i0 DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle Youth Education League and Detroit Chapter of Hadassah Serve at Canteen The following hostesses served at the Downtown USO Canteen on Jan. 10: From the Youth Education League, Mesdames Harry Goodman, Max Phillip Ol- eider, A. H. Lichter, Morton 1 arrows, Irving Yarrows, Albert Kahn, Sam Jacobs, David Tann, Charles Goldman, Lou Kroll, Max Tenchin, William J. Hubert, Phillip Kollin, Morry Sussman, James V. Brown, B. E. Gilman, John Sklar and Joe Summers. The following women from the Detroit Chapter of Hadassah served the full day in the can- teen, preparing 1,200 sandwicheF, on Jan. 24: Mesdames Charles Harris, William Gordon, John Herman, Albert Ehrlich, L. Mil- ler, Harry Rosman, Max Dunitz, Harry Coggan Harry NI end el- sohn, Ben Cohn, Jack Art George Smith, J. Leach, Esther Hur- witz, Judith Bookstein, H. Sloan, D. S. Diamond, Samuel Arkin, Dulax Kogan, William Shinderman, M. R. Saulson, Carl Stein, Harry Gitlin, Morris Garvett, C. Prenz- lauer, Miss Frances Farber, and Mrs. AI Weisman, chairman. Food Packages Zion Ladies' Auxiliary, Perfection Lodge No. 486, Beth Abraham Ladies' Aid, Kiev Progressive So- ciety, Sisterhood of Temple Beth Jacob, Federation of Lithuanian Jews, Men's Club of Temple Beth El, Poale Zion Branch No. 1, Ladies' Arbeiter Society No. 1, and Beth Abraham Ladies' Aid. Contributions to Great Lake . Club for January were made by Hebrew Ladies' Aid, Mrs. Henry Soss, Julius Rosenberg, Carolyn Friendship Club, and Ladies' Auxiliary of House of Shelter. Contributions to USO Honor Fund were made by Mr. and Mrs. David Goldberg, honoring their mother; Mrs. Sophie Goldberg, on her 72nd birthday. A weekly food package will go to Camp Custer for all of 1944 in her honor. Samuel Beitner contrib- uted three food packages to Camp Custer. For any information regarding service and contributions, please call Mrs. A. H. Brodie, Town. send 8-8180. League of Women's Outstanding Church Soloists on Program At Community Center February 4, 1944 Cantor Jacob Hohenemser, Formerly of Munich, To Be Round Table Concert Soloist Cantor Jacob Hohenemser of Temple Emanuel, Providence, The Music Department of the Rhode Island, will be a featured Jewish Community Center will soloist at the second annual good- present a brotherhood concert, will concert sponsored by the De- . fifth in a series of musicales, on Tuesday evening, Feb. 8. CANTOR J. HOHENEMSER troit Round Table of Catholics. Jews and Protestants in the large auditorium of the Detroit Insti- tute of Arts, Monday, Feb. 1.1, at 8:30 p. m. Other featured artists will be Claire Coci, foremost woman or. ganist, formerly of Jesuit Church. New Orleans; Thelmo Von Eisen- hatter, distinguished Detroit • prano, and the Wayne Univer) ., Chorus. under the direction Harold uo Tallman. il l i llir l iti , a m n s.e r was the Cantor of the Haupt Synagogue in Mu- nich which was destroyed Nov. 9, 1938, when the Nazis destroyed Jewish temples throughout Ger- many. Following the destruction of the Munich Synagogue Mr. Ho- henemser spent two months in th,, notorious concentration camps at Dachau. He has been heard t) , nation-wide radio programs in- cluding the Church-of-the-air broadcasts. Claire Coci is regarded by many as the greatest woman organist, a native of New Orleans, she be- came at an early age, the organ- ist at the .Jesuit Church, the lead- ing church of the city. In recent years she has been teaching at the Oberlin conservatory of music. and as been engaged in interna- tional concert tours. On the night of November 9, 1938, the Nazis burned and razed Jewish temples throughout Ger- many. To Cantor Jacob 11ohenemser, of Providence, this elaborate crime is more than a fact of history. He lived through it. Five months earlier, the temple in which he was a cantor, the Haupt Syna- gogue in Munich, had been de- stroyed by the expressed desire, as it is believed, of Hitler himself. Food packages were sent to Fort Brady in January by Bnai Organizations To Hear Brith Pisgah Lodge and Pisgah Auxiliary, Men's Club of Tempi' Ann Birk Kuper Feb. 14 Yearbook of Central Beth El and Zedekah Club. Miss Setta Robinson, program Food packages were sent to Conference of American CYRIL WEZEMAEL Battle Creek in January by Poale chairman of the League of Jew- Zion No. 3, Ladies of Yeshivath ish Women's Organizations, ad- Harriett Toomey, soprano so- Rabbis Just Issued Beth Yehudah, Chernigover and vises that the program which the loist of the Central Woodward League will present at its general Layever Aid Society, Mishkan The 53rd volume of the Year- Congregation Ladies' Auxiliary, meeting of Feb. 14, is a distinct Christian Church of which Dr. books of the Central Conference Workmen's Circle, Congregation departure from the presentations DeWitt Jones is minister, will of American Rabbis has just ap- b . rt. u exerted xn elretn e l t . 1 sing arias and songs written by Bnai Moshe, Congregation Bnai heretofore rtt o ff o eie BAY CITY NOTES bring to0 our mem- Catholic, Jewish and Protestant peared front the press of the Jewish Publication Society. The bership an exceptional program composers. She will be accom- volume contains the proceedings Mr. and Mrs. Alex Kahn have featuring an outstanding person- panied by Lucile Zumstein. Arthur Schnabel To Be ality, Cyril Wezemael, noted bari- of the 54th annual convention returned home from a trip and we feel that we have held in New York City. throughout the East where they been very fortunate in our sue- tone soloist of the Fort Presby- Symphony Soloist Of outstanding interest was a spent several weeks. , ..••• mosipullelligemp cuss in engaging a solo actress of terian Church, will sing arias report of the committee on pen- Arthur Schnabel, pianist and Ann Birk Kuper's caliber for this from "Elijah" by Mendelssohn sion plan which announced the Among the graduates of Cen- and songs by Carissimi and other assisting artist for the 16th sub- event," states Miss Robinson. organization of a Joint Pension t•al High School last week was scription concert of the Detroit Miss Kuper is a former pupil of well known composers. Mrs. Ed- Commission with the Union of Robert Schneideman, son of Mr. Symphony Orchestra, is one of Beatrice Ives Welles, mother of win S. Sherill will be at the American Hebrew Congregations. and Mrs. Louis Schneideman, who piano. the greatest classicists of our Orson Welles. The report of the committee on graduated with high honors and Henry Siegl, well known vio- The Chicago Daily News, in its day. He is unique in that he chaplains was in the nature of was elected to Agathos Honorary elects to confine his public per- appraisal of Miss Kuper's talent, linist of the Detroit Symphony a memorial service in mamo•y of Society. Orchestra, will play "The Prayer" formances to the works of Mo- wrote that her character inter- Chaplain Alexander D. Goode, zart, Beethoven, Brahms an d pretations are vivid and true to and "Palestinian Dance" by Jul- who lost his life when a trans- Isadore Hitaw has received word ius Chajes, accompanied by the Schubert. life, and that she is a superb port was sunk on which he was that his son, Sgt. Hyman Hitaw, Karl Krueger has conducted master of her art. "Tomorrow composer himself. is missing in action. The First Baptist Church Choir a passenger. many orchestras with Schnabel the World" which will be inter- The volume also contains two as soloist and it is a distinct preted by Miss Kuper was one under the direction of Dr. Cyril resolutions on Zionism. Resolu- Mr. and Mrs. B. Homburger compliment to the new director of Broadway's outstanding suc- E. Barker will render four num- tion one reaffirmed the previous have returned home after spend- bers, including the first perform- of the Detroit Symphony that cesses; its theme is based on the declaration of the Conference ing a week in New York. this eminent pianist always effect of Nazi ideology on the ance of "Harken to My Prayer" that it would take no official by Julius Chajes. chooses to play not one, but two youth of Germany. Mrs. Walter Bloch has returned Reverend Joseph Q. Mayne, stand on Zionism, but asserted Mrs. Louis James Rosenberg, concerts under Krueger's baton. the belief that Zionism and Re- front a buying trip in New York. Arthur Schnabel was born in president of the League of Jew- executive director of the De- form Judaism are not incompati- Austria, was a pupil of Leschet- ish Women's Organizations, ad- troit Round Table of Catholics, ble. The second resolution, Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Anthony izky and has been one of the vises that the League meets three Jews and Protestants, will de- "Without impugning the right of have as their guest this week liver a short message. foremost recitalists since the turn times a year with the entire their son, Pvt. Chas, E. Anthony, Tickets may be secured at the Zionist or non-Zionist to express who is a student in ASTP at of the century. He attracted a membership of its constituent or- and to disseminate their convic- Center office free of charge prior wide following for his Beethoven ganizations, and the meeting tions within and without the con- Clemson, S. C. Sonata programs, giving corn- scheduled for Feb. 14, at Temple to the day of the concert. ference," asks the American plete cycles of those piano works Beth El, Brown Memorial Chapel, Council for Judaism to terminate JNF Council to Show in London, Berlin and New York. at 2 p. m., is the first for 1944. its existence for the sake of Palestinian Movies Feb. 9 His solo appearances with or- A cordial invitation is extended Dr. Leo M. Franklin amity. chestras are legion and he has to all women who are members The volume also contains the The Jewish National Fund also been a most successful of organizations affiliated with To Address Kiwanis President's Message of Rabbi Council invites all National Fund teacher. In spite of his devotion the League. Club Monday, Feb. 7 James G. Heller, the Conference box holders and their friends to to the classics, Mr. Schnabel has lecture by Rabbi Julius Gordon, a rally on Chamisho Osor b'Shvat worked in an ultra modern idiom Dr. Leo M. Franklin, rabbi and the Kohler centenary address on Feb. 9, at the Jewish Com- in his own compositions. emeritus of Temple Beth El, will by Rabbi Louis L. Mann, as well munity Center, beginning at 8 At Mr. Krueger's special re- Jr. Hadassah To End be the speaker at a brotherhood as the addresses by Frank L. p. m. A fine program has been quest, the two concerts to be Fund Campaign with meeting of the Kiwanis Club, \Veil, president of the Jewish prepared by the program com- played on Feb. 10 will be the Wayne, Mich., on Monday, Feb. Welfare Board, and by Philip S. mittee, with Mrs. B. Laikin in Mozart in B Flat (K. 595) and Donor Luncheon Feb. 20 7, at 12:15. Bernstein, executive director of charge. Philip Slomovitz will be the Concerto No. 4 (G Major) by Rabbi Leon Frani of Temple the Committee on Army and the guest speaker. Refreshments Beethoven. The Mozart work, Hadassah girls are hard at Israel will present a brotherhood Navy Religious Activities. in keeping with the holiday will written during the last year of work as their fund raising drive message at a meeting of the The volume was edited by be served. The program will also the young composer's life, is not enters its final weeks. The drive Women's Society for Christian Rabbi Isaac E. Marcuson. include the newest Palestinian often played though it is one will be culminated by a donor Service of the Calvary Methodist movies and singing, both by au- of the most interesting in all the luncheon at the Book-Cadillac Ho- Church, Grand River at Northrup, Always judge your neighbor dience and by the youth groups. Mozart literature. Credit goes tc tel on Feb. 20. Wednesday, Feb. 9, at 1:15 p. leniently and excuse his faults. Admission is free. Schnabel for reviving interest in Each girl's quota is $7.50 and Rev. Joseph Q. Mayne, execu the Beethoven Concerto No. 4 if the girl desires to bring a tive secretary of the Detroit when he brought "to life' this guest, an extra donor is required. Round Table of Catholics, Jews superb work during his 1933 tour The luncheon is always a gala and Protestants, will be the in America. Karl Krueger will affair. This year Dr. Shlomo Bar- speaker at a meeting of the conduct Eugene Zader's "Bibli- din, president of the Zionist Grand Rapids Chapter No. 7, KOSHER cal Tryptich" (a first perform- Youth Commission will be the Royal Arch Masons, Monday, Restaurant and Dining Room ance anywhere) on this program guest speaker. Feb. 7, at 6:30 p. m. His sub- UNEXCELLED FOOD and will also include the Bee- All money raised at this time ject at that time will he "Broth- thoven overture 'Leonora" No. 2. goes directly for use in Palestine. erhood or Chaos". AIR CONDITIONED—OPEN 24 HOURS Private Dining Room for Parties Among the projects to which 00.001:KKHXHUKH:8:1-048: 11-041-1X4-0.0 money is allocated is Youth Ali- 12017 DEXTER BLVD. yah—the movement which brings Wm. H. Chamberlain at NOrthlawn 9786 into Palestine refugee children from war-torn areas of Europe, Cass Town Hall Feb. 11 and the maintenance of Meier Shefay—the •Children's Village, William Henry Chamberlin, the children put into prac- noted American journalist, author Window Shade CO. where tice what they have learned, the and former foreign correspondent WINDOW SHADES principles of cooperative living. and now contributing writer for Persons desiring to contribute The Christian Science Monitor, is MADE TO ORDER to the drive will be welcomed as the Detroit Town Hall, at the Cleaned and Repaired patrons of the luncheon. As such Cass Theater, speaker for Friday they will he listed on the luncheon morning, Feb. 11, at 11 o'clock. LINOLEUM William Henry Chamberlin is program and will be sent collies of the program. For those who famed for his brilliant and im- Inlaid and Battleship wish to honor a loved one in partial analysis of world events Rugs and Furniture service by giving money to charity gained through his coverage of in his name, a special page has the Soviet development for 12 VENETIAN BLINDS been set aside on which the per- years for The Christian Science Drapery Hardware son's name will be listed. Con- Monitor. He also spent 1934 in tributions in the amount of $2.00 Germany and was in Tokio as Get Our Prices and Sale Free Estimates Furnished or more will be gratefully accept- Far Eastern correspondent. After ed. Checks should be mailed to the the outbreak of this World War 8625 LINWOOD Detroit Chapter of Junior Ha- he was in France until the col- CALL TYLER 5-1230 dassah, care of Miss Alyse Geer, lapse and singing of the Armis- tice. 0-11:1-0-0-110:14XHXHX1-04:101:14 :8:14:H:14:1 0-0-* 2971 Carter. FREDSON'S LA C ALLE L._