8

' DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle

Open Meeting of
League of Jewish
Youth on June 19

The League of Detroit Jewish
Youth will hold an open meeting
on June 19, at 8:30 p. m., at the
Jewish Community Center, Wood-
ward at Holbrook. The League is
composed of 18 major Jewish
youth groups in the community
and has enlisted among others the

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sponsorship of the Jewish Wel-
fare Federation, the Jewish Com-
munity Council and the Jewish
Community Center.
The purpose of this organiza-
tion is to concern itself with
problems of specific Jewish inter-
est in co-operation with the or-
ganized Jewish community. Some
of the projects to be considered
are the establishment of a date-
clearing bureau, a program re-
source library, co-operation with
other youth groups, stimulation
of youth participation in communal
affairs, and the promotion of the
community's understanding of
youth problems.
At the open meeting of June
19, greetings will be extended to
the League by representatives of
the Federation, the Jewish Com-
munity Council, and the Jewish
Community Center. The League
proposes to co-operate in the pro-
gram of the United Service Organ-
ization through the Jewish Wel-
fare Board's Army and Navy
Committee. To that end a person
prominent in the work of the com-
mittee has been invited to tell
the group about the social and
r ecreational needs in the National
Defense program. Dancing will
follow the meeting. All Jewish
youth groups with similar inter-
ests are invited to attend and be-
come acquainted with the work of
the League. Further information
may be obtained by calling the
Jewish Community Center, Madi-
son 8400.

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Final Meeting of the Year to
Be Held at Rose Sittig
Cohen Building

Newly-elected officers of the
Ladies' Auxiliary of the Jewish
National Fund will be installed
at the organization's final meeting
of the year, at 1:15 p. m. on Tues-
day, June 17, at the Rose Sittig
Cohen Building, Lawton and
Waverly.
Rabbi Joshua S. Sperka will
be the guest speaker of the after-
noon.
William Hordes, president of
the Jewish National Fund Coun-
cil of Detroit, will install the offi-
cers.
The musical program will fea-
ture Helen Sloan, accordionist,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Sloan.
Refreshments will be served
after the meeting, and Mrs. A.
Smilo will be the hostess.
Members of the board of the
Ladies' Auxiliary of the Jewish
National Fund will convene with
their families for a picnic next
Sunday at the summer home of
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Cutler, near
Port Huron.

Mrs. Freeman Again
Elected to Head
Hebrew Ladies Aid

MISS EDYTHE VALERIE LEADER

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Leader announce the engagement of their
daughter, Edythe Valerie, to Shakespeare 0. Goldsmith, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Zell Goldsmith. A reception will be held at 3833
Sturtevant Ave. on Sunday, June 22, from 5 to 9 p. m. No cards.
Mr. Goldsmith is a graduate of Ferris Institute and the Uni-
versity of Michigan.

Inter-American Jewish Congress
Postponed; Rabbi Sperka Was to
Be Delegate Representing Michigan

The Detroit Section of the flounced with regret that the
American Jewish Congress an- Inter-American Jewish Confer-
ence of the American and World
Jewish Congresses, which was to

The Best Materials Used

be held in Montevideo, Uruguay,
on July 9-11, was postponed clue

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Will Install New
Officers Tuesday

An unveiling of a monument
in memory of Morris Flanders
will take place on Sunday, June
15, at 2:30 p. m., at Chesed Shel
Ernes Cemetery. Relatives and
friends are invited.

Esquire 'Kosher' Grill

Detroit Phone I
Vinewood 2-3060
•

J. N. F. Auxiliary

UNVEILING OF MONUMENT

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June 13, 1941

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RABBI J. S. SPERKA

to unforeseen international oc-
currences.
Rabbi J. S. Sperka was to have
been the Michigan delegate to
the conference. and he had al-
ready made plans to make the
two-month tour of South Ameri-
can countries. Congregation Bnai
David unanimously voted him a
leave of - absence, and he was to
have been feted extensively dur-
ing the coming week-end, before
taking what would have been a
momentous tour.
Regret is widely expressed
that Rabbi Sperka thus is com-
pelled to abandon an important
mission, but it is assumed that
he will head the Michigan dele-
gation to the Inter-American
Jewish Conferenc e when it is
held at a later date.

"Defend Zionism and Palestine" Mass Meeting
To Be Held This Week; Sponsored by the
Zionist Youth Council of Detroit

A "Defend Palestine, Outpost
of Democracy" mass meeting
will be held at Central High
School auditorium, Wednesday,
June 18, at 8 p. m. The meeting
will be addressed by prominent
mid-western Zionist leaders.

The meeting has been called to
clarify Zionism's and Palestine's
position in the titanic struggle
now going on as well as setting
forth and showing the tasks that
lie before American Jewry. With
the theater of war now central-
ized in Palestine, the meeting
will facilitate a mass expressison
for Detroit Jewry of its solidar-
ity with the Yishuv. "In this
crisis the presence of every sin-
cere Jewish man, woman and
child is a form of duty," the
call to the rally states.
Rabbi Rudolph N. Rosenthal of
Cleveland will be the principal
speaker at the rally.

At the last meeting of the He-
brew Ladies Aid Society, Mrs.
Paul R. Freeman was re-elected
president. Mrs. Louis Kepes and
Mrs. Manuel Engel are the new
vice-presidents; Mrs. Joseph Ritt-
man, recording secretary; Mrs.
Emery Ehrenwald, financial sec-
retary, with Mrs. Alex Stein act-
ing as assistant; Mrs. Allan B.
Janawitz, corresponding secretary;
Mrs. Marcus Kallush, treasurer;
Mrs. Ethel Goodman and Mrs.
Jos. Einzig, conductress and in-
ner guard respectively. Mrs. Ber-
nard %Viatrak is retained as chair-
man of the visiting committee.
Mrs. Charles Berger is chair-
man of the committee arranging
the picnic to be held on Sunday,
June 22, at Plymouth-Riverside
Park. Signs will be posted direct-
ing to the picnic-grounds. A hot
dinner prepared by the committee
on the grounds will be served as
well as soft drinks, etc. All mem-
bers and their families are urged
to invite their friends to this all-
day outing.

WELFARE

(Continued from Page One)

troit, presided at the opening ses-
sion.
Stating that social workers, by
their positions as key men in
every community in the country,
could be of invaluable aid to
the national defense program,
Henry Monsky of Omaha, national
president of Bnai Brith, and
Frank L. Weil of New York, presi-
dent of the National Jewish Wel-
fare Board, called upon the dele-
gates to register themselves and
their organizations solidly behind
the President in the present emer-
gency.

Officers of Infants Service
Group to Be Installed
Tuesday

A formal installation on Tues-
day, June 17, 12:30 p. m., will
introduce Mrs. Samuel Bank as
president of the Infants Service
Group. The ritual, which will take
place at the Stockholm on East
Jefferson, will also induct Mrs.
Julius Hackman, Mrs. Sidney Kalt
and Mrs. Louis Snyder as vice-
presidents; Mrs. George Heller,
recording secretary; Mrs. George
Treeger, corresponding secetary;
Mrs. Louis Wagnor, financial sec-
retary; Mrs. Albert Silber, treas-
urer; Mrs. David King, social di-
rector; Mrs. Morris Wittus, so-
cial service; Mrs. Joseph King
memorial fund.
Mrs. I. C. Elson will officiate at
the ceremony. The public and
friends are invited. For reserva-
tions, call Townsend 8-6308.

Fox Goes to China for Stabili-
zation Board

•
RABBI R. M. ROSENTHAL

WASHINGTON, D. C. (JPS)
—Abraham Manuel Fox, who has
served on the U. S. Tariff Com-
mission since 1923, is on his way
to Hong Kong to help rearrange
China's system of economy. Fox
will serve on the United States
Dollar-Chinese Yuan Stabilization
Board.

C-

