Women's Organizations Asked to Submit
Names for Rosenberg Youth Awards

Names of candidates for the
1966 Mildred Simons Rosenberg
Memorial Youth Awards may be
submitted until March 31, accord-
tag to Mrs. David Kliger, Youth
Awards chairman.
This is the 21st year that the
League of Jewish Women's Organ-
izations is sponsoring the awards
to commemorate the name of one
of its past presidents, Mildred
Simons Rosenberg. Mrs. Marvin B.
Levy is president of the League.
A candidate must be in the 11th
or 12th grade of high school and
may be sponsored by one of the
175 Jewish women's organizations
affiliated with the League of Jew-
ish Women. Each organization may
submit the name of one boy and
one girl.

First-place winners receive an

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engraved silver kiddush cup, or
an engraved silver menorah (for
lighting the Sabbath candles).
Honorable - mention certificates
are awarded to runners-up.

Candidates must be academical-
ly superior in high school and in
Judaic studies, should show lead-
ership in youth groups, or excel
in art and music, and should have
demonstrated a willingness to
work for the good of the commu-
nity.
A maximum of three letters of
recommendation should accom-
pany nomination blanks. These
may be from school principals,
counselors and rabbis. Inquiries
and completed nomination blanks
and letters of recommendation may
be sent to Mrs. Kliger, 18438 Hart-
well, 48235.
Judges include:
Dr. Albert Schiff, division direc-
tor of personnel, Detroit Board of
Education; Rabbi Mordecai S.
Halpern, of Cong. Beth Shalom;
Dr. Max Rosenberg, educational
director, Temple Emanu-El Reli-
gious School; Dr. Irving Panush,
assistant superintendent, United
Hebrew Schools; Kalman Tillem,
vocational counselor at the Jew-
ish Vocational Service; and Dr.
Bruce Danto, psychiatrist.
Youth awardees will be honored
at an open evening meeting May 19
at Shaarey Zedek Synagogue.

NCJW Anti-Poverty
Work Lauded by U.S.

WASHINGTON (JTA) — Gov-
ernment officials commended the
voluntary contributions of the Na-
tional Council of Jewish Women
to the war on poverty during the
Council's Washington Institute here
last week.
Hyman Bookbinder, assistant
director of the Office of Economic
Opportunity, said in an address to
the group that the NCWJ "can
feel particularly proud of the role
it has played in WICS (Women
In Community Services). And it
can take a special bow for provid-
ing WICS with its dynamic presi-
dent, Mrs. Joan Cooper." WICS
has helped enroll underprivileged
girls for job corps training and
performed other functions.
Mrs. Mary Dublin Keyserling,
director of the Women's Bureau
of the U.S. Department of Labor,
told the Jewish women "you are
doing magnificently through your
support of needed legislation,
through your schools for commu-
nity action, and through your par-
ticipation in WICS, in the 'Head
Start' program and in all other
instruments for public and volun-
tary action that are moving us so
encouragingly ahead in our efforts
to realize more fully than ever
before the wonderful promise of
America."

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
20—Friday, March 11, 1966

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Editor of 'Women's Wear Dail/ Will Share
Views of Fashion World With Hadassah

Two leaders in the world of
fashion will be presented at the
Detroit Chapter Hadassah's "Eye-
Opener Affair" at the Royal The-
ater, 12:30 p.m., March 29.
In addition to the Spring Fash-
ion Show, with millinery creator
Lilly Dache serving as commenta-
tor, John Fairchild, 38-year-old
editor of the well-known publica-

g3rith
Activities

MAURICE C. ZEIGER CHAP-
TER will hold its annual games
night 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Labor
Zionist Institute. Refreshments
and favors included for a nominal
donation.
*
ZAGER-STONE LODGE will
feature Msgr. Clement Kern, of
Holy Trinity Parish, who will
speak on "Detroit—the Inner City
and the Outer City," 8:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Labor Zionist In-
stitute. Guests are welcome. There
is no charge, and refreshments will
be served.
* * *
LOUIS D. BRANDEIS LODGE
will honor "Mr. Bnai Brith," Nate
Sosin, at a Purim party 8:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Sholem Aleichem In-
stitute. Master of ceremonies will
be Max Sosin, and the program
will feature Cantor Hyman Adler,
Hal Gordon and Sammy Woolf. Moe
Miller will make the presentation.
Refreshments w ill be served.
Friends invited at no charge.
* * *
BRANDEIS CHAPTER will have
its 21st annual installation of offi-
cers 8 p.m. Monday at Sholem
Aleichem Institute. Officers to be
installed are Mesdames George
Brown, president; Carl Lichten-
stein, David Gershon and Sidney
Miller, vice presidents; Max
Pringle, treasurer; and Julius Pam
and Benjamin Siegel, financial
secretaries. Installing officer is
Mrs. Leon Dreylinger. Entertain-
ment and refreshments will fol-
low. Husbands and friends invited.
* * *
Bnai Brith Charters Lodge
Honoring Adlai E. Stevenson
CHICAGO — Bnai Brith char-
tered an Adlai E. Stevenson Lodge
here in dedication to the memory
and ideals of the later and re-
vered statesman.
Former Bnai Brith president
Philip M. Klutznick, who served
under Stevenson as a member of
the United States mission to the
United Nations, participated in
the ceremonies.

tion Women's Wear Daily, will be
pr es e n t e d by Mrs. Joseph H.
Jackier, c h a i r-
man of the day.
Fairchild will
share his inside
views of the
people who in-
habit the Paris
and New York
worlds of fash-
ion. His first
book "The Fash-
ionable Savages,"
recently released Fairchild
by Doubleday and Co., is an "anat-
omy of the creators and their cus-
tomers." From Paris, where he
himself spent five years, he will
report on the most noted designers
and their customers.
A filled Eye-Bank holding $5
in dimes or a contribution of this
amount or more will admit the
donor to this party.
Mrs. David Pollack, chapter Eye-

Bank chairman, advises that each
filled bank will buy medication to
save one eye of a child or adult in
Israel afflicted with trachoma or
other blinding afflictions. Within
recent years, of the 250,000 Jews
settled in Israel, over 90 per cent
were destitute immigrants and
many of them suffering from vari-
ous diseases. A third of the new-
comers are under 16.
Any persons desiring additional
Eye-Banks can obtain them
through group chairmen or the
Hadassah office, BR 3-5441.

N

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Bnai David Sisterhood
Readies Donor Luncheon

Tenor Jimmy Angel, who has ap-
peared on the Ed Sullivan and
Danny Thomas television shows,
will be guest performer at the an
nual donor luncheon of Bnai David
Sisterhood noon April 20 at the
synagogue.
Mrs. Henry Schore, president,
announces that reservations may
be obtained from Mrs. Oscar
Shorr, ticket chairman, LI 6-6769.

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Sng agements

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Klein, for-
merly of Oak Park, now of Shaker
Heights, Ohio announce the en-
gage ment of their daughter Karen
Sue to Kenneth C. Alan Welt, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Welt of
Morton Ave., Oak Park. Miss
Klein attends Michigan State Uni-
versity where she is a senior. Her
fiance is a graduate of Michigan
State and will begin graduate
studies in April. A June 18 wed-
ding is planned.

A friend to everybody is a friend
to nobody.
—Spanish Proverb

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