Junior Service Group Here
Forms Collection Committee

Youth Group, Under Co-Chairmanship of Four Leaders,

To

in Collecting Pledges Still Due
The Allied Jewish Campaign

Assisf

Organization of the collection committee of the Junior
Service Group, to participate in the collection of outstanding
pledges to the 1942 Allied Jewish Campaign, is now nearing
completion.
Miss Ann Brooks, Miss Esta Geller, Meyer H. Golding,
and Al Sparage have, been selected co-chairmen of the col-

lection committee.
Assisting them are the follow-
ing:
Marian Bassey, Rodelle Broder,
Freda Brooks, - Carolyn Cohen,
Lenora Ginsberg, Miriam Gold-
stein, Annette Isaacs, • Sarah
Moehlman, Bluma Nagler, Betty
Rottenberg, Sherman Shapiro,
Marry Simmer, Sybil Smith,
Florence Subelsky, Aaron Sum-
etz, Lillian Tron, Molly Tron,
Belle Weinberg, Lorraine Wolf
and Mildred Zaff.
The group will meet next
Thursday evening at the Jewish
Community Center to perfect the
collection plans and to outline
the procedure of the work.
Those wishing to participate in
the work of the collection corn-
mittee are asked to call the chair-
men at their homes, or to com-
municate with Mrs. Jean
Schlesinger at the office of the
Jewish Welfare Federation, Col-
umbia 1600.

MISS ANN BROOKS

Round Table Picks
Three Teachers for
Educational Project

UAHC Journal
Has Symposium
On Zionism

Through the efforts of the De-
troit Rourid Table of Catholics,
Jews and Protestants and the
Board of. Education, three teach-
ers have been chosen from the
Detroit Public School system to
attend the 1943 Summer educa-
tional workshops at Harvard and
Columbia Universities.
Thbse selected were Miss Ber-
nice Frederick of 2332 W. Grand
Ave., teacher at the Clifford
School, Mrs. Esther Lowe of 8051
Chippewa Ave., from the Colum-
bian School, and Miss Doris
Streater of 715 Parker Ave., East
Commerce High. MiSs Frederick
and Mrs. Lowe will attend Har-
vard, while Miss Streater will
go to Columbia.

'Liberal Judaism' Publishes
Article in Attempt to
Clarify Question

Given Opportunity
The teachers will be given an
opportunity to solve whatever
problems of intercultural rela-
tionships or intergroup tensions
they may have experienced or
feel will be beneficial to the De-
troit Public School system. They
will be able to discuss whatever
issues may be of immediate con-
cern to administrators and other
teachers. They will also receive
the opportunities of guidance for
individual projects on planning
courses of study, constructing
units of work and planning pro-
grams of testing and evaluation.

The Contributions
Funds for the three scholar-
ships are being provided by the
Jewish Community Council, Na-
tional Society for Advancement
of Colored People, Christ Church
Chapel of Grosse Pointe, Center
Woodward Christian and the
Central Methodist Church.

Sanford Perlis
Elected Boys'
State Governor

Central High Senior Rules
Over Annual Wolverine
Boys' Convention

Sanford Perlis, Central high all
`A' student who reigned as the
Boy governor of the Wolverine
Boys' State in East Lansing this
week, will be graduated during
Summer school.
Elected by a vote of 394 to 255
Saturday morning, Perlis was in-
augurated as Boy Governor of
the sixth annual convention
sponsored by the Michigan Amer-
ican American Legion during in-
stallation of officers last Satur-
day night. Gov. Harry F. Kelly.
and State Supreme Court Jus-
tice Walter H. Northern attend-
ed.
Perlis, a member of the Athe-
nian Party (the 727 youthful at-
tendants were divided into two
parties, the other being Trojans)
defeated Fred Keister, 16, Ionia.
Perlis is the son of Dr. and Mts.
M. S. Perlis, 3337 Glynn.
Perlis left his duties for one
day to Lt. Gov. Robert Hull of
Highland. Park to attend the
graduation exercises Tuesday. He
was sponsored by the Julius Ro-
senwald Post 218, American Le-
gion.
The present president of the
Junior Congregation. of Shaarey
Zedek, Perlis has displayed lead-
ership qualities in Jewish youth
activities as well as among his
public and high school class-
mates.
At the age of 15, the young Boy
Governor was a counselor at the
Merrill Palmer School summer
camp. This year, he will be on
the staff of the Merrill Palmer
School summer city project.

Page Five

THE JEWISH NEWS

Friday, June 25, 1943

MISS ESTA GELLER

Marshall Lodge Closes

Successful Bond Drive

Successful completion of its sec-
ond War Bond Drive within four
months has just been announced
by Louis Marshall Lodge of Bnai
Brith, through its War Bond
chairman, William B. Chatman.

Prof. C. C. Barnes of Wayne
University, Mr. Stanley Dia-
mond, of the Social Studies De-
partment of the Board of Educa-
tion, Manley Erwin, Supervisor
of Instructions a,nd Dr. Marion
Edman of the Language Depart-
ment of the Detroit Public
Schools have served as the com-
mittee in selecting the teachers.
Members • of the Round Table
who convened on Friday, June 13,
in behalf of this project, were:
Rabbi Leon Fram, Isaac Franck,
Rev. John Q. Mayne, director of
the Round Table; Dr. Marion Ed-
nan, language education depart-
ment of the Detroit Public
Schools; Gloster Currant, execu-
tive secretary of the N.A.A.C.P.;
I Stanley Diamond, social studies
department of the Board of Edu-
cation.

The conflicting attitudes toward
Zionism among Reform Jews
form the basis of a three-cor-
nered symposium in the current
issue of Liberal Judaism, official
organ of the Union of American
Hebrew Congregations just is-
sued in New York. These author-
itative statements are published
in the hope that "they will serve
to clarify a question that has
long agitated multitudes of our
people."
Participants in this discussion
are Rabbi Felix A. Levy of
Emanuel Congregation of Chica-
go, who holds that "religion and
land are alike necessary to the
life and preservation of Israel,
and cannot ever be sundered."
Rabbi William H. Fineshriber
of Congregation Keneseth Israel,

Philadelphia, who believes that
"Zionist theory is the intellectual
scaffolding for a fantastic struc-
ture to be built on the quick-
sands of fear and despair," and
he advocates United Nations rule
over Palestine "as the unique
Holy Land of the World."
Rabbi Solomon B. Freehof of
Rodef Shalom Temple, Pitts-
burgh, who quests a definition of
world Jewry that may embody
the strength of Zionist and anti-
Zionist ideals so as to serve as
"the basis for increasing Jewish
reconciliation . . . a design for
Concord between Reform Judaism
and Liberal Zionism."

Editorially Liberal Judaism an-
alyzes the epic defense of the
Warsaw ghetto and condemns
those irresponsible extremists
who recently provoked the epi-
thet "Alien Palestinians" in the
United States Senate.
The front cover bears the por-
trait of Prof. Nelson Glueck,
whose remarkable recent dis-
coveries in the Jordan Valley are
described within the magazine.

Buy War. Bonds !

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Fr. John F. Quinn, S. J., Dean
of the College of Arts and Science
at the University of Detroit, will
be -the speaker at a luncheon in
GREENBUSH, MICHIGAN
the Detroit Leland Hotel, Wed-
nesday, June 30. Subject of his On Prate Water Hwy. 196 Miles North of Detroit on Lake Huron
Mr. Chatman pointed out that address will be "Problems of
most of the Bonds sold were in World Reform."
small denominations, indicating
that the prime purpose of the
Robinson's Open Monday Evening Until 9:00
drive—to educate persons of
small means in the advisability of
•
Bond purchases—was effective.

This is the first lodge to an-
nounce fulfillment of its quota in
the $10,000,000 War Bond cam-
paign conducted by District No. 6
of Bnai Brith.

-

The quota was exceeded by 15
per cent. Success of the drive has
resulted in a determination that
the lodge continue its campaign
to sell War Bonds, with emphasis
on small denomination securities,
for the duration of the war.
At a recent executive commit-
tee meeting of Louis Marshall
Lodge, it was decided that many
new activities be conducted dur-
Refugee Service Aided
ing the coming year, so as to es-
tablish a definite community
Ex-German. Army Chef
service in Bnai Brith aside from
A refugee who served as a the nationwide activities regu-
cook for the Kaiser's picked larly conducted.
forces in World War I has just
received an honorable discharge
Open
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Evenings
from the United States Army af-
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duty for Uncle Sam in World
War II. He is Cpl. Alphonse M.
DEXTER
Haase *hom the National Refu-
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his chosen profession shortly af-
ter his arrival in America.
MICHIGAN'S LARGEST
Born in Berlin, he came to the
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