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The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

February 25, 1966 - Image 20

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-02-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Temple Israel Women Leave 'Room
at the Top' for Fair Coffee House

This year's Antique Fair and
Art Show will be the 15th such
venture by the Temple Israel
Sisterhood. The show opens noon
March 6 and continues to March 8,
with hours until 10 p.m.
Among the attractions will be
items of 25 dealers from all over
the state and the Midwest. There
will be an exhibit of art works by
175 artists.
There will be two dining rooms,
the formal Brass Lantern Dining
Room for luncheons, dinners and
snacks and a coffee house art
gallery in "the Room at the Top"
on the second floor. Guests also
will be able to hear chamber and
folk music concerts.
Also planned is a country store,
featuring the sale of all kinds of
confectionaries. The sisterhood
will open a gift shop, featuring a
variety of Judaica items, and mem-
bers of the sewing group will sell
hand-made aprons, pot holders,
stuffed toys and other items.
Available •to fair visitors will be
copies of the sisterhood cookbook.
"The Fruit of Her Hands," con-

Congressman, Israeli
Singer Due at Reception
of Pioneer Women

Congressman Billie S. Farnum of
the 19th congressional district and
Tova - Ronni, popular Israeli folk-
singer will head
the program at
the Pioneer Wom-
en's leadership
reception and
dessert luncheon
to be hosted by
Mrs. Jack Wein-
baum at her
home, 12909 Na-
dine, Huntington
Woods, March 14,
at 12:30 p.m.
The reception
is in advance of
the annual Pio-
neer Women Is-
rael Bond award
luncheon, to be
held March 24 at
Shaarey Zedek.
Tov a Ronni
Miss Ronni, vivacious young en-
terpreter of the songs of Israel, has
appeared in concerts throughout
Israel, has been featured on the
Israel radio network and has made
concert appearances in the Middle
East, Western Europe, South
America, Canada and the United
States. Since her arrival in the
United States she has starred on
leading television and radio pro-
grams and has sung in major
communities from coast to coast.
A Sabra, Miss Ronni sings in
English, Hebrew and Yiddish and
has a wide repertoire.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
20—Friday, February 25, 1966

taming many of the recipes for
foods that are served in the Dining,
Room. The cookbook is a compila-
tion of the best traditional recipes
garnered from sisterhood members
themselves.
Proceeds from past fairs have
enabled the sisterhood to purchase
a piece of land to be used as a
parking lot by the temple, have
furnished the temple's $30,000
kitchen and have permitted the

group to carry out vital work in

supporting such -projects as its
Braille group, hospital service at
Northville State Hospital and in-
terfaith work in the community.

Mrs. Robbins said this year
Sisterhood members are working
to make their contribution to the
temple's half-million-dollar 25th
anniversary program, which in-
cludes the burning of the temple
mortgage, purchase of land for a
new school site and beautifica-
tion of the present Temple
building.

Mrs. Norman Robbins is sister-
hood president, and Mrs. Elmer
Raskin, vice-president of Ways &
Means, is in charge of the Fair
arrangements.
Mesdames Barney Israel and
Paul Monchnik are advisers, while
the following women are in charge
of various aspects of the Fair
program:
Mesdames Arthur Kellman,
dealers; Frank L. Simons, tickets;
Albert Dicken and William Lee-
bove, Brass Lantern Dining Room;
Maurice Victor, Room at the Top.
Making arrangements for the art
show are Mesdames Allen Berlin,
chairman; Rodney Landsman, Ar-
nold Fuller and Murray Mahlin,
co-chairmen; and Hyman Blinder,
Milton Goldrath, Bruce Miller and
Stewart Lakind.
Advance tickets are available at
the Temple office. Purchasers of
10 or more tickets will be issued
a special invitation to a champagne
preview and sale 8 p.m. March 5,
prior to Sunday's official opening.

Jewish Composers
on March 1 Program
of Center Symphony

The Center Symphony Orchestra
under the direction of Julius
Chajes will honor Jewish Music
Month 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Jew-
ish Center.
The program will be devoted to
Jewish composers o n 1 y. Italo
Babini, solo cellist of the Detroit
Symphony Orchestra will play
Chajes' Cello Concerto, and Can-
tor Harold Orbach of Temple
Israel will sing songs and arias by
Mendelssohn, Halevy and Chajes.
Bloch's Concerto Grosso No. 2
for Strings and "Emek," a sym-
phonic poem by Lavry, are also
listed on the program.
Tickets are available at the Cen-
ter cashier's office.

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ORT Day to See New Members Welcomed

New members of ORT will be
honored at dessert luncheon 12:15
p.m. Wednesday at Temple Israel.
An original skit "Wouldn't ORT
Be LOverly?" will be presented by
members of Fairview Chapter:
and Dr. Milton Convesky, history
professor at Wayne State Univer-
, sity, will speak on "Ideas That
I Changed Mankind."
On this day, Michigan Region is
joining 66,000 ORT (Organization
for Rehabilitation Through Train-
ing) members throughout the Un-
ited States in celebrating ORT's
86th birthday. They will rededi-
cate themselves to the sponsor-
ship of 600 vocational training

Symphony Rehearsal
Set by Auxiliary to Aid
Children's Hospital

centers in 22 countries where 70
different skills and trades are
taught.

Mrs. Ben Brant, region vice
president of membership, will
preside as ORT Day chairman
and introduce Dr. Covensky.
The cast in the skit consists of:
Mesdames Harold Blumenstein,
Ellis Roth, David Rovner, Alan
Gilbert, James Sherman, Robert
Schechter, Alvin Spector and Leon-
ard Velick. Based on the musical
"My Fair Lady," this comedy was

written by Mrs. Edith Gordon and
Mrs. Noel Gage, with music by
Frederick Lowe and direction by
Mrs. Alvin Spector. Mrs. Paul
Fried is accompanist.
Mrs. Jerome Rosman, president
of the new Southwood Chapter,
will receive a charter from the na-
tional office, presented by Michi-
gan Region President Mrs. William

Wetsman.
The committee assisting Mrs.

Brant consists of the following
chapter vice presidents of mem-
berships:

Mesdames Leon Lewis, Stuart J.
Sachse, Arnold Smith, Jerome Keywell,
David Karp, Seymour Ekelman, Russell

Davis, Phillip Buckfire, Leon Paul,
Maurice Kurzman, Bernard Zaffern,
Louis Sarko, Leonard Baruch and
Adrian Williams.

Also assisting in the arrange-
are Mesdames Herman
Hack, Max Beal, Ben Bonin, Mil-
ton Superstine, Jerome Rosman,
David Fredrick.
Region Ticket Chairman is Mrs.
Bernard Colton, decorations and
accessories chairman, Mrs. Robert

ments

Wienstock; hospitality, Mrs. Eu-
gene Epstein; and publicity, Mrs.
N. H. Schlafer.

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Mrs. Herman H. T a r t o f,
project chairman, gets on the
phone while ticket committee
worker Mrs. David Galin does
the paper work for "An After-
noon to Remember," set for
April by the Women's Auxiliary
of Children's Hospital.
* * *

Truly the finest Music and
Entertainment for the discriminating

Mach gitt and igCis Orckstra

Lincoln

"An Afternoon to Remember"—
an open rehearsal of the Detroit
Symphony Orchestra, with Andre
Kastelanetz conducting and Sixten
Ehrling at the piano—is sched
uled by the Women's Auxiliary of
Children's Hospital as its spring
benefit 1:45 p.m. April 13 at Ford
Auditorium.
Mrs. Herman H. Tartof is proj-
ect chairman and Mrs. Charles L.
Levin, co-chairman of tickets.
Proceeds will go toward the
providing of a two-bed ward in the
new hospital in the Detroit Medi-
cal Center.
For tickets, call Mrs. Levin, UN
4-5082, or Mrs. Tartof, TY 6-8200.

Family Port raits

Do You Own 0

5:114, cli&) i f phot

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The first side, mostly story, in-
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rapt-1,13

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EXPECTING OUT OF TOWN GUESTS
FOR A WEDDING OR A BAR MITZVAH?

`Purim in Song,
Story' Recorded

A timely Coral Recording has
been issued by Decca Distributing
Corp. for Purim.
Entitled "Purim in Story and
Song," this record presents the
story of Esther, gives a full account
of the holiday and is interspersed
with a group of songs.
The Purim story is narrated by
Rabbi Robert Schenkerman. A vo-
cal group, with instrumental ac-
companiment, participates in the
long-playing two-sided record. The
entire program in story and song
was produced by Herbert L. David-
son.

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Shoshanas Yaakov and the con-
cluding number, Utzu Etza. The
second side also concludes with
Utzu Etza and includes these
songs: Purim Hayom, Chag Pur-

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