Gertrude Lippincott to Appear
In Dance Program at the Center

Young Israel to Form
I I Clubs for Children;
Friday Family Groups

Gertrude Lippincott, outstanding American dancer, returns to
the Midwest to present her first Detroit solo concert to be held at
the Jewish Center, Sept. 21, at 8:30 p. m. under the auspices of the
Center's Dance Consultants Committee. Mrs. Oscar M. Zemon is
committee chairman.
Miss Lippincott's program will include: "Invocation," a prim-
itive dedication to the Dance Gods; "Tragic Lullaby," a dance com-
position produced
recently by Doris
Humphrey, talent-
ed modern dance
choreographer;
"And They Came
to the Prairie", a
dance in four sec-
tions, Arrival,
Planting, Drought
and Thanksgiving;
"Burdensome
Blues" with music
by Norman Lloyd
of Juillard Music
School; "T'was on
H o 1 y Thursday,"
based on a poem
by William Blake
with a special
musical score by
Otto Janowitz.
T w o composi-
tions by Louis
Horst, Martha
Graham's music
director. "Invita-
tion," based on
melodies and
rhythms of Latin-
America, and "Hot
Sunday," a fast
jazi medium, alsc
will be performed.
GERTRUDE LIPPINCOTT
Other dances in-
elude "Reaction—A Time for Tears" and "Young Girl in a Garden."
Virginia Bush, Detroit singer, will accompany Miss Lippincott
during several dance presentations. Miss Bush was one of the
finalists in the Belle Isle auditions, a soloist with the Wayne Uni-
versity Choir and the First Methodist Church, and a member of the
WJR choir. Sylvia Hochberg, well known pianist, also will accom-
pany Miss Lippincott.
Miss Lippincott will give a series of classes in the modern dance
at the Center, Sept. 15-19. For further details, call MA. 8400.
Tickets for the Sept. 21 concert are available at the Center.

Tel Aviv Survivor Will Speak
At Opening JNF Auxiliary Meet

.

dent of the Detroit Unit, urges all
women, 18-25, to attend.
The program chairman, Char.
lotte Kruger, states that there
Detroit Unit of Junior Hadas- will be skits, vocal renditions by
sah will hold an open meeting in the choral group, and a surprise
number. The guest speaker will
be Lawrence W. Crohn.
The weekly study groups will
meet jointly in the home of
Mrs. Maurice Landau, 2292 Long.
fellow, Wednesday, at 8 p. m.
Corrine Perlis is educational
chairman of Junior Hadassah,
and her assistants are Phyllis
Glassier, University Group; and
Norma Glassman, Russell Woods
Group.

Crohn Will Address
Jr. Hadassah Sunday

Rabbi Abraham Z e n t ma n,
chairman of youth activities com-
mittee of Young Israel, announces
that Young Israel will sponsor
11 clubs for children 4 to 18. The
new program will include super-
vised Sunday outings in chartered
buses, an arts and crafts club
which will meet • in a newly built
and well-equipped shop, and a
weekly night of sports in a local
gym.
Dr. Hugo Mandelbaum, chair-
man of the adult education com-
mittee, is planning Friday eve-
BBYO. Yom Kippur Night
ning family gatherings to take
Dance at Masonic Oct. 5
place at Yeshivath Beth Yehudah.
Classes for groups of various ages
Bnai Brith Youth Organization
and educational backgrounds will
of Detroit will sponsor its annual
include Bible, Jewish history,
Yom Kippur night dance on
laws and customs, Rashi and
Oct. 5 in the Grand Ballroom
Talmud. Following these sessions
of the Masonic Temple. Paul
refreshments will be served at
Leash and his orchestra, featur-
an Oneg Shabbat.
ing Jackie Ward, Lee Edwards
Joseph Grossman, chairman of
MISS GERTRUDE STRAUSS and the Sophistocats, will provide
the Scout committee, reported at the Auditorium Studio of Station the music. Proceeds of the event
the Sept. 4 board meeting that
will be used for the proposed
Young Israel Scout Troop 210 WWJ, Sunday, at 2:30 p. m.
BBYO headquarters in Detroit.
will meet Tuesday nights at
Miss Gertrude Strauss, presi- Dancing will be from 9 p. m.
RoOsevelt School. Boys over 12
in the Dexter neighborhood are
invited to the meeting next Tues-
day.

•

\ ACJI\

LJWO Efforts Board
To Meet Wednesday

Levi Shapiro, one of a group of Detroiters who settled in
Palestine in 1936, in the Ain Hashophet Colony named in
honor of Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis, will be
the principal speaker at the opening meeting of the year of
the Ladies', Auxiliary of the Jewish National Fund, at 12:30
p. m. Thursday, Sept. 19, at the Rose Sittig Cohen Bldg.

Mr. Shapiro arrived here two :>

w.eeks ago on a visit with his fam- man, TO. 5-4757, or the assisting

ily. He was accompanied by Mrs. captains, Mesdames Max Hayman,
Shapiro and their two children, Wm. Klafer, Morris Kutinsky, I
Joel and Simha.
Lawton, Sam Moore, Sol Pearl-
Condemns King David Bombing man, Albert PoFen, A. Prag, Harry
Having gone through the har- Rosman and Joseph Sandler.
P:iwing experience of being in Tel
Aviv during the curfew and hav- Pioneer Women Hold
ing viewed the ruins of the King
David Hotel in Jerusalem, Mr. I Regional Conference
Shapiro will descirbe the reac- In Detroit, Oct. 18-20
tions of the Jewish population of
A regional conference of the
Palestine to the British policies
and will tell of the work being Pioneer Women's Organization will
accomplished in Zion by the Jew- be held at the Detroit Leland
Hotel, Oct. 18-20, it was announced
ish National Fund.
at the opening meeting of the sea-
Mr. Shapiro stated this week son on Sept. 4, when plans were
that during three days of Tel formulated for the coming year.
Aviv's curfew all he had was some
The annual donor event will be
Shapiro will describe the reac- held on Jan. 15 at the Masonic
tea due to total lack of food for Temple. •
the 200,000 Jews of the all-Jewish
A workers rally of membership
city.
committees of the various chap-
He condemned the bombing ters will be held Sept. 24. The
of the King David Hotel and de- meeting will be addressed by
Glared that the British retaliatory Malka Gottlieb, representative of
measures a-re frightful. However, the Nurses Division of the Kupat
he is confident that the Jews of Cholim, who is here from Pales-
Palestine will not be defeated in tine.
their efforts to create the Jewish
A series of membership teas
National Home. • have been planned with the first
to be held on Oct. 7 in the Rose
Membership 1,300
The JNF Ladies' Auxiliary will Sittig Cohen Bldg., it was an-
inaugurate a drive for 500 new nounced by Mrs. Abraham Cohen,
members at _next Thursday's membership chairman. On her
meeting. The Auxiliary, organized committee are Mrs. Alex Schrier,
18 years ago by a group of women Ida Kay and Sylvia Novetsky.

'‘\-\

SOUTH

Postwar efforts board of the
League of Jewish Women's Or-
ganizations will meet Wednesday
at 10 a. m. at the Jewish Center.
Breakfast will be served in the
USO Lounge by the Sisterhood of
Cong. Bnai M...she. Mrs. I. E.
Goodman, UN. 4-1090, is in charge
of reservations, which must be
made by this Friday.
Mrs. Henry Meyers, president,
and Mrs. Carl Schiller, chairman,
urge all presidents and their war
efforts chairmen to attend this
rieeting.

EAST or

W EST

Your Cunningham's Store is not far away.
And when you need prescriptions com-
pounded quickly and accurately, you'll
appreciate our nearness! Our Pharmacists
are reliable; our Pharmacies are completely
stocked.

Central Night School
Classes Open Sept. 16

Levi Shapiro, in Palestine Since 1936, to Describe Curfew
Period, Work of Jhe JNF; Women Plan Drive
to Add 500 Members

under the leadership of Mrs. Di-
nah Milkofsky, has grown to a
membership of 1,300. The objec-
tives of the organization are to
spread knowledge regarding Jew-
ish efforts in Palestine and to
participate in the land redemp-
tion program of the JNF.
Those interested in becoming
members are asked to attend
meeting or to corn-
"th the following who
'lership committee:
chairman,,HO.
Davis, co-chair-

Page Seven

THE JEWISH NEWS

Friday, September 13, 1946

Wherever you see it, Cunningham's is a
name to rely upon. For prompt, accurate
prescriptions, you can depend on your
neighborhood

C. W. Kammerer, principal of
Central High Evening School, an-
nounces that registration is now
taking place for classes to begin
Monday, Sept. 16. Health edu-
cation, commercial classes, aca-
demic subjects and various home-
making, technical and special
classes are offered.
Courses in citizenship and in
elementary grades 1-3 are a part
of the curriculum.
Other courses will be offered, if
there is sufficient interest.
For information, call the Cen-
tral Evening School office, TO.
7-9816.

n 08913E6

GOLDHAR-ZIMNER

SERVICE and PARTS

DEPARTMENTS

NO W OPEN

DAILY 8 A.M. to 12 MIDNIGHT

SAT. 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

SPECIAL SERVICE

PICK IT

NII N NG
E L EL V0 Ew
pL
R EI T N E TH F0
m A
B U cR o C
YO
Lu Ep AVE °
. RNING
G . M . O

COMPLETE REPAIR SERVICE

SPECIALISTS ON CUSTOM

BUMPING and PAINTING

ALL MAKE AND MODEL CARS

GOLDHAR-ZIMNER MOTOR SALES, Inc.

"WHERE DRIVING PLEASURE BEGINS"

11

.2:1
1-) et-Ame,

(Ii/( i

edo

'

#Pr ettres

II

CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH SALES & SERVICE
CORNER
18500 LIVERNOIS MARGARETA
UN 4-2800

