THE JEWISH NEWS

Page Twenty Four •

Victiave Stovies

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from the

INVGIRY HARVEST SEASON FOR SEVEN
YEARS, THE MIDIANITES AND OTHER TRIBES
INVADED ISRAEL, DESTROYING THEIR
GRAIN AND TAKING THEIR CATTLE •••

YOU wILL LEARN WHLO

(

IS CONQUEROR,

P"

AND OBEY!

THIli PAMIR WARRIOR WHO FREED ISRAEL
VET ROPUINEDTO BECOME HER KING

•

( FROM THE BOOK OF JUDGES,
CHAPTERS 6-11 KING JAMES,
OCILIAV AJ4DJSKILVERSIONS

•Oelt.t0 011DEOP4 IN THE

DOUAY VERSION •

(4), ODEON,
AND SAVE ISRAEL
4 FROM. THE

I CO/AL To gamine
YOu 00 TH6 LOBO GOD
'MO BROUGHT vOU UP FROND
EGYPT-Tog yvu WAVE NOT

OBEYED 14 /5

VOICE'

,

FROM A POOR
FAMILY! NOBODY
KNOWS NE - GIVE
ME SOME SiGN

)'OURSELF!

CIDFON OFPE R5 A KIP

AND

/A.ALL CAKES AS A SACRIFICE; AND AS HE
PLACES THE KID ON A ROCK SUDDENLY—,

GIDEON

KNOWS THAT SMASHING THE IDOL
MEANS WAR. SO ...
YES, AND
THIS Is 11-4E
MESSENGERS
CALL TO
ARMS!
HAVE BEEN SENT 14
TO OTHER TRIBES
WHO WILL. ME ET

VHAT NIGHT GIDEON WITH TEN PICKED MEN

SmASI4E0 BAAL, A HEATHEN IDOLII-

DEsTROv Tats FALSE GO
AND THE SACRED
,
GROVE'
WE
DEF Y
THE FLOWER %Zs
of BAAL!

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T H E A4E /V rw i cAw i- i -1.4

Real Estate, Mercantile Divisions Elect CPA Approves Construction
Officers; Berry, Osnos Named Chairmen Of Young Israel's Center

With the election of officers this week in two important, '' Marks, electricians and suppliers; Work on $150,000 Project on Dexter to Begin Immediately
groups, five trade and professional divisions of the Detroit Charles N. Agree, architects and
After Bids Are Accepted; Realization of 23-Year-
Service Group have completed preliminary organization for building engineers; David Gold-
Old Dream Becomes Reality
participation in the communal activity of the Jewish Welfare berg, coal and ice.
Federatiorr.L--•- '---
Klausner, Sobeloff SPiiiilfc
-
Young Israel of Detroit has received authorization f rora-
Meeting at a bruncheon in Butzel Hall in the Jewish
Chairman of the bruncheon the Civilian Production Administration to begin the con-
Community Center Sunday morn-,i, -
which featured talks by Captain struction of the first floor of its new Youth Center, at 12511
ing, the Real Estate and Building builders; Ben B. Fenton, David Abraham J. Klausner, honorary
Dexter, near Fullerton.
Wilkus, real estate; Emanuel J. president of the Central Com-
David I. Berris, chairman of Young Israel's building
mittee of the Liberated Jews of
Harris, hotels; Allen C. Kramer, Germany, and Isidore Sobeloff, committee, pointed out this week that for the first time in its

Harry Rott, property manage- executive director of the Jewish
ment; Norman Ross, Abe Silber- Welfare Federation, was Joseph
stein, contractors and sub-con- Holtzman.
In his talk Mr. Sobeloff pointed
out that an important feature of
year-round organization is the
opportunity it affords the volun-
teer worker to secure an under-
standing of the total Jewish pic-

history, Young Israel will have a-..
home of its own for its many cost of $150,000. Substantial sums
activities and that a 23-year-old have been pledged by Young
dream will become a reality.

Bids Being Accepted

Construction bids are being ac-
cepted by Samuel Hechtman,
Home
president of Practical
Builders, Inc., an active Young
Israel member who is supervising
the work. Construction of the
building will begin as .§.00n as
satisfactory bids are received.

Israel members and by indi-
viduals outside the organization.
The campaign to secure payment
on pledges and to interest friends
of Young Israel in the project is
being intensively pressed, Rabbi
Alvin M. Poplack, executive di-

rector of the organization, stated.

The modern center for re- I.
ligious, social and cultural activi-
Saturday
ties, designed by Louis G. Red- 1 mowrer Speaks
stone, will have facilities for a ' At Rackham Memorial
synagogue, meeting and recre-
ation rooms for Young Israel's I Edgar Ansel Mowrer will speak
youth program and for new ! at 8:30 p. m. Nov. 23, in the audi-
groups formed through the ex , torium of the Rackham Memorial
pansion of this program, class
rooms for adult education, a ' Building.
modern ritualarium, a gymnasium; Mowrer's topic will be "World
; Government." S. L. A. Marshall
and a social hall.
The center will be built at a . will be chairman of the meeting.

-

ISRAEL HIMELHOCH

Council elected Louis Berry as
year-round chairman.
Meyer Fishman, Max C. Handl-
er, Joseph Holtzman and Barney
Smith were elected vice-chair-
men.
Other officers include: Irwin
Shaw, executive director; Henry
Feinberg, executive secretary;
Louis Berry and Barney Smith,
representatives to the Jewish
Welfare Federation board of gov-
ernors.

LOUIS ROBINSON

Maurice A. Enggass, Israel Himel-
hoch, Morris Shatzen.
Elected on the board of direc-
tors of the division are: jewelers,
Emil Rose, Fred F. Simmons;
shoes, Samuel D. Plotler; dry
goods, Maurice A. Landau; furni-
LOUIS BERRY
ture, Herman Mathias, Louis
'.cure—local, national and over- Tabashnik; luggage and loans,

tractors; Samuel H. Ellrnan, Jacob
Kalt, modernization; r e p a i r s,
roofers and tinsmiths; Benjamin
Wilk, building suppliers; Walter
Field, Irving Goldberg, B e n
Smith, store fixtures, janitor sup-
pliers and hardware;• Irving seas.
Council Directors
Bronson, Samuel Victor, painters
The mercantile division met at
Council board of directors in- and decorators; Harry C. David- a dinner in the Wayne Room of
cludes: James Rossin, George D. son, heating, plumbing and sup-
Hotel Statler, Tuesday evening to
Seyburn, Nathan Silverman, pliers; Milton J. Doner, Louis H. hear Robert R. Nathan, outstand-
ing American Economist and to
elect officers. Elected chairman
of this division was Max Osnos,
who also served as a co-chairman
for the mercantile group during
the Allied Jewish Campaign. Mr.
Osnos is president of the Jewish
Hospital Association and a mem-
ber of the board of governors of
the Federation.

•

Maurice Ben Lewis; speciality
shops, Walter J. Mayer, I. Lewis

Zuieback; store executives, Leon

G. Winkelman; store employees,
James Wineman, David Chaney;
furriers, David M. Freerer; mil-
liners, Howard Schiller; men's

apparel, Nathan H. Scholnick,

Dan Winograd; merchant tailors,
Samuel A. Granadier.
What becomes of the European
Jew will depend on political de-
velopments in the near future,
according . to Rabbi Klausner,
who addressed the founder's
Other Officers Elected
bruncheon of the Real Estate and
Other officers elected by the
Building Council.
mercantile division include: vice-
Up to U. S. Jewry
chairmen, I s r a e l Himelhoch,
Since it is imperative that Jews
Julian H. Krolik, Louis Robinson;
secretaries, Esther R. Prussian, be permitted to leave Germany,
Irwin Shaw; representatives to Rabbi Klausner declared, it is up

board of governors of Federation, to American Jewry, to take an

active role in world politics.
While the Jews in DP camps
were desirous of going only to
Palestine immediately after liber-
ation, he added, their desire has
now changed to a faint hope that
they will be able to go some-
where—anywhere that is not Ger-
many, anywhere they can build
a home.
Painting a moving picture of
the desperation of a people with-
out a home, Rabbi Klausner em-
phasized: "When I say they do
not have a home I do not mean
a building. - I am speaking of
people who have no future, no
family, no occupation. Demorali-
zation is the fate awaiting people
who get up in the morning only
to wait for night and it is re-
markable that the Jews in DP
camps have stood up under this
pressure."
Rabbi Klausner, a native of
Denver and former leader of the
congregation in New Haven,
Conn., entered Dachau on the day
of liberation as a Captain in the
U. S. Army. He left Europe only
six weeks ago and plans to re-
turn_the_first of the year.

