Friday
December. 29 1944
THE
$12,000,000 Bond Record
Set by Local Jewish Groups
.
Jewish Program
To Be Broadcast
Sunday on WJR,
15,000 Gallants Thanked by Nate S. Shapero; Expects'
N. Y. Temple Emanuel Choir,
Oversubscription of 6th War Loan; Wayne Com-
Milstein to be Featured
mittee Already Planning 7th Loan
With Philharmonic
Another record has been set by Jewish groups in the
6th War Loan campaign, according to final reports made
this week.
Knollwood Country Club expects to match the total of
more than $5,000,000 raised in the 5th War Loan.
Franklin Hills Country Club raised $2,283,237.50.
Norman Snider and Maurice@
Seligman, co-chairmen of the
Shaarey Zedek drive, expect to
beat the total of $1,260,000 raised I-1
in 'the last drive. Of the sum of V rganized by JDC; 9
more than $1000000 already sub-
scribed, $500,000 was raised in
bond sales at a rally arranged by
the Men's Club.
The American Jewish Joint
$12,000,000 Total
Distribution Committee, aligning
Detroit Section of the National itself with governmental, inter-
Council of Jewish Women sold governmental and voluntary
$500,000 in bonds.
At an auction rally conducted
at the meeting of the Detroit
Lodge 1374 of Bnai Brith on
Tuesday evening, a total of
$30,500 was raised in war
bonds. Max Rosner collected all
the items and Fred Epps was
the auctioneer.
The Women's Auxiliary of the
Home for Aged oversubscribed
its $25,000 quota.
At a rally held at Cass high
school on Dec. 15, Mrs. Julius
Ring reported that the Jewish
groups in Detroit rank first
among the bond salesmen—hav-
ing sold bonds for a total of
$12,000,000.
Continue Efforts
DR. J. J. GOLUB
The 15,000 Gallants in Detroit's
retail stores who sold 6th War
agencies
in preparing for post-
Loan bonds will continue their
patriotic activities to the end of war health needs of Europe's war
the year, Nate S. Shapero, Wayne victims, announces the formation
County War Bond chairman an- of the Committee on Health, Nu-
trition and Medical Service.
nounces.
Dr. Jacob J. Golub, director of
"We expect a substantial over-
subscription in individual's war the Hospital for Joint DiOases,
bond purchases" said Mr. Sha- was named chairman. He has
been on the JDC executive com-
pero.
mittee for many years, and was a
Prepare for War Loan
Mr. Shapero paid a high trib- member of a health_ commission
ute to the retail Gallants of with similar objectives which
Wayne County for the way they JDC sent abroad after the last
have handled the double job of war.
The special committee, pattern-
serving the public during the past
30 days—a time when shortage of ed on a similar JDC health com-
help, record breaking' demands mittee organized in 1921, will
for merchandise on the part of concern itself with supplement-
the public, a Treasury Depart- ing post war public health pro-
ment quota of more than 22 mil- grams now being maintained or
lion dollars coincided. He also considered by the governmental
expressed his gratification over and intergovernmental agencies
the manner in which the retailers engaged in similar activities. It is
clubbed together to decorate the also concerned with the rebuild-
streets and stimulate the 6th War ing of the special health facili-
Loan with the largest amount of ties, many of which were con-
publicity ever devoted to a public structed with JDC help in the
service cause in the state of past 30 years; and which the Ger-
mans now have destroyed.
Michigan.
Other members of the newly
The Wayne County Retailers
War Finance Committee is al- constituted committee are:
Dr. Alfred E. Cohn, Rockefeller In-
ready making plans for the 7th stitute
of Medical Research; Dr. Louis
War Loan, and will continue to I. Dublin, statistician and vice-presi-
dent, Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.
operate its headquarters at 157 and
assistant to the national chairman
Griswold St., where the staff is of the American Red Cross; Dr. Morris
Fishbein, editor of the Journal of the
busy receiving reports of bond American
Medical Association ; Dr. Iago
sales. Because bonds purchased Galdston, executive secretary. Commit-
tee
on
Medical
information, New York
up to the end of the year count Academy of Medicine;
Dr. A. J. Rongy
in the campaign, the sales of the and Boris Pregel, co-chairmen of OSE;
retail division can not be totalled Dr. David Davis Rutstein, deputy com-
of health. City of New York;
and announced until early in Jan- missioner
Dr. Abel Wolman, professor of sanitary
engineering,
Johns Hopkins School of
uary.
Engineering; Dr. Leon Wulman, sec-
Health Committe
Golub in Charge
.
.
Smith Aide Boasts
Of Postwar Fascism
Confident that Fascism has a
future in the U. S., Homer
Maertz, one of the 26 defendents
at the mass sedition trial in
Washington, just declared a mis-
trial, told a reporter here:
"When the time comes the big
boys will show themselves as
leaders." • Maertz, who claims he
is the link man between all anti-
Semetic and native Fascist
groups in this country, said: "You
won't be able to call us fascists
or Nazis after the war . . . Lind-
bergh isn't through. Neither is
Father Coughlin. Everybody will
have a place, even the crackpots.
They're on the right side."
Homer Maertz, a delegate at
G. L. K. Smith's America First
Party's national convention, in-
troduced a resolution to deport
all Jews from the U. S. and
sterilize those who remain.
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M. Green & Son
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Page Seven
j ifWISH NEWS
An all-Jewish program, featur-
ing Nathan Milstein, eminent
violinist, and the Temple Eman-
uel, New York, Choir in Bloch's
"Israel's Symphony," will be
presented by the New York
Philharmonic over Station WJR
at 3 p. m. this Sunday. The pro-
gram will be broadcast nation-
wide by CBS.
Mr. Milstein will be soloist
with the Philharmonic and will
play Bruch G Minor Violin Con-
certo, Mendelssohn's "Ruy Blas"
Overture and Bloch's "Israel's
Symphony."
The singers to be featured in
the presentation of Bloch's Sym-
phony are: Barbara Stevenson,
soprano; Marcella Uhl, contralto;
Meville Landor, baritone. They
will be assisted by the choral
ensemble of women's voices of
the Temple Emanuel Choir of
New York, directed by Lazare
S a mins ki.
Bloch's "Israel's Symphony" is
famous as a great interpretation
of Jewish sentiments. The title
was accepted by Bloch at the
suggestion of Romaine Rolland.
Adler, Malcuzynski
Symphony Soloists
The first concerts by the De-
troit Symphony in 1945 promise
to be sensational.
Witold Malcuzynski, eminent
Polish pianist, appears with the
symphony on Jan. 4. In the
course of his brief career, Eu-
rope, South America and North
America have come under the
spell of this sensational pianist.
Larry Adler, harmonica vir-
tuoso, returns to play with Karl
Krueger on Jan. - 6. The program
will be heard, over Mutual,
coast-to-coast, for an hour. Adler
will be the first soloist with the
orchestra on this series of
broadcasts. The program will
consist of Beethoven's Fifth
Symphony, the Berger Harmon-
ica Concerto, Griffes' "Pleasure
Dome of Kubla Khan," First
Romanian Rhapsody of Enesco
and the Ravel "Bolero" for Or-
chestra and Harmonica.
Flint Will Honor
Israel Sendlers'
25th Anniversary
Community-Wide Event to
Be Held Tonight; M. Ru-
densky of N.Y. to Speak
The Jewish National Fund
Council of Flint is transform-
ing the 25th wedding anniversary
O'Brien. Selects 5
Jewish Assistants
Among the assistants appoint-
ed by Prosecutor Gerald. K.
O'Brien in his staff of 40 are the
following:
Arthur L. Robbins of 4726
Buena Vista, 36, a 1931 graduate
of Wayne University Law School,
who will be in charge of the
civil division.
Ralph Garber of 2470 Long-.
fellow, 46, 1924 graduate of De-
troit College of Law, who served
under McCrea.
Harry B. Letzer, 42, who also
served under McCrea.
Walter D. Schmier of 18000
Santa Barbara, now attorney for
the Army Air Technical Service
Command in Detroit, recently
honorably discharged from U. S.
Navy with rank of lieutenant.
Nathan J. Kaufman of 2470
Elmhurst, former president of
Graham Paige Local UAW CIO,
admitted to law practice in 1929.
-
-
Committee Selects Youth
Books for Religious Week
MR. AND MRS. ISRAEL
SENDLER
of Mr. and Mrs. Israel Sendler
into a community-wide cerebra-
cion tonight.
Honoring the two leaders, a
special event has been arranged
for this evening at the Flint Jew-
ish Community Center.
Mordecai Rudensky of New
York is bringing a special mes-
sage from the national J. N. F.
headquarters to the celebrators.
Rabbi Hurwitz has arranged
the program in which commun-
ity leaders from Flint and De-
troit will participate.
In extending an invitation to
friends in Flint and Detroit and
other communities, emphasis was
placed by the Flint J. N. F.
Council on the couple's desire
not to receive personal gifts and
that they prefer that gifts be
made to the Jewish National
Fund for land redemption in
Palestine.
The Sendlers followed a sim-
ilar procedure when their son,
Simson, was Bar Mitzvah • two
years ago, and a sum of approx
imately $1,000 was contributed
at that time to the JNF.
The Sendlers also have two
daughters, Freda, a graduate of
E9 En/Cy
The Rev. Joseph Mayne, execu-
tive secretary of the Detroit
Round Table of Catholics, Jews
and Protestants, announces
Detroit has been chosen as the
city to furnish the Relicri—s Book
Week list of Jewish youth books
to be featured nationally by the
National Conference of Chris-.
tians and Jews during Religious
Book Week celebrated annually
in Michigan on the anniversary
of the burning of the books )n
Germany.
The committee consists of
Rabbi Leon Fram, Temple Israel,
chairman; S i m c h a Rubenstein,
educational director, Congrega-
tion Shaarey Zedek; Mrs. Arthur
L. Goulson, librarian, Temple
Beth El.
the University of Michigan, who
is now associated with MGM, and
Reva, a U. of M. student.
William Hordes, president of
the Detroit J. N. F. Council, has
issued a statement in behalf of
the Detroit co-workers of the
Sendlers congratulating them on
their anniversary and commend-
ing them for their devotion to
the cause.
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December 29, 1944 - Image 7
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- Publication:
- The Detroit Jewish News, 1944-12-29
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