8 !: 1 DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle THE WILSHIRE COMMUNITY Continued from Page 1 spring, and the Detroit Com- munity Fund Drive, held in the membership tea at the home fall of each year," explained Mr. of Helen Goodman, 3323 Buena Newman. "And this year, as we Vista, is part of the member- look out upon a world torn by ship drive being sponsored by the war, as we read of the death National Council of Jewish Juni- of civil-rights under the totali- ors to be held on Thursday, Oct. tarian powers, we are deeply 10, at 8 p. in. The committee, grateful for the privilege of par- headed by Miss Goodman, invites ticipating in this great civic pro- members and their friends, also ject. For the Community Fund all girls interested in the group's program represents democracy at activities, to attend. For further work. The Fund brings Catholics, information call TO. 6-3578. Protestants and Jews together to Plans have been Completed for plan the betterment of living a theater party to benefit the conditions for their neighbors, re- milk fund of the Council's Nur- gardless of race, color or creed. sery School to be held Monday As workers in the Drive we have evening, Oct. 14, at the Fox a daily realization of the happy Theater. Tickets may be secured truth expressed in the 1941 Cam- from the co-chairmen of the paign slogan—'In America Only fund-raising committee, Gertrude the Heart Dictates,' and we are Pregerson, TO. 8-8044 and Sy- glad to be of service." delle Serman, TO. 7-8628. A Residential Hotel Collingwood at Third $50.00-$200.00 4 LIVE IN COMFORT I carpeted suites, fur. or unfur., Well appointed I to 5 rooms new refrigerators and stoves. Dining room, garage. Compare our values. C Bisio, Mgr.— T0. 8-2680. Council Juniors Membership Tea Thursday, Oct. 10 Jewish Agencies in Fund Detroit Jewish Free Burial Ass'n (Chesed Shel Emes) ANNUAL BAZAAR Will Start November 16 BNAI MOSHE AUDITORIUM Dexter and Lawrence Organizations are asked to accept our committees who call to invite them to the bazaar in a friendly manner. We appeal to the public to cooperate in the giving of ads and packages. We Extend Best Wishes to All for a Happy New Year! SAMUEL BREZNER, Pres. Stressing the speCial interest members of Detroit's Jewish com- munity have in the Community Fund Campaign, Mr. Newman said. "As Detroiters and as Jews we are a part of this community and are intimately concerned with any program to benefit the general welfare of Detroiters. We are interested in the broad program conducted by all of the 80 agencies supported by the Fund. In addition, as Jews, we are particularly interested in the work of the local Jewish or- ganizations which are dependent on the Community Fund Drive for the major portion of their maintenance budgets. Our own agencies receiving allocation from the Fund includes: North End ,Clinic, the Fresh Air So- ciety, the Hebrew Free Loan As- sociation, the Jewish Child Place- ment Bureau, the Jewish Chil- dren's Home, the Jewish Com- munity Center, the Jewish So- cial Service Bureau and the Jew- ish Welfare Federation for the coordination of services." Undetermined Goal For the second consecutive year the Detroit Community Fun will be seeking an unde- te ined goal, in its 23rd annual campaign. Last year the Fund obtained $2,323,000, including the $148,- 000 for campaign and year round expense which was contributed by a limited number of Detroit- ers. This year, the Fund will ask for as great an amount above the $2,323,000 as possible in or- der that the 80 agencies of the Fund may be able to meet the problems they face in 1941, Dodge said. Through the plan of obtaining Fund overhead costs from a lim- ited group of citizens, the Fund again can promise other contrib- utors that all of their contribu- tions will go to the agencies for the work that they will do in 1941, 5,000 Volunteer Solicitors Five thousand unpaid solicitors will aid the Fund as volunteers again this year, as has been done since the Fund was founded. Ear., solicitor will be furnished cre- dentials so that donors can be assured their gift goes to the Fund. The campaign organization will include four units. Unit A will handle the bulk of individual so- licitation; Unit B, industral and manufacturing firms; Unit C, commercial and professional or- ganizations, and Unit D, smaller businesses and some individual solicitation. President Roosevelt to Speak On a national scale, the Com- An Old Friend Says: HAPPY NEW YEAR We greet you warmly on this, your Holiday! We genuinely appreciate the patronage and good will with which you have favored us through nearly three decades now — and we'll sincerely strive to be more-than-ever deserving of it through the coming year! munity Fund season will be opened by President Roosevelt on Oct. 13, at 10:30 p. in., by means of a national radio hookup. Throughout the whole country, $85,000 is raised annually in the Mobilization for Human Needs. Each year for the last decade these national mobilizations have been held to draw the people of America together in the spirit of volunteer service through Com- munity Funds. Both nationally and in Detroit, the money raised is used for the relief of suffering among the needy. Charles Francis Adams, presi- dent of the Community Federa- tion of Boston and Secretary of the Navy under President Hoover, is chairman of the 1940 Mobili- zation. He will make a brief re- sponse to President Roosevelt's radio talk on Oct. 13. The President declared his sup- port for the mobilization and the country's many Fund campaigns in a congratulatory letter to Adams upon the latter's appoint- ment. "In many of our communities people are suffering," he wrote, "through no fault of their own, from lack of proper nourishment, lack of proper housing, and lack of medical care. Many of the problems created by economic and social maladjustment are so fun- damental as to be of grave con- cern to the nation as a whole and to require the efforts of all the people, acting through the machinery of democratic gov- ernment, for their amelioration and solution. "Nevertheless, we must recog- nize that each person is a mem- ber of the community in which October 4 1940 Trees Planted in Palestine Forests The Jewish Natitortent:Folr eusntd: Council of Detroit announces •' the planting of trees in forests in Pal le n stt i h n e , Fa rs edfo Al f loss E v u: Two trees honoring Mr. and Mrs. B. Kaikin on Rosh Ha is v h:n nah we bl5. i t n heiir nec n il a o uig yhte ol f . J Fui uin l ti h e; , o A inotith . nrc t hi . b:ye; J fa et w eish (W N omw eno'o s dw Ea uir l o i Br one tree in honor of birth of Peggy Anne Barnett by her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Barnett; one tree in memory of Max Rosengarten, father of Mrs. Benjamin Rosenthal, •u l d one tree in memory of S. Mel- clover by Ladies Auxiliary of J, N. F.; two trees on recover y , from illness of Alex Barnett by his wife, Mrs. Alex Barnett. In the J. H. Erhlich Forest: One tree in memory of Mrs, Goldfine's sister-in-law, A nna Sandler, by Dexter Group of Pio- neer Women's Organization. To plant trees in Palestine for- ests, call Mrs. Alexander W. Sanders, HO. 0967, 12342 Broad- street. TEMPLE COLLEGE (Continued from Page One) is a course organized especially for the many men and women who want to get a condensed pic- ture of Jewish history, and it will present vividly those ele- ments in the Jewish past which account for the Jewish role in the present. The other new course offered this year is the course in "Current Events" to be given by Rabbi Leon Frain. While this class is held every year, it is by its nature every year a new course. The growth of Rabbi Fram's class is one of the most remarkable phenomena in adult education in America. The enrollment last year was 500. The class outgrew every room in the Temple and hart to meet in the Brown :Memorial Chapel. The title of the course this year is "The World Crisis and the Conflict of Social and Political Ideas Which it Reflects." Rabbi Frain interprets each cur- rent event in general, and Jew- ish life by giving its complete background in history and in so- cial philosophy. Each course in Beth El Col- lege of Jewish Studies consists of ten successive Monday night sessions, beginning Monday night, Oct. 14. The enrollment fee is one dollar per course. En- rollment begins at 7 o'clock Mon- day, Oct. 14. The first class ses- sions begin at 8 o'clock. he lives and that the community as a group has a definite interest in the welfare of each of its members Within the limits of its available resources, there is a definite responsibility which the community must take and a definite contributiOn which it can make to the alleviation of human suffering. "The annual Community Chest Campaign gives each member of the community an opportunity to contribute to the well-being of his less fortunate fellow citizen. I hope and I know that the Amer- ican people will respond most generously to your appeal this year." To Rebuild Tornado-Hit Synagogue CROWLEY'S Picture of Temple Bnai Israel, Albany, Georgia, taken last February immediately after tornado had swept through the The Union of American Hebrew Congregations and its affiliates. the National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods, the National Federa- tion of Temple Brotherhoods and the National Federation of Temple Youth, have already pledged aid to the Albany Congregation in building a new synagogue.