Friday, January 4, 1946 THE JEWISH NEWS Page Rye Lehrer Will Address Cultural Program Of Center-Council Gewerkshaften Campaign Rally Sunday Afternoon Committee Formed to Aid Hebrew School Project Helen Waren to Be Guest Speaker at Opening Conference of 1946 .Drive for $ 125,000 to Aid Palestine Labor; Local Groups Invited to Attend A group of officers, members of the board and friends of the United Hebrew Schools of Detroit, acting upon the recommendations of the schools' board of directors who last week endorsed the movement to erect a new building to provide for the needs of children in th northwest section of Detroit who are not receiving a Jewish education at the present time, mobilized their forces to assist in making plans for the new building a reality. Representatives of scores of Jewish organizations in De- troit will participate in the opening rally of the Detroit Pal- estine Labor Committee, in the interest of the 1946 Gewerk- shaften drive for a goal of $125,000, in the Brown Memorial Chapel of Temple Beth El, at 1:30 p. m. this Sunday, Jan. 6. Miss Helen Waren, Broadway stage star who was the first Jewish American civilian to visit 4) the displaced persons camps and Europe, (Sept. 17th) she has at- who personally witnessed the tempted to bring a message horrors experi- directly from these suffering enced by Jewish Jews to those in a position to help survivors in them. Europe, will be The Gewerkshaften has the guest speaker. cooperation of 3,000 labor, fra- Jules Yanover, ternal and folk organizations in Detroit Sym- 400 communities, and Detroit's phony violinist, unit has enlisted the support of will be the guest more than 200 organizations. The artist. He will program sponsored is of a two- be * accompanied fold nature: by Rebecca; : 1. Annual Palestine Histadrut Fr ohm an. Mr.: campaigns to provide -the Hista- Y a n o v er, who Miss Waren was recently discharged from the drut with funds for the strength- army, is one of Detroit's out- ening of its economic, social and cultural institutions and to en- standing musicians. able it to initiate new projects Schaver Gives Report for the benefit of the country Reports will be submitted at and its laboring population. Sunday's meeting by Morris 2. Information and propaganda Schaver, chairman of the Ge- werkshaften drives for the past programs to acquaint 'the Ameri- 16 years; Harry Schumer, treas- can public with the cooperative urer; J. L. Wolock, in behalf of forms of social and economic the organizations committee; life realized in Palestine. Samuel Rabinowitz, director of the drive, and other campaign leaders. Greetings will be presented to the conference by Isidore Sobe- loff in behalf of the Jewish Wel- fare Federation; Philip Slomovitz will speak for the Zionist "Coun- cil and Isaac Franck for the Jew- ish Community Council. Resolutions will be submitted by a special resolutions commit- tee, and the conference will act on plans for the year's drive, in addition to electing officers. To Present Quota Louis Levine is chairman of the committee which. will propose the year's quota. Organizations which have not yet selected representatives to Sunday's conference are asked to do so at once and to make certain that they will be rep- resented at the sessions.' Helen Waren, the guest speak- er, who left the Broadway hit, "The Searching Wind" to play the leading role in the overseas com- pany of the play, "Ten Little Indians", has just returned from a year's tour of Italy, Sicily, France and Germany. The corn- pany was reputed to be the most • successful unit of entertainment overseas. Radio, Theater Star Miss Waren is well known to both radio and theater audi- ences. She appeared in a number of Broadway plays, such as "Stage Door", "Alien Corn", had the comedy lead in "Having Wonderful Time" and the lead in the George Coulouris produc- tion of "Richard the III." as well as in a number of other success- ful plays. Simultaneously Helen Waren was being starred by NBC in several radio dramas. She was cited by Movie-Radio Guide Mag- azine as having given the best feminine performance ever heard on the air in a psychological drama "The Next is Always a Waltz" which was repeated three times over the NBC network by popular request. While with the USO in Italy Miss Waren came in contact with the Jewish Briaade and was very much inspired by their heroic work. Miss Waren was one of the first civilians to enter Germany immediately after V-E Day. The grim horror which. she found there especially the plight of homeless Jews who had been part of the large army of slave labor brutalized by the Nazis forced her, despite an utter lack of resources, into single-handedly smuggling Jews out of Germany into Italy, obtaining food for them from all available sources and exhorting army aid for them. Message from Victims Since she has returned from 4 24,000 Go to Fronts The Histadrut , sent 24,000 of its members as volunteers to the various fronts and mobilized thousands of its members, train- ed in Solel Boneh, for the' build- ing of roads, fortifications' and bridges. The men and trucks of its transport cooperatives carried vital supplies to the United' Nations armies. The Histadrut cares for thou- sands of its wounded soldiers, provides maintenance and low-' cost housing for their families, and conducts a vocational re-- training program for disabled. veterans. Among those who have formed a committee to assist in this project are: MAX BACHMAN JULIUS BERMAN LOUIS BERRY JOSEPH BLOCK IRVING BLUMBERG HARRY *COHEN IRWIN I. COHN JOSEPH B. COLTEN WALTER FIELD MORRIS FISHMAN ARTHUR FLIESCHMAN PHILIP J. GILBERT ABE KASLE JACK KELLMAN LEIBUSH LEHRER "Attitudes of Jews to Jews" will be the subject of the lecture by Leibush Lehrer on Sunday evening at the Jewish Commun- ity Center, under auspices of the Joint Yiddish Culture Com. mittee of the Center and the Jewish Community Council. The program will begin promptly at' 9 p.m. Mr. Lehrer will speak in Yiddish. Abe Kasle, president of the United Hebrew Schools, ex- pressed great satisfaction over the interest shown by these men in the needs of the Hebrew schools and the efforts to assure a Jewish education for hundreds of boys and girls in the northwest section of the city. "The type of men who have shown this interest and the rising needs of JewiSh educational efforts encourage us to carry on our work," Mr. Kasle stated. "We sincerely hope that many who are concerned that a building should be erect- ed by the United Hebrew Schools in the northwest district of Detroit will call either the office of the United Hebrew Schools or the men who have voluntarily banded together to sponsor the building project." Set Feb. 17.18 For Meetings 01Conference The Third Session of the American Jewish Conference will open at Hotel Cleveland, Cleve- land, 0., on Sunday, Feb. 17, at 1 p.m., and continue through Monday, Feb. 18, and possibly Tuesday, Feb. 19. It waikareviously intended to hold the Third Session in the spring of 1946, but the Interim Committee, at a meeting held on Dec. 18, advanced the date, in view of current developments requiring review and action by the entire body of the Confer- ence. The General Committee of the Conference will meet on Friday, Feb. 15, at Hotel Cleveland, to approve the Agenda and rules for the Session. Delegates who served on the General Commit- tee in the past are requested to The Michigan Federation of be in Cleveland at that time. Labor, at its recent convention, The third session will receive adopted a resolution protesting reports of all the manifold and British policy in Palestine and expanded activities of the Con- urging the immediate opening of ference since the convocation of Palestine's doors to Jewish immi- the second session in Pittsburgh gration. in December, 1944. The resolution was introduced' The American Jewish Confer- by Isaac Litwak, president and ence has been invited by • the business representative of Team- Anglo-American Committee of sters' Local 285, and Sol Snider- Inquiry on Palestine to submit man of Teamsters' Local 337, written testimony or, if it wishes, to make an oral statement, at 2-Day Ambijan Parley the hearings which will begin To be Held in New York on Jan. 7, before the Department NEW YORK—The American of State in Washington, D. C. Birobidjan Committee (Ambi- jan) will have a two-day East- Rabbi Yoelson, Father of ern Regional Ccinference Jan. Al Jolson, Dies at 88 26-27, at Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Rabbi Moses Reuben Yoelson, Sessions of the Conference will father of Al Jolson, died in Wash- be .devoted to the problems of ington in Doctors Hospital at the rehabilitation and reconstruction age of 88. Rabbi Yoelson, a na- of the Jews in t h e post-war tive of Kovno, Lithuania, came world; significance of Birobij an, to the United States in 1883 and the Jewish Autonomous Region was a resident of Washington for of Soviet Russia, in helping solve the last 58 years. Besides his these problems; and the program rabbinical position, he was af- and future activities of the Amer- filiated with many Jewish organ- ican Birobidjan Committee. izations in the Capital. Mich. Labor Conclave Adopts Zion Appeal ALL 4 MAURICE LANDAU SAUL R. LEVIN GUS D. NEWMAN LOUIS ROBINSON EMIL ROSE ABE SCHMIER SAMUEL SCHWARTZ PHILIP SLOMOVITZ LOUIS STOLL FRANK A. WETSMAN NATHAN YAFFA JOSEPH YOLLES MAURICE H. ZACKHEIM ADL Publishes Study of Jewish Business Morality CHICAGO—An exposition of the Jewish heritage of morality and decency in business and so- .cial dealings was published by the Civic Service Department of the Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith in a 20-page brochure entitled "To Do Justly . . ." Compiled by Dr. Meyer Wax- man, head of the department of Bible, Jewish history and phil- osophy at the Hebrew Theologi- cal College of Chicago, the pamphlet is condensed from a larger work on the subject pre- pared by the author for the Anti- Defamation League. A selected bibliography on the subject 'of Jewish ethics is avail- able upon request to the Civic Service Department of the Anti- Defamation League, 100 N. La- Salle St., Chicago. I I Hungarian Leaders Thank J.D.C. For. Relief Work NEW YORK—The recent open- ing of cable connections between this city and Budapest brought thanks for the work of the Joint Distribution Committee in provid- ing relief and rehabilitation for Hungarian Jews from Dr. Fred- erick Gorog, leader of local Bud- apest relief activities. According to Dr. Gorog, 180,000 Jews are now living within the decreased frontiers of Hungary, of whom 75,000 have recently re- turned from concentration camps. Sixty thousand Jews are from the Budapest ghetto and the rest were saved in different hiding places. (■•■ I 1 I I • Lieutenant I Lou Handler I 1 Announces I I I 1 The Reopening of Camp Tamakwa His Famous and Highly Reputed Summer M ajor Y PHOTO SERVICES Camp For Boys 6 through 16 Years. ote-Wicie DAILY DETROIT TIMES ' ''': ,:. -'•:. S .'": :: : ,.. ....,,,..,- _ - ,-,,,...,...-, ,,, c.. --.,,,,-,.., : - s' ._ t' i . ' ;' -' - - ----5 -'-' - 'L'' '' L''''''''' -- .•-•,-,,, - ,..,,,- - : : ---,' '-':- - , - . ,C I I Completely Staffed and Equipped '-' , - _ - ..--- I In Beautiful Algonquin Park Ontario -,, 1 -T---- -', ,, i, ,,,,,... ----... , : '.."':'''T-'-'-'- " " '':::7 *' Available Reservations Filled In Order of Arrival of Inquiries to; I Lou Handler 9141 Monica, Detroit 4 1 1 1 HO. 4448