Bnai Brith Bond Dinner Saturday

At the Bnai Brith leadership reception in advance of the Bnai
Brith testimonial dinner-dance are (from left) Bernard Panush, vice
president of the Metropolitan Detroit Bnai Brith Council; Sam Bank,
Council president; Emil Cohen, guest star; Alexander Gersuk, Coun-
cil Israel Bond chairman; Mrs. Alan Nathan, president Women's
Council; and Louis E. Levitan, Detroit Israel Bond director. A total
of $55,000 in Israel Bond sales was announced at this affair. The
Bnai Brith testimonial dinner-dance will be held 7 p.m. Saturday,
in the Adas Shalom Social Hall, with Dr. William A. Wexler,
international president of Bnai Brith, as guest speaker. Leaders of
Detroit area lodges and chapters will be honored for their dedica-
tion to the Bnai Brith program of service for Israel.

Ex-Detroiter Rose Kaufman
Makes Music Her Business

The date has been set for the wedding
A new life will start for you two.
Can you spare a few precious moments
To hear what I say to you?
Please be good to him, I ask of you.
Please be good to her, I'm pleading too
From the time you were small to
this day I recall
That I dreamt and I planned what I'd
say to you.
Live with love each day I ask of you,
whole life
your
happiness
Find
through.
I'll calm my fears and I'll wear a smile
I'll be content in a little while
be happy too.
If you're happy,

* * *

Set to music, "A Mother's Pray-
er" becomes No. 40 in impressive
collection of songs written by
former Detroiter Rose. Bielan
(Biehl) Kaufman, whose own son
provided the "model" for the
above lyrics.
Tinsel Town has not always
been kind to struggling song
writers, but Mrs. Kaufman, now
a resident of Los Angeles, is
confident about the future.
She's been writing songs for 20
years and seen several of them
played by band leaders and over
radio stations. Among them were
patriotic songs ("Fight, Fight,
Fight," "Keep Your Chin Up")
published during World War II
and sung across the nation and
overseas.
One of her latest, "A Song-
writer's Plea" will be published
in Variety's Golden Jubilee Edi-
tion coming out Jan. 4.
Pennsylvania-born Mrs. Kauf-
man lived in Detroit from age 6
when she was orphaned with the
death of her mother. ilier father
died when she was 4.

Two of her songs she has writ-
ten with her son, a young music-
ian attending high school. Mrs.
Kaufman wrote words and music
to 18 songs until she started col-
laborating with Lou Halmy, a well
known arranger. Now she writes
the words, he provides the music.
Together they have produced 22
songs.
"We are about the fastest writ-
ing team in the business," Mrs.
Kaufman said.
A free-lance feature writer,
Mrs. Kaufman has done articles
for The Jewish News. She re-
called showing some of her early
work to publisher Philip Slomo-
vitz, and he told her "Take your
writing seriously — your work
shows great promise."
Mrs. Kaufman was featured
several times in news articles and
widely commended for the sheet
music drives she conducted here
during the war. Sheet music col-
lected in these drives was sent to
servicemen in hospitals and ports
of embarkation around the world.

Post Office Hunts Trucks

The Detroit Post Office is look-
ing for additional trucks to help
deliver holiday mail. Postmaster
Edward L. Baker has asked that
truck owners interested in hiring
out their vehicles for this period
contact the post office, 965-3750,
Ext. 291, or call at the post office
main garage, 1770 14th, as soon as
possible.

Try and Stop Me

By BENNETT CERF

F

OR HIS BIRTHDAY, a Philadelphia merchant received
from his wife a group photograph of her entire family
(eighteen persons in all), in a sterling silver frame. What
to do with this marvel-
ous gift? The ingenious
banker solved the prob-
lem. He took the photo-
graph to his office and
gave it to his receptionist.
"Study this picture well,"
he instructed her, "and if
anybody in it ever comes
to this office, say I've gone
to Tokyo on business."
*
*
*
A sad faced man limped
into a doctor's office, and

-

with a grimace of pain la-
boriously removed his shoes
and socks, revealing shins
that were black and blue. "You've certainly been banged up,"
commiserated the doctor. "I presume you're a professional hock-
ey or football player?" "Certainly not," sighed the man.. "All I
play is bridge with my wife as a partner."
*
*
*

QUICKIES:
At an overcrowded discotheque, during a momentary lull in
the ear - splitting music, a clumsy waiter spilled a trayful of

crockery. Eight couples jumped up and began dancing.
Bandits staged a brazen holdup at a star-studded fund-raising
dinner. They made off with fifty dollars in cash and two hundred
thousand dollars in pledges.
C 1965, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate

~ nai A•itA
Activities

Nosa nchuk-Olen Troth Seek Ban on 'Mein
Announced in Pontiac Kampf' in Argentina
The West Ger-

BONN (JTA)
man Foreign Office was under-
stood to be seeking means to sat-
isfy a demand of the Central Coun-
cil of Jews in Germany for action
against the publication of Hitler's
"Mein Kampf" in Argentina. Thr —\_
Council protested the publicatio
and asked the Bonn Foreign Offic
to act on the matter.
The Council awarded its Leo
Baeck Prize for 1965 to Dr. Ernst
Blum, a German official who has
launched plans for cooperation be-
tween the West German Blind
Society and that of Israel. Dr. Blum
is blind himself.

—

IVAN S. BLOCH CHAPTER will
hold a Hanukah party for prospec-
tive members and their sponsors
8:30 p.m. Thursday at the home of
Thelma Isaacs, chapter consultant,
18200 Coyle. P r i z e s will be
awarded. For reservations, call
Nellie Richman, membership chair-
man, KE 7-1628.
*
*
TIKVAH CHAPTER will meet
noon Dec. 21 at Cong. Gemiluth
Chassodim. At the Hanukah lunch-
eon, Judge Joseph Pernick, member
of the Michigan Regional Advisory
board of Anti-Defamation League,
Music the Stein-Way
will discuss activities of the radical
right and the John Birch Society.
MISS BEVERLY NOSANCHUK
DICK STEIN
Guests invited.
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph I. Nosan-
* * *
& ORCHESTRA
LOUIS MARSHALL LODGE and chuk of Cherokee Rd., Pontiac, an-
nounce
the
engagement
of
their
CHAPTER invites guests to the
annual Hanukah program 8:30 p.m. daughter Beverly J. to David J.
Tuesday at the Labor Zionist In- Olen, son of Dr. and Mrs. Alex
stitute. Guest of honor will be Olen of Harvard Rd.
PHOTOGRAPHY by
Miss Nosanchuk is a student at
Mrs. Alfred Lakin, past president
BERNARD H.
the
University
of
Michigan,
and
of Bnai Brith District 6. The music-
al portion of the program will be her fiance is a senior at U. of M.'s
presented by Mrs. Reuven Frankel medical school.
and her song and dance troupe.
A June 19 wedding is planned.
• * *
He who fights and runs away
BRANDEIS CHAPTER will meet
KE 1-8196
8:30 p.m. Wednesday at Sholom may live to fight another day —
Bar Mitzvahs — Weddings
Amer.
proverb.
Aleichem Institute. In celebration
of Hanukah, Dorothy Buchalter ■OIMMows.■.■cP.Mwo- ■ o■-o.soos o.wwo.N.0■■•■, !0 ■0■•••0••• ■ 0■0■0
will sing, and there will be prizes.
Guest welcome.
Truly the finest Music and

LI 7-2770

WINER

C

*

*

Bnai Brith's Event
to Star Joey Adams

Joey Adams will be the guest
star at two Bnai Brith-sponsored
"Hanukah Nights in Israel," Dec.
20 and 21 at the Labor Zionist In-
stitute. The two cabaret-style
events are sponsored under the
Bnai Brith Israel Bond program.
On Dec. 20 at 8:30 p.m.,
Pisgah Lodge and Chapter will
host a cabaret night with the fol-
lowing lodges and chapters as co-
sponsors:
Detroit, Downtown-Fox, Grant,
Herzl, Jacobson, Livonia, Motor
City, Rex, Suburban, Business and
Professional Chapter and Gersh-
win Chapter. Alexander Gersuk,
Bnai Brith Council Israel Bond
chairman, will be the toastmaster
at this event.
On Dec. 21 at 8:30 p.m., Detroit
Louis Marshall Lodge and Chapter
will host a Hanukah Night in Is-
rael celebration, with the following
Lodges and their sister Chapters
as co-sponsors:
Bloch, Brandeis, Centennial, Dov
Frenkel, Handler-East Side, Is-
rael, Keidan, Maurice Zeiger,
Morgenthau, Sholem Al e i c h e m,
Tikvah, Tucker and Zager-Stone.
Hy Crystal, Michigan Bnai Brith
executive director, will be the
toastmaster.
Everyone is welcome, and re-
freshments will be served. Admis•
sion is free to both affairs.

Aliyah Information
to Be Offered Here

Representatives of the Jewish
Agency-American Section Aliyah
Department will be in Detroit
Monday and Wednesday to meet
with those who are interested in
aliyah to Israel.
Shmuel Werzberger, director of
the Cleveland office of the aliyah
department, will accept appoint-
ments at the Labor Zionist Institute
on those two days, offering in-
formation regarding b u s i n es s,
professions, retirement programs,
Ulpan program of study, kibbutzim
and housing.
On Dec. 14, campuses in the
area will be visited in preparation
for the Aliyah Department's Corn-
mittee on Manpower Opportunities
in Israel (COMOI) program.
For appointments, call DI 1-0669,
or write the area office of the
Jewish Agency, 13947 Cedar Rd.,
Cleveland 18, 0.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
24—Friday, December 10, 1965

Entertainment for the discriminating

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