Page Six THE JEWISH Prominent Layman Views Jewish Vocational Service Br HARVEY H. GOLDMAN • NEWS Mrs. VanAuken Butzel Heads Detroit Committee Delegate to Zion To Honor Dr. Chaim Weizmann Parley in Chicago Next Monday, Dr. Chaim Weiz- science, literature and govern- . President Detroit Jewish Vocational Service Non - Jewish Leaders Join in Formulating Program to Aid Palestine —Photo, Jewish Vocational Bulletin The Jewish Vocational Service helps to guide individuals into jobs "for which they are best fitted." Learning about occupations, as this youth group is doing, is one of the steps in career guidance. The few years which have passed since the Jewish Voca- tional Service of Detroit was organized have seen much prog- ress and have- brought a much wider horizon to the viewpoint and scope of the activities of the Jewish Vocational Service and to its responsibilities in the community. It started, like most such agencies, as simply a job- placement bureau. Whether we<, like it or not, we have to face fications can be exercised. Let's face something else. We the fact that Jewish communi- ties need placement bureaus. are "on the spot." The envy dir- Most of our people can find use- ected at Jewish business men is ful employment through the ordi- partially due to the fact that we nary channels; but some of them, are concentrated in just a few whether the fault is actual dis- lines of industry, that in these crimination or a psychology in- lines we are proportionately more numerous than our repre- herent in them- sentation in the population at selves, need large. Vocational counseling can, help. And so ‘ from the standpoint of sound during the mid-E public relations, give considera- die and later If tion to recommending those lines '30s, the Jewish of endeavor where we are not Vocational Ser- already so predominant, at the vice developed same time widening the occupa- an enviable rec- tional horizons of the people who ord in increas- are being served. ing from year to Agency is Effective .,. year its service The Jewish Vocational Service in finding jobs. H. H. Goldman of Detroit has, within the limits Services to Refugees When the refugee problem was of its manpower, done a reason- at its height, and when each ble job of acquainting the Jew- metropolitan community faced ish community at large with its the problem of absorbing these services. The agency has been refugees so that they would not unusually effective, through the become a charge upon the public spoken and the written word, in at large, Detroit was fortunate in getting its message across to having a . well-organized place- various groups—youth organiza- ment service which was already tions, parent organizations, men's well accepted among employers. clubs, and women's clubs. Still Some of these refugees were more is to be done in the way of education, in the way of over- readily placeable; some of them, coming prejudices in favor of or however, had no skills, and train- ing courses had to be establish- against various types of occupa- tions, in the way of youth guid- ed to provide them with skills ance programs, in the way of in trades where jobs were avail- more aggressive programs for able. the parents of these youths. War-Time Problems Mere job placement is just a The war has brought on new start. But a program of fitting conditions. Practically every one the right peg into the right hole, who wants to work can find a of placing our people in jobs in job, but we have already enter- which they will be happy, in ed the period—as some of our which they will have an op- veterans are already returning portunity to grow and to earn from service and as some of the the comforts and some of the plants engaged in war manufact- luxuries of life—fitting them into uring are even now curtailing places of endeavor where they their production—when more can fill a sound place in our and more people will need to community, avoiding jealousies seek jobs. The situation which — that is a program that is we are about to face brings the worthy of every earnest effort realization that the mere place- of the Jewish Vocational ment of people of our faith in Service, of the employment and jobs is by no means the sole vocational services in each com- responsibility or even the princi- munity, of every forum, and of pal responsibility of an employ- every organization that concerns ment or vocational - service. itself with this vital problem. The principal responsibility of Editor's Note: The new offices such an organization is to guide of the Jewish Vocational Service individuals into jobs which will are located at 320 W. Lafayette, give them opportunities for serv- telephone CA. 8570. ing themselves and the rest of the community. It is the function of the agency to direct people Farband Folk Schools into the kind of work for which Celebrate New Term - they are best fitted, in which At Supper Sunday they will be most happy. and in Farband Folk School of De- which they will have possibilities troit will celebrate the opening of self-development and of at- of the new school year with a taining a de4rable future. concert-supper Sunday evening Facing Facts at the Lee Plaza Hotel, 2240 W. Discovering t h e occupations Grand Blvd. each individual is best fitted for Efraim Auerbach poet and ties in with the problem within journalist, will be the guest each local community. Every speaker. Canter. Carl Urstein man's aptitude has to be con- of Chicago will present a pro- sidered in the light of the op- gram of Hebrew and Yiddish portunities for exercising these songs. aptitudes within his community. The affair is conducted in be- Proper vocational counseling in- half of the annual campaign of volves, therefore, not merely an the Farband Folk Schools for analysis of each man's qualifica- $7,500 towards their annual tions, but an analysis of the oc- budget. cupational possibilities in the The program will start at 8 community where these quali- p. m. Friday, November 24, • 1944 mann, renowned scientist, presi- dent of the World Zionist Organ- ization and of the Jewish Agency for Palestine, will attain his 70th birthday. .Cor the observance of the event in the United States, a national committee, headed by the Hon- orable Felix Frankfurter, As- sociate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, has been formed. The Committee, of which Ed- mund I. Kaufmann of Washing- ton, D. C., former president of ton, Zionist Organization of Am- erica, and Samuel Zemurray, of New Orleans, La., president of the United Fruit Company, are president and chairman of the board respectively, is comprised of Jewish and non-Jewish leaders in all parts of the nation. The following Detroiters have been invited to serve on the lo- cal committee, under the honor- ary chairmanship of Fred M. Butzel: Dr. Leo M. Franklin, Dr. B. Benedict Glazer, Dr. A. M. Hershman, Rabbi Leon Fram, Charles Rubiner, Nate S. Shap- ero, Judge - Charles C. Simons, David LeVine, Henry Soss, Sid- ney J. Allen, William Hordes, Mrs. J. H. Ehrlich, Prof. William Haber, Henry Meyers, Leo But- zel, Justice Henry Butzel, Philip Slomovitz, Mrs. Joseph M. Welt, Abraham Srere, Henry Wine- man, Isidore Sobeloff, Andrew Wineman, Meyer Prentis, Fred Ginsburg, Max Osnos, Harry Frank, Israel Davidson, Irwin I. Cohn, Morris L. Schaver, Mrs. Albert Kahn, Harry Grant, Dr. Hugo Freund, Israel Himelhoch, Abe Kasle and Leon Kay. Publication of "Dr. Chaim Weizmann: Statesman and Sci- entist,' a great book containing evaluations of Dr. Weizmann's work by the world's outstanding men and women in the field of Mrs. Howell VanAuken, De- mocratic National Committee- man for Michigan, represented Detroit a the Regional Confer- ence on Palestine held at the Stevens Hotel, Chicago, on Tues- day, under the direction of Di. Howard M. LoSourd. Non-Jewish leaders of public opinion discussed the Palestine question and formulated a pro-. gram to aid the development -of the Jewish National Home. The conference was sponsored by the Christian Council on Palestine and the American Palestine Committee, in cooper- ation with the American Federa- tion of Labor, the Congress. of Industrial Organizations, the Free World AsSociation, the Unitarian Fellowship for Social Justice and the United Christian Council for Democracy. Speakers at the Conference included Dr. Carl J. Friedrich, Harvard University; Rabbi Sol- omon Goldman, Congregation Anshe Emet, Chicago; Dr. Le- Sourd; Dr. A. William Loos, Chicago Church Federation; Dr. Francis E. McMahon, University of Chicago; Dr. Reinhold Nie- buhr, Union Theological Semin- ary; Col. Albert A. Sprague, Chicago business and civic lead- er; Dr. Carl Hermann Voss, executive secretary, Christian Council on Palestine, and William B. Ziff, author and publisher. The American Palestine Com- mittee, headed by Senator Wag- ner of New York, is the vehicle for the expression of the sympa- thy and good will of Christian America for the movement to re- establish the Jewish National Home in Palestine. Judge Frank A. Picard is chairman of the Michigan Com- Portraits mittee. Weddings The Christian Council on Pal- estine is headed by Dr. Henry Children A. Atkinson, and represents A Specialty 2,000 Christian ministers and re- ligious educators. - Ask Diamond Workers To Return to Belgium JERUSALEM, (JTA)—Promis- ing good working conditions, the Belgian and Dutch consuls have invited Jewish diamond workers and merchants of their respective countries, who fled here after the German invasion, to return home to continue their work. ment, was announced this week by The Dial Press, 461 Fourth Ave., New York. The book is edited by Meyer W. Weisgal. It will be ready for circulation on Monday. Bnai Brith Creates Four-Part National Youth Commission WASHINGTON — A four-part national Bnai Brith Youth Or- ganization for Jewish boys and girls of high school age, for Jew- ish young men over high school age and under:',21, and for Jewish young women over high school age and under 25 was launched at the first meeting of the newly- organized Bnai Brith Youth Corn- mission. The, four groups within the framework of the Bnai Brith Youth Organization a r e the Aleph Zadik Aleph, for Jewish boys in high school or of high school age; Bnai Brith Girls for Jewish girls in high school or of high school age; the Bnai Brith Young Men • for Jewish boys above high school age and under 21; and the Bnai Brith Young Women for women above high school age and under 25. The Youth Commission was created by Bnai Brith to govern the activities of the entire youth movement. Help Preserve Our Ceremonial Objects! • A Detroit collector who treats Jewish ceremonial objects with reverence and with the objective of preserving our histor- ical values is anxious to secure COLLECTORS' ITEMS Articles of gold and silver which have artistic and historical value will be accepted at a good price. BARNETT STUDIO Reply to Box 7'77 % The Jewish News 2114 Penobscot Bldg. Detroit 26, Mich. PHOTOGRAPHY 9733 Linwood TY. 6-8684 Living Room Masterpieces The most distinctive showing in De- troit. Unusual pieces for the living room, library and hall 18th Century Tufted Chair '89" Of steel spring inner construction, covered in rich matelasse in a choice of colors. A comfortable chair in an unusual design. Carved Crystal Lamp . . $69.50 Smart Tier Table . . . $24.75 Budget Terms Arranged Open Every Evening E. Robinson In Charge UN. 1-2570 J 7630 W. McNICHOLS ROAD THE CHAIR STORE OF AMERICA