Wmant Address Climaxes Detroit's
'4TBrottekhood Week Observance
The Honorable John G. Win- Our'responsibility in a very real
ant had this message for the De- sense -has become global as well
troiters who came to dinner, Feb. as .nationaL The world is looking
Noted -Economisi
Speaks to Council
At March Meeting
22; to heaThis address as national to the United States for leader-
chairman of 1947 Brotherhood ship in the United Nations and
Week: "Try to make peoPle un- for the improvement of mankind,"
derstand that it is fun being de- Winant emphasiT,ed.
Being International Neighbors ,
cent to one another."
In reviewing the first week of
As head of the International
Labor Office! before he became his brotherhood Speaking itiner-
wartime ambassador to Great ary, which took him across three-
Britain, Winant spent several quarters of the United • States,
years in Geneva, where Germans Winant figured out that some 20
sought refuge from Gestapo tyr- years ago, ."It would have taken
annies:" There, he said, "I learned me six weeks to do what I have
what it meant to assemble peace- done in a single week. You have
fully as we're assembled -here to be very well equipped to meet
and to speak freely as we are these new conditions. We shotfld
able to do here; what a free press, know something about the lan-
habeas corpus and trial by jury guages of the other people, their
mean, and I realized as I had ways and customs and know how
never done before what we owed to accommodate ourselves to new
to those who had gone before— situations. There's just a little
our forebears, who bad often sac- more to do than we had,to do in
rificed life itself in order that we the past to be good international
neighbors."
might enjoy those freedoms."
The National Conference of
People Seek Happiness
"During my time (in the Inter- Christiaps and Jews is the found-
national Labor Office)," Winant er and sponsor of American Brot-
continued, "I made it my business herhood Week. The civic dinner
to visit most of the countries of culminated the week's activities
the world, and I want to tell you in Detroit under the auspices of
that I came to realize that there the Detroit Round Table of Cath-
was good in all people. I found olics, Jews and Protestants.
Rabbi Leon Fram of Temple
that the people of other coun-
tries wanted the things that we Israel gave the invocation, Leon-
want; they didn't want a good ard Simons, president of Simons-
deal individually or even collect- Michelson Advertising Co., and
ively within their countries. But Henry Wineman, Jewish chair-
they wanted some chance for hap- man of the Detroit Round Table,
were at the speakers' table.
piness in their lives.
"When I represented you on
the Economic and Social Council St. Louis Rabbi Guest
of the United Nations and we
were asked for human rights for At 4ntercongregation
people around the world, some- Men's Club Fete Here
times representatives from other
countries would ask us about the
Dr. Julius Gordon, rabbi of
practices in our own country. Temple Shaare Emeth in St.
Louis, will be guest speaker at
the annual intercongregational
Music Guild to Presen+
Council of Jewish Women at 8:30
p. m. Monday, March 3, at the
Jewish Community Center, Wood-
ward at Holbrook, on the topic
"Europe and the World Picture."
He will be introduced by Fred
abouts of their missing daughter.
13-year-old Marilyn.
Wearing a brown coat and ski ,
pants, plaid skirt, chartreuse
sweater, saddle oxfords, pink
M. Butzel.
shell-rimmed glasses, and a West-
Dr. Lubin, former U. S. Com- lock wrist watch, Marilyn left
missioner of Labor Statistics, has home four weeks ago. She car-
joined the technical committee
of the Bureau of War Records of ried a small suitcase with a
the National Jewish Welfare change of clothing, and is be-
Board which is compiling the lieved to have had about $30 in
record of Jewish participation in cash with her.
the American armed forces dur-
Marilyn has a fair complexion.
ing World War II.
Internationally known econo- shoulder-length dark blond hair
will act as host.
The guest speaker is a noted
scholar and author of such dis-
tinguished works as "Pity the
Persecutor". A graduate of He-
brew Union College, he received
his doctorate in the field of He-
brew Letters from that school in
1945. He is an active participant
in religious and civic activities
in his community.
Cantor Robert S. Tulman of
Temple Israel and Jason H. Tick-
ton, music director of Temple
Beth El, will present a musical
program.
Reservations for the dinner
may be secured at the offices of
the participating congregations.
Beth Yehudah Ladies
Plan Purim Concert .
Ladies of Yeshivath Beth Ye-
hudah, sponsors of the Beth Ja-
cib School for Girls, will hold a
Purim cohcert at 8 p.m. Tuesday,
March 11, at Bnai David, 14th
and Elmhurst.
A Yiddish play, "Der Mishpot
fun Purim," recitations in Yid-
dish, Hebrew and English, vocal
selections by Cantor Hyman Ad-
ler of Bnai David, accompanied
by Dan Fwhinan, will feature
the program. Proceeds will be
used for the bUilding program
of the Yeshivah.
Tickets can be obtained by call-
ing TY. 5-1171.
The Yeshivah Ladies received
Orchestra.
a contribution in honor of the
This is the fourth in the cur- wedding anniversary of Mr. and
rent subscription series. Tickets Mrs. Meyer Simon of Pontiac.
will be available at the door.
Rabbi Jacob M. Brown's class-
es at Yeshivath Beth Yehudah
were among the leaders in - the
tree-planting campaign of the
Jewish National Fund on Ham-
isha Asar b'Shevat. -
One of his 3-A classes of 12
pupils excelled in the drive and
the other 3-A group of 24 pupils,
planted 15 trees. . Philip Stone
alone purchased five trees.
A "Palestine Garden" will be one of the features at the
at
Spring Flower Show of the Michigan Horticultural Society,
Convention Hall, March 15 to 23.
The "Palestine Garden" is being arranged by the Jewish
National Fund Council of Detroit. There will be Palestine flora
and fauna, Palestine earth, etc.
At a special Nationality Night, the date to be set, a Pales-
tine movie, "A Day in Dagania," will be shown.
One of the features will be the United Nations gardens, 10
small gardens—each one representing one of the cultural
nations of the world: a Court of Nations displaying the flags
of all the nations and a large modern garden symbolizing the
unity of nations. To make these gardens authentic. the help of
the various nationality groups has been obtained through the
International Institute.
Tickets are available throughout the city in neighborhood
stores and florists shops, in an advance sale at less than the
regular admission price.
Marilyn Grossberg, 13,
Men's Club dinner, to be held at
7 p. in. Wednesday, March 5, at
Temple Beth El.
Participating Men's Clubs in-
clude Bnai David, Bnai Moshe,
Guild
will
pre-
Detroit Music
Downtown Synagogue, North-
sent a concert at 8:30 p. m., Wed- west Hebrew Congregation, Shaar
nesday, March 5,
Hashomayim of Windsor, Shaar-
in the Lect
ey Zedek, Temple Beth El and
Hall of The De-
Temple Israel. The Beth El club
3-A Yeshivah Students .
Spark JIFF Tree Drive
'Palestine Garden Featured
At Flower Show March 15-23
Missing for 4 Weeks
DR. ISADORE LUBIN
Dr. Isador Lubin, United States
After four weeks of frantic
delegate on the United Nations
Economic and Employment Corn- searching, Mr. and Mrs. Max •
mission, will be guest speaker of Grossberg of Waverly Ave. are
the Detroit Section, National still seeking clues to. the where-
Concert on Wednesday
At Institute of Arts
troit Institute o
Arts.
The Guild'
Chamber Orches- .
tra will offer:
Handel's C o n
certo Grosso in
G Major for two
solo violins, solo Mr. Resnick
'cello, string orchestra and pi-
ano; Hindemith's Sonata for Eng-
lish Horn and piano; Bach's Con-
certo in A Major for piano and
string orchestra and the first
performance in Detroit of Bloch's
Concerto Grosso for _String or-
chestra with piano obligato which
was written in 1924.
Felix Resnick, of the Detroit
Symphony Orchestra, will con-
duct the Guild Chamber Orches-
tra which he had organized
several years ago. For this con-
cert he has augmented the or-
chestra by several of Detroit's
finest musicians.
Katja Andy, Detroit pianist
who has appeared in concert this
season in New York and Chicago,
will appear as soloist and Lare
Wardrop, member of the Detroit
Symphony Orchestra, will, be
soloist on both the English Horn
and on the oboe. Occupying the
first chairs in their respective sec-
tions, will be the members of the
Guild . String Quartet, Morris
Hochberg, concertmeister, Jules
Yanover, Meyer Shapito and
Thaddeus Markiewicz. Another
guest will be Joe Kertez, viola,
formerly with the Budapest State
Page Nine
THE JEWISH NEWS
Friday, February 28, 1947
mist, statistician and author, he and blue eyes. Anyone having
long and distinguished rec- knowleuge of her whereabouts
has a of public service. He has is urged to contact her parents
ord
served as advisor to many official or Murray Sabin, president of
agencies, and Congressional corn- Louis Marshall Lodge of Bnai
Brith, at once.
mittees. He was American repre-
sentative on the Allied Repara-
tions Commission at the end of
World War I and as chief of the
. ALL DETROIT JEWS
Statistical Analysis Division of
the Munitions Assignment Board
Are Invited
in World War II.
Dr. Lubin was also the first
TO HEAR THE MESSAGE
American representative on the
governing body of the Interna-
of the
tional Labor Organization of the
League of Nations. From 1920 to
GREAT AMERICAN
1922, he was president of the In-
tercollegiate Menorah Society.
and
Mrs. Herbert M. Smith, pres-
ident of the Council of Jewish
GREAT
Women, announces that this will
be the only evening meeting for
1947 and urges all members to
HUMANITARIAN
bring their husbands and friends.
New Had Gadya Appear
With Geller Illustrations
r4eJt
5756 Cass Ave. near Palma,
MRS. FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
A new illustrated version of
the traditional Had Gadya of the
Seder has been created by Todros
Geller, noted woodcut engraver,
and Efraim Michael Rosenzweig.
The book, which includes ten
two-dollar lino-cuts, a text writ-
ten especially for children, and
an appropriate melody to accom-
pany the verse, is published by
L. M. Stein, 913 W. Van Burne
St., Chicago, 7.
Geller's Had Gadya, appropri-
ate for both adults and children,
makes an ideal gift for an in-
dividual or to a Jewish library.
Chairman of the United Nations Human Rights Committee
Who Will Be Guest Preacher at
SABBATH MORNING SERVICES
at the
TEMPLE BETH EL
Woodward at Gladstone
SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH I, AT II
O'CLOCK
Mrs. Roosevelt will discuss the plight of European sur-
vivors and the needs of the Jewish displaced persons.
LAST WEEK OF SALE!
special
BIG VALUES. IN CUSTOM
UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE
JUST RECEIVED .. .
FOR THE COMING HOLIDAYS
A NEW LINE OF QUALITY FABRICS FOR
NEW FURNITURE AND REUPHOLSTERING
YOUR OWN , FURNITURE
Rubin Directs Publication
Of Beth Aaron Journal
.
The Men's Club of Cong. Beth
Aaron is rushing plans for the
Publication of its first annual
journal, under the supervision of
Saul Rubin. The club's dinner,
dance the Park Ave. Penthouse
proved a success.
The group which meets every
Thursday evening at the synago-
gue, Wyoming at Thatcher, spon-
sors a night of games at 8:30 p.m.
every Tuesday.
The Home of Fine Upholstered Furniture Built to Order
LOUIE'S UPHOLSTERING CO.
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Thurs., Fri., Sat. to 9 P. M.
UN. 4-0564