March 17, 1944
DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle
Hillel Foundation at Michigan to Hold
Vocational Guidance Meeting for Students
The first of three meetings
dealing with vocational guidance
for Jewish students at the Uni-
versity of Michigan will be held
on Tuesday evening, March 23,
at 8 p. m., at the Bnai Brith
Hillel Foundation of the Univer-
INSTITUTE
(Continued from Page 1)
hers; extent to which Center
should be self-supporting; board
members' rsponsibilities and un-
destanding of the agency.
The Institute will convene in
the afternoon at 2:30 for the
first session. It will recess at 5
for an informal subscription sup-
per. At 7 it will reconvene for
the final session and summary of
the day's deliberations. That same
session will be opened with the
brief exercises of the 1944 an-
nual meeting of the Center. The
agenda includes election of of-
ficers, a review by the outgoing
president, Mrs. Samuel R. Glo-
gower, and election of new board
members. New nominees whose
names come up for election are
Miss Bertha M. Robinson, Robert
H. Schwarz and Charles Wolok.
Miss Robinson, well known in
the community, has been engaged
for many years in the guidance
department of the public schools,
now serving as department head
of counselling at Chadsey High.
Mr. Schwarz, associated with
Packers Outlet Company, has
been a member of the Health
Club of the Center since 1940.
He is president of the Men's Club
of Congregation Bnai Moshe, and
for many years has been a leader
in the Aesculapian Society.
Mr. Wolok has been a member
of the Center since his youth.
He is engaged in war production
and is identified with many local
communal causes.
All these sessions will be held
in the Jewish Community Center
and are open to the public.
sity of Michigan. The Hillel
Foundation and the Jewish Voca-
tional Service of Detroit are co-
sponsoring the meetings, the oth-
er two of which will be held on
April 2 and April 16.
Albert Cohen of Detroit, from
the Jewish Vocational Service,
will be the speaker. Tuesday eve-
ning his topic will be "Job Op-
portunities for Jewish Youth
Now and After the War".
Preceding Mr. Cohen's talk, a
film, entitled "Of Pups and Puz-
zles," will be presented. The
movie deals with selection of vo-
cations.
The guests of the evening are
to be 40 Japanese-American
young people now living in Ann
Arbor and working at the Uni-
versity, the University Hospital,
and local places of business. Ar-
rangements for their attendance
were made by their advisors,
Shigeo Tanabe and Rev, Andrew
Kuroda.
Students in charge of the pro-
gram for the evening are Audrey
Rubenstein of Steubenville, 0.,
ZZena Etkin of Detroit, and
Netta Siegel of Cleveland, 0.
At the later conferences, pri-
vate interviews will be had. Stu-
dents will make special appoint-
ments to see Mr. Cohen and talk
over with him the vocations in
which they are interested.
Avukah to Hold Tea
Avukah, student Zionist organi-
zation, will sponsor a tea for in-
coming freshmen and transfer
students on Sunday, March 19,
from 3 to 5 o'clock, at the Bnai
Brith Hillel Foundation of the
University of Michigan.
Rabbi Jehudah M. Cohen, di-
rector of the Foundation, will
welcome the new students. Sylvia
Savin of Detroit, president of
Avukah, will speak to the stu-
dents on the activities of Avu-
kah.
Zena Etkin of Detroit and Har-
riet Sachs of Baltimore, Md.,
chairmen of the tea, will pour.
Members of the organization will
serve as hosts and hostesses.
LIKE NEW
LEADER CARPET CLEANING.0
eali TYLER 5.8400„
SEGAL
(Continued from Page 4)
Calvary and why did men still
keep Him nailed to the cross ...
"From my day on Calvary I
have rentable(' fixed to this cross
even to now and there are so
many places for me to go and so
much to do."
f
T HADN'T occurred to me until
then that I had never seen an
image of Jesus except on a cross.
Always the nails deep in His
hands; always the bleeding feet,
as if He were to be kept forever
a prisoner of the cross.
"I must be released," he said.
"I must go among men. I would
stop first at these houses beneath
my feet. I have seen the children.
Generation after generation of
children disinherited and denied.
I have seen them in all the years
I have hung here on the cross.
Why don't they let me go?"
Yes, I thought, why isn't He
let go? This certainly was a
moment in the time of man when
He should be among men speak-
ing to them. France was under
the feet of the evil doer and his
hordes were making ready to
march over the earth. This was
the time for the Beatitudes again
and the Sermon on the Mount.
The stukas were bombing the in-
nocents on the roads.
whimsical idea came to me.
Nobody was looking, and if I
could release Him from the cross
He could be restored to the com-
pany of men; he could go march-
ing over the earth for the second
coming. If there was to me a sec-
ond coming, this was the hour;
this hour when mankind lay pros-
trate in the agony of his travail.
Yet if I released Him and He
went out among men to bless
the persecuted again, and to give
His benediction to those who suf-
fer for righteousness' sake and
to peacemakers* . . . No! . . . It
would be said here is another
Jew come to stir up the people.
The international Jew up to his
tricks again.! . . There might
be another crucifixion.
I walked away in the dusk. I
left him there in the torment
of the original crucifixion. That
was an old, old pain and no long-
er could hurt Him so much. Why
should I expose Him to a new
crucifixion?
An honest interviewer, in these
circumstances, must confess that
what he heard his subject say
was really the meditation of his
own heart. I feel I can speak for
Jesus, since His heart and mind
are not alien to my idea of a
good Jew.
He is another Jew who speaks
from a heart of compassion,
though I am sorry to say that
not all Jews are in His image
but then not all Gentiles are
either, though so much is made
of His image.
I
9
Toscanini to Conduct GM Symphon y in Music
By Haydn, Respighi, Strauss and Weber
The works of four composers,
Haydn, Weber, Strauss and Res-
pighi, will be conducted by Ar-
turo Toscanini on the General
Motors Symphony of the Air pro-
groin on Sunday, March 19, NBC,
5 to 6 p. EWT).
Opening the concert will be
Weber's Overture to Oberon, an
opera which he was commissioned
to write for Covent Garden in
London, and which had its first
performance on April 12, 1826.
Haydn's Symphony No. 92 in
G Major, more popularly known
as the Oxford Symphony, was so
labelled after its performance
under the composer's direction on
the occasion of his receiving a
Doctor of Music degree from the
noted English university.
It was Toscanini who, in 1929,
conducted the American premiere
of Respighi's The Pines of Rome,
the third work scheduled for per-
formance next Sunday. The pre-
miere in New York preceded by
one day the work's second Ameri-
can performance by the Philadel-
phia Symphony Orchestra under
the composer's baton. With a
glance at the calendar, Toscanini
concludes the bill with Johann
Strauss' famous waltz, Voices of
Spring.
Charles F. Kettering, vice pres-
ident of General Motors and di-
recting head of its Research
Laboratories, will speak briefly
during the intermission period.
Air Garments
A gentle airing of woolen gar
ments will blow away stale odors
and lift the nap. Sun baths will
rout moths. Care should be taken
lest colors fade in bright sunlight.
r
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Restaurant and Dining Room
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HISTADRUT
(Continued from Page 1)
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Reservations Now
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For the
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Passover Holidays
FIRST SEDER FRIDAY NIGHT, APRIL 7th
SECOND SEDER SATURDAY NIGHT, APRIL 8th
In These Pleasant, Restful Surroundings
RABBI JOSEPH MALEK
Will Conduct The Seder Services
Dietary Laws Observed
Elevator Service
Phone Mt. Clemens 9307
M. & J. FELDMAN, Proprietors
will take part in the dramatized
oratory of "Die Zwie Brider"
by I. L. Peretz, music by J.
Schaefer, Cantor Samuel Mogil
with Emma Lazaroff Shever as
soloist.
Tickets for this concert will
not be sold. The guests of the
evening will be contributors and
workers in the campaign. They
are invited on the basis of each
$15 contributed to the cam-
paign. All workers and repre-
sentatives of organizations are
urged to complete their work as
soon as possible and report the
results of their efforts at the
last rally which will be held
Thursday evening. March 23 at
Lachar's on 12th St. This will
be the last chance to obtain
tickets for the festival.
The doors of the Scottish Ri ''''"e"-
In loving memory of our dear
Cathedral will be open at 7 ;:nediet mother, Anna Weiss, who passed
p. m. and the program will coins in away nine years ago, March 20,
mence at 8:15 sharp. The aCeme - 1935.
rangements committee urges
A loving mother, true and kind,
guests to be prompt—no sea
No friend on earth like her well
1TZ
will be reserved.
nod;
ch 18
did her heat,
For His
moment
She
Works of Sholem Aleiche . Lieb-
Presented in Ukrainian i. Fu-
State Theater in Kharkov Thurs-
n offi-
MOSCOW (WNS).—A repclehrew
the liberated city of Khark
published in the Moscow nev,
papers today states that t
Ukrainian language of SholOamuel
Aleichem's classical Yiddish (li t Ave '
and
ma "Tevye the Dairyman". Trf the
is the first time that the plu ) nday i ,
is being presented in UkrainiAt the
in Kharkov, although it had bO hi J '
given in central Asia during t
last two years while the Ukrai
Ian Theater was located there.
For all of t. she
And 4:4,i1 gave her
eternal rest
.
Sadly missed by her daughter,
Jennie, and family.
Manual lirintril
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