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CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, 01110

Friday, May 4, 1951

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE

G-Day Drive by Women
Nets Campaign $85,000

.co thousand women's divi-
sion workers in general solicita-
tion of the Allied Jewish Cam-
paign raised a total of $85,000 in
their G-Day, one-day drive last
Sunday, to bring their division
total to $345,009, Mrs. John C.
Hopp, chairman, announced.
The women workers, headed
by Mrs. Sidney J. Karbel, cov-
ered 70 per cent of the slips
assigned them and secured an
average increase of 20 per cent
over gifts from the same people
last yew-.
Division workers will make
"clean-up" reports at an all-day
meeting from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Tuesday at the Davison Center.
Workers without cars were
driven to their prospects' homes
by a motor corps, supplied
through the cooperation of the
Greater Detroit Bnai Brith Coun-
cil. Mrs. Gerald Goldberg was
mobile corps coordinator, while
Irving Davis and James Laker
served as co-chairmen of the
Bnai Brith motor corps commit-
tee.
Assisting Mr., . Karbel were
Mrs. J. Shurly Horwitz, and six
vice-chairmen, Mesdames Ben-
jamin Coggan, David S. Diamond,
Herbert Frank, Arthur Gould,
Emil D. Roth and Raymond So-
kolov.
Women with special assign-
ments included Mrs. Charles
Briskman, program; Mrs. Daniel
E. Krouse, emergency squad; and
Mrs. Seymour J. Frank and Mrs.
William B. Isenberg, general co-
ordinators.

Hebrew Camp
Names Head

Camp Kinneret, Detroit's first
Hebrew camp, is an attempt to
combine creative group camping
with the Hebrew language and
Jewish culture.
David "Doodle" Horowitz of
New York has been appointed as
Rosh Kvutzah (camp director) of
Kinneret. Horowitz has an inten-
sive background in the field of
Hebrew camping, having also
spent a year studying in Israel.
At present, he is a member of the
Habonim national executive.
Rabbi Moses Lehrman, of Bnai
Moshe, and Leon Kay, also of
Detroit, have been added to the
camp's sponsoring committee.
To date, scholarships have been
pledged by the Bureau of Jewish
Education of Cincinnati, the
United Hebrew Schools of De-
troit, and Mitticschule (Jewish
High School) of Detroit.
Manford Stryke, civil engineer,
announced that construction of
new buildings is scheduled to
start by June 1.

Dedicating Home

of

Mrs. Robert S. Drews served as
special publicity consultant, ar-
ranging for a series of radio and
television interviews.

• • •

Israeli Concert
Here Produced
$2,666 Profit

Detroit's response to the Israel
Philharmonic proved not only a
cultural but a financial success,
according to a review of the
symphony's tour released by the
American Fund for Israel Insti-
tutions, which sponsored the
tour.
Arrangements for the concert,
held here on Feb. 4, were
handled by Max Osnos, chairman
of a special committee appointed
for the occasion. Osnos was
assisted by Jack Kellman and
Philip R. Marcuse.
Prices of tickets were scaled at
usual concert rates and the Jew-
ish Welfare Federation—of which
the American Fund is a bene-
ficiary agency—granted $7,500 to
meet expenses of the orchestra
and of the concert.
Because of the efficient opera-
tion of the concert committee, the
Federation was able to turn over
to the American Fund an addi-
tional $2,666.38, to further the
work of the orchestra, a net
profit on the Philharmonic's ap-
pearance in Detroit.
Both items allocated to the
American Fund by the Federa-
tion are in addition to the grant
of $15,600 from 1950 Allied Jew-
ish Campaign funds. Along with
aiding the Philharmonic, the
American Fund is American
Jewry's agency for supporting 92
other cultural agencies in Israel.

• •

•

Rabbi Israel I. Halpern will in-
augurate his second annual series
of Sabbath afternoon lectures on
Ethics of the Fathers at 6 p.m.,
Saturday at Beth Abraham Syna-
gogue.

• •

•

The Ailas Shalom Young Peo-
ple's Club will present a "ladies
night" at . 8:30 p.m., Thursday,
May 10. Ruth Krandell will give
a demonstration of make-up.
Speakers from Wayne University
will talk on dress and personal
care.

• •

MOTHERS CLUB BANQUET
The Center Mothers Club will
hold its annual mother-and-
daughters banquet at 6:30 p.m.,
Monday at Zack's Catering. Mrs.
Ida Drapkin will be toastmistress.
Mrs. Bella Katz is president of
the club.

Israel Tightens Trade in Gold
Issues Bonds to Halt Inflation

,

The Reader
Writes

READER CLARIFIES
STATEMENT BY LIPSKY
To the Editor:
I wish to call your attention
to page 33 in your issue of April
20.
1 do not know what the inten-
tion was, but for the matter of
record, Louis Lipsky is the chair-
man cf the American Zionist
Council and speaks in behalf of
this body which is the representa-
tive Zionist body of all Zionist
organizations in the United
States.
I do not believe it wise or
fair to convey to the readers that
.he ZOA makes it a practice of
assailing the U. S. State Depart-
ment.
JULES DONESON,
Regional Director,
Michigan Zionist Region.

•

The Beth Aaron Young Adults
will hold a wienie roast Saturday.
The price is $1 per person and
includes food. , Those interested
should contact Leon Osshansky,
UN. 1-2490, or Bette Stein, WE.
3-6984.

The Marchioness of Reading, president of the British Section of
the World Jewish Congress, greets Mrs. Harry Frank, left, presi-
dent of the Detroit Women's Division AJC, and Mrs. Samuel
Green, right, president of the Michigan Council AJC, at cere-
monies dedicating the headquarters of the organization, bearing
the name of Dr. Stephen S. Wise, at 15 East 84th street, New
York City. Lady Reading was baptised at birth into the Church
of England and brought up by a Christian mother in a Chris-
tian home. She became a foremost leader of British and world
Jewry, an ardent Zionist and chose the JeWish faith of her own
free will.

TEL AVIV — (ISI) — Further
anti-inflationary measures, in-
cluding the designation of spe-
cific banks to deal in gold and an
order that all other dealings in
gold henceforth would be illegal,
were announced by the minister
of finance, Eliezer Kaplan. He
also announced that the price of
gold would be fixed by the Knes-
set finance committee.
Banks have been requested to
limit credits to not more than 50
per cent of old deposits and 25
per cent of new deposits. More-
over, the granting of credits
should be qualitative, priority be-
ing given for purchases of essen-
tial stocks.
No credits are to be allowed
against gold or foreign securities
which should be handed into
banks in return for dollar-pegged
bonds. Credits to builders will
also be radically reduced in order
to concentrate major building ac-
tivity in mass housing schemes.
Non-negotiable savings bonds
FLOWER EXHIBIT IN ISRAEL
paying 2 1/2 per cent interest, re-
JERUSALEM — (ISI) — More deemable after eight years, are to
than 1,000 specimens of flowers be issued. These are expected to
and plants were exhibited here at
the first flower show to be held in
Israel.

A scene in the new motion picture, "Border Street," the story
of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. The film, based on John Hersey's
best seller, "The Wall," is now showing at the Cinema Theater.
The film won the highest award in the Venice International
Film Festival in 1918. Quentin Reynolds delivers the foreword
to the film.

Events
the Week

Phi Sigma Sigma Alumni have
elected the following officers:
Sue Berger, president; Miriam
Dresner, vice-president; Miriam
Chodoroff, secretary - treasurer;
and Geraldine Hyman, corres-
ponding secretary.

HOME FOR THE AGED
RESIDENTS RAISE $450
Residents of the Jewish Home
for Aged have conducted their
solicitation in behalf of the Allied
Jewish Campaign and raised a
total of $450, according to an
announcement by Abe Kasle,
campaign chairman.
Committee members who soli-
cited their fellow residents at the
Home—which is a local benefici- 1
ary agency of the campaign—in-
clude Abraham Glozman, Roy
Konop, Mrs. Milka Moshkowitz,
Abraham Prioslow, Mrs. Ida
Steffin and Mrs. Helen Youl.

Last Days of Ghetto

WEDDING
BAR MITZVAH

Page 7

withdraw large sums from pri-
vate circulation and provide the
government with capital for de-
fense and development expendi-
tures as well as provide the pub-
lic with a medium for savings.
If the currency market is free
when the bonds are redeemable,
the bonds may be repayable in
dollars, otherwise in Israel cur-
rency at the guaranteed dollar
value.
Kaplan confirmed that since
the beginning of April the gov-
ernment had issued no further
treasury bills under its policy of
covering the defense budget
through the ordinary budget and
savings. He also stated that the
nonpayment import scheme had
so far brought in $9,500,000.

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