Page Two

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

•

National Fight
on Bigots Set

NEW YORK — A call having
been issued by Henry Monsky,
president of Bruit Brith, and Jos-
eph M. Proskauer, president of
the American Jewish Committee,
for a national conference of the
Joint Defense Appeal, more than
1,000 Jewish leaders are expected
from every state in the Union to
the three-day sessions Jan. 4, 5
and 6, in St. Louis.

Adoptirg for its theme "Fighting
Anti-SemItism On The American
Front," the conference will seek
to establish country-wide partici-
pation in the work of the Ameri-
can Jewish Committee and the
Anti-Defamation League of Bnal
Brith for combatting racial and
religious bigotry on the American
scene, Monsky and Proskauer de-
clared.
They hailed the St. Louis as-
sembly as an effort to awaken na-
tional interest In the threat of
anti-Semitism and the need to
combat this danger on a nation-
wide scale. The JDA Conference
agenda will probe the entire prob-
lem of anti-Semitism in postwar
America, they disclosed.

Berry Heads Real Estate Council;
Osnos Elected Mercantile Chief

With the election of officers this
week by the real estate and mer-
cantile groups, five trade and pro-
fessional divisions of the Detroit
Service Group have completed pre-
liminary organization for partici-

LOUIS BERRY

Palestinian Youths Halt to Pray
in Midst of Building a Colony

(Continued from page 1)
onles of this religious labor move-
ment.
Some of their fellows are stil'
at Birya settlement near Safed
and others are in Acre Prison
where they were sent after the
second attempt to settle Birya
When the latter are released am'
the former no longer indispensible
to Blrya, all 100 members of the
group will come home to the Heb-
ron hills.
The average age of the group,
including the few girls, is 19; the
youngest is 17.
As they danced In Rf ar
/Won't, dining-hall the previous
night and later huddled around
the loaded lorries to receive last-
minute Instructions for the pre-
dawn venture on the morrow,
they seemed, in their khaki
shorts and with their youthful
assurance of speech and gesture,
more like a troop of Boy Scouts
out for a day's adventurous hik-
ing than a group of hard work-
ing settlers committed to a life
of changing a waste hill to a
permanent comfortable home for
themselves and those they plan
to welcome.
• • •

Hy Weiner Heads
the Cast of 'Jason'

James Rossin, George D. Seyburn,
Nathan Silverman, builders; Ben B.
Tenton, David Wilkus. real estate;
Emanuel J. Harris, hotels; Allen C.
Kramer, Harry Rott, property manage-
ment; Norman Ross, Abe Silberstein,
contractors and sub-contractors; Samuel
II. Ellman, Jacob Katt, modernization;
Benjamin Wilk, building suppliers;
Walter Field, Irving Goldberg, Den
imith, store fIxtures, janitor supplies
tnd hardware; Irving Bronson, Samuel
Victor, painters and decorators; Harry
v. Davidson. heating, plumbing and sup-
oilers; Milton J. boner, Louis H. Marks,
dectricians and suppliers; Charles N.
%gree, architects and building engineers;
')avid Goldberg, coal and ice.

MAX OSNOS

Temple Beth El will honor Dr.
Benedict Glazer on his fifth
anniversary with the Temple and
3n the twentieth anniversary of
his ministry at a special anniver-
sary service Friday, Nov. 29.
The anniversary speaker will be
Dr. Julian B. Feibelman, rabbi of
Temple Sinai of New Orleans. Dr.
Feibelman is one of the outstand-
ing reform rabbis in the country
And was a classmate of Dr. Glazer
at Hebrew Union College.
The combined choirs of the
North Woodward Congregational
Church and Temple Beth El will
render a program of special music. ;
A reception for Dr. and Mrs.
Glazer will be held in the social
hall following the services.

1 3.

'BEVINORAD' IN ZION
JERUSALEM (JTA)—Jerusalem
wits have dubbed the fortified gov-
ernment citadel in the center of
the city, in which police head-
quarters and military and civilian
officers are located, "Bevingrad."

The campaign for a state Fair Employment
Practice Law, in which the Jewish Community Coun-
cil is paiticipating, must not fail.
As the deadline for obtaining signatures ap-
proaches, every qualified elector in our community
must be certain that he has added his signature to
those of the many thousands who are interested in
achieving fair employment practices.
The success of this campaign is.of vital concern
to us. The battle against discrimination in employ-
ment must be won, and a swelling list of signatures
will help to insure the victory we seek. Decent mind-
ed Americans of every race, nationality and creed
are joined behind this effort.
If you have not yet signed a petition, see your
Community Council delegate or sign one of the many
that are circulating throughout the community. Pe-
titions may also be signed at the office of the Detroit
Jewish Community Council, 803 Washington Boule-
vard Bldg.

.

After-Theatre Snack

inexpensively priced

DINNER

We accommodate bergs private parties

TRinity 3.9800

8231 Woodward

Jewelers, Emil Rose, Fred F. Sim-
mons; Shoes, Samuel D. Plotter; dry
roods, Maurice A. Landau; furniture,
lerman Mathias, Louis Tabashnik; lug-
rage and loans, Morris Ben Lewis;
peciaity shops, Walter J. Mayer, I.

New Orleans Rabbi
to Speak at Service
Honoring Glazer

LONDON (WNS) — The seast
tional but unfounded London rl
ports that Palestine terrorists wei
planning to extend their activitit
to Britain have been transforms
by the fascists in this country it
to weapons of anti-Semitic pr .(
poganda.
Exploiting the terror scare whit
has been played up by the pros
during the week, fascists ar
spreading vicious rumors designs
to arouse public sentiment nc
only against the Palestine terror
ists but against the Jewish popu
lation as a whole.
The anti-Semites circulated a ru
mor that the synagogues wer
being used as hiding places fo
secret weapons and incited thel
followers to commit acts of arso.
against Jewish houses of worshll
In the meantime the Board c
British Jews issued a statemen
condemning the reported threa
of the Palestine terrorists and de
ploring the "sensationalism of th
reports."
Although the London Press con
tinues featuring fantastic stork
about Jewish "terrorists," not
single incident has occured t
warrant belief that there is eve,
a semblance of truth to the ru
mors.

for that .

(formerly Lee 'n Eddie's)

13.000

MIXED LOTS

of

GOVERNMENT SURPLUS MERCHANDISE

FOR SALE TO THE HIGHEST BIDDERS

HERE IS AN OPPORTUNITY

to buy vast supplies of useful
and valuable merchandise at warehouse clearance prices
to be established by purchasers on a scaled-bid basis.

WHERE AND WHEN CAN MATERIAL BE INSPECTED?

You'll remember us—

At WAA No. 8 Warehouse. 5718 linx•ell St., Detroit. Samples of the
lots of this niatcrial will he ...linable for inaction from November 12
through Nmember 26, Inclusive, except Saturdays and Sundays. noun
of Inspection are from 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. Inspection Is not only deemed
advisable but necessary before entering bid.

for excellent food, courteous serv-
ice, moderate prices.

Community Council Urges Groups
to Assist in FEPC Drive

Fascists Exploit
Scare in Britain

pation in Jewish Welfare Federa- Lewis Zuleback; store fixtures, Leon 0.
tion activities.
Winkelman; store employees, James
Meeting at the Jewish Commu- Wineman, David Chancy; furriers,
nity Center Sunday, the real estate David M. Feeror; tnilliners, Howard
and building council elected Louis S.,hiller; men's apparel, Nathan It.
Berry as their year-round chair- Scholnick, Dan Winograd; merchant
man.
tailors, Samuel A. Grenadier.
Meyer Fishman, Max C. Hand-
ler, Joseph Holtzman and Barney
Smith were elected vice-chairmen.
The mercantile division held its
founders' meeting at a dinner in
the Hotel Statler, Tuesday, to hear
Robert R. Nathan, outstanding
American economist, and to elect
officers. Elected chairman of this
division was Max Osnos. Osnos is
president of the Jewish Hospital
Association and a member of the
board of governors of the Jewish
Welfare Federation.
Other officers of the real estate
council include: Irwin Shaw, ex-
ecutive director; Henry Feinberg,
executive secretary; Berry and
Barney Smith, representatives to
the JWF board of governors.
Council board of directors in-
elude:

clearing, the boys pitched tents
out together the huts, set up a Other officers elected by`the mer-
water tank, showers and toilets cantile division Include:
Vice-Chairmen, Israel Ilimelhoch, Ju-
narked the perimeter of the set-
II. Krolik, Louis Robinson; secre-
lement with a fence and cele- Ian
arles, Esther It. Prussian, Irwin Shaw;
mited the completed fact of a epresentatives to board of governors,
oew village by the ritual instal- Maurice A. Enggass, Morris [Matzen
'ation of a Sefer Torah in Its Ark Ind Illmelhoch.
Elected on the board of direc-
n one of the huts.
tors of the division were:

Featured in "Jason," the second
nroduction of the season of the
Detroit Civic Players, to be given
at the Detroit Institute of Arts
Nov. 21, 22 and 23, is Hy Weiner
of 9809 Dexter boulevard.
A speech major at Wayne Uni-
versity, he has done extefisive
work in the University Theater
and Radio Guild. He played the
surier in "Lady Precious Stream,"
David in "Claudia," Morgan Evans
in "The Corn is Green," and Hen-
ry Higgins in "Pygmalian."
A baritone, Weiner sang with
the Acapella Choir at Wayne for
two semesters and is now con-
ductor of a choir of 20 members.
In the musical field, Weiner
plays the trumpet. He has played
with the Scandinavian Symphony
YET IN THE MORNING, as and the Community Center Sym-
they cleared the site of their new phony and was a member of the
home of stones and put together Wayne University Concert Band.
the pre-fabricated huts and strung
a wire fence about the site, they
worked with a business-like prac-
ticality and skill that testified to Wayne IZFA to Hear
the training that they had re- Talk by Rabbi Adler
ceived at Tirat Zvi, which had it-
self been put up as a 24-hour
Wayne University's Intercollegi-
stockade-and-tower operation.
ate Zionist Federation of America
Stopping only for morning. pray- (IZFA) will hold a membership
ers, In phylacteries and prayer- meeting at 8 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 1,
shawls, recited in rotation by small at the Rose Sittig Cohen Bldg.
groups in order not to halt the
Rabbis Morris Adler of Congre-
work, and breakfasting off sand- gation Shaarey Zedek will be guest
wiches and coffee brought to them speaker. An entertainment pro-
at their jobs by the girls who gram, including dancing, is sched-
could be spared from the stone- uled.

0

Friday, November 22, 1946

Private dining room for evening
and Sunday dinners

Special rate for large or small
groups, afternoons or evenings

HOW WILL MATERIAL BE SOLD?

On sealed bids to the highest bidders on bid forms to be furnished by
WAA. Material will be sold In mixed lots by lot only on an "as Is,"
"where is" and "said to contain" basis. It has been broken Into Iota of
all sixes to accommodate both large and small buyer.. All *ales will
be made in accordance with terms shown on bid forms to be furnished
at warehouse and by direct mail. At the time of inspection, • general
list of materials will be available for your review and trained salesmen
will be on hand to assist you in making inspection.

Hors D'oeuvres made to order

Rothstein
Restaurant

3454 Joy Road, east of Dexter
TYler 4.9424

for

Delicious Pastries and =—
Fresh, High Quality
Bread .. Baked Daily

EF-

2568 FENKELL at LINWOOD

Our Specialty:

Wedding and Birthday E7-
Cakes

UNiversity 4-0208

Jack Freed, Prop.

CAN BUY?

A

Everyone is Invited to bid. Sales will be made to higheat bidders Ir.
accordance with priority sequence. Export buyers are eligible and
welcome to bid.

WE'RE KNOWN

La SALLE BAKERY

WHO

WHEN AND WHERE CAN BIDS BE ENTERED?

Sealed bids should he deliver...II or mailed to WAA Office. 535 GrIrtrok1
Street. Detroit 26, !Michigan. To receive consideration, all bids must be
in our hands not later than 2 P.M. Wednesday, Nor. 27th, 1946.

All prospectice purchasers are incited to make prompt
and thorough inspection of these surplus property listings.

WAR ASSETS ADMINISTRATION

535 Griswold St., Detroit 26, Mich., Phone CH 4920, Ext. 32
DE-30.8-1

