Friday, Detemlier 3, 1943

THE JEWISH NEWS

Local Bnai Brith Lodges
Honor Centennial Dec. 12

100 Detroiters
Guests of Hillel
This Sunday

Bnai Brith Leaders Meet to Spur
Campaign for New Members

* 4, *

Henry Monsky, President of Supreme Grand Lodge, to Be
Bnai Brith Women's Council
Guest Speaker at Rally at Temple Beth El; Rabbi
to Make Annual Trip
Folkman to Initiate Hundreds of New Members
To Ann Arbor
On Sunday, December 12, all local Bnai Brith groups
Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation
under the sponsorship of Greater Detroit Bnai Brith Coun-
cil will commemorate the 100th anniversary of Bnai Brith a the University of Michigan is
with an afternoon and evening program at Temple Beth EL preparing for the annual pilgrim-
Henry Monsky, president of Supreme Lodge of Bnai age of Young Women's Council
of Bnai Brith of Detroit, on Sun-
Brith, will be the guest speaker of the evening.

A past president of District
Grand Lodge No. 6, Mr. Monsky
is now serving his second three-
year term as president s of the
Supreme Lodge. He has been ac-
tive in non-sectarian and Jewish
organizations and his most re-
cent effort was the calling of the
Pittsburgh Conference which
culminated in the convening of
the American Jewish Conference
I in which he played a prominent
role.
Initiate Members
The afternoon's session will
feature the initiation of a large
class of candidates who were
obtained in a city-wide mem-
bership drive conducted by Pis-
gah, Louis Marshall, Detroit,
Theoder Herzl and East Side
Lodges. Aaron Rosenberg, mem-
bership chairman, states that
half of the 1,500 quota set for
the drive will be initiated at
that time.
The initiatory exercises will
be recited by the degree team
of Pisgah Lodge.
Rabbi Jerome D. Folkman of
Grand Rapids, president of Dis-
trict Grand Lodge No. 6, will be
the speaker at the afternoon pro-
gram. Harry Yudkoff, second
vice-president of the District,
will extend greetings in behalf
of the District Grand Lodge. All
candidates are requested to re-
port at 1:30 p. m. for registra-
tion. The initiatory exercises to
which the public is invited will
commence at 2:30 p. m. in the
Brown Memorial Chapel of
Temple Beth El.
Evening Program
The evening program will
commence at 8:30 p. m. in the
main auditorium of Temple
Beth El. To accommodate all
those who desire to hear Mr.
Monsky, the Brown Memorial
Chapel has been wired with a
public address system. Louis H.
Schostak, president of t h e
Greater Detroit Bnai Brith
Council, Dr. B. Benedict Glazer,
Rabbi of Temple Beth El, and
Mrs. Charles Solovich, president
of Womens' District Grand
Lodge, will extend greetings. A
musical program has been ar-
ranged, including Henry Siegl,
concert violinist, Anna Awis, so-
prano, and Karl Haas, accom-
panist.

JDC Sends Aides
To Middle East
and S. America

NEW YORK, (JTA) — The
Joint Distribution Committee an-
nounced that it is sending Reu-
ben B. Resnik, former executive
director of the Jewish Welfare
Federation of Dallas, Tex., to
Istanbul to supervise its expand-
ing relief package service which
is sending thousands of packages
monthly to European Jews who
have found refuge in Asiatic Rus-
sia.
Resnik also will attempt to
speed the emigration of 5,000
Jewish children and adults from
the Balkans to Palestine. He will
word together with the Middle
East Advisory Committee of the
JDC, in Jerusalem.
Another Texas social worker,
Jacob B. Lightman, former ex-
ecutive director of the Jewish
community of Houston, is being
sent by the JDC to South Amer-
ica where he will attempt to
further the economic and social
integration of the 125,000 Jewish
immigrants in Latin America, the
announcement said. He also will
help to co-ordinate welfare ac-
tivities in the older Jewish com-
munities.

Buy War Bonds!

HENRY MONSKY

Labor Committee

Demands Death
Of White Paper

day. One hundred members of
the Pisgah, Deborah, Naomi and
Rebecca Gratz chapters of Young
Women's Council will be the
Foundation's guests.
The program will include a
tour of the campus, a tea, buffet
supper, and entertainment at the
Foundation. The guests will also
attend a concert at the Lydia
Mendelssohn Theater. Artists
who will perform include Arthur
Hackett, tenor, and Joseph
Brinkman, pianist, both of the
University of Michigan faculty.
Joyce Siegan of Benton Harbor
and Sylvia Modiest of Detroit
are chairmen of the event.
Invitations to attend the tea
and reception during the after-
noon have been issued to Army
and Navy trainees stationed at
the University of whom approxi-
mately 400 are Jewish.
The Hillel hospitality com-
mittee for the event includes
Mrs. Mae Lieberman, house
mother; Hannah Katz, Tampa,
Fla.; Elise Zeme, Detroit, and
Estelle Sager, Chicago.

A group of Bnai Brith work-
ers who met to further plans
for the city-wide membership
drive and the celebration of the
100th anniversary of Bnai Brith
at Temple Beth El, on Dec. 12.
Sitting (left to right): Mrs.
Florence Adler, president, Louis
Marshall Women; Mrs. Leonard
M. Sims, president, Pisgah
Women; Louis H. Schostak,
president, Greater Detroit Bnai
Brith Council; Mrs. Celia Lebo-
vitz, president, Theodor Herzl
Women; Mrs. Annetta Ruby,
East Side Women's membership
chairman.
Standing: Charles Nathanson,
membership chairman, Detroit
Lodge; Rudolph Meyersohn, edi-
tor, souvenir book; Samuel W.
Leib, general committee of the
District; Isadore Starr, president,

Probe of Palestine Officials
Asked for Interference
With Jews

Pisgah Lodge; David R. Rosen,
president, Louis Marshall Lodge;
Louis Eder, president, Theodor
Herzl Lodge; Fred E. Sherman,
president, East Side Lodge.

Bnai Moshe Sisterhood,
Men's Club Plan Supper

A joint supper and card party
will be held Sunday, Dec. 12, by
the Sisterhood of Congregation
Bnai Moshe and the Men's Club
in the main hall of the Syna-
gogue.

Mrs. Manuel Engel, Mrs. Ethel
Goodman and Mrs. Joseph Hie-
man are chairmen of the affair,
with Harold Haas in charge of
the ticket sale. The public is in-
vited.

The .25aiouteis

The National Labor Committee
for Palestine, at its two-day con-
vention in New York, demanded
immediate revocation of the
White Paper, cessation of inter-
ference with Jewish reconstruc-
tion efforts and the creation of
an interparliamentary committee
to investigate and try "the offi-
cials in Palestine who are using
British and United Nations vol-
unteers and police, not in the
war against the Nazis, but in the
war against Jewish Palestine—
the most loyal ally of world de-
mocracy."

SHIRT

with Invisible

ACTIVE SWING

Dr. Israel Goldstein was the
speaker at the concluding session
of the conference. Other speak-
ers included Dr. Stephen S. Wise
and Emil Ludwig.

A national quota of $1,250,000
was adopted by the Labor Com-
mittee (Gewerkshaften) for the
coming year. (It was announced
two weeks ago that Detroit's
quota in the national drive will
be $75,000).
Joseph Schlossberg, prominent
labor leader, was re-elected na-
tional chairman of the committee.

Detroit ORT Group
To Discuss The Jew
In Post-War World'

Mrs. J. H. Ehrlich, Mrs. Joseph
Welt and Mrs. William Grahm
will speak on various phases of
"The Jew in the Post War
World," at a symposium of the
Detroit branch of the ORT, this
Friday, at 1:30 p. m.,, at the Jew-
ish Center. Mrs. Moritz Kahn
will be chairman. A dessert
luncheon will precede the meet-
ing.

New officers of the Detroit
branch of the ORT are: Mrs.
Moritz Kahn, president; Mrs.
Harry Becker, Mrs. Nathan Si-
mons and Mrs. Herbert Warner,
vice-presidents; Miss Elizabeth
Finley, corresponding secretary;
Mrs. B. David Ruby, recording
secretary; Mrs. David Rugoff,
treasurer; Mrs. Fred Gottfurcht,
financial secretary; Mrs. Wm.
Grahm, chairman of the board;
Mrs. • J. H. Copeland, chairman
of contributions; Mrs. Mitchell
Robinson, War Bond chairman;
Mrs. Oliver Ruby, social chair-
man; Mrs. Harry Becker, chair-
man of publicity.

Plate the unusual "give" under
the arm as Snead drives a long
one down the middle.

The Active Swing Shirt . . . A revoiu-
tionery new idea in sports shirts for the
man whose shirts bind across the shoulder
with swing or service. Hidden under the
arm, and normally invisible, there's° an in-
sert of French ribbing that stretches as
you stretch, twists as you twist. Custom
single needled sleeve, finely tailored of
rayon challis . . . in tan, natural, blue, or
heather green-gray. Sizes small, medium,

IN PLAIN CHALLIS.

7.50

THE SAME MODEL IN RAYON
GABARDINE PLAIDS AT MOO

large.

O

MAIL AND TELEPHONE ORDERS
GIVEN SPECIAL ATTENTION

O

SCHOLNICK'S IS DETROIT'S
GIFT ROBE CENTER

WASHINGTON BLVD., at GRAND RIVER

