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CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, 01110

Friday, May 11, 1951

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE

Laying of Cornerstone Slated
for New Bnai Moshe School

The cornerstone of the new
The United Hebrew Schools,
school building being erected by which entered into an agree-
Congregation Bnai Moshe will be ment with Bnai Moshe to use the
laid at 5:30 p.m., Sunday, May 20. school rooms for daily classes for
The services will begin with a
Mincha service in the synagogue
and continue at the building.
Charles Grosberg, whose gift
of the site stimulated the cam-
paign among Bnai Moshe mem-
bers to raise funds for the erec-
tion of the building, will be hon-
ored with the laying of the cor-
nerstone.
Rabbi Irving Lehrman, of
Miami Beach, Fla., brother of
Rabbi Moses Lehrman of Bnai
Moshe, will be the guest speaker
at the banquet tendered by the
congregation to its members and
friends at the conclusion of the
ceremonies.

Installation Slated
by Career Group

Fay Gollob will be installed as
chairman of Career Group, Na-
tional Council of Jewish Women,
at a dinner at the Belcrest Hotel
at 7 p. m., Tuesday.
Mrs. Leonard H. Weiner, past
president of the Detroit Section,
National Council of Jewish Wo-
men, will be guest speaker.
Other newly elected officers are
Hermine Stone and Fay Fortner,
vice-chairmen; Rosalene Crimm,
corresponding secretary; Esther
Sears, recording secretary; Ruth
Miller, treasurer.
Following the installation din-
ner, the inaugural ball will start
at 9:30 p. m. Jerry Coleman and
his orchestra will provide the mu-
sic. Refreshments will be served.
Members may make reserva-
tions with Hermine Stone, TO.
5-7593, or June Brezner, UN.
3-1589.

Juntor Hadassah

Schedules Party

RABBI I. LEHRMAN

children, will be represented by
its officers and board members
at the ceremonies and the dinner.
Reservations for the banquet
may be made at the congregation
office. •

Dr. Shinueli Set
by Hebrew Groups

Dr. Ephraim Shmueli will be
the guest of the Kvutzah Ivrith
(Hebrew Cultural Group of De-
troit), the staff of the United He-
brew Schools and the Midrasha
during the week end of May 19.
Saturday afternoon he will
speak at an Oneg Shabbat in the
Joseph H. Ehrlich conference
room of the Rose Sittig Cohen
Building.
The same evening, he will de-
liver an address at a Melava Mal-
ka in the auditorium of the Rose
Sittig Cohen Building. His sub-
ject will be "Education in Isra-
el."
Sunday evening he will lecture
in the same place on "Modern
Hebrew Literature."
All his lectures will be deliver-
ed in Hebrew and are open to the
public.

Page 7

Center to Give Wayne Names Dr. Fritz Redl
Ghetto Film Second Franklin Professor

Czech survivors of the notor-
ious Nazi extermination camp,
Theresienstadt, took part in mak-
ing the film "Ghetto Terezin,"
which will be shown for the first
time in Detroit Thursday, May.
17, at the Davison Center, and
Sunday, May 20, at the Wood-
ward Center.
Documentary scenes and daring
use of music and crowd shots
heighten the nightmare reality
of this recent history.
Organizations may obtain spe-
cial rates for advance orders
by contacting Harry D. Katz,
Center supervisor of adult edu-
cation, TR. 5-8400.

Dr. Fritz Redl, professor in the
school of social work at Wayne
University, has been named the
Leo M. Franklin professor in
human relations at Wayne for
the next university year.
A five-man commitee desig-
nated by Dr. David D. Henry,
president, made the selection un-
der a plan outlined in October,
1949, when the Leo M. Franklin
Chair was established through
action of the board of trustees of
Temple Beth El and the Detroit
Board of Education.
Occupany of the chair begins
in September and the memorial
professorship carries an annual
stipend of $1,000 over and above
the professor's salary. Under the
plan, Wayne presents annually a
lecture series known as the Leo
M. Franklin Memorial Lectures
in Human, relations. Included in
the series are addresses by the
A dinner-dance celebration is memorial professor and four
scheduled for 6 p. m., Sunday at
the Workmen's Circle on Lin-
woo'd to mark the 39th anniver-
sary of the founding of the Odes-
sa Progressive Aid Society.
This group, banded together
Isadore R. Cohen,. president of
since 1912, is working to help
meet the needs of the state of the Yeshivath Beth Yehudah, an-
nounces that there will be an an-
Israel.
Louis Nathanson, assisted by nual membership meeting at 2:30
Jacob Menacer, is in charge of p.m., Sunday, May 20 at Con-
the occasion and the committee gregation Mogen Abraham.
At that meeting a report will
in charge of the souvenir pro-
be rendered on finances and edu-
gram book are:
Isaac Sinkoff, Morris Weinhart, cation. Election of new mem-
I. Yourist, Hyman Kaber and Da- bers to the board will also take
vid Kay. Max Rosenthal is the place.
evening's toastmaster. J. B. Or-
Postcards will be sent out to
mond is president.
all members and the card will
have to be presented in order to
obtain a ballot.
For further information relat-
ing to the meeting call Hyman
Wohl, executive director, TU.
The Mosaic Chapter, Order of 3-3700.
DeMolay, will install its officers
Saturday evening at - Masonic
Temple.
Dinner will be served at 6:30 asw
p. m., in supper rooms 1, 2 and
3. Following the ceremonies
there will be dancing to the
music of Mickey Woolf and his
orchestra.
Elected were Melvin Bornstein,
sH A L I m A
master counselor; Sheldon Iden,
senior counselor; and Vern Pri-
mack, junior counselor. Outgoing
master counselor is Sidney Bas-
kin,

Odessa Aid Plans
Anniversary Fete

Beth Yeliudah Sets
Election of Board

Mosaic Chapter
to Install Officers

Junior Hadassah will hold its
monthly dance in the form of a
"Coke and Record" party at 8:30
p. m., Wednesday, May 16 at
the Halevy Music Center.
For information call Violet
Messer, UN. 3-3473, or Fern Skol-
nik, TO. 7-5127. Refreshments
The Chronicle deadline is on
Tuesday noon.
will be served.
Junior Hadassah's spring con
ference will be held over the
week end of June 2 in Louisville.
This conference wilt be made
-
up of the central states region,
which consists of the units from
CALL UNIVERSITY 4-3750
Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky and
West Virginia.
FOR THE BEST AND FASTEST PICK-UP
For further information on the
conference call Violet Messer.
TO STORE YOUR FURS — WITH

other lecturers selected by him.

Dr. Redl received his doctoral
degree from the University of
Vienna in 1925. At the invitation
of the General Education Board
of the Rockefeller Foundation,
he came to the United States in
1936 to work with the Progres-
sive Education Association of
New York.
In 1941, Dr. Redl Came to
Wayne with a broad background
as an author, consultant, and
teacher in the realm of child de-
velopment and mental hygiene.

He is the author of numerous
books and of magazine and ency-

clopedia articles pertaining to his
field.
During the current year, Dr.
Lloyd A. took, chairman of the
department of educational soci-
ology in Wayne's college of edu-
cational, was the memorial pro-
fessor.

JEWISH FOLK CHORUS

Henri Goldberg, Conductor

26111 Annual Concert
Sunday, May 20, 8P.M.

At the Masonic Temple

(Scottish Rite Cathedral)

By Popular Request

DI NAPE HAGODE

(Shadows of the Warsaw Ghetto)

by MAX HELFMAN

Starring

SAIDA GERRARD

New York Choreographer
With a Ballet of 20

Dancers

Tickets: $2.40, $1.80 , S 1 .20, tax inc.
Available ' at:
George Mogul—Ty. 5-51175
Mrs Regina Litt—TO. 8-0623
Metro Music Ifouse—Dexter at Cal-
vert and from All Members of the
Chorus.

where fashion reigns

Just a Reminder - -

Carmel School
to Hold Dinner

Carmel Hebrew school and
Congregation Bnai Joseph will
hold their second annual dinner
at 6 p. m., Sunday, June 3 at
17556 Wyoming avenue.
Installation of the new officers
will be held at this affair.
Tickets may be obtained by
calling UN. 1-9744 or UN. 2-4232.

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