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June 14, 1940 - Image 13

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1940-06-14

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Americo! ,fewisk periodical Carter

CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

JAI-A

June 14, 1940

Archie H. Cohen
To Speak Sunday

• Business and Professional Wo-
men of Bnai Brith Installation
at Temple Beth El

On Sunday, June 16, the Busi-
ness and Professional Women of
Bnai Brith will hold installation
of officers in the Brown Memorial
Chapel of Temple Beth El, at
8p. m.
Archie H. Cohen of Chicago, the
principal speaker, is a past presi-
dent of District Grand Lodge No.
6 of Bnai Brith, as well as past
president of Ramah Lodge No.
33, Outstanding in both Jewish
and non-Jewish circles, he was
formerly a professor of law at
Loyola University, a past exalted
ruler of Chicago Lodge No. 4,
Benevolent and Protective Order
of Elks, and now is Master in
Chancery of the Circuit Court of
Cook County.
Miss Bertha Broudy, chairman
of committee on arrangements, an-
nounces that Miss Flora Beckman,
pupils of Mischa Kottler, will ren-
der several piano selections. An-
other feature of the program will
be the presentation of an electric
Menorah by the Women's District
Grand Lodge No. 6, as an award
for leading in a district wide mem-
bership drive.
Mrs. Charles Solovich, assisted
by Miss Charlotte Gant of the Wo-
men's Auxiliary, will install the
following newly elected officers:
Mrs. Etta Overton, president; vice-
presidents, Jean Abrams and Gus-
sie Eisenberg; Frieda Jacobs,
treasurer; Rose London, corres-
ponding secretary; Rachel Corn,
recording secretary; Nell Weis-
man, financial secretary; Eve
Hirsch, sentinel; Florence Black,
guide; Jessie Hoffenblum, . Betty
Geller, Pauline Goodman, Paula
Baumhauft, trustees; Bertha
Broudy, Belle Epstein, Mrs. Lil-
lian Levin, Rose Phillips, two-
year board members. Following
the installation refreshments will
be served in the social hall. The
public is invited.

HEBREW SCHOOL
GRADUATIONS

DETROIT AND FLINT DELEGATES
TO ATTEND . BNAI BRITH PARLEY

Will Got to Omaha, July 2 on Special Train
Leaving From Chicago

Delegates from Flint and De-
troit to the 72nd annual con-
vention of District Grand Lodge
No. 6 will go to Omaha by spe-
cial train leaving Chicago at
10:30 o'clock the morning. of
July 6, and arrive in Omaha the
same day at 6:30 p. m., Ben Z.
Glass, executive secretary, has
announced.
Delegates from Detroit's Louis
Marshall Lodge No. 1203 are
Jess R. Feiler, Joseph Glazer,
Alvin Levin, Robert Overton, Dr.
M. M. Silverman, Joseph Weiss,
Gerald Goldberg, Milton Kushair,
Morton Bechek and M. Manual
Heitman.
Pisgah Lodge No. 34 will have
as delegates Henry M. Abramo-
vitz, Aaron Droock, Dr. Victor
Droock, Julius Deutelbaum, Dr.
Leo M. Franklin, Ben F. Gold-
man, Elian Goldberg, Aaron Kur-
land, Samuel W. Leib, Herman
S. Osnos, Aaron Rosenberg, Louis
Rosenzweig, Rabbi Morris Adler,
Nathan D. Rosin, Morris Shatzen,
Joseph L. Stuab, Harry Yudkiff,
Rabbi Leon Fran, Morris Gar-
vett, Ben Marcus, Theodore Lev-
in, William Friedman, Albert

Goldberg, Sam Maza, Dr. Harry
Tanner, A. J. Piel, Ben Osher,
Roy Selling, Rabbi A. M. Hersh-
man.
From Theodor Herzl Lodge No.
1377 delegates will be Harry
Golden, Joseph H. Brown, Eu-
gene Roth,NDr. Meyer B. Zeff,
Louis Eder and Fred H. Sims.
Flint Lodge No. 656 of Flint
will be represented by Martin
Gordon, Jack Rabinovitch, Ellis
Warren, Morris Zwerdling, Dr.
Max Hart, Louis Lebster, Mau-
rice Rottenberg, Isaac Schnider.
Eddie Cantor, nationally known
movie star, will highlight the
convention program, speaking at
the banquet Tuesday night. Hen-
ry Monsky, president of the Su-
preme Lodge, will serve as toast-
master, and newly elected of-
ficers of the district are to be
installed.
Interspersing convention ses-
sions, it is planned to take visit-
ors to Omaha's famous Boys
Town. An out-door barbeque,
initiation of a Philip M. Klutz-
nick class, honoring the district's
present vice president, and a
dance will be the other features
of the convention program.

Pisgah to Install
Officers Monday

COUNCIL CAMP
OPENS JUNE 3o

Rabbi Arthur Zuckerman to De-
Registrations Now Being Taken
liver Principal Address

at Jewish Center

Next Monday, Pisgah Lodge
No. 34 of Bnai Brith will install
newly elected officers in the main
auditorium of the Jewish Com-
munity Center, Woodward at Hol-
brook, at 8:30 P. M. The public
is invited.
Rabbi Arthur Zuckerman of
Congregation Shaarey Zedek,
Lansing, Mich., will be the prin-

The graduation exercises of
the United Hebrew Schools will
take place Monday, June 24, for
the pupils of the Parkside School,
Wednesday, June 26, for the
David W. Simons students, and
Thursday, June 27, for the Phila-
delphia-Byron students.
A public examination was held
last Sunday in Mr. Gordon's
class. On Sunday, June 23, ex-
aminations will be held in Mr.
Haggai's and Mr. Ruttenberg,'s
classes.
The Feigenson Brothers, who
for years have given a gold medal
to the best all-around student of
the graduating class, have noti-
fied the Hebrew Schools that this
year, too, three gold medals will
be presented to the best student
in each graduating class.

Hebrew Schools'
Election June 20

F

The annual meeting of the
United Hebrew Schools, at which
officers and board members whose
terms expire, will be held Thurs-
da y evening, June 20, at 8:15
o'clock, in the auditorium of the
Philadelphia-Byron School.
Th e present officers are: Presi-
dent, Louis Robinson; first vice
president, Rudolph Zuieback; sec-
ond vice president, Charles Ru-
biner; treasurer, Maurice Lan-
dau; secretary, Harry Seligson.
Board members whose terms
expire this year are: Julius Ber-
man, Louis Dann, Rabbi Moses
Fischer, Rabbi Leon Frani, Aaron
Klein, Maurice Landau, Saul R.
Levin, Robert R. Mar•il, Gus D.
:Newman, Harry Rosman, Simon
Shetzer, Nathan Yaffa and David
S. Zemon.
Board members whose terms
expir e in 1941 are: Dr. Albert E.
Bernstein, Harry Cohen, Dr. A.
M. Hershman, Abe Kasle, Henry
Meyers, Louis Robinson, Isaac
Rosenthal, Charles Rubiner, Wil-
liam Sandler, Dr. Leonard Sid-
law, Philip Slomovitz, Rabbi
Ralph Spalter and Maurice II.
Zackheim.
Board members whose terms
exPlre. in 1942 are: Rabbi Mor-
ns Adler, Fred M. Butzel, Joseph
Cohen, Lawrence W. Crohn,
Judge. Harry B. Keidan, Max Lie-
berman, Rabbi II. N. Rosenthal,
Harry Seligson, Aaron A. Sil-
berblatt, Louis Stoll, Rabbi Isaac
Stollman, Henry Wineman, Rabbi
M. J. Wohlgelernter and Rudolph
Zuieback.

13

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle

RABBI ARTHUR •ZUCKERMAN

cipal speaker. He is director of
the Bnai frith Hillel Founda-
tion Extension Unit at Michigan
State College, East Lansing.
The entertainment program will
feature prominent local radio ar-
tists, including Old Dean and his
Novachord, who broadcasts daily
at noon over Radio Station WWJ,
and Henry Siegl, first violinist
with Detroit., Symphony Orches-
tra and a member of the \\'JR
Studio Orchestra. Mr. Siegl will
be accompanied by J. Bertram
Bell, director of Detroit Conserva-
tory of Music.
Aaron Droock, member of Pis-
gah Lodge, president of District
Grand Lodge No. 6 of Bnai
Brith, will install the following
officers: Louis II. Schostak, pres-
ident; Sam Maza and Rudolph
Meyersohn, vice-presidents; Ben
F. Goldman, financial secretary;
Jack Lawson, recording secretary;
Max GoldhofT, treasurer; Louis
Rosnezweig, monitor; Dr. George
W. Leib, assistant monitor; Isa-
dor Starr, warden; Ira Kauf-
man, guardian; Henry M. Abram-
ovitz, Morris Shatzen and Lewis
L. Steinberg, trustees.
Louis Rosenzweig, retiring pres-
ident, will give a brief resume of
the accomplishments of his admin-
istration.
Plans have been completed for
the Bnai Brith moonlight on July
21. Dave Diamond and his on.hes-
tra will play for dancing. Other
entertainment will also be pro-
vided.

Registrations for summer vaca-
tions at Council Camp are being
taken at the Jewish Community
Center, Woodward and Holbrook
Ayes., every day except Satur-
day. Council Camp, sponsored by
the Detroit Section of the Na-
tional Council of Jewish Women,
will open its 13th season on Sun-
day, June 30. The season will
close on Aug. 25.
Built on a cliff, overlooking
Lake Huron, 70 miles north of
Detroit, Council Camp at Jeddo,
Mich., has accommodations for
90 young women. The dormitories
are equipped with every modern
convenience and rooms may be
shared by two or three girls, or
campers may find a refreshing
night's sleep on the screened
sleeping porch. An airy, screened
dining-porch commands a mag-
nificent view of the lake. An at-
tractive recreation hall provides
indoor comforts after active
hours out-of-doors.
A well-rounded athletic pro-
gram will be conducted under the
guidance of expert counsellors
durng the 1940 season. Tennis,
horseback riding, bicycling and
archery are included in the day's
routine, with several hours de-
voted to waterfront activities.
The brisk waters of Lake Huron
invite vigorous swims and the
quarter-mile of sandy beach on
the shoreline is conducive to sun-
tanning.
Indoor activities include handi-
craft work—the Cape Cod Craft
Cabin is one of the most popu-
lar spots at camp—dramatics,
photography and classes and clubs
of various types. Bridge, roller-
skating and story-telling 'round
the camp fire are included in the
varied entertainment scheduled
for evenings.
Miss Florence Davidson will
serve as camp director for the
1940 season. Detailed information
may be obtained by telephoning
Madison 6970 or Madison 8400.

Notre Dame University Stu-
dents Contribute to Hias
Rescue Work

NOTRE DAME, Ind. (WNS)—
A group of Catholic students at
the University of Notre Dame
arranged for a "Penny-a-day"
drive to raise a special sum as
their contribution towards the
"Rescue Through _ Emigration"
work of tahe Hebrew Sheltering
and Immigrant Aid Society
(IIIAS).
The drive which was conduct-
ed during Lent was the response
of the Catholic student body to
a description of the HIAS refu-
gee aid program published in
the Catholic Worker, a New York
City publication. The amount was
remitted by Rev. Frank E. Gart-
land, Prefect of Religion, to
Isaac L. A sofsky, executive di-
rector of H IA S.

Winter Clothes, Drapes, Blankets

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KADIMAH HEBREW SCHOOLS I

_. ONE OF THE MOST_MODERN IN THE STATE .
NEW PUPILS NOW BEING ENROLLED
at 11812 Linwood Ave., corner Tuxedo, upstairs
SIMON RICHARDSON, Principal
Private Lessons Can Be Arranged

Transportation furnished for children who live at •
distance from the school.
For information call TOwnsend 6.1698

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