Page Sixteen THE JEWISH NEWS Friday, February 19, 1943 What's Happening in Detroit • B ROTHERHOOD WEEK, observance of which commences today and will continue through Feu. 28, will bring together men and women of all faiths at numerous meetings being arranged by the Detroit Round Table of Catholics, Jews and Protestants. M. Hubert O'Brien, Henry Wineman and Edgar A. Guest are 'the Catholic, Jewish and Protestant co- chairmen of the Detroit Round Table, and the Rev. J _ oseph Q. Mayne is the executive director. The nationwide character of the celebration of • Brotherhood Week is reflected in the numerous mes- sages which have been issued by men of all faiths encouraging the movement to establish a spirit of co- operation among Christians and Jews. President Roose- velt's message has already been quoted in our columns. Numerous Brotherhood Week Events Numerous and varied are the events arranged for the observance of Brotherhood Week in Detroit. Addresses before church, community and social groups; interchange of pulpits; concerts and other events have been arranged by the Detroit Round Table of Catholics, Jews and Protestants. "World We Want to Live In" The film "The World We Want To Live In" will be shown by the Detroit Round Table before the Religious Schools of Temple Beth El and Temple Israel Saturday, and before the Youth Speaks Forum at the Jewish Community Center, Sunday evening. A panel discus- sion on Brotherhood will follow the latter, with Dr. Alfred McClung Lee, head of the department of soci- ology at Wayne University; Fr.J. Lawrence Cavanaugh, assistant, superintendent of Roman Catholic Schools of Detroit, and E. L. Niemand of the Jewish Commun- ity Center as resource leaders. The National Council of Jewish Juniors, at their meeting at the Statler Hotel on Sunday afternoon, will hear Brotherhood addresses by Rabbi Leon Fram of Temple Israel, Prof. Francis J. Donohue of the Univer- sity of Detroit and Dr. Norman Kenzie, director of the department of social work of the Detroit Council of Churches. The president of the League of Detroit Jewish Youth, Harold Noveg, will act as moderator. Admission will be free. All who are interested are urged to attend. On the committee of arrangements for the forum are Mrs. Shonnie Kulka, chairman, Mrs. Martha Glei- scher, Miss Selma Jacobson, Aaron Sumetz and Miss Nettie Seligson. Miss Celia Plotnick will complete the program with several musical selections. Rabbis Adler, Fram Among Speakers The ministry of Southern Oakland County in as- sOciation with other community groups will present a Brotherhood Mass Meeting in the Royal Oak High School at 8 P. M. on Feb. 22. The speakers, who will be introduced by Joseph Q. Mayne, executive secretary of the Detroit Round Table, will include Rabbi -Morris Adler of Congregation Shaarey Zedek, Dr. Herbert Beecher Hudnut of Woodward Ave. Presbyterian Church and Fr. John F. Quinn, S. J., University of De- troit, Dean of School of Art and Science. An inter-faith team will discuss the post-war world at a Brotherhood meeting at the Northeast YMCA, Tuesday. Rabbi Adler, Dr. Henry Hitt Crane of Central Methodist Church and Fr. George A. Kmieck, S. J., Dean of Freshman, University of Detroit, will speak. Rabbi Fram will deliver a Brotherhood address at the Emanuel. College, Berrien Springs, Mich. (Seventh Day Adventist Institution), Feb. 24. He will also par- ticipate in a good will team to be presented at Hender- son Methodist Church, Lilac and Puritan, with Fr. Quinn and Chaplain Westwood of the Naval Training School, Dearborn. • Speakers at Synagogue Services Bnai Brith Helps Plan Brotherhood Fete Dr. Marshall Reed of Nardin Park Methodist Church will be the Brotherhood guest speaker at the Sabbath Eve. services at Congregation Shaarey Zedek, Feb. 26. Dr. Crane of Central Methodist Church will be the guest preacher at the lrotherhood Services of Temple Israel in the Lecture Hall of the Detroit Institute of Arts on Feb. 26. Rev. Tracy M. Pullman of the Church of Our Father will be the guest preacher at the Brother- hood Service of Temple Beth El, Feb. 26. A Catholic, a Protestant and a Jew will Speak at the second annual inter-faith Brotherhood banquet, to be held at Amity Hall, the home of the Gabriel Richard Council of the Knights of Columbus, Amity Ave. and Parkview, Wednesday evening, March 3, at 7:30 p. m. This banquet is sponsored jointly by the Knights of Columbus Councils of Detroit, Wayne County Council of Master Masons and the Greater Detroit Bnai Brith Council, with the cooperation of the Detroit Round Table of Catholics, Jews and Protestants. The speakers will be Governor Harry F. Kelly, Edgar A. Guest, na- tionally known poet, and Rabbi Jerome G. Heller of Cincinnati, president of the Central Conference of American Rabbis. Center Brotherhood Concert Tuesday Outstanding soloists will participate at the next Center musicale which will be devoted to the music of Catholic, Jewish and Protestant composers, on Tuesday, in the main auditorium of the Jewish Community Center. Dr. Nellie Beatrice Huger, director of church music of the Detroit Council of Churches, will lead the Radio Male Choristers, and the Center Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Julius Chajes will play an over- ture by Mozart. Rose Cooper, well-known Detroit soprano, will sing songs by Isadore Freed, Gustav Mahler, and Julius Chajes. Other soloists will be Emily Mutter Adams, violinist of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra; Marshall Bruce, baritone, president of the Catholic Youth Organ- izations; and Margaret Mannebach, pianist of the De- troit Symphony Orchestra. Mrs. Joseph M. Welt, vice-president of the Jewish. Community Center, Dr. Thoburn T. Brumbaugh, execu- tive secretary of the Detroit Council of Churches, and Rev. Joseph Q. Mayne, executive secretary of the De- troit Round Table of Catholics, Jews and Protestants, will welcome the audience. Tickets may be obtained free of charge' prior to the day of the concert at the Center office. . Rose Cooper to Sing Over WWJ The Detroit Council of Churches, which has its radio program every Sunday at 9:30 A. M., is arranging an Inter-Faith program during Brotherhood Week. Rose Cooper, distinguished Detroit soprano, has been invited to participate in that program over WWJ on Sunday. She will sing 'By the Rivers of Babylon" by Julius Chajes which is dedicated to her. "Signifigance of Brotherhood Week" is the topic chosen for discussion by Mothers' Clubs during the coming week. The following _questions are being raised in connec- tion with these discussions by the Mothers' Clubs: "Will Brotherhood Week unlock American silence to Jewish suffering abroad? Or will it be just another 'Week'? Will the American clergy follow the example of the Church of England thereby inspiring Congress to make an official expression in behalf of the downtrodden minority groups of Europe?" Pisgah Lodge's Programs for March With the successful conclusion of the Greater De- troit Bnai Brith Council's $1,000,000 War Bond drive to sponsor two Submarine Chasers. Pisgah Lodge No. 34 of Bnai Brith will join the District Grand Lodge No. 6 membership campaign to enroll 10,000 new members in hono! of Bnai Brith's 100th year. Rudolph Meyer- sohn, president, announces that a brief membership campaign will be conducted by Isadore Starr, member- ship chairman of the loci f_Ye. to culminate in an initia- tion during the month of May. Programs for March, according to Louis Rosenzweig, program chairman, include a business meeting on March 1 and an open meetin g on March 15. featuring an evening of Jewish music, humor and arts. Greater Detroit Bnai Brith Council will have a vic- tory Bond rally at Temple Beth El on Feb. 28 and the second annual inter-faith Brotherhood banquet on March 3. Max Goidhoff, chairman of Pisgah Lodge war serv- ice committee, announces the appointment of Harry Schwartz as a chairman of a sub-committee on soldiers' needs. JNF Thanks Christadelphians FEBRUARY Compiled From the Records of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency Has Been Designated BUCHAREST—King Ferdinand has promised a Jewish delegation that he will personally probe the recent outbreaks of anti-Semitic violence, especially by students in the universities. Zionist War Bond Sales Continue Abraham Cooper, president of the Zionist Organiza- tion of Detroit, announces that progress is being made here in behalf of the sale of War Bonds during the February War Bond Month. The nation-wide memberships of Hadassah, women's Zionist organization of America, and of the Order Sons of Zion; fraternal. Zionist organization, have joined in the furtherance of War Bond Month which has been designated by the U. S. Treasury Department for mem- bers of the Zionist Organization of America, it was an- nounced in New York by Judge Morris Rothenberg, chairman of the Z.O.A. national war effort committee. Shaarey Zedek Red Cross Unit Twenty Years Ago This Week MOSCOW—The Jewish sections of the Communist Party have been authorized to distribute the supply of matzohs for Passover. The American Jewish Joint Distribution has been given permission to distribute money to those Jews who do not have sufficient funds to purchase the matzohs. This meeting• inaugurated a program of education on Jewish history, cultural background and problems, for all Bnai Brith Lodges and auxiliaries in Michigan. Rabbi Applebaum devoted the entire period to a "dis- cussion of the Jewish holidays. The Shaarey Zedek Red Cross Unit has established a surgical dressing work room under the chairmanship of Mrs. Sidney Frank. The work room is open for production every Mon- day and Tuesday from 10 A. M. to 3 P. M. Due to the great need for surgical dressings, all those who have taken the, course are urged to come and work. Additional classes- in surgical dressings will be held soon. All interested in taking the course, contact Mrs. Philip Gilbert. University 1-9212. Program at the Shaarey Zedek NEW YORK—A young Jew from Edmonton in Canada is one of the chief advisers to Dr. Sun Yat Sen who is seeking to regain his position as head of the government of South China, the correspondent of the New York Globe reports. The young man, whose name is Morris A. Cohen, is a member of the inner circle about Dr. Sun, which is known as the Kuo Min Tang Society. Bnai Brith Cultural Programs Rabbi Morton Applebaum of Lansing, director of Bnai Brith Michigan Educational Council, spoke to an enthusiastic audience of the East Side and Louis Mar-. shall Lodges and their auxiliaries, including the Bus- Mess and Professional Groups, at the Rose Sittig Cohen Auditorium. Mothers' Clubs Brotherhood Programs The young people of Calvary Presbyterian Church will be the guests of the Young People's Club and the Men's Club of Congregation Shaarey Zedek at 8 P. M. on Feb. 24. Dr. Leslie A. Bechtel will give the Brother- hood address and a forum will follow. The leaders will be Dr. Bechtel, Rabbi Adler and Mr. Mayne. ' Cantor Jacob H. Sonenklar will chant traditional Hebrew melodies and the organist of the Calvary Pres- byterian Church will render selections. There will be a social hour, with refreshments, after the program. All members of the Men's Club, the Y.P.S. and the Sisterhood of Shaarey Zedek are urged to attend this good will meeting. WASHINGTON—The records of heroism of Jew- ish soldiers in the American army as well as those of other armies who fought under the American Flag were cited today in the minority report of the House Immigration Committee, which asked liberal-. ization of the immigration laws. The report partic- ularly cites eight veterans who received Disting- uished Service Crosses. Plans for the banquet have been arranged by James E. Frazer, State Navigator, Fourth Degree Knights of Columbus, general chairman; Eugene Fisher, president of Gabriel Richard Council of Knights of Columbus, vice chairman; William J. Newton, president of the Master Association of the Masonic Temple, vice chair- man, and Harry Yudkoff, president of the Greater De- troit Bnai Brith Council, vice chairman. Committee members include Paul Henry, William T. Buckeridge, Norman Randolph, Rudolph Meyersohn, William J. Newton, William ,A. Ross, John Wysocki, Louis Rosenzweig, Dr. Robert Coggan, Mark Dunn, Wil- liam. Friemuth and Rev. Joseph Q. Mayne. Yudkoff says that reservations for the banquet are limited, and will not be accepted after Feb. 24. For reservations write to Louis Rosenzweig, secretary of Bnai Brith Council, 1108 David Stott Bldg. WAR BOND MONTH G. V. Growcott of 15586 Normandy Ave. this week received the thanks of the Jewish National Fund of America for the gift he remitted in behalf of the Christadelphian Ecclesia of Detroit. Mendel N. Fisher, national director, in his letter of thanks, expresses gratitude for the humanitarian spirit of the Christa- delphians.. - Coming Events of the Feb. 21—Youth Speaks Forum at Jewish Center. Feb. 21—Father, Son and Daughter Funfest at Shaarey Zedek. ZIONIST ORGANIZATION OF AMERICA Feb. 22—United Nations Sound Films program at Jewish Center. Detroit Jews are urged to buy War Bonds this month through the Zionist Organiza- tion of Detroit: Call Abraham Cooper, president of the Detroit organization, to credit your investment for speedy victory to the Zionists of America. CHerry 7474 Feb. 23—Opening of Chess Touranment at Jew- ish Center. Feb. 23—Brotherhood Week concert at Jewish Community Center. Feb. 24—Symposium on factory jobs and women at Jewish Center. Feb. 28—Symposium on "Jobs and Training in the Army," at Jewish Center. Feb. 28—Mass demonstration against Nazi atro- cities at Cass High School. March 7—Torah Month banquet at Jewish Cen- ter, marking first anniversary of Yeshivath Beth Yehudah. March 8—Annual meeting of Jewish Welfare Federation and its constituent agencies. Guest speak- er: Dr. Joseph J. Schwartz, European chief of the Joint Distribution Committee.