THE JEWISH Page Six Pioneer Women Plan Jewish Young-Adult Leaders Meet Membership Tea for To Further Plans of Youth Council Oct. 13 at Sittig Hall Plans for a permanent council Sol Schwartz, chairman, Marilyn Dr. Eisendrath to Analyze Projected AJC Successor Plans for a successor organization to ithe American 'Jewish Conference, providing a permanent unified voice for American Jewry, will be discussed at a public -hearing at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 12, in the Arabian Room of the Hotel Tuller. Dr. Maurice Eisendrath, president of the Union of Ameri- can Hebrew Congregations, and chairman of the AJC com- mittee on future organization, will be the principal speaker. He will present the plan, as conceived by his committee after a year' of pre- paratory work, and call for dis- cussion by the •community mem- bers present. The meeting is one of a series of discussions which are being held in key cities throughout the country, designed to provide an opportunity for communal leaders to express their views on the plan and to suggest necessary amend- ments. An over-all organization which Marguerite Kozenn Sings With LaScala Co. Here \•Marguerite Kozenn, Detroit so- prano, will be heard in the star- ring role of Nedda, when the Philadelphia LaScala Opera Co. presents "I Pagliacci" Sunday evening, Oct. 19, at Masonic Temple. Miss *Kozenn (Mrs. Julius Chajes) recently returned from a two-month concert tour in Eu- rope, where she sang the title role. in "Rusalka" at the National Opera in Prague. The LaScala opera festival will include eight performances from Oct. 13 through 19. Tickets are available at the Masonic Audi- torium and at Grinnell's. Friday, October 10 , 1 94? NEWS DR. MAURICE EISENDRATH would weld together the Ameri- can Jewish community, including the American scene, activities in behalf of overseas Jewry and co- operation with the effort toward establishment of a Jewish com- monwealth in Palestine, is the aim of the Conference plan. The basic principles of the proposed permanent organization were ap- proved by the interim committee of the Conference in May. Dr. Eisendrath's committee will present its final report to the fourth session of the Conference in Chicago Nov. 29 to Dec. 1, taking into account all views ex- pressed in the series of corn- Triunity meetings. • The Pioneer. Women's Organ- ization will sponsor a member- ship tea Monday, Oct. 13, 12:30 p. m., at the Rose Sittig Cohen Auditorium. Mrs. Joseph R. Mer- lin of Cleveland will be the guest speaker. A piano recital will be given by Sally Green and a Yiddish reading from Sholem Aleichem will be given. by Jeanette Ser- ling. Mrs. Norman Kanter will preside. • Council's membership chair- man, Mrs. Alexander Schreier, invited all prospective members and friends. Refreshments will be served. For information call Mrs. Schreier, TO. 8-2484 or TO. 9-'7180. Club 1 of Pioneer Women was greatly encouraged in its fund- raising efforts, this week by a contribution of $1,080 from the Wednesday - Evening Social Club, whose previous gifts to ewo 'already amounted to nearly $2,000. Mrs. Rose Rosen- blatt and Mrs. Edith Cooper supervised the Wednesday So- cial Club's activities for the PWO child rescue fund. Twelve new homes for chil- dren and youth were built in Palestine by Pioneer Women, ac- cording to a report rendered by Miss Dvorah Rothbard, member of the 'national praesidium, upon her return from Europe. Informa- tion on the building activities carried on with funds provided by the American organization was given by Mrs. Beba Idelson, secretary of the working women's council. of Detroit Jewish youth groups Adler, Baruch, Natalie Gaines, will be furthered at a brunch Ruth Miriam Levine, Ann Ruben- meeting of organization presidents stein, Bernie Schiff, Tybie Schnei- der and Miriam Schwartz. Pro- _ fessional assistance is being given the group by Rosenman and Har- old Arian of the Center. Schwartz, who was one of De- troit's delegates to the Jewish Welfare Board's national youth convention this fall, reports that a similar- organization of young people's groups is being carried out successfully in Cleveland. Among the leaders of the adult Detroit community who • have en- dorsed the project are Fred M. Butzel, Aaron Droock, Henry Wineman, Isidore, .Sobeloff, Oscar Cohen, Herman Jacobs, Julian Krolik, Samuel Rubiner, Morris Jacobs, Judge Theodore Levin, Benjamin Laikin, and others. LEONARD BARUCH $5,000,000 For Children Pledged by N, Y. Leaders at 12:30 p. m. Sunday, Oct. 19, at the Jewish Community Center. Leonard Baruch, temporary chairman of the Young Adult Council (Jewish Youth "Federa- tion) urges that all youth group. presidents contact Yehudah Ros- enman, young adult adviser at the Jewish Center, MA. 8400, to insure their reservations at the brunch. At the meeting, 'presi- dents will be adiiised of the prog- ress that has . been' made in or- ganizing the Council. The steering committee, elect- ed last spring by representatives of. 22 youth groups, is now work on a constitution, Baruch added. The committee includes NEW YORK (JTA)—More than 2,000 Jewish leaders in the New York area pledged to raise $5,- 000,000 for the aid of Jewish children abroad at an emergency meeting of the United Jewish Ap- peal of Greater New York. The principal speaker was Dr. Jorge Garcia Granados, Guate- malan ambassador to the United States and rePresentative on the United Nations Special Committee on Palestine. The diplomat de- nounced the autocratic rule • of the Palestine government/ and 'stated that the "case of the Jews was stronger than that of the Arabs." elegant - Half-Blood Mink Fashion Styled After the "Star of The North" A week agd, Victor announced his most advanced and most luxurious mink coat creation . . . the fabulously. beautiful "Star of the North," priced at $10,000.00 . . . a fur of such preeminent beauty and such outstanding quality, that in all the world, it has no equal. Now, Victor kias taken the same fashion, the same elegant styling and workmanship and recreated them in lovely Half-Blood Mink ... the first fruit of the mating of selected wild mink with ranch mink of recognized pedigree. 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