America ffewisli Periodical Cotter
CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, 01110
Friday, December IL 1944
DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle
Albert Cohen to Speak at Hillel
Foundation at Ann Arbor Sunday, Dec. 10
Albert Cohen, of the Bnai
Brith Vocational Guidance Serv-
ice for the Michigan area, will
speak on "Opportunities Today
and After the War," at a voca-
tional guidance lecture to be held
in the Bnai Brith Hillel Founda-
tion at the University of Mich-
igan on Sunday, Dec. 10, at
8 p. m.
Mr. Cohen will discuss a num-
ber of fields which are available
now to Jewish students, gradu-
ates of American universities,
and he will indicate where the
best employment opportunities
will exist after the war. He will
also deal with job-getting tech-
niques and the possibilities of
using military training in civilian
life during the postwar period.
A film, "Michigan on the
March," will be shown in connec-
tion with Mr. Cohen's talk. This
film is in technicolor and was
recently taken on the University
of Michigan campus. There will
be a discussion period following.
Arrangements for the film show-
ing have been made with the
Bureau of Visual Education, Uni-
versity of Michigan. In charge
of the lecture are Celia Elson
of Detroit, Mich., chairman of
the Vocational Guidance Lectures,
and Sonya Heller of Chicago,
Ill.. student director.
This is the second year that
Mr. Cohen has been conducting
these discussions at the Founda-
tion, and he will lead another
Joint Hadassah Oneg
Shabbat Sat., Dec. 9
Henrietta Szold's 84th birthday
will be celebrated at an Oneg
Shabbat by all groups of Detroit
Chapter of Hadassah this Satur-
discussion on Jan. 7. On Jan. 21,
Mr. Cohen will hold individual
consultations with the students
interested in more specific ad-
vice.
Preceding the discussion there
will be a cost supper sponsored
by Avukah. The meal will be
served at a nominal fee, with all
the preparations being made by
members under the charge of
Saul Levine, of Cheboygan,
Mich., and Rene Schneider, of
New York City, co-chairmen of
the cost suppers for Avukah.
Dr. Melvin Tumin to
Be Temple Israel Jr. ,
Guest Speaker Dec. 10
Dr. Melvin Tumin of the so-
ciology department of Wayne
University will discuss "Educa-
tion for Democracy" at the Chan-
ukah meeting of Temple Israel
Juniors at 2:30 p. n. Sunday,
Dec. 10, at the home of Ruth
Miriam Levine, 3742 Cortland
Ave.
Before coming to Wayne the
speaker worked with Mortimer
Adler at the University of Chi-
cago as one of the editors of
the Great Books Index staff, aid-
ing in the preparation of a guide
to the major discussions of the
principal categories of Western
civilization. He was awarded his
fellowship predoctorate by the
Field Fellow Social Science Re-
search Council in New York.
Dr. Tumin received his doctor-
ate last June at Northwestern
University on the basis of a
thesis entitled "Social Relations
in Eastern Guatemala," written
after a year's research work in
that country.
His talk will be followed by a
general discussion. Other fea-
turbs of the Juniors' meeting will
intTude a display of literature
honoring Jewish Book Week, as
well as the lighting of the Chan-
ukah candles and the singing of
Chanukah songs.
The Juniors' Comparative Re-
ligion study group witnesesd a
High Mass at St. Agnes church
last Sunday, and compared Ca-
tholicism with Judaism afterward
at a brunch at the home of Ruth
Medal, study group chairman.
Pisgah Women's Aux.
Presents Checks
For War Service
MRS. MAURICE ZACKHEIM
-
day, Dec. 9, at 2:45 p. m., in the
social hall of Shaarey Zedek.
An elaborate program has been
arranged by Mrs. Theodore Levin
and her committee. The recent
conferring of the degree of Doc-
tor of Humanities by Boston Uni-
versity upon Miss Szold, in ab-
sentim, will be dramatized under
the direction of Mrs. Walter
Field. Mrs. Esther Etkin Moss-
man will speak on "Youth To-
day," and there will be singing
of Palestinian songs, led by Miss
-a Florence Lipshitz of Junior Ha-
dassah.
The meeting will close with
an Hay Dallah service and social
hour, planned by Mrs. Maurice
Zackheim, chairman, and Mrs.
Julius Berman, co-chairman. The
following hostesses will assist:
Mesdames Aaron Carlstein, Dav-
id Cooper, Irwin Cohn, Adolph
Ehrlich, Walter Field, John Fraz-
er, Louis Glasier, Nathan Gold-
man, Morris Gourwitz, Joe Hor-
witz, Theodore Isaacs, Harry L.
Jackson, Theodore Levin, Max
Miller, Moe Perlis, Nathan Schol-
nick, A. B. Stralser and Frank
t
t Wetsman.
At the last joint board meet-
ing of all Detroit Hadassah
groups, held at the Belcrest, Mrs.
Louis Glasier, chapter president,
delivered a comprehensive report
on the national convention of
Iladassah presidents in Cleveland.
li
i
ARGO
•
FURNACE OIL
•
LA 4500
At a closed business meeting
on Nov. 27, Mrs. Nathan Wolf,
president of Pisgah Women, pre-
sented the following checks to
Mrs. Louis Perlman, District Wo-
men's No. 6 president, to cover
the following: War Service, $1,-
250.00; Detroit War Chest,
$400.00; Percy Jones Hospital (to
furnish three rooms), $450.00;
Hillel Scholarship, $550.00. Due
to the success of the 5th donor
luncheon, other allocations will
be made in the near future. The
Ida Hibbard Fund will again re-
ceive financial aid.
On Dec. 11 at the Congrega-
tion Bnai Moshe, at 8:30, a Chan-
ukah party will be held. Mrs.
Albert Fenkel, chairman of the
hostess committee, and the offi-
cers and board members, will
act as hostesses. Cards will be
played and refreshments will be
served. Only members can at-
tend.
Winners of Hillel
Scholarships Named
The members of the Bnai Brith
Hillel Foundation at the Univers-
ity of Michigan who have won
Bnai Brith Auxiliary Scholar-
ships for the school year 1944-
1945 have been announced by
the Hillel Scholarships commit-
tee of Bnai Brith Women's Dis-
trict Grand Lodge No. 6.
The Detroit Pisgah student di-
rector scholarship of $250.00
has been awarded to Milton Bud-
yk of Detroit; and the Detroit
Pisgah work scholarship of
$150.00 to Maurice Dubin of
Boston, Mass. The Detroit Pis-
gah hostess scholarship of
$150.00 has been won by Judith
Jacobs of Detroit; and the De-
troit Louis Marshall work schol-
arship of $75.00 has been won
by Jack Rash of Detroit.
The Chicago Logan Square
work scholarship of $10.00 was
awarded to Jack Rash of Detroit.
The Jackson (Michigan) Tem-
ple Sisterhood work scholarship
of $26.00 was won by Joan
Schwartz of Chicago, Ill.
pa • IS
CENTER ACTIVITIES -:-
Mothers' Clubs to
Discuss Role of Women
The theme to be discussed this
week by the various Mothers'
Clubs will be "The Role of Wom-
en in the World of Tomorrow."
Young Women's Study Club,
Tuesday afternoon, Dec. 12, at
1:30 p. m., at Rose Sittig Cohen
Bldg., Lawton at Davison.
Woodward Study Club, Wed-
nesday afternoon, Dec. 13, at
1:30 p. m., at the Jewish Com-
munity Center.
Davison Mothers' Club, Thurs-
day evening, Dec. 14, at 8:30
p. m., at Workmen's Circle Edu-
cational Center, Linwood at Bur-
lingame.
Mothers' Clubs Chanukah ball
and latke party will be held
Wednesday evening, Dec. 20, at
8:30 p. m., in the auditorium of
the Jewish Community Center,
Woodward at Holbrook. Admis-
sion is free to paid-up members,
otherwise there is a 50 cent
charge. All proceeds will go to
the Chalutzah Fund in Palestine.
The following officers were re-
cently installed at the Center
Mothers' Club:
President, Mrs. Bella Katz;
vice president, Mrs. Rose Schur-
aytz; financial secretary, Mrs.
Martha Markson; recording secre-
tary, Mrs. Lobowsky; treasurer,
Mrs. Ida Drapkin; sick committee,
Mrs. Bernice Posen, Mrs. Lena
Cohen.
Dr. Preston H. Scott to
Address B & P Group
Dr. Preston H. Scott, Professor
at Wayne University, will be the
guest speaker at the meeting of
the Business and Professional
Discussion Group of the Jewish
Community Center on Thursday,
Dec. 14. Dr. Scott will talk on,
"The United States Foreign Pol-
icy."
The meeting will be held in the
adult lounge and will begin at
9 p. m. Everyone is invited to
attend.
Service Wives to Hold
Next Meeting Thur., Dec. 14
The Service Wives of the Jew-
ish Community Center will hold
their next meeting Thursday eve-
ning, Dec. 14, at 8 p. m. Mrs.
Henry Meyers, active in Detroit's
Serve-A-Camp Project, will be the
guest speaker. She will discuss
the project and outline its needs.
Mrs. Sadie Saferstein is chair-
man of the group, which now
numbers over 80 women in its
membership. The group has plan-
ned many interesting actvities,
one of which will be to serve the
soldiers at the Downtown USO
Jan. 1. The group is also in
charge of a War Bond Booth at
the Center, which is under the
chairmanship of Mrs. Marian
Feurst.
All wives of men in service are
invited to join this group and
to come to the next meeting.
SEGAL
Philip Slomovitz to
Review Books on Zionism
The next book chat program
of the Jewish Community Center
will be held on Wednesday, Dec.
13, at 9 p. m. in the library.
Philip Slomovitz will review
three books on Zionism and Pal-
estine. The books are "Land of
Promise," by Walter C. Lowder-
milk; "The Forgotten Ally," by
Pierre van Paassen; and "Har-
vest in the Desert," by Maurice
Samuel.
Book chats at the Jewish Com-
munity Center are held on con-
junction with the Utley Branch
of the Detroit Public Library.
The programs are open to the
public without charge.
Ladies Aux. No. 135 JWV
Hold Victory Party
The Detroit Ladies Auxiliary
and Men's Post No. 135, of the
Jewish War Veterans of the
United States, Commander Leon
Ginsburg and his staff, and chair-
men and co-chairmen of the bin-
go, Harry Berger and Lillian
Fink, of Auxiliary No. 135, and
the conductor of the bingo, Nate
Gurvin, were the guests Tues-
day evening, Dec. 5, at a victory
party at the home of the presi-
dent of Auxiliary No. 135, Mrs.
Birdeye Rosenberg, of Oakman
Blvd. A fine program was given,
gifts were awarded and refresh-
ments served.
New Detroiters to Hold
Special Meeting Dec. 9
The New Detroiters Group of
the Jewish Community Center
will have a special program Sat-
urday, Dec. 9, at 8:45 p. in.,
dedicating an honor roll of all
their men who are in service.
They will also welcome the mem-
bers of their group who have re-
cently become citizens of the
United States.
There will be an address by
Dr. Paul Rankin, nationally
known educator and civic leader,
president of the Council of Social
Agencies, and assistant superin-
Third Holiday Hop
To Be Held Sun., Dec. 10 tendent of schools. A musical
program and an original radio
The third holiday hop of the sketch will also be featured.
Everyone is invited to attend.
Jewish Community Center will
Leon Mandel(
100% WAR BOND GALLANT
ANNOUNCES
That with the gross income derived from the
ew
Glenwood
Hotel
(Continued from Page 4)
It seems to me that the recent
events , call for a course of a
new kind of education in all the
public schools. Acours e of edu-
cation in social living together,
for America's sake! Democracy
is mocked where groups of people
are set aside and made to seem
inferior because of their race,
their color or their religion.
It's pretty late to attempt to
re-educate adults who like to keep
their prejudices as most precious
possessions. They may have for-
gotten the Sermon on the Mount
and the beatitudes that bless the
persecuted and the peace-makers
but to their dying day they re-
member and cherish a hateful
prejudice they received early in
their lives.
But we can't let the kids grow
up that way. A prejudice caught
young can be treated and cured.
In the planning for postwar
America—jobs for all, bigger and
better roads, new sewers, water-
works and railroad stations—
there must also be a project for
social living together, which in
the more poetic phrase is known
as brotrerhood.
The place to start is in the
schools.
be a Chanukah dance, Sunday,
Dec. 10, at 9 p. m.
Carlos Revera and his orches-
tra will be featured. Decorations
will be carried out in the Chan-
ukah spirit. Refreshments will be
available throughout the evening.
Ben Braman and Estelle Starr
are co-chairmen of the holiday
hop committee, and are assisted
by the following committee mem-
bers: Beatrice Bortman, Morris
Buckzeiger, Bernice Friedland,
Charlotte Greenberg, Morris Ka-
men, Joseph Kwaselow, Alan Mit-
tleman, Danny Raskin, Sara Rot-
man, Ruth Sobel, and Dr. Milton
White.
Admission to the dance is 75
cents for members and $1.00 for
non-members, tax included.
He will pu ha
ar Bonds of the
6TH WAR,. tt D DRIVE
FROM NOV. /20 TO DEC. 16TH
Can Joseph Malek
Is now a co-partner in the New Glenwood Hotel.
Our kitchen under strict Kashruth is super-
vised by
Cantor and Mrs. Joseph Malek
Open
All Winter
To insure accommodations phone or write
immediately.
Elevator Service
33 GRATIOT AVE., MT. CLEMENS
Just a step from your room to the bath house.
PHONE MT. CLEMENS 6311