Program Chairman
Friday, March 28, 1947
DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The 'Legal Chronicle
Page Ten
16 Panels Listed
for Youth Parley
Fascist Given
Pesach Services
Set at NW Hebrew Year by Krause
Offers Scholarships
31
t.
Passover services will be held
at the Northwest Hebrew Congre-
gation Friday and Saturday even-
ings, April .4 and 5, at 6:45 p. m.
and Saturday and Sunday morn-
ings, April 5 and 6, at 8:45 a. m.
Rabbi Jacob E. Segal will
preach the sermons at both morn-
ing services. His subject Satur-
day will be "Freedom Is Indivis-
ible." On Sunday his topic will
be "Who Is The Just Man?"
The children of the Northwest
Religious School will observe the
holiday with a special Passover
assembly program Sunday morn-
ing. A model Seder will be en-
acted with the children perform-
ing the rituals. A Passover play-
let will also be presented and spe-
cial holiday projects will be car-
ried out in all classes.
Rabbi Levi Speaker
at Opening Saturday
Palestinian music will echo
throughout Congregation Bnal
Moshe whkn the Jewish Youth
Conference on Palestine is for-
mally opened at 8:30 p. m. Satur-
day, March 28.
The prOgram will include Pal-
estinian dances by the Jewish
Community Center dance group
under Vhe direction of Fanny
Aaronson, and songs by the Ha-
bonim choir. Betty Kowalsky,
pianist, and Frances Bloom, so-
prano, will perform.
SPEAKERS LISTED
Representatives of 31 youth
groups, sponsors of the parley,
MRS. PERRY BURNSTINE
will also hear Rabbi Eliezer Levi,
• • •
on "Palestine's Challenge to Amer-
ican Jewish Youth."
On Sunday, 16 panel discussions
will be held at the Jewish Com-
munity Center starting at 1:30 p.m.
Panel leaders aro:
Semour Tilchin, Rabbi Jacob
Segal, Rabbi William Gold, Abra-
Twersky, Tzvi Frisch, Dr.
Cast of 14 Rehearsing ham
Hugo Mandlebaum, Harold Arlan,
Morris Lieberman, Joseph Haggai,
for Show on April 18 Ben
Gallob, Max Chomsky, Philip
Slomovitz, Harry Katz, Moshe
An original, three-act play, Heyman and Ylsroel Stashefsky.
"Our Earth Is But a Small Star,"
has been written especially for BANQUET IS CLIMAX
the Tuesday, April 8, meeting of
Climaxing the conference, a
the Detroit Chapter of Hadassah, banquet will be held at 6:30 p.m.
which will start at 1 p.m. in the with Rabbi Leo Geiger of New
Jewish Community Center.
York, former AAF chaplain, as
Mrs. Perry Burnstine, chairman guest speaker.
of the American affairs commit-
Dancing will follow the banquet.
tee, is in charge of the program,
assisted by Mesdames Harry Beck-
er, Louis Slatkin, J. J. Marks;
Albert Silher and Samuel Schaf-
lender and Miss Gertrude Giesler.
Mrs. Harold Koenigsberg is play
director and Mrs. Sander Weiss
Dr. Saul K. Padover, distin-
and Mrs. Barney Israel are stage
guished historian and editorial
managers.
Members of the cast include writer foil PM, will speak at an
Mesdames Louis Barak, Harold open meeting of the Michigan
Bregman, Ben Coggan, Daniel Citizens Committee at 8:15 Wed-
Cohn, Philip Frank, Arthur Gil- nesday, April 2 in the Downtown
bert, Louis Grossman, Joseph YMCA, Witherell and Montcalm
avenues.
Jackler, , Zelda Landsman, Harry
Dr. Padover, graduate of Wayne
Paysner, Arthur Snyder, Koenigs-
University and author of several
berg, Silber and Slatkin.
outstanding biographies, was for
a , time attached to American Mil-
itary Government in postwar
Germany. He presented his ap-
praisal in his illuminating vol-
ume, "Experiment in Germany."
Play to Highlight
Hadassah Meeting
Padover to Speak
at MCC Meeting
Writing Honors
to Morris Weiss
Together with such distin-
guished American authors as I. J.
Kapstein, Mary Ellen Chase, and
Mark Van Doren, a Detroit teach-
er, Morris Weiss, has been named
one of 11 winners in the Good
Housekeeping short story contest.
Weiss, who lives at 3245 Chica-
go boulevard, is a member of the
speech faculty at Wayne Univer-
sity and also of the Pershing
High School staff.
His story, "The Apology", was
among the flood; of 3000 manu-
scripts submitted by faculty mem-
bers of American colleges and
universities.
GEORGE D. SCIIERMERIIORN
candidate for regent of the Uni-
versity of Michigan in the April 7
election, is sponsoring a scholar-
ship fund to enable young De-
trotters to attend a university. De
hopes to make it possible for at
least 12 students annually to en-
ter college. These scholarships
will be available to students in
Detroit public and parochial
schools and will include at lead
two for Negroes. The only quali-
fications will be that scholastically
the student is deserving of a
higher education and that his
f am I 1 y financial circumstances
prevent him from going to col-
lege. On Wednesday, Schermer-
horn handed over his check for
$600 to start the fund to acting
Mayor George Edwards.
Joseph Adler Elevated
by Fire Department
A play, "The Saga of Resist-
ance," will bo presented by the
Brith Trumpeldor of Detroit (Be-
tar) at its Third Seder Sunday,
April 6, at the Jewish Community
Center.
The event is being sponsored
with the cooperation of the Los
Angeles Club of the Center.
Proceeds will go to the Pales-
tine Resistance Committee, which
is helping patriots of the Jewish
underground. Phillip Jaffe, Betar
leader, will conduct the services.
Tickets may be obtained at the
Center or by calling TY. 5-3194.
view "Thieves in the Night" by
Koesler at a meeting of the
Northwest Hebrew Congregation
Sisterhood Wednesday evening in
the Synagogue.
A sketch on Passover will be
enacted by members of the con-
secration class.
The Young People's Club of the
congregation will hold its first
get-acquainted dance Sunday eve-
ning in the social hall. Mrs. Ja-
cob Levine is in charge of the
club.
Judge Moynihan Speaks
at Toledo Synagogue
Judge Clyde I. Webster, dean
of the Wayne Circuit bench, is a
candidate for reelection April 7.
On his behalf, Jewish friends
point out that Judge Webster is
a friend of religious liberty. He
believes that it is obligatory for
each person to protect his right
to worship as he pleases and to
respect the equal rights of others.
The into Judgo Harry B. Keidan
and Judge Webster were intimate
friends and held great esteem for
each other.
Circuit Judge Joseph A. Moy-
nihan, presiding judge in Michi-
gan, addressed the annual recog-
nition dinner of the Men's Club
of Bnal Israel Synagogue, Tole-
do, March 20. His subject was
"Our Common Heritage."
Jules D. Lippmann, retiring pres-
ident of the Toledo Board of
Commerce, was honored as the
most - outstanding • Jewish citizen
of 1946.
Aaron A. Silberblatt, court re-
porter for Judge Moynihan, was
also a guest of the club.
BICUR CHOLEM
A membership tea will be held
by the Young Women's Bicur
Cholem Organization April 14 at
the home of Mrs. Leo Wasserman,
17331 Santa Barbara drive.
SHARONA OF PWO
Girls, 18-30, are invited to a
social evening of the Sharona
Group, Pioneer Women's Organi-
zation, Tuesday at the PWO hall,
11818 Dexter boulevard.
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After being convicted on a mo-
rals charge, Russell M. Roberts,
self-admitted fascist and anti-
Semite, was given the maximum
term of one year by Recorder's
Judge Paul E. Krause.
Roberts, St. Clair Shores busi-
nessman, had been exposed as an
active fascist in John Roy Carl-
son's "Undercover." Carlson called
Roberts "the most perfectly deve-
loped fascist mind it has been my
bad fortune to study at close
range."
Roberts told Judge Krause that
he wanted to give up his Amer-
ican citizenship and move to Ar-
gentina, a more fascist-minded
country, but Judge Krause has
delayed Roberts' plans for a year.
Betar Seder to Aid Book Review Set
NW Sisterhood
Palestine Patriots by
Mrs. Harry Oberstein will re-
For the second time in the his-
tory of the Detroit Fire Depart-
ment, a Jew has been named a
battalion chief.
He is Joseph H. Adler, 2460
Fullerton avenue, who was pro-
moted from captain Tuesday.
Adler is in charge of the Fourth
Battalion Headquarters, Second
and Burroughs avenues.
The other chief was the late
Moses Weingarden, who retired in
1927.
.
on Morals Charge
Judge Webster Friend
of Religious Liberty
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RE-ELECT
Judge
Theodore J.
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