at Detroit Memorial Hospital. Its current project is the raising of funds for lung cancer research at the hospital. Volunteers from Detroit No. 41 work at the Michigan Cancer Foundation, Detroit Memorial Hos- pital and at home workshops where dressings are produced and material is prepared for the use of visually handicapped students in the Detroit Public School system. , Custom Picture Framing***41" Art Classes FIELD ART STUDIO Conveniently Located 18090 WYOMING at UN 3-1031 Curtis Beth Aaron Opens School in Suburbs; Others Tell Plans A Southfield branch of the Beth Aaron Religious School will be opened Sept. 12, at Southfield School No. 16, on Lahser Rd. between 11 and the 12 Mile Rds. Bernard Panush, school direc- tor, advises that the branch will open with grades from kinder- garten through the 4th for young- sters age 4 to 9. Classes will be held every Sunday morning from 9:30 to 11:30, and the same course of study will be used as in the main school. Classes in the main school, at the synagogue, also will be held from 9:30 to 11:30 on Sunday for grades from kindergarten through the 10th grade and will lead to confirmation. Pupils from the 9th and 10th grades receive an intensive course of study in preparation for their confirmation. Those of the 10th grade are under the personal guidance of Rabbi Benjamin Gorrelick. Dr. Marvin Last, chairman of the educational committee, urged parents in the Wyoming-Seven Mile area and in the Southfield district to register their children before summer vacation. For in- formation, call the school, at UN . 1-5222 and UN 1-5999. Bnai Moshe Religious School also has opened its school registra- Michigan Distributors for tion in May, two months earlier Amazing New POSTALIA than past years. Classes will meet 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on Sundays. Parents who wish to select early Postage Meters or late sessions for their children must register by June 30. $850 Walter Farber, director of tho congregational religious school plans to introduce classes in arts Mail 10 pcs. a day or 10,000. and crafts, Israeli dance and Rate remains same. No extras! • Imprints up to $9.99 drama, in addition to the extra- • Imprints directly on pkgs. curricular activities already part • Weighs only 5 lbs. of the school. U P S Parcel Registers Available Young Israel Parley For information, call the school, Phone for Free Demonstration The pre-collegiate council of the LI 8-9000. National Council of Young Israel 4' 4' 4' d d ‘ri ype,hic. will conduct the third annual teen- Enrollment for the fall semester • • BUSINESS MACHINE DISTRIBUTORS age convention. June 18 - 20, is now open for children from age at the Lebowitz Pine View Hotel, 32 to 13 at the Hayim Greenberg Phone I 16895 SCHAEFER Fallsburg, N.Y. The convention School. 342.7800 I Near W. 6 Mile Rd. Typewriters, Calculators, Business will be held in conjunction with Children are taught Hebrew and Machines. All Makes, Models. New the 53rd annual convention of the Yiddish, Humosh in its original and Reconditioned. National Council of Young Israel. form, Jewish history, holidays and customs. Transportation is provided to SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR 15 YEARS all areas of the city and suburbs. For information, call the school, Now Located at UN 4-6319. 26760 LAHSER — Bet. Expressway and 11 Mile LOWEST COST Board of the Chicago Women's Aid. Delegates from the Detroit Lodge are Mrs. Simon Traurig and Mrs. Saul Kaplan. On Wednesday, the local chap- ter, Detroit No. 41, will cele- brate its 13th, or Bar Mitzvah, birthday with a luncheon in the great hall of Northland Inn. In addition to the delegates and members of the Western Con- ference, Mrs. George Romney will be a speCial guest at the luncheon. Mrs. Gerald Rosen- bloom of Southfield is chairman of the afternoon. The Western Conference is open to all memberS of the order, and, chairing it are area members Mrs. Harris Crane and Mrs. Herman Schonberg. The Detroit Chapter, in addi- tion to the yearly giving of grants for isotope and cobalt treatments MRS, ANN G. WOLFE of New York, program consultant on civil rights and social action of the American Jewish Committee, was elected president of the Associa- tion of Jewish Community Rela- tions Workers at the group's an- nual meeting held in conjunction with the National Conference of Jewish Communal Service at the Sheraton Hotel in Philadelphia. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 22—Friday, June 11, 1965 . . . 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