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May 10, 1968 - Image 37

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1968-05-10

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Women 5s

(Continued from Page 27)
CLUB ONE, Pioneer Women,
will meet noon Monday at the tem-
the Labor Zionist Institute. There
will be a brief business meeting,
and recent slides of Israel will be
shown. Refreshments will be serv-
ed. Guests invited.
* * *
YOUNG ISRAEL OF OAK-
WOODS SISTERHOOD will hold
an oneg Shabat in honor of Moth-
er's Day at 3 p.m. Saturday at the
synagogue. Rabbi James I. Gordon
will speak. Friends are invited, and
refreshments will be served. Serv-
ices, that morning will be dedicated
to -Mother's Day. At 8 p.m. Wed-
nesday, the sisterhood will meet at
the synagogue for its final meeting
of the year. Awards will be pre-
sented, and President Mrs. David
Dombey will give the annual re-
port. Mrs. Meyer Mandelbaum,
program chairman, has arranged
to have Mrs. Lee Sales of WJBK
radio as guest speaker. A petite
buffet will be served. Guests
invited.
* * *
TEMPLE ISRAEL SISTERHOOD
will meet noon Monday at the tern-
ple for the sisterhood's annual
installation luncheon. Mrs. Samuel
W. Barr and Mrs. Sanford Lakin,
a mother-daughter team, will pre-
sent a program of Yiddish melodies
on the piano and melodica. Mrs.
Moe Traurig, re-elected to a second
term as sisterhood president, will
be installed with her fellow of-
ficers by sisterhood past president
Mrs. Robert A. Coggan. Other offi-
cers are Mesdames Irving Kramer,
Richard Kamil, Jack Caminker and
Paul Begun, vice presidents; Wil-
liam Leebove, Elmer Raskin and
Samuel Goodman, secretaries, and
Jerome Oppenheim treasurer.
Luncheon reservations may be
made by calling Mrs. Lowell Res-
sl,er, 353-6578.
* * *
EMANU-EL SISTERHOOD will
meet 12:30 p.m. Monday in the
social hall. Mrs. Milton Rosenbaum
will dramatize Robert Anderson's
I Never Sang for My Father." The
following officers will be installed
by Mrs. Joseph Maltzer, president
of the Michigan State Federation
of the National. Federation of Tem-
ple Sisterhoods, District 11: presi-
dent, Mrs. Conrad Goode; vice
presidents, Mesdames Ralph Stein,
Louis Pevin, Laurence Weisman
and Bernard Meyer; directors,
Mesdames Emmanual Maisel, Har-
ry. Lieberman, Joseph Blumenthal
and Donald Kaplan: secretaries,
Mesdames Donald Sills, Stanton
Bocknek and Elisha Gold; and
treasurer, Mrs. Sidney Golds. Pro-
-gram chairman for the luncheon
will be-Mrs. Harold Gelman.

-

* * *

GLENNWOOD CHAPTER, Wo-
men's American ORT, will present
a flea market 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Ferndale Women's
Club. The following officers were
installed for 1968-69: Ruth Rosen-
feld ; president; Brenda Winer,
Sharon Chudnow, Doris Shanbrom,
Sandra Brown and Marilyn Stone,
vice presidents; Gail Smith, treas-
urer; Beverly Weinstein, Sandra
Goodman and Olivia Hammer,
secretaries; Harriet La Belle, par-
liamentarian.
* * *
CITY OF H 0 P E CANCER
FIGHTERS will hold a board meet-
ing noon Monday in Bnai David
Synagogue. Mrs. Maury Gordon,
vice president of fund raising,
asks members to sign up for Tag
Day, May 19-21 to raise funds for
the free and nonsectarian pilot
medical center in its fight against
cancer and other catastrophic di-
seases. Mrs. Harold Weingart, KE
7-2717, and Mrs. Al Wermuth,
544-1558, chairmen are signing up
volunteers and assigning locations.
* * *
UPPER NORTHWEST NSHEI
HABAD STUDY GROUP will meet
4 p.m. Saturday at the home of
Mrs. Sol Nusbaum, 20475 Carol.
Guest speaker will be Rabbi Jacob
Kranz.

Cluh

activities

Beth Jacob Sisterhood will hold
a petite luncheon and open meet-
ing 1 p.m. May 21 at the temple
in Pontiac. R e v.
Hubert G. Locke
1Nvill discuss "The
' Next Step in Race
A Relations." R e v.
Locke, a gradu-
ate of Wayne
State University,
received a bache-
lor of divinity de-
Rev. Locke gree at the Chi-
cago Theological Seminary and a
master of arts degree at the Uni-
versity of Michigan. The president
of Temple Beth Jacob Sisterhood,
Mrs. Marvin Talan, will chair the
meeting and Mrs. Michael Nosan-
chuk will introduce the program.
Hostesses for the day are chairman,
Mrs. Sherwin Birnkrant, and Mes-
dames Harry Ackerman, 'Arthur
Benson, Eugene Ketchel, Henry
Winkelman, Elmer Jaskpan, Paul
Weinner and George Wyman.
* * *
ADAS. SHALOM SISTERHOOD
will install its officers at a lunch-
eon meeting noon Monday in the
social hall. Mrs. Harry Nachman
is installation chairman. The pro-
gram will include greetings by
Rabbi Jacob E. Segal; the annual
presidential report by Mrs. Joseph
Katchke; and Cantor Nicholas Fen-
akel in a program of liturgical,
Israeli and Jewish songs, with Mrs.
Jacob Axelrod and Mrs. Sheldon
Schwartz, accompanied by Mrs.
Bella Goldberg. Other sisterhood
members participating in the pro-
gram are Mrs. J. Stewart Linden
leading the singing of the national
anthems accompanied by Mrs.
George Bassin; Mrs. Robert Dunsky
giving the invocation; Mrs. Tzvi
Berkal leading the grace after
meals; and Mrs. Maurice Shackett
presenting the benediction. Mrs.
Jacob E. Segal will install presi-
dent, Mrs. Carl R. Lichtenstein; vice
presidents, Mesdames A. I. Morri-
son, Abe Cherrin and Morris Sam-
uels; secretaries, Mesdames Jack
Diamond, Manuel Grossman and
George Brown; and treasurer, Mrs.
Philip Cameron, Leon Diskin and
Maurice Zuckerstein. • Serving on
the installation committee with
Mrs. Nachman are Mesdames
George Brown, Baruch Ulyrch,
Sidney Schwartz, Sol Hammerstein,
Dan Shapiro. Carl Lichtenstein
and Philip Helfman. Guests are
invited.

* * *

UNITED HEBREW SCHOOLS
WOMAN'S AUXILIARY will install
its officers noon Wednesday at the
Esther Berman branch. Lyric
coloratura soprano Mrs. Milton
Goldberg will sing, accompanied
by Mrs. Jerome Levey. Mrs. Albert
Elazar will be the installing officer
and chairman of the day, accord-
ing to Mrs. Joseph Kripke, program
chairman. A vote will be held for
a constitutional amendment. The
social committee, under the direc-
tion of Mrs. Erwin Friedman, will
serve a light lunch.
* * *
BETH AARON SISTERHOOD
will hold its final oneg Shabat of
the season 2 p.m. Saturday in the
social hall. The program "Adven-
tures in Israel," will feature Mrs.
Ben Z. Freeman. Rabbi Benjamin
H, Gorrelick will bring greetings,
and Mrs. Gorrelick will lead com-
munity singing. Refreshments will
be served. The public is invited.
The oneg Shabat committee con-
sists of Mrs. Freeman, Mrs. Gor-
relick and Mrs. Bernard Panush.

B A T Y A CHAPTER, Mizrachi
Women, will meet 8:30 p.m., Tues-
lay at the home of Mrs. Dave Dom-
bey, 14500 Park, Oak Park. The
movie "Western Wall" will be
shown, and friends are invited.

Discuss Ghetto Uprising at Folk Chorus Meeting

Dr. Abraham Berman of Israel
will discuss the life and personali-
ties in the Warsaw Ghetto -8 p.m.
Wednesday at the Jewish Music
Center, announces Morris Citrin,
president of the Jewish Folk Chor-
us. Dr. Berman helped plan the

Warsaw Ghetto uprising. has been
a member of the Israel Knesset
and is chairman of the Anti-Nazi
Fighters in Israel.

Peace hath her victories, No less
renown'd than war.—Milton.

*

NORTHWEST NSHEI HABAD
STUDY GROUP will meet 3 p.m.
Saturday at the home of Dr. Hugo
Mandelbaum, 18460 Griggs. Dr.
Mandelbaum will speak.
*
DETROIT LINK, 'Order of
the Golden Chain will hold
its annual installation of officers
for 1968-69 9 p.m. Monday at the
Labor Zionist Institute. Fredya R.
Jayson, past grand matron and
grand secretary, will officiate as
installing officer for Sophia Rosen
and her incoming officers. A re-
ception and refreshments will fol-
low the installation.

Hart Introduces
New Draft Bill

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Senator Hart introduced a new
military draft bill that would make
young men draft-vulnerable for
just one year and allow them some
choice as to when the year would
begin.
He said the bill would relieve
the current pressure on graduate
schools and put a greater degree
of certainty into each potential
draftee's life.
Under Hart's plan, most draftees
would be 19-year-old, thus revers-
ing current draft policy that takes
eligible 25-year-olds first and
works backwards.
The bill would place all young
men in a "prime pool" when they
turn 19. All current deferments —
for college, essential occupations,
etc.—would be available but when
the deferment expired, the man
would have to begin his year in
the prime pool.
Currently, some 2,000,000 Ameri-
cans reach draft age each year
but only some 350,000 are needed.

Jake Geller Completes
50 Years as Head of
Windsor News Co.

Jake Geller, active in the Winds-
or Jewish community, has com-
pleted 50 years as head of the
Windsor News Co. Ltd.
He took over the company in
1918 while attending Windsor Col-
legiate Institute. Now 68, he is a
graduate of the Detroit College
of Law and a member of the
Michigan Bar Association.
The Windsor News Co. Ltd.
supplies books, magazines and
newspapers to 150 retail outlets
throughout Essex County.
Geller is a member of the Winds-
or Jewish Community Council,
Masonic Harmony Lodge 579,
Mocha Temple Shrine and Bnai
Brith.
In 1965. Geller was awarded the
Israel Freedom Medal for his work
on behalf of State of Israel Bonds
and just recently received the Ca-
nada Centennial Medal "in recog-
nition of his valuable service to
the nation."

,a.

\\\\\, ,I/////

DIAMONDS

* * *

AESCULAPIAN LADIES PHAR-
MACEUTICAL AUXILIARY will
meet noon Wednesday at the home
of Mrs. Ben Finkel, 18881 Addison,
Southfield. For information, call
Mrs. Finkel. 353-0284.
* * *
D I M 0 N A CHAPTER, Pioneer
Women. will meet 12:30 p.m. Tues-
day at the home of Mrs. Samuel
Koval, 27245 Devonshire, South-
field. Slides on old Jerusalem will
be shown. Friends are invited.

Friday, May 10, 1968-37

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