See-Mores

A club founded exclusively for Seymours
is trying to find a niche for itself.

t the first meeting of the Seymour Club in Au-
gust, about 20 like-named men mingled and
discussed the idea of having more than a first
name in common. At the second one, held last
week at Seymour Brode's Franklin Racquet
Club, nearly 30 Seymours broke bread together but
still hadn't decided on their direction as a group.
At next month's meeting, club members will get se-
rious about the future, which most likely
Seymour
will mean supporting a charity or sending
Lusky and
a child to camp, said club secretary-trea-
Seymour
surer Seymour Raskin. After that, wives
Joseph chat and girlfriends are welcome to show up at
with their
namesakes. meetings, he said.
The name Seymour has gone the way of
"Irv" and "Sol," Mr. Raskin acknowledged. One of the
L club's members is 45 and another is 82, but everybody
E- - in between is in his 60s.
"I started with the class of 1946 from Central High,
cd
where there were 15 or 20 Seymours," Mr. Raskin said.
c'. "In our era, it was a popular name, but that was the
'-- only era that it ever was. There will be no Seymours
.
°- after us." ❑

All The World's A Stage

he women of the Roo-
sevelt Hadassah chapter
couldn't help themselves:
The clothes were too
beautiful to be locked in
a musty closet behind a stage.
At their recent annual paid-up
membership dinner, the officers
of the 30-year-old Hadassah
chapter invited Julie Espinoza of
Meadow Brook Theatre to bring
in and speak on some of the pe-
riod costumes the theater has ac-
cumulated over the years for its
dramas, musicals and comedies.
The outfits span 500 years of
fashion.
Everyone agreed they looked
much better off the hangers. ❑

Sheila Weiss, Shirley !.
Robbins, Gail Katz, Susan
Greenfield and Jan Wanetick,
members of the Roosevelt
Hadassah chapter, put on the
dog at their annual paid-up
membership dinner.

PHOTO BY JOHN DISCHER

