Friday, August 20, 1948
Teen•ge
Sophisticates
By HELEN TENNENBAUM
IAT LONG-AWAITED vaca-
tion will start this weekend
for the flock of students who
sweated over school books this
summer and for the many oth-
ers who couldn't get away for
different r e a- Erwrizzamm
sons.
Leaving f o r
Charlevoix will
be Burt Mah-
ler, Al Gendel-
man, Burt Lo-
wenstein, Mort
Alger and Doug
Schubot.
Sue Popkins
and Alice New-
man are look-
Helen
ing forward to their visit in New
York, while their friend Nancy
May, will be the guest of rela-
tives in Washington, D. C.
By the time this is in print,
Walter and Richard Schwartz
will be enjoying "Life on the
Farm," the farm belonging to
their grandparents in New Jer-
sey.
• • •
►
THAT CUTE LITTLE redhead,
Shirley Bigelman, daughter of
popular photographer, Jack Bi-
gelman, will leave Aug. 20 with
her mom and dad for a month
of Miami sunshine. Going with
them will be Shirley's girlfriend,
Toby Fink. Should be loads of
fun.
Avivia Freedman writes us
from Charlevoix that Nancy
Mann and Carol Bloom have
just come up. Back from there is
Murile Silberstein.
Others having fun in Charle-
voix are Marion Bressler, Earl
Tendler, Cyma Goodman, Heleyn
Vidrah, Mary Gersuck, Sally
Kornwise, Barbara Fox, Mimi
Leebove, Myrna Elgot. . . . Also
Larry Trager, Bev Hartstein,
Phil Schwartz, Tobye Goodman
and Ruthie Friedberg.
• • •
MORE VACATION chatter in-
cludes news that twins Sara and
Gloria Zimmerman really liked
Niagara Falls and had a wonder-
ful time on their return trip by
way of Cedar Point. Their pal,
Sandy Pilnick, is tack from
camp.
Visiting Ann Willis, Annette
and Debbie Margolis at their
cottages in Pleasant Lake, Mich.,
are Leslie Phillips, Allan Ellis,
Ilarve Tushman, Mel Sachs and
Feannie Lieberman.
More enjoying the clear water
. . . Alva Sachs, Jerry Klegman,
Arvin Bennish, Kay Jurkowitz,
Herbie Barish, Elaine Gittleman
and Carol Lewis.
• • •
A BANG-UP affair was held
at the Knollwood Country Club
in the form of a splash party,
followed by an evening of de-
lightful dancing.
Jerry Hirsch escorted Bev
Hartstein, Dickie Hamburger was
with Toby Goldman and Jerry
Schummer was Sue Schatz's date.
More who attended were Edith
Colton with Jack Solomon, Al
Fischman and Lois Gendal, Mert
Rabinowitz with Sandy Baskin
and Bert Mahler with Carol Ja-
cobs.
• • •
WE'LL REALLY miss our col-
umn pals who will be leaving
soon for colleges all around the
nation.
We know that right now you're
mighty busy and excited as you
Group Acts to Keep
UAIIC in Cincinnati
CINCINNATI—Cooperation of
reform Jews throughout the na-
tion was invited in a statement
issued by the newly-established
national Committee to Retain
Union of American Hebrew Con-
gregations Headquarters in Cin-
cinnati.
The committee is trying to per-
suade delegates to the forthcom-
ing (Nov. 14-17) UAHC conven-
tion in Boston to reject a
UAHC executive board proposal
for moving union headquarters
to New York City.
DETROIT JEWISH' CHRONICLE
rage Nine
School is Fun Now
prepare for this, the most won-
derful time of your life.
There'll be lots of studying
ahead, but it rill be balanced
with loads of fun of every kind.,
We hope that your dreams of
the future will come true in
these next few years, and also
that you fellows who will be
called on to serve in Uncle Sam's
army will realize that you are
doing this so that you and your
buddies may go on with the kind
of life you have always planned.
• • •
THEN THERE are many of
you who last term went to high
and who are now beginning a
job, which, in whatever field
you choose, you have a chance
to r each the top. .. . We don't
want to sound like a preacher.
All we want to say is good luck
and, by golly, appreciate and
make the most of all the wonder-
ful opportunities our parents give
Haifa Chapter's
Roast Saturday
Membership Drive
Charted by Croup
us.
We can't help thinking of the
thousands of teenagers in cold
and hungry Europe, with no
friends, no family, no future ex-
cept Israel.
You can help these young peo-
ple by sending packages, writing
letters and in other ways. Please
do so!
Position of DP's
Called Appalling
The years of Nazi oppression are far behind 15-year-old
Tommy Eichenbaum, studying under the supervision of his
teacher, Mrs. Anna S. Discavage, at the Patterson School in
Pottsville, Pa. Tommy arrived in the U. S. with the aid of
United Service for New Americans.
(Continued from page 3)
patriots. So why fight?" he asks.
• • •
BY THIS TIME most of the
Zionist leaders of America are
in Israel to attend another im-
portant gathering of the Zionist
Actions Committee in Tel-Aviv
on Aug. 2.
Last time these leaders met in
Tel-Aviv was in March, before
the Jewish State was proclaim-
ed, and it was at that meeting
that the momentous decision
was made.
This session will find other
not less important decisions af-
fecting the fate of the Jewish
State and of Jewish DP's in
Europe discussed and decided
upon.
Chief among these are: The
question of enlarged Jewish im-
migration; the question of Is-
rael; and finally, the question of
the economic upbuilding of Is-
rael.
• • •
THE COMMITTEE will also
decide the date and place of
the next Zionist Congress which
will have to be convoked in or-
der to decide the future of the
Zionist Organization of the
world.
There is a strong tendency in
favor of calling the Zionist
Congress at the end of this year
in Switzerland, exactly one year
from the date when the last
Congress was called at Basle.
It is proposed that there
should not lie any new elec-
tions, but that the old Congress
should be reconvened.
Hebrew Most Popular
in New York Schools
NEW YORK (World News
Services) Modern Hebrew is
gaining pupils faster than any
other foreign language taught in
the New York public school sys-
tem, it was reported by the
board of education.
In September, with the addi-
tion of three Brooklyn junior
high schools, 26 ins'itutions
throughout the city will oiler
the subject.
Anti-Semites Mentally Sick,
Peril Society, Expert Avers
NEW YORK — Prejudice not
only menaces the mental health
of the biased person and his vic-
tim, but corrodes the entire
framework of democracy, Dr.
Julius Schreiber, director of the
National Institute of Social Re-
lations of Washington, D. C.,
told the New York Chapter of
the American Jewish Committee.
Dr. Schreiber, a psychiatrist
who served in the army during
the war, with the rank of lieu-
tenant colonel, emphasized the
importance of work on the com-
munity level to combat prejudice.
He particularly recommended the
group discussion method as a
forerunner to constructive social
action.
OUTLINES CAMPAIGN
A seven-point program to curb
intolerance was outlined by Dr.
Schreiber. "Research, education,
legislation, action against rabble-
rousers, changes , in community
patterns, joint participation of
various groups in discussions and
concerted action on social issues
are vital weapons in the fight
against prejudice," he declared.
Dr. Schreiber defined prejudice
as "an emotional blind-spot, opin-
ion or attitude which is actually
a prejudgment, a conclusion
Tormed Without carefully exam-
ning the facts, an idea uncritical-
ly accepted or not measuring up
to reality."
NEED MORE THAN FACTS
As a rule, he stated, "preju-
dices reflect personality disturb-
ances in the individual who holds
them. When these prejudices are
implemented so as to violate the
rights of other individuals
through discrimination in em-
ployment, education and other
areas of civil rights, they not
only undermine the mental
health of the aggressor and his
victim, but become a challeng-
ing social problem that endan-
gers our whole democratic life."
Facts, information and appeals
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to reason cannot overcome preju-
dice by themselves, Dr. Schrei-
ber asserted, but must be but-
tressed by a "courageous and
concerted program of social ac-
tion."
BACKS LEGISLATION
13224 Dexter
For Special Occasions
TO 7-9280
Member Drive
The most aggressive member-
ship drive in its history has been
launched by the Junior Service
Group.
The membership committee,
headed by Doris Moss, has or-
ganized a speakers' bureau to
solicit members from every or-
ganization of young Jewish
adults in Detroit.
William Stone is in charge of
the organizational drive and
Shirley Jacobson will handle
speakers' bureau assignments.
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"Education is extremely im-
portant, particularly in removing
children from the atmosphere of
prejudice," Dr. Schreiber pointed
out, paying tribute to the ad-
vances made in intercultural edu-
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cation.
"Education also enab'hes the in the Jewish Chronicle.
victims of prejudice to meet the
PERSONAL
problem in a wholesome spirit of
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A wienie roast will be held by
Haifa Chapter, Zionist Organi-
zation of Detroit, Saturday eve-
ning at Lola Valley Park.
Informal games, dancing and
group singing will highlight the
evening.
Plans for the event are being
made by the social committee un-
der the chairmanship of Mrs.
Philip Bernstein and Mrs. Jos-
eph Carp.
Elaborate preparations are be-
ing made to expand the mem-
bership of the chapter, accord-
ing to Benjamin Weiss, member-
ship chairman.
In addition, continued emphasis
will be placed on the member-
ship drive of the ZOD, in which
Haifa Chapter played a promi-
nent role (luring the past year,
Weiss said.
The educational committee un-
der the chairmanship of Martin
I loffer is planning a series of dis-
cussions featuring a number of
outstanding speakers, and the so-
cial committee is making plans
for a variety of affairs.
A fund-raising affair, expect-
ed to surpass last year's event,
is being charted by a committee
under Mr. Sidney Brand and
Mr. Irving Sniderman.
COKPIXTE
TAKE-OUT
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the Jewish Community
KING FONG CAFE
11111 DESTER roe. 112mbar•t —
OPEN DAILY 11 a. a. So 11 p.
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SATURDAYS, 11 a. wa le 1 a. ma.