Applaud Mizrachi Women's Project

Mayor Teddy Kollek (center) of Jerusalem approves handiwork
of Israeli youngster on a recent inspection tour of the Bakka Settle-
ment House, a project of the Mizrachi Women's Organization of
America. Looking on are (from left) Gedaliah Schreiber, director of
the institution, which was the first settlement house on the American
plan to be established in Israel's capital city, and Deputy-Mayor of
Jerusalem Rabbi Shar-Yashuv Cohen. Established in 1949, the Bakka
Settlement House is scheduled to be augmented, in cooperation with
the municipality, by the addition of a building to house the expanded
John F. Kennedy Memorial Library, which serves the congested
Bakka Neighborhood. Mayor Kollek will address the forthcoming
41st annual national convention of Mizrachl Women in a filmed
progress report on the joint library project as more than a thousand
delegates of the organization gather in Washington, Oct. 30.

Bnai Brith to Honor Harry Yudkoff
at Testimonial Farewell Eiening

Monday night, Harry Yudkoff
will be honored by all local Bnai
Brith lodges with a testimonial
evening in the main auditorium of
the Labor Zionist Institute.
An active Bnai Brith worker
for the past 41 years, Yudkoff is
leaving Detroit to take -up resi-
dence in California. This farewell•
meeting is sponsored by Pisgah
L o dg e and the Metropolitan

Detroit Bnai Brith Council com-
prising 25 Bnai Brith lodges in the
Detroit area. Dignitaries from all
parts of the country, as well as
state and local personalities, have
signified they will be present.
Sam Stone of Peoria, Ill., will
be the principal speaker at the
Yudkoff testimonial evening. Stone,
chairman of Bnai
Brith's national
f un d . campaign
cabinet of the Su-
preme Lodge, has
been active for
years in religious,
communal and
civic affairs in
Illinois. He
served as presi-
d e n t of District
Stone Grand Lodge No.
6, Bnai Brith.
Tributes will be paid to Yuclkoff
by state and local Bnai Brith lead-
en.
Milton M. Weinstein, a past pres-
ident of Pisgah Lodge, is chair-
man of the committee on arrange-
ment and master of ceremonies
for the evening. Assisting him are
Bud Charlip, vice president of
Metropolitan Detroit ,Bnai . Brith .

Council; Leo Hollender, president
of Pisgah Lodge; Hyman N. Crys-
tal, executive secretary of Bnai
Brith Council; Joan Kalef for the
Women's Bnai Brith Council; and
Rudolph Meyersohn, past president
of Pisgah Lodge.
Preceeding the testimonial eye-
ing a dinner honoring Harry and
Molly Yudkoff will be held in the
social hall of Ahavas Achim Syna-
gogue.
Yudkoff was born Sept. 2, '1903,
in Baltimore, and came to Detroit
with his family in 1914. He grad-
uated from Northern High School,
and as an actuary from the Univer-
sity of Michigan in 1934, with a
degree of Bachelor of Arts. He has
been in the insurance business in
Detroit since 1924.
He joined Pisgah Lodge in 1935,
served as president and for a num-
ber of . years was secretary of the
Michigan Bnai Brith Council. He
was president of the Greater De-
troit Bnai Brith Council during
1941-42, and was president of Dis-
trict • Grand Lodge No. 6 during
1945-46.
On a national level, Yudkoff was
one of those responsible for - the
present concept of Bnai Brith pack-
age fund raising. From 1956 to
1959 he served as co-chairman of
the national fund campaign cabinet
of Bnai Brith and from 1959 to
1965 as its chairman. In 1959 he
was also elected a member of the
Bnai Brith Supreme Lodge board
of governors.
He was a vice president of the
Jewish Community Council 1952-
56; served on the board of the Jew-
ish Welfare Federation; on the
board and executive committee of
the United Hebrew Schools; as a
member of the board of the Jew-
ish National Fund; executive com-
mittee of State of Israel Bonds and
on the board of Resettleinent Serv-
ice.
He is a charter member of Tem-
ple Israel. ••He was married to
Mollie Steffin in 1929. His son,
Jerome Leonard Yudkoff, a gradu-
ate of the University of Wisconsin,
is now residing in California.

Co-Star Role for Sahl
Mort , Sahl, the controversial po-
litical satirist on KTTV television,
who conducts on the air the most
talked-about local discussion pro-
gram in Los Angeles, has been
signed by Martin Ransohoff for a
co-starring role in the Tony Curtis-
Claudia Cardinale movie for
M-G-M, "Don't Make Waves," un-
der Alexander Mackendrick's di-
,rection.

Dean of Nursing to Address Sinai Graduates Sept. 22

Detroit's Nurse of the Year in
1958, Mary Kelly Mullane, R.N.,
PhD, will deliver the commence-
ment address at
the tenth anniver-
s a r y graduation
ceremonies of
Sinai Hospital's
Shapero School of
Nursing to be
held in the Jew-
ish Center,
Thursday 8
p.m.
Dr. Mullane,
now dean of the
Dr. Mullane
College of Nursing at the Univer-
sity of Illinois, was born in New
York City where she earned Bache-
lor of Science and Master of Arts
degrees from Columbia University.
She received her Doctorate from
the University of Chicago in 1957.
A graduate of Holy Name Hos-
pital School of Nursing, Teaneck,
N. J., in 1931, Dr. Mullane came to
Detroit in 1936 and spent almost
a quarter century here. Following
seven years of teaching at Mercy
School of Nursing and Mercy Col-
lege, she became assistant direc-
tor of nursing at Receiving Hos-
pital. In 1941, she was an associate

professor and assistant to the Dean
of the College of Nursing at Wayne
State University and, in 1952, re-
signed to become director of pro-
grams for Cunningham Drug Co.
In 1959, Dr. Mullane was named
dean of the College of Nursing at
the State University of Iowa where
she remained until accepting her
current position at Illinois in 1962.
She is a past president of both

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

the National Council of Catholic
Nurses and the Detroit District of
the Michigan State Nurses Asso-
ciation.
Currently, Dr. Mullane serves on

committees for the American Hos-
pital Association and the American
Nurses Association and as a con-
sultant in nursing for the U.S.
Public Health Service and the U.S.
Air Force.

Friday, September 16, 1966-17

TO All
OUR
JEWISH
FRIENDS

From Your Friends and
Neighbors at

JESSE W. ANTMAN and MAN-
UEL KATZMAN earned member-
ship in New York Life Insurance
Company's 1966 Top Club. They

are two of New York Life's 500
outstanding agents based on 1965-
1966 . sales records, from a field
force of more than 7,000 field
underwriters.

Operated by Borman Food Stores, Inc.

Knowledge is power.—Bacon.

TRADITION
OF
EXCELLENCE

A SYMBOL OF QUALITY

Since 1875 the familiar Sanders script has been a tradition of
Excellence to folks who enjoy Good Things to Eat. There is
an element of pride in this signature—the pride of a man sure
that his product is the finest that quality ingredients and skill
can create.

Grandpa Fred Sanders started it. We—his family—and the 2,000
Michigan people employed at Sanders are proud of this Tradition
of Excellence. We will continue to serve you with the very finest
Candy, Bakery and Ice Cream.

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