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July 01, 1949 - Image 15

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1949-07-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE JEWISH NEWS--1 5
Friday, July 1, 1949

People Make News

Reuben B. Besnik, nationally
Among Detroiters elected as
directors of the United Health prominent administrative figure
and Welfare Fund of Michigan in community organization and
welfare work,
are Harry Becker, Martin L.
has assumed
Butzel, Dr. B. Benedict Glazer,
the executive
Julian S. Krolik, Judge Theodore
post of Director
Levin and Henry Wineman.
*
* *
of University
Resources at
NEW YORK — Regina Chom-
Brandeis U n i -
ska, outstand-
versify and will
ing interpreter
direct the ex-
of Israeli songs
pansion drive of
in the United
the nation's
States, will fly
first Jewish-
next week to
sponsored, non-
Tel Aviv, where
R. B. Resnik sectarian insti-
she will make
recordings f o r tution of higher learning, it was
the Israel Music announced by George Alpert,
Foundation, it chairman of the University's
w a s announced board of trustees.
* * *
' by Oscar Regen,
OSCAR GRONER of Chicago
Regina Chomskapresident of the
Foundation. In Israel the so- has been appointed director of
prano will make a series of con- the New Jersey regional office
of the Anti-Defamation League
cert appearances.
of Bnai Brith.
* * *

RABBI BENJAMIN SCHULTZ
has been voted the annual ci-
tation for Americanism by the
American Legion, New York
County, it was announced by
William Hardenbergh, chairman
of the Americanism committee
of the county organization. Pre-
vious recipients of the Ameri-
canism award have been Ber-
nard Baruch and Msgr. FUlton J.
Sheean. The Legion will make
the award publicly to Rabbi
Schultz, national executive di-
rector of the American Jewish
League Against Communism, at
its annual convention at Man-
hattan Center July 5.

*

* *

MRS. SAUL H. GORENSTEIN
of 961 Eastern Parkway, Brook-
lyn, N. Y., sailed for Israel where
she will represent the national
board of Pioneer Women, Wom-
en's Labor Zionist Organization
of America, in the Working
Women's Council of Israel,
known as Moatzot Hapoalot,
sister organization of the Amer-
ican Zionist group. Her son, Ar-
thur, 23, president of Habonim,
Labor Zionist youth movement,
left with his mother on a mis-
sion of his own. Accompanying
them for a short stay will be
Mr. Gorenstein and daughter,
Judith, 14.
* *
DR. ISRAEL GO.LOSTEIN, who
recently returned from Israel,
where, as treasurer of the JeW-
ish Agency For Palestine, • he
was in charge of United Jewish
Appeal funds for refugee assis-
tance, was awarded a citation
by Gratz Teacher'S College, at
the yearly commencement exer-
cises held in Temple University,
Philadelphia, in token of "his
great contribution to world
Jewry; his self-sacrificing effort
on behalf of the State of Israel
and his devotion to humanism
and true brotherhood. 4
* * *
RABBI JONAH B. WISE, na-
tional chairman of the United
Jewish Appeal since its incep-
tion, vice-chairman of the Joint
Distribution Committee and for
45 years a leader of the Reform
rabbinate in American, has been
awarded the honorary degree of
Doctor of Hebrew Letters by the
Jewish Theological Seininary of
America.
# * * *
DR. LEO BAECK, president of
the World Union for Progressive
Judaism, and DR. SHELDON H.
BLANK, chairman of the facul-
ty of the Hebrew Union College,
Cincinnati, will deliver the ma-
jor addresses at a World Union
conference which opens July 14
in London.
* * *
DR. NOAH NARDI, educator
and psychologist,. consultant to
the Jewish Education Commit-
tee of New York, has been ap-
pointed head of the Department
of Research and Experimenta-
tion of the Ministry of Educa-
tion of Israel by Education Min-
ister Zalman Shazar.

.

'$

*

NEW YORK, (JTA)—The ap-
pointment of STANLEY
ABRAMOVITCH, veteran Joint
Distribution Committee welfare
worker in Europe, as the JDC's
first director in Iran was an-
nonuced by Moses A. Leavitt,
executive vice-chairman of the
Committee.

Greenbush Features
Three Name Combos

Greenbush Inn, resort hotel
200 miles north of Detroit on
U. S. 23, has a full season of
name bands playing for night-
ly dancing and feature enter-
tainment.
Jack Weick and his trio open
a three week engagement July
1st, featuring live comedy, pan-
tomine, and musical vocals.
Following Weick for a three
week stand and a return en-
gagement the last two weeks of
August will be Dave Sloane and
his quartette.
The Dean Duane Trio comes
in between Sloan engagement
for two weeks. The trio provides
comedy and variety skits.

Rabbinical Assembly
Names Israel Mission

The Rabbinical Assembly of
America will send a mission to
Israel early in July to learn
how American Jewry can con-
tribute toward the religious re-
vival of the new state and to
study the religious resources
Israel can offer to strengthen
Jewish life in America it was
announced by Ra b b i Dav-
id Aronson, Assembly president.
Representing the Assembly on
the mission will be four of the
nation's leading Conservative
rabbis: Rabbi Ben Zion Bokser,
Forest Hills Jewish Center, new
York City, chairman of the mis-
sion, and Rabbi Maxwell Farber
Emanu-El Congregation, Phila-
delphia; Rabbi Ralph Simon,
Congregation Rodfei Zedek, Chi-
cago, and Rabbi Sanders Tofield,
Jacksonville (Fla.) Jewish Cen-
ter.

New York Forms Own
DP Welfare Agency as
USNA Quits City Aid

Reburial Set for Refugee
Who Gave Life for U.S.

Shevitz Underwrites

Yeshiva for A Day

Jacob Shevitz, 2220 Atkinson,
is underwriting a day's opera-
tion of the schools of Yeshivath
Beth Yehudah by his contribu-
tion of $412.
Educated in
the Yeshiva of
his native Slo-
nim, Boland
Shevitz has
been active in
J e w ish affairs
in the more
than 40 years he
has lived in De-
troit. He is a
Jacob Shevitz former presi-
dent of the Mizrachi Organiza-
tion of Detroit, a past president
and currently vice-president of
Congregation Beth Tefilo Em-
anuel.
"At one time, I was afraid
that the Jewish traditions which
meant so much to my own gen-
eration would die out in Ameri-
ca," explains Shevitz. "Now I
see the Yeshiva teaching Ameri-
can boys and girls, to love the
Torah' and to understand and
respect their own history."

NEW YORK—(JTA)—Forma-
tion of the New York Associa-
tion for New Americans, a new
welfare agency organized by
New York Jewish , leaders to
meet the relief, rehabilitation
and adjustment needs of Jewish
immigrants settling in the met-
ropolitan area was announced
here.
Announcement was made that
the United Service for New
Americans would discontinue its
direct relief and rehabilitation
operations in the New York City
area and would concentrate on
its national resettlement pro-
gram and migration services in
all ports of entry.
The Association, the largest
community DP welfare agency
in the United States, will begin
operations on July 5, with Mrs.
David M. Levy, prominent com-
munal and philanthropic leader,
as president of the board.
The board of the NYANA
adopted a statement of policy
emphasizing that the Associa-
Jewish News classified ads
tion is deSigned to be a tem- bring results. Call WO. 5-1155.
porary agency. Its objective will
be to avoid duplicating services
being rendered in the fields of •

its activities by existing com-
O
munity agencies, and to inte-
grate the services which NYANA
renders to immigrants with the
services of the permanent agen-
North Shore Drive
cies in the community.

Funeral and reburial services
for T/5 Robert Mathis, who died
Feb. 18, 1944, at Anzio, at the
age of 29, will be held at 11:30
a.m. this Sunday at the Hebrew
Benevolent Society. Rabbi Morris
Adler and the Jewish War Vet-
erans will officiate. Burial will
be in the veterans' section of
Hebrew Memorial Park.
T/5 Mathis enlisted in. the
U. S. armed forces in 1941, only
two years after his arrival in
this country. A native of Lith-
uania, he was a graduate of the
University of Kovno. In this
country he wrote for the Yiddish
and Lithuanian press.
He is survived by two broth-
ers, Jacob M. Mathis of 2083
Gladstone and David of New
York, and two sisters, Luba
Karni and Chana Rebcinsky of
Tel Aviv, Israel.

FOR RENT

VACANCIES FOR JULY ONLY
COMPLETELY FURNISHED LAKE'
FRONT 2 AND 3 BEDROOM

COTTAGES IN

SOUTH HAVEN

—Including—

Dishes - Silverware - Kitchen Utensils
Bed Sheets - Pillow Cases. - Blankets
and Towels. Fresh Linens Furnished
Twice Weekly.

Call Mr. Firsht

UN. 1-8507

41 • •••••••••••••••••••••00•+4.0+04.•••••••••••••#
••



"For Rest and Play—Come and Stay"

SAM SON'S RESORT

• Excellent Food

Junior Hadassah Sends
Ten to Study in Israel

In the first five days of June,
six new colonies were founded
in Israel including two in upper
Galilee near the Lebanese bor-
der extending over some 300
acres. The third is on the site
of a former abandoned Arab
village southwest of Ramle
where 60 new immigrant fami-
lies from Yugoslavia have re-
ceived single farm units of seven
to eight acres each.

Israel Corporation Signs
Up for Housing Project

NEW YORK — The signing of
an agreement between Israel
Corporation of America and the
Jewish Agency for Palestine
which contemplates the invest-
ment by the former of the sum
of $250,000 in housing for im-
migrants into Israel, either
through the purchase of deben-
tures of the .Amidar National
Housing Company or otherwise,
was announced by Albert Schiff,
president of the corporation.

ment and Activities

Both and Showers

SAMSON'S RESORT

Phones: 379 - 443

ZLATKINS RESORT
' on U. S. 31. So. Haven, Mich.
Phone So. Haven 666

No. Shore Dr., So. Haven, Mich.

Ruby Samson, Mgr.
♦ .***.e...******•*******0

PLAYGROUND OF THE NUDDLE,WOT

* Golfing
* Fishing
* Boating
* Sandy Beaches
* Theatres
* Mineral Baths
* Modern Stores
* All Sports
* Express Greyhound Busses from Chicago
* Beautiful Parks

SOUTH HAVEN RESORT ASSOCIATION

Code of Ethics

We, the members of the South Haven Resort Association
in our desire to maintain a high standard of service.
to the vacationing public, adopt this code of ethics and
seal, which we are privileged to display, as evidence of
our pledge to the following.
1 To honor our membership 9 To foster and maintain a
spirit of good will and
by constant improvement
courtesy towards those we
of vacation facilities for all. serve.

3 To

4

5

6

be fair and honest in
To earn and maintain a.
reputation for giving the
our relations with the pub-
maximum in vacation values
lic and to honor all com- and comfort.
mitments made by us.
To insure a clear under..
To continue our high `" standing of rates and serv-
ices
by a plain and concise
standards of cleanliness statement
and to adjust
and to serve only the finest promptly any causes of dis-
satisfaction.
in foods and beverages.

Spacious, beau tiful
grounds for rest and
- ecreation, delicious
deals, homelike at-
m o s ph.ere, childrens
counsellors.

449
-

Bus and Cars for
Convenience of
Guests

Buses meet all trains from Detroit at Kalamazoo
For Information and Reservations—Write or Phone

Famous for 30 Years As the
Most Ideal Vacation Spot in
South Haven


Be assured of a
Wonderful Va-
cation for the
Entire Family.



• Rooms with Tile

ZLATKINS . . .

Most Reasonable Rates

• All Sports
• Children's Governess
and Playground

• Planned Entertain-

NEW YORK — Ten members
of Junior Hadassah left by air
from Newark, N.J., airport on
June 26 for a year's study in
Israel under the sponsorship of
the Jewish Agency for Palestine.
They will be part of a group
totalling 35 young men and
women—including Joe Yanich of
Detroit—chosen from among the
membership of Zionist youth or-
ganizations in the United States
for special leadership training.

So. Haven, Mich.

I

For further i?ijorination write directly to the Resort of your choice

The

1

MICHIGAN BEACH HOTEL

1-"IT I, ANTIC

Ivl. Eichenbaum, Prop.

D. Mendelson, Prop.

65 N. Shore Drive, Tel. 511

269 N. Shore Drive, Tel. 451

BABOK'S VIRGINIA BEACH

SAMSON'S RESORT
Mrs. F. Samson, Prop.
U.S. 31, North, Tel. 379

M. Babok, Prop.
N. Shore Drive, Tel. 786

SEIDELS HOTEL &

BARON'S RESORT

REST.

U.S. 31, North, Tel. 433

Louis Seidel, Prop.
238 Brockway Ave., Tel. 787

PINE RIVER HOTEL

The BILTMORE
Maurice and Annabelle Steuben,
38-52 N. Shore Drive, Tel. 124

STEUBEN'S SUMMER HOTEL
Mayme, Ria and Ben S4.:ueben
68 N. Shore Drive, Tel. 581

CHARLEVOIX, MICHIGAN

FIDELMAN'S RESORT

J. Rubin and E. Bloom, Propr

Mrs. Charles Levitt invites you to spend yobr vacation in
beautiful Charlevoix ... where you will find:

Every Recreational Facility
Pollen Free Area
All Jewish Home-Cooked Meals
Served in Our Dining Room Under
the Personal Supervision of Mrs.
Fay Richman.
1 /2 Block From Lake Michigan —
Reasonable Rates





For Reservations and In

Write or Phone

PINE RIVER HOTEL

CHARLEVOIX, MICH,

PHONE 160

ti

M. Fidelman, Prop.
Phoenix Road, Tel. 789

GLASSMAN'S RESORT

A. H. Glassman, Prop.

THE SURF HOTEL

Sam Leider, Prop.
55 N. Shore Drive, Tel. 872

WEISS' RESORT

227 Oak Street, Tel. 408

Mickey Weiss, Prop.
70 N. Shore Drive, Tel. 34-W

GRAND PARK HOTEL

YASHENOVSKY'S RESORT

Jack Mann and Milton Rubin,
203 Dyckman Ave., Tel. 96

Webster Ave., Tel. 427

JANIS HOTEL

ZIPPERSTEIN'S REST

Mineral Baths
N. Schulman, Prop., Tel. 655

B. Zipperstein, Prop.
Bailey Ave., Tel. 335

LAKE PARK RESORT

ZLATKIN'S RESORT
S. Zlaikin, Prop.
East of Town, Tei. Z!'56

A. 4Rosenson, Prop.
U.S. 31, North, Tel. 348

.iCH1GAN

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