24 Friday, Jane 9, 1918 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS FIRESTONE Bnai Brith Activities JEWELRY SUITE 318 ADVANCE BLDG. 23077 Greenfield at 9 Mile (313) 557-1860 METROPOLITAN DE- TROIT BNAI BRITH COUNCIL will hold its 39th annual installation dinner-dance 6 p.m. Wed- nesday at Adat Shalom Synagogue. Officers to be installed are: Ralph Miller, president; Floyd Bornstein, David Jaffa and Arnold Michlin, vice presidents; Joel Garfield, secretary; Irwin Alpern, treasurer; and Henry Gutter, assistant recording secretary; An- drew Berger, Michael Berger, Lawrence Brown, Gerald Corlin, Ted Frazis, David L. Friedman, Wil- liam Katz, Meyer Littky, Harry Michelson and Harold Zuker, trustees. • • • COUPLETS 5016 mem- bers Evie Tichik and Linda Garfield were named vice presidents and Belle Ruben president of the Bnai Brith Women's Council. Reserva- tions are still being taken for the Chinese dinner to be held 8 p.m. June 24 at the Wah Mee Restaurant. For reservations, call Stan Liebowitz, 661-4648. Tic- kets are still available for a AAA Lawn Sprinklers Residential & Commercial Service & Repairs We install the best and Service the rest 399.8718 The Young Israel of Oak-Woods and the entire Young Israel family extends its heartiest congratulations to our members, Max and Frieda Stollman, who will become recepients of honor- ary doctor degrees at the Commencement Exercises of Bar Ilan University in Israel on June 20th. Their pioneering spirit is not only evident in the founding of Bar Ilan University but in every facet of Jewish life that spells continuity of heritage and survival of Judaism. May the Almighty grant them many years of good health in the continuance of their noble deeds. YOUNG ISRAEL OF OAK-WOODS EDWARD TRAURIG, JAMES I. GORDON, President Rabbi concert at the Meadow Brook Music Festival to take place 8:30 p.m. July 23. For tickets, call Dave Cit- rin, 476-3033. * * * OAKLAND CENTURY LODGE installed David Weiner as president at the lodge's dinner-dance Sun- day. Other officers are Sol Goldberg, David Redisch and Harry Weitzman, vice presidents; Manny Chud- now, Sol Budney and Donald Simon, secretaries; Morton Bechek, treasurer; Eugene Hirsch, chaplain; and Dr. David Friedman, warden. Maurice Rosender was honored "for his mem- bership efforts and BBYO fund raising." A grant of $5,000 was allocated for a new Hillel HOUS0_ on the Michigan State University campus. * * * DEBORAH CHAPTER will have an art auction 9 p.m. June 17 at the Gallery Art Center, Berkley. Champagne preview will begin at 8. There is a charge. For information, call Marsha Greenstein, 398-2897. * 5 * MORGENTHAU CHAP- TER will have a l uncheon-meeting noon Wednesday in the Lincoln Towers Apts. club room. There will be a cosmetic demonstration. Guests are invited at a nominal charge. For reservations, call Helga Kay, 968-4483. Arlene Blumberg is program chairman and Shirley Kar- lin, president. DOWNTOWN - FOX LODGE will hold its final meeting Of the season 8 p.m. Thursday in the Jewish War Veterans Memorial Home. Yehudah Berman, director of the Israel Aliya Center, will speak on Israel. There also will be a discus- sion on the Michigan Citi- zens Lobby. Mr. and Mrs. Sam (Betty) Slafkin will be honored on the occasion of their 50th anniversary. Wives and friends are in- vited. Refreshments will be served. * * * LOUIS MARSHALL CHAPTER will hold its annual paid-up member- ship luncheon noon Thurs- day at the Zionist Cultural Center, announces Presi- dent Celia Mager and Ei- leen Israel, program chair- man. Paid members will be admitted free of charge. Dues may be paid at the door. Awards will be pre- sented. * * ■ NATANYA CHAPTER `October Critical for Peace' Says Former Diplomat Sisco WASHINGTON (JTA) — Former Undersecretary of State Joseph Sisco says the Middle East is presently at a stage that could tilt either toward war or peace. He predicted that "the critical point" will come this Oc- tober "when the mandate of the United Nations force in the Sinai comes to an end" and the UN Security Coun- My dad's smarter than >ours. 1-le buys his clothes a+ Do I Hoffmans. ..„ ., . I , ,• . ..." , v it% .40 4 /;iiiyill;!.,‘4, t‘:, efik-Ai - wzi, - :,. , , . /itiodik 1 tat et . , . h I 1 i 11 t 4.1■10•11 iil li l ffil ■ it /r Ai/ 10., „Le .6.1.1,421..■ _ •--- intim This Flather Day make sure your dad looks as smart as he is. Doug Hoffman Ltd. — Specializing in fine European & domestic clothing for gentlemen. 115 S. Woodward Ave. at Maple Birmingham 642 5630 - will hold its first installa- tion noon June 25 at the Holiday Inn, Southfield. In- stalling officer will be Lil Onrich, past president of Bnai Brith Women's Coun- cil of Metropolitan Detroit. Officers to be installed are: Beverly Toren, president; Florence Amster, Lillian Epstein, Rae Mucasey, Bert Nelson and Rose Vosk, vice presidents; Sandra Gorosh, treasurer; Selma Sherman, Frances Shusterman, Myldred Hamburger and Rose Rubens, secretaries; and Mildred Benstein, Minna Bernstein, Sonia Bloom, Ray Rosenkranz, Helen Perchikoff, Mildred Saphirstein, Hilda War- field, Roz Weinerman, board of directors. Past Bnai Brith Women's President Linda Moss will present the charter. Guests and new members are welcome. For reservations by Monday, call Ms. Vosk, 356-4742, or Ms. Saphirstein, 548-0754. Mesdames Onrich and Syl- via Weitzman are consul- tants. _...; doug boffin= RD cif will have to act to renew it. "I think that will be a period of high tension," he told 150 participants in a three-day symposium on the Middle East sponsored by the American Histadrut Cultural Exchange Insti- tute and the AFL-CIO at the George F. Meany Center in Silver Spring, Md. Sisco, who is president of American University and was regarded as one of the State Department's top experts on the Middle East during his diploma- tic career, said he is "not as pessimistic as some" over the chances for a settlement in that region. He noted that despite the present negotiations im- passe neither President Anwar Sadat of Egypt nor Premier Menahem Begin of Israel "are willing to say that the peace process has come to an end." He also said he was convinced that "there is no diminution" of America's "historical com- mitment to the security and survival of Israel." Postal Workers Strike in Israel TEL AVIV (JTA) — Is- rael's 5,500 postal workers went on a 24-hour strike Sunday because of unclear wording on a new wage ag- reement. The workers blamed Meir Cohen, a Likud MK ap- pointed to arbitrate the dis- pute, for the ambiguous language. Meanwhile, Attorney General Aharon Barak ruled that Cohen could no longer serve as arbitrator in the dispute because he had made his views public be- fore it was settled.