Meyer Levin's Widely-Recommended `My Father's House' on at Cinema THE JEWISH NEWS-5 Friday, June 25, 1948 Garaldine Sfashefsky's Organizational Gifts Being Recorded As Campaign Reaches Final Stages $685: Mozirer Society. $1500: Odes- With many groups increasing M., "See it—your conscience will never forget it.* sa Progressive Aid Society, $500; Our This was Walter Winchell's recommendation after he had seen ,Poem Voted 'The Best' their pledges by a large percent- Family Club, $25; Perla: )n Lodge Bowling Team, the film, "My Father's House," which is based on Meyer Levin's age, the organizational division $410.81; Pliskow Family Association, soul-stirring book and which Mr. Levin, the eminent novelist per- Geraldine Stashefsky, a 16 $100; Polonner-Woliner Aollt1 Associ- of the Allied Jewish Campaign ation, $200; Radomer Friendly So- • sonally filmed in Israel. The synopsis of this all-English movie, which was enacted by. able year old student as Cass Techni- is playing a major role in the ciety, $150;Shearit. Hapleith, $63.50; Skverer Relief Society, $500; Social cal high school, recently was Palestinian actors on Palestinian Committee. $75; Sokoliv- concluding phases of the 1948 Legislation ker Progressive Verein, $525; Tau. given an assignment in her Eng- spots, is as follows: David's and Miriam's future. Epsilon Rho Fraternity, $150; Tur- drive. over Aid Society, $1000; United Through the blackness of the This is the moment when his lish literature class to write an Figures released this week 're- Friendship Club, $275; Elias Woolf Club. $50; 'Workmen's Circle No. night the passengers of the ves- child's mantle of innocence drops original poem on any subject. Because it was the time that veal $19,481.31 pledged from May 945, $145; Yud Aleph Yud Memorial sel, "Hannah Szenesch," move away, and David grows up. In Society, $50; Zhilomer Progressive carefully towards the shore in his tragedy he reaches maturity, the Jewish people, were praying 14 to June 16 by Yiddish-speak- Aid Society. $500; B'nai Brith: Bloch Lodge No. 1677, small boats. • With stealth and and he knows that • in a larger, for a refuge and a homeland,. she ing organizations, in contrast to $25; Brandeis Lodge No. 1583, $300; more vital sense he has finally chose the topic "A Nation's $15,278.85 collected • last year. Keidan Lodge No. 1560, $1000; Hen- ry Morgenthau Lodge Bowling League, reached his father's house—his Dream". Einai Brith divisions, in that per- $325; Although 90 per cent of the father; s land. He and Miriam. Jewish War Veterans—C & A Ko- find in Palestine the highest students in the class were - not iod, pledged $1,650, as against gan Post No. 510, $25; Roy Green Post No. 529, $24; they understood the fullment to their deepest desires: Jewish,- $200 given last year. Congregations—Aaron Moshe, $50; Beth Itzchock and Sisterhood, $250; Other organizational gifts dur- Beth Sponsored by the Jewish Na- meaning of the poem and voted Mordecai Talmud Torah of Fern- tional Fund of the world, the it the best in the class. The poem ing that time included $50 dale, $50; Beth Tikvah, $250; Bnai David, $2000; Detroit Hebrew Cong., follows: film has been released for distri- pledged by two war veterans' A NATION'S DREAM bution in America by the JNF posts and $3,100 donated by con- $300; Shaarey Shomaim, $200. of America. It opened its De- To a land whose earth was burning gregations, in contrast to $1,550 troit run at the Cinema Theater waste, pledged in 1947. U. S. Allocates 6,000 ne'er a tree in sight; on Thursday evening and will A With The gifts included in these fig- people came in perilous haste Tons of Flour to Israel continue for two weeks or more. To bring in God's own light. ures are as follows: Yiddish Speaking Organizations — Arthur Shutkin, executive di- With weary hearts rejoicing Berditchever Progressive Beneficial WASHINGTON, (JTA). — The rector of the Jewish National, To have fled the butcher's knife, Soc., $500; Beth Abraham. Free Loan squared their shoulders and Ass'n, $250; Brezner Aid Society, Department of Agriculture has Fund Council of Detroit, has They looked ahead $200; Brith Sholom of Detroit, $700; allocated 6,000 tons of flour for To a new and fearless life. issued a call to all Zionist and The Chess Family Club, $50; Cohen, Rosenblum Family Group, $100; Con- Israel. other , local organizations to en- They worked the rocky soil, glo Bowling League, $80; Eishishker Under the Department's export courage their members to see Their bodies damp with sweat. Verein, $500; Freedman Family Club, MEYER LEVIN said, "That land will never yield, $25; Good Fellowship Club, $100; program all shipments of short- this film and to be eye-witness- Some Heartache is all you'll get.", Grodno Society, $100; Herman Gar- supply grain are allocated to with fear, but proudly, hope - es to the great achievent in Israel dens Jewish Club, $20; Independent But pioneers do not give up, Detroit Lodge, $152; Isaac Agree countries submitting applications fully, the remnants of the cruel- by Jewry. And soon,—an act of God; Memorial Society, $2000; Jewish Re- on the basis of need. The United est massacre in all history come A leaf „of green was growing. lief Fund, $300; Jewish Social Club, in the old and useless sod. $500; Jewish Metropolitan Club, $500; Kingdom forinerly supplied the to claim their birthright in Pal- Kadimah Social Club. $1600; Kess- Middle East area with grain. Dr. Samuel Kraus Dies estine. And soon the land had changed its ler Family Club, $50; Knights of The maritime unions have looks Pythias, Detroit Lodge No. 55, $500; Among the passengers is 11- LONDON, (JTA)—Dr Samuel wheat and yello,w corn, Korostishever Aid Society, • $600; given assurances that, even if a year-old David Halevi. For him Krauss, noted Jewish scholar, A With phenomenon not made in books, Lachowitzer Aid Society, $1000; Sa- But here in brave men born. rah Lichter Family Club, $50: Esther maritime strike is called, the this is the climax of a five-year historian and philologist, who Lipson Family Club. $25 ; Lovitcher shipment of wheat to Israel will pilgrimage. For here on the came to England from Austria in And cities took the place of waste Verein, $200; Lubliner' Hilfs Verein, shores of the Promised Land his 1938 after the German-Austrian $500; Mezeritcher Progressive Ben- depart on schedule as an indica- And trees the place of sand; barren earth was changed to efit Society, $100; Mezeritcher Social tion of unity between the Ameri- father would be waiting. David anschluss, died at his home in This Club, $1750; Michigan Shoe Travelers, green knows it will be so: On that Cambridge at the age of 82. $25; Mosaic •Lodge No. 530, F. & A. can workers and the new state. And called "The Promised Land." dark day five years ago, when the Germans came to Cracow and ordered all the Jews at gun- point into the great square be- fore the railroad trains, his father had told him to run into the woods and hide, and when the war was over they would be together again in Palestine. Another European passenger is Miriam, a young woman who suffered the horror and indig- nities of Jewish women forced into the Nazi "Feldkorps." She has lost her husband and child, and has come to Palestine to find peace and to try to forget. try to forget. Miriam, in the bitterness of her experiences, is certain that David's quest for his parents is fruitless. But DaVid's faith can- not be shaken. The colonists of the settlement to which he is assigned are solicitous, a n d promise to help him , find his parents. "In our little country every- -one finds what he needs," one wise settler says. Impatient of delay, David leaves the colony, and _subse- quently runs away from an or- phan's camp, in an effort to find his family. He travels from village to village—to Tel Aviv where he thinks a violinist named Halevi might be his fath- er. At the potash works on the Dead Sea, a worker named Hal- evi gallantly insists he is the boy's uncle when he hears Da- vid's sad story. But a mere of- fer of a home is not enough for the boy, and again he leaves in frantic search, this , time to Jer- usalem where the registry of- fice of Jewish DPs is located. Here he learns the terrible real-: ity of his family's destruction in Includes the Credenza Buffet, Increase your pleasure of dining amid this beautiful setting. Here • the crematoriums. Breakfront China Cabinet, Young David collapses. With is a finer 18th Century adaptation, fashioned in Mellow finish security and hopefulness gone, Extension Table, 2 Arm Chairs, mahogany combined with other select hardwoods, accented by he lapes into a state of infancy. In a large, modern hospital and 4 Side Chairs. swirl mahogany fronts and richly carved details. Buffet measures Avram, the young leader of the 62 inches, chiria cabinet 42 1 /2 inches, and the 42 by 62 inch table colony, and Miriam find the boy, an discuss his fate. Avram ten- with twin pedestal base extends to 74 inches. Shield back chairs derly tells Miriam that she can 'save the boy, and help herself have slip seats upholstered in attractive striped tapestry. too, by giving David the love he needs—a mother's love. Miriam accepts the challenge, and the Trade-In Allowance on Your Old Furmiture. Budget Terms Arranged boy is gradually nursed back to health. The discovery of an ancient building stone on which the name Halevi is chiseled is the final 1420 WASHINGTON BOULEVARD PHONE CADILLAC 4352 cure to David's malady. It is to be the cornerstone for a new colony, and symbolically, for 4 Dining Room Luxury . Nine Beautiful Pieces In Rich Mahogany $195 O ROBINSON FURNITURE COMPANY 7,500 stockholders have received $150,000 in dividends to date from investments in $3,500,000 AMPAL American Palestine Trading Corporation Hear infriguiqg reports at annual dinner, June 29, at the Stotler Call in your reservations at— TO. 9-8710