Friday, September 2t, 1945 DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle Page Twelve -:-CENTER ACTIVITIES-:- Refugee Report Asks U.S. To Aid Center Plans Activities Zion Settlement Campus Alumni Club Meets at Wayne Oct. 2 The Campus Alumni Club will hold its first meeting of the sea- son at 8:30 Tuesday evening, Oct. 2, at the Wayne University Faculty Club located at 470 Put- nam Ave. Election of officers and estab- lishment of the Max Weil Mem- orial Scholarship are on the busi- ness agenda. Chaplain To Talk At Beth Yehudah (Continued from Page 1) Chaplain is one of the most elo- the season: Dexter Mothers' Club will meet quent speakers of the younger at 1:30 p.m., Tuesday, Oct. 2, at Orthodox Rabbinate. For Boys and Girls WASHINGTON (WNS) — Of- Bnai Moshe Synagogue, Dexter at BEGINS SCHOOL YEAR A program of activities for S. action "to effect the U. ficial Lawrence. The address of Chaplain Scha- reopening of Palestine" to Jew- boys and girls between the ages Woodward Study Club will chter will be the highlight of a ish immigration was recommend- of 7 and 14 is being planned at meet at 8:30 p.m., on Oct. 2, at program arranged by the com- ed by William O'Dwyer in his the Jewish Community Center. the home of Mrs. Gertrude Katz, mittee in charge, consisting of final report as executive director The Fall program for the 1945- 2639 Tuxedo. David I. Berris, Morris Karbal, of the now defunct War Refugee 46 season will begin on Sunday Twelfth Street Mothers' Club HADASSAH LITTLE WOMEN Max Weisberg, and Louis Tatken. afternoon, Oct. 7. Board. will meet at 8:30 p.m., Thurs- HOLD MEMBERSHIP TEA The occasion will also mark the The report, submitted to the The Sunday afternoon pro- day, Oct. 4, at Lachar's Little Women of Hadassah an- beginning of the new school year Secretaries of State, Treasury grams begin at 1:45 and will in- 8939 Twelfth. nounce a gala season opening at Yeshivath Beth Yehudah, with and War, covers the high spots clude movies, gym, swimming, with the annual membership tea registration in all departments— of the board's part in effecting games, arts and crafts, music, Center Tea Talks which is to be held at the home kindergarten, day school, inter- rescues of Jewish refugees. dramatics, journalism, and club of Miriam Coggan, 17176 Wil- mediary groups, afternoon Yeshi- Declaring that "several million groups. Special programs and Open Sunday, Oct. 7 persons, including one million holiday celebrations will be held. The Jewish Community Center demere Ave., at 2 p.m., on Oct. 7. vah, and Beth Jacob School for At this time, Carolyn Share Jews who were the special sub- In addition boys may attend will open its season of Tea Talks will reveal the identity of the Girls — already reaching an all- jects of the Nazi persecution the Center on Monday and Wed- on Sunday afternoon, Oct. 7, at new officers and board members. time high. campaign, are still alive in Eu- nesday afternoons for gym, rec- 3:30 o'clock. Conversion of the upper flats Mrs. Adler, who has favored rope," the report recommended reation and swimming at 4:30. A fashion show by Irving's will many Little Women of Hadassah in the Annex into a regular school that the U. S. take aggressive Girls will have their activities in- be the feature of the afternoon. building will be completed this action at once for a United Na- cluding gym, recreation, dancing Musical background will be fur- affairs with her talks, will speak week. Originally, the building again at the coming affair. All tional solution of the "interna- and swimming on Tuesday and nished by Lauretta DeYoung pia- and four tional humanitarian problem" of Thursday afternoons beginning at no studios. Tea will be served old and new members are invit- held four apartments on the ground floor. ed to be in attendance. stores finding homes for the non-repat- following the program. DONATED BUILDING 4 :30. riable displaced persons. Mrs. Isenberg is chairman of These activities are available A citizen's committee, consist- Gen. O'Dwyer considered the to all Junior members of the the women's activities committee, ing of Louis Tatken, chairman, problem of the stateless Jews one Jewish Community Center. The Miss Sophie Blanche Schwartz, (Continued from page 1) Harry Kraft, Ben Lewis, Israel of the most pressing ones, and, fee for a twelve month member- chairman of the tea talks and tuberculosis hospital, to be erect- Schwartz, Joseph Weisberg, Louis hence, recommended that "imme- Mrs. Nate Schermer will arrange ed as soon as materials can be Please and Morris Gourwitz, rais- diate action be taken for this ship is $4.00. the tea. released by the government. group," the majority of which ed funds among the residents of These tea talks are co-sponsor- Detroit Hadassah is engaged in the Russel Woods neighborhood "desires to start life anew in Pal- Center Mothers ed by the Jewish Community Cen- a concerted effort to enroll 1,000 as an initial payment and the estine, the only country which ter together with the Bnai Brith new members this year. Announce Meetings building was given to the Yeshi- is ready and willing today to re- Business and Professional Wo- At the League of Jewish Wo- vah. ceive Jews in large numbers." He MOTHER'S CLUBS CALENDAR men, Bnai Brith Young Women's Monday, Oct. 1, at 12:30 p.m., Council, Business and Profession- men's Organizations dessert lun- pointed out that in view of the Six classrooms will be made fact that the admission of Jews at the Jewish Community Center, al Division of Hadassah, Junior cheon and meeting, to be held available by Oct. 4. They will he to Palestine is restricted by the the League of Jewish Women's Hadassah, Junior Home Relief, Monday, Oct. 1, at 1 p.m., at the used by the intermediate stu- British White Paper, the U. S. Organizations will have its Fall National Council of Jewish Jun- Jewish Community Center, Ha- dents, some of the day school should take official action to se- Dessert Luncheon. All Mothers' iors, Service Wives of the Jewish dassah's activities will be depicted classes, the Beth Jacob School for through an exhibit created by cure the opening of Palestine Clubs members are invited. classes Community Center. Mrs. Benjamin Bond and her Girls, and by the overflow "for the immigration of these Tuesday, Oct. 2, at 1:30 p.m., All women of the community of the afternoon Yeshivah. daughter, Dorothea. at the Rose Sittig Cohen Build- are invited to attend. There is no people." ing, Lawton at Davison, the admission charge. SPENT 20 MILLIONS The rescue work was made Young Women's Study Club will ORIENTAL GARDENS possible through the contribution have election of officers. VICTOR LIM Sociologist to Speak of some $20,000,000 by private The following clubs will hold organizations, mostly Jewish, and their opening social meetings of At Center Wednesday by 2,500,000 in government funds Psychology and anthropology the latter mostly for food that gees were saved. Though the U.S. will be discussed at the next was distributed to refugees in was at war with Romania, 48,000 meeting of the Business and Pro- German concentration camps by Jews of the 150,000 who were de- fessional Discussion Group at the the Red Cross. The Joint Distri- ported from Bessarabia and Bu- Jewish Community Center, Wood- bution Committee alone contrib- covina to Transnistria were re- ward at Holbrook, at 9 p.m., on uted $15,00,000. More than 1,- moved from Transnistria, ultim- Wednesday, Oct. 3. Dr. Melvin 000,000 was contributed by the ately to Palestine. Tumin of the Sociology Depart- Vaad Haatzalah Emergency com- The report covers in detail the ment of Wayne University will NOW OPEN mittee. major programs of rescue, relief, be the guest speaker. Dr. Tumin's Among the other Jewish or- psychological warfare and the es- special field is anthropology and ORIENTAL GARDENS ganizations with large contribu- tablishment of temporary havens he has made several trips to Cen- We Serve tions were: The American Jewish of refuge, including that at Os- tral America to gather material. Chinese dishes in the oriental style Committee, the Zionist Organi- wego, N. Y., and recommends He will discuss the relationship We cater to Banquets and Private Parties zation of America, the World that the Oswego refugees be per- of psychology and anthropology Luncheon 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Jewish Congress, the Jewish La- mitted to remain in the country. to the problems of inter-group Dinner 5 to 9 p.m. bor Committee, the National Ref- The report praises Ira Hirsch- relationships. 1530 THIRD ST. Corner BAGLEY ■■•■■ ■1•■•■ ugee Service, the Hias and the mann, who served as special ■ ■ ■ ■11■0■ Emergency Committee to Save WRB representative in Turkey. ORIENTAL GARDENS the Jewish People. Mr. Hirschmann, the report notes, SERVES CHINESE FOOD The report stressed that res- went to Ankara early in January The Oriental Gardens recently cue operations were made possi- 1944 "for the sole purpose of in- opened by Victor Lim and Harry ble by a ruling of the State and vestigating the possibilities of Jean at 1530 Third St., corner Treasury Departments permitting rendering aid to Nazi victims in Bagley, specializes in serving de- private agencies to transfer funds the Balkans. With the wholeheart- licious Chinese food in the orien- from the U.S. to their represen- ed cooperation and assistance of tal style. tatives abroad. It simultaneously U.S. Ambassador Laurence A. Oriental Gordens makes a spe- discloses that when Great Britain Steinhardt, Mr. Hirschmann ren- cialty of catering to banquets objected to that policy on the dered outstanding and unusually and private parties. A business- ground that it would enable the successful service to the board." man's lunch is served from 11 foe to secure foreign exchange, The War Refugee Board was a.m to 2 p.m. daily. Evening din- the Treasury Department took established by the late President ners are served from 5 to 9 p.m. the position that "the saving of Roosevelt on January 22, 1944, This restaurant caters to those lives far outweighed any possi- to aid in the rescue of Hitler vic- who are discriminating and know ble danger involved in permitting tims in Europe. what good food is. FAMOUS LEON'S the enemy to acquire relatively insubstantial quantities of for- eign exchange." In criticism of the U.S. Em- bassy in Madrid, the report dis- closes that our officials in Spain The Most Unique held out for some time against Egg Rolls — Chinese Roast Pork — WonTon "Krep. having an agent of the board sta- lach" — Fried Live Lobster, Chinatown Style — Fried and Talked About tioned in that country, and that Fresh Shrimp with Lobster Sauce — Gai Kell or by the time the U.S. Embassy Steak Kell was persuaded to press the Span- ish Government for permission to admit board representatives "the war had reached such a stage We Cater to Parties, Banquets that large-scale rescues from Showers, Etc. France were impractical or im- Join the Caravan of People Who Are Rushing to Go To possible." • GI II Hadassah 1111. 41M0 I KN=1.1111•00 11 410110 •••• NOW OPEN! , ,Rwmgotxtoocumps GOOD EARTH CAFE NOW OPEN! Chop Suey and Native Chinese Dishes SEA FOOD and RESCUE CENTER Switzerland was "the most im• portant center" of the board's op- erations. More than 17,000,000 were sent there for rescue pur- poses. In France more than 8,000 Jewish orphans were kept alive with funds transmitted through Switzerland. Sweden saved about 20,000 Jews in Hungary by giving them "protective passports." Through Turkish cooperation in the rescue program, more than 7,000 refu- * MARDI-GRAS CHOP HOUSE Lunch 11 A.M. to 2:30 P.M. — Dinner 5 P.M. to P.M. 9:30 P.M. — Sunday Dinners 11 A.M. to 9 GOOD EARTH CAFE 12557 LIVERNOIS AT FULLERTON "A Good Place to Eat At All Times" Catering to Parties, Banquets, Showers, Etc. 16925 W. McNICHOLS ROAD Between Ferguson and Biltmore For Reservations Phone HOgarth 6426 "There's No Substitute for Quality Food." Phone VErmont 7.5210 Open From 11 A.M. to 3 A.M. : •I• •