• Page Twelve

THE JEWISH NEWS

$850,000 War Bond Drive
Started by Pisgah Lodge

Install Pisgah's
Officers Monday

sale of $10,000,000 in Bonds,
among District 6 members. This
drive will end June 30.
The drive in Michigan, under
the chairmanship of Samuel W.
Leib, gained momentum this
week, with the adoption of a
quota of $850,000 by Pisgah
Lodge.
Mr. Leib reports that the Lan-
-sing Lodge has already sold
$432,000 of Bonds.
Goldhoff Chairman
Pisgah Lodge aims to sell
Bonds in an amount sufficient to
name two Flying Fortresses in
the name of the Lodge. Max H.
Goldhoff, TO. 8-1346, is chair-
man of Pisgah's drive, and is as-
sisted by Leonard L. Radner, TO.
5-4749.
In an appeal to the entire com-
munity, incorporated in a Guest
Editorial on Page 2 of this issue
of The Jewish News, Mr. Leib
urged the oversubscription of the
$850,000 quota set by Pisgah
Lodge.
Other lodges of Bnai Brith in
Detroit, their chairmen in the
current drive and their goals
are:
$200,000 Quota
Detroit Lodge No. 1374, Roy R.
Fisher, Jr., war service chairman,
Maxwell D. Goldman, Bond Sales
chairman, $200,000 quota for pur-
chase of Medium Bombardment
Plane.
Louis Marshall Lodge, Dr. A. N.
Prussin, war service chairman,
William B. Chatman, Bond Sales
chairman, $125,000 quota for 2000
H. P. Advanced Fighter Plane.
155 mm. Anti-Tank Gun.
East Side Lodge, George Katz,
was service chairman, Alfred W.
Keats, Bond sales chairman, $75,-
000 quota for 1200 H. P. Dive
Bomber.
Theodor Herzl Lodge, Harry
Paskovitz, war service and Bond
sales chairman, $57,000 quota for
155 m.m. anti-tank gun.

SAMUEL W. LEIB

Center Art Exhibit
Open. All of June

Zionist Postwar Platform
Seeks Homeland, Equality

Aaron Droock to Officiate;
Organization's Program to Be Presented at Coming
Public Reception to Fol-
American Jewish Conference Demands Relief
low Ceremonies
And Opening of Gates to Palestine

Samuel W. Leib Heads Michigan Drive: Local Lodges
Name Chairman and List Quotas in Campaign
to Honor Centennial

•
This week, every member of District Grand Lodge No. 6
of Bnai Brith received a letter from the Treasury Depart-
ment at Washington, signed by William C. FitzGibbon, chief
of the fraternal section of the War Savings Staff, commend-
ing the Bnai Brith for its War Bond efforts and encouraging
the members in the current 100th anniversary drive for the

Friday, June 11, -1943

Next Monday night, Pisgah
Lodge No. 34, of Bnai Brith will
install officers at a public initia-
tion in the main auditorium of
the Jewish Community Center.
Aaron Droock, past president
of District Grand Lodge No. 6 of
Bnai Brith, will install the fol-
lowing: Isadore Starr, president;
MiltonWeinstein and Jack Leeds,
vice presidents; Max Goldhoff,
treasurer; Leonard Radner, re-
cording secretary; Leonard Be-
love, financial secretary; Ru-
dolph Meyersohn, monitor; Jack
Lawson, assistant monitor; Harr3r
Schwartz, warden; Rudolph Leit-
man, guardian; Lewis L. Stein-
berg, A. J. Piel and Robert Wal-
lach, trustees.
Rudolph Meyersohn, retiring
president, assumes the office of
monitor.
The installation program will
also include a short report by
Mr. Meyersohn, and the inau-
gural address of Mr. Starr. A
special presentation will be made
by Harry Yudkoff, president of
Greater Detroit Bnai Brith
Council and a member of the
general committee of . District
Grand Lodge, No. 6. A public
reception in honor of the newly
installed officers will follow.
- The membership drive of Pis-
gah Lodge officially ends on
June 30. Any male Jew, 21 years
of age or older, is eligible to join
Pisgah Lodge. Application blanks
can be had at the secretary's
office, 606 Murphy Building,
I Cherry 3372.

Mrs. David B. Werbe, chairman
of the Jewish Community Center
Art School, announces that the
exhibit of student work now on
display will be open through the
month of June.
The work is divided into two
sections. In the Advanced Art I
Class, first prize was awarded
to Bertha Rosenbaum, who has
studied--in Center art classes for
the past 10 years under Jascha
Schwartzman and Leon Makiel-
ski, and was recently awarded
a scholarship to the Art Student's
League in • a ,competition spon-
sored by the National Scholastic
Magazine.
Second .prize was awarded to
Simon Rosen and third prize to
Kathleen Killewald. Honorable
mention in the advanced art class
went to Jacob Avison, Louis Kor-
rnendy, Edith Mayer, Rose Pal-
moroli and Miriam Solomon.
In the elementary art. Class,
first prize went to Moishe Smith.
Selma Arkin received the second
prize and Arlene Rosen the third
prize. Honorable mention was
given Irene Gilbert, Helen Levin
and Jerry -Altman.
Members of the jury were Mes-
Former Director of Railroads
dames Edward D. Quint. Hoke
Appointed Commissioner
Levin and Milton Brown, Messrs.
of Communications
Henry Bernstein; Leon Makiel-
.ski and Stanley Twardowicz, in-
ALGIERS (JPS)—Rene Mey- structors, Milton Brown and Mrs.
er, former French railroad direc- Werbe.
tor, has been appointed by the
Committee of National Libera-
tion as Commissioner of Com-
munications and M e r chant
Marine, one of the cabinet of 14 AL MILLER
which will govern the French
7720 McNICTIOLS ROAD.
Empire.
Near Santa Barbara
A nephew of Baron Edouard
de Rothschild, Meyer was secre-
Delicatessen, Appetizers and
Dairy Products
tary of communications for Al-
geria under the Giraud adminis-
ItINTiversity 2-9781
We Deliver
tration.

WASHINGTON—The restoration of full equality of
rights for the Jews in European countries, a program of re-
lief and rehabilitation for the uprooted and despoiled Jews
of Europe, the establishment of Palestine as a self-governing
and democratic commonwealth, as well as the right for Jews
to place their case before the Peace Conference—these are

the major planks of a post-war,-,.
program formulated by the Zion- tation be provided at the earliest
ist Organization of America made
possible moment.
public here by Judge Louis E.
"Those who desire to return to
Levinthal, president of the or-
their countries of origin must be
ganization.
Formulated for the forthcom- enabled to do so; while oppor-
ing sessions of the American tunities for migration and settle-
Jewish Conference, the program ment must be afforded to others
which represents the official ZOA
platform, 'sets forth the demands who will wish to emigrate and
of the parent body of the Zionist begin life anew elsewhere.
movement in this country in re-
Demand Equal Rights
spect to the post-war position of
"On behalf of the Jews in
the Jewish communities through- European countries, we demand,
out Europe and Jewish rights
with respect to the future status further, full equality of rights
with their fellow countrymen as
of Palestine.
individuals. In those lands where
Victory Comes First
Declaring that "as Americans group rights shall be granted to
and as Jews, we seek first of all, others and where the Jewish
the victory of the forces of de- population involved desires such
mocracy, of equality and of free- rights for themselves, we urge
dom over those of tyranny and full equality of status; and we
brutal aggression to the end that urge that guarantees to this end
men everywhere may enjoy the be provided by the United Na-
Four Freedoms," the platform tions."
The concluding plank reads:
presents the following demand in
regard to the position of the Jew - "We ask, finally, that the Jews,
in a post-war reconstructed dem- through appropriate representa-
ocratic world:
tion, shall be accorded the right
"For the uprooted and despoil- to place their case directly and
ed Jews of Europe, who were the officially before any peace con-
ference that may be called, or
first victims of the assault against
any authority designated by the
democracy and civilization, we United Nations for the recon-
demand that relief and rehabiii- struction of the post war world."

Pisgah Lodge 34
Bnai Brith

zSitgir-

.0Ztamoi'

Jew in Cabinet
Named to Govern
French Empire

Buy War Bonds!

Birds of
Vengeance

O

■

111

FREDSON'SI
KOSHER

The flying fortress . . . the harbinger

UNEXCELLED FOOD
Private Dining' Room for Parties

and destruction a full measure of ven-

Restaurant and Dining Room

12017 DEXTER BLVD.

NOrthiawn 9786

of the victory to come . . . the bird of

prey, bringing to the forces of evil

geance . . . of retribution for the

crimes the enemy has committed

CANTOR PIERRE S. PINCHICK

Feiday Night, June 25 — Saturday Morning, June 26
Sunday Night, June 27
Rosh Hodesh Taniuz Service and Concert
With Max Leib, Violinist

Proceeds: Post War Relief

-

At Beth Abraham Congregation, 12517 Linwool

Secure Tickets From

1

Tuekaaer
8527 Lin wood

J. 'IL;ntlgarten
at the Shut

IT. 6,,I1sHimitit
81i55 12t1t 't.

.11f
i ner
872-
5 Li 11....•ottd

TO BUY

Two Flying

ers in their round-the-clock punishment

Fortresses

of the Axis, are hastening the day of

CHAIRMEN:

victory ... of judgment. You can have

a direct part in the glorious battle-

MAX H. GOLDHOFF

record of these great ships through

TO. 8-1346

your purchase of War Bonds during the

LEONARD L. RAMER

against mankind. These mighty

The Galician Society of Detroit Presents

5850,000.00
War Bond Drive

bomb-

Pisgah Lodge Bnai Brith Drive to buy

Two Flying Fortresses in the name of
Justice and the approaching Victory.

PHONE FOR

A SALESMAN

TO. 5-4749

SAMUEL W. LEIB

84.31 Erlf!1 Szite

