- Browdy Named ZOA President ; Helps Arrange 'Salute to Israel' ED SULLIVAN, nationally-syndicated columnist (left),. BENJAMIN G. BROWDY,4new president of the Zionist Or- ganization of America (center) , and DAN TROTSKY, presi- dent of the Roosevelt School at Hyde Park, discuss plans for the ZOA's first annual pageant "Salute to Israel," at Madison Square Garden on May 11. Sullivan and Trotsky are co-chair- men of the ZOA event, which commemorates the first an- niversary of Israel's admission to the United Nations. The program will be dedicated to the memory of the late ZOA president, Daniel Frisch. At the meeting of the ZOA national administrative coun- cil, oil Sunday, in New York, Browdy was unanimously elected president of the ZOA to complete the unexpired term of Mr. Frisch. It is believed that the annual convention of the ZOA, usually held in July, will be advanced, possibly to May. Browdy, in his speech of acceptance, promised to continue a policy of harmony and cooperation by consulting Dr. Abba Hillel Silver and Emanuel Neumann, as well as Louis Lipsky. It is believed in some quarters that Dr. Israel Goldstein, Rudolf G. Sonneborn, chairman of the administrative council, _ Ezra Shapiro of Cleveland and Emanuel Neumann are being considered for the ZOA presidency. It also was announced that the new ZOA House in Jeru- salem wil be named the Daniel Frisch House, in memory of the late ZOA president. . Histadrut wises $230,000, Reports Acclaimed by 1,800 _ An enthusiastic audience of more than 1,800 who filled to overflowing the auditorium of . Northwest Hebrew Congregation ' on Sunday evening acclaimed -the announcement made by the :Histadrut Israel campaign chair- man, Morris Lieberman, who :presided, that $230,000 was raised in this year's drive. 7. While this sum represents a . decline as _compared with. last _year's total of $270,000, the feel- ing in Histadrut . circles is that the result in the 1950 solicita- tions was good, considering a temporary downward trend in fund-raising. Mr. Lieberman expressed thanks to his co-workers and expressed the hope that this community will continue to sup- port the great work of Hista- drut which stands in the fore- front of Israel's reconstruction efforts. Mrs Altman Lauded Harry Schumer, who opened the meeting, called upon the gathering to re-dedicate itself •to the work in behalf of Israel and stated that even if the quo- ' ta had been doubled it would not have been sufficient to care for all of labor's needs in state- building. Louis Levin, chairman of the organizations' division, spoke briefly and expressed special thanks for her cooperation over her radio hours to Mrs. Hyman • Altman, who was given an ova- * tion by the gathering. The musical program which brought forth prolonged ap- plause and many demands for encores featured the Music study Club Chorus, directed by Dan Frohman, with Rose Bassin Stein as accompanist; and the Israeli artists.; the flu- tist Hillel Rabinadov and his wife, Aviva, who interpreted the selections and joined in singing with her husband,. Hillel Rabinadov played on a , flute which he had made from a reed in Israel. Arthur Holzman, radio broad- - caster who recently arrived from Israel, and Rabbi Morris Adler • were the - principal speakers. Mr. Holzman described how- the youth fought for Israel's re- * demption. die emphasized that Histadrut laid the • foundation for the Jewish state, that it as- sists in absorption of immigra- tion, provides schools and health services for its hundreds of thousands of affiliates and aid in the economic upbuilding of the country. 28 — THE JEWISH NEW Friday, March 24, 1950 Silver Shares Pulpit With His Son at HUC Founder's Ceremonies Dr. Abba Hillel Silver will de- liver the principal address at Founder's Day ceremonies Sat- urday, March 25, at the Hebrew Union College—Jewish Institute of Religion in Cincinnati. The traditional •exercises will be coupled with a salute to the 75 historic years of service ren- dered by the seminary Dr. Isaac Mayer Wise founded in 1875. Sharing the platform with Rabbi Silver will be his son, Daniel J. Silver, a third-year student at the College-Institute, who will read' the service. Dr.. Abraham Cronbach, pro- fessor of Jewish social studies, who will retire at the end of this academic year after 28 years of service, will give the invoca- tion and Dr. Julian MorgenStern, president emeritus, will ask the benediction. Dr. Nelson Glueck will deliver a word of welcome and Lester A. Jaffe, chairman of the board of governors, Will extend a greet- ing. Yiddish Writer Visits City, Lectures Here Jacob Beller, well known, Yid- dish writer, formerly of New York, now a resident of Israel, is a guest in Detroit and will de- liver several lecturers during his stay here. - Beller, who recently returned from a tour of Central and Latin American countries in be- ',half of Magen David Ado rn (Red Magen David), is t h e of a 300- . :author 1 age book i n iddish, "Eretz rael — 1948." is work now s being trans- ated into Eng- lish for ear ly Beller publication. He is a writer for Davar, the organ of Histadrut, Israel. Federation of Labor. During his stay here he can be reached at Yeshivath Chachmey Lublin, Linwood and Elmhurst. Community Asked to Aid JWV Buy-a-Brick Project Sunday Five hundred men and women, members of the _ Detroit Posts of the Jewish War Veterans of the U. S. and their Women's Auxiliaries, will make a house-to- house canvass from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday -for a fund to help pay for the new JWV memorial building erected - on Davison and Holmur in tribute to the 300 Detroit Jews who pave their lives in World War II. - The City Council has proclaimed Sunday, March 26, as "Buy-a-Brick Day" for the Jewish War Veter- ans. Bricks will sell at $1 each. Norman Berkley is chairman of the JWV earn- paign. Mrs. Fannie Hencken is in charge of publicity. An appeal has been issued to all Detroit Jews by JWV to welcome the volunteers and to purchase as many bricks as possible. Slosson to View Mid-East Problems At • ZOD Meeting This Wednesday Wednesday evening, March 29, at 8:30, the Zionist Organization of Detroit is sponsoring - a meet- ing at Northwest Synagogue, to be addressed by Prof. Preston Slosson of the University of Michigan. Is Egypt preparing , to attack Israel? What about the many disquieting rumors coming out of the Middle East? What stand will our country take? are among the question's Prof. Slos- son, well-known radio commen- tator and authority on United States foreign policy, will dis- cuss. Since 1921, Prof. Slosson has taught history at the University of Michigan. He also taught in several British Universities, and has written many books, includ- ing textbooks. Leon Kay, president of the Zionist Organization of Detroit, urges all who are interested hi this subject to attend .this meet- ing and participate in the -ques- tion and answer period which will follow the lecture. The pub- lic is invited to attend. UJA Speaker Mrs. Avis Shulman To Address Pontiac Meeting Friday Pontiac's Jewish Welfare Fed- eration will present Mrs. Avis Shulman, national chairman of the - speakers' division of the United Jewish Appeal, at an open meeting at 9:30 p.m: Fri- day, March 24, at Bn.ai Isr el auditorium, Oneida arid Melo- minee Streets, in Pontiac. Mrs. Shulinan, who is noted for her authoritative reports on •- , • rael and, more recently, the Israel Supply Mission, has kept her in constant touch with Is- rael's problems and their rela- tion to the American Jewish community. In 1946, Mrs. Shulman worked with displaced persons in Eu- rope, as a representative of the Jewish Agency for Palestine. . Her appearance Friday will be the first educaational meet- ing in Pontiac this year in be- half of the United Jewish Ap- peal. There will be no solicita- tion of funds. Detroiters are in- vited to attend the meeting. Parents' Institute Passover Record Widely Distributed Zionism Does Not End Speaking in Yiddish, Rabbi Adler declared that "a work that can be ended is not an ideal" and that Zionism is an ideal that does not end. Asserting that numerous difficulties still stand in the way of Israel's recon- struction, he said that Jews in the Diaspora are ambassadors without portfolios for the new state; that "we are Jews and Americans" and that non-Jews must recognize the value of work for Israel because only through the Jewish state can democracy be brought to that part of the world. He admon- ished the gathering that "we must continue to serve as Isra- el's interpreters to the outside world." LZOA to Present Meeting on Housing Mrs. Samuel Linden, chair- man of the American Affairs committee of the Detroit cen- tral committee of the Labor Zionist Organization of America, has announced that the com- mittee will sponsor a movement- wide meeting at 9 p.m. this Wednesday, March 29, at the Labor Zionist Institute, on the subject of "Housing -- Detroit's Number One Problem." A presentation of Detroit's housing needs will be made by James H. Inglis, formerly secre- tary-director • of the Detroit Housing Commission. Inglis' comments will be illustrated by slide photographs. He is pres- ently associated with the U. S. Public Housing Administration. Also on the prbgram is Frank Wur tsmit h, of the Detroit Round Table and temporary chairman of the Detroit Conn- ell for -Better Housing. Akron Tire Company To Open Israel Plant TEL XVINT — (JTA) — The General Tire Company of Akron, will form a company in Israel within the next few months to produce tires, it was announced here. The company and the Is- rael Finance Ministry have come to an agreement whicli will result in the opening of a $2,000,000 plant. Production will begin next year and is ex- pected to be 50,000 tires and tubes annually, MRS. AVIS SHULMAN Israel, was a resident of K far Hachorech, a Kibutz near Naz- areth', at the time of the Arab- Jewish riots in 1937. She has worked with Israel leaders on various projects for the last 12 years. Her day-to- day work with Materials for Is- Mrs.‘ Solovich Elected Vice-President, BBW Supreme Council; Honored Here MRS. CHARLES SOLO- VICH (center) has been the recipient of double honors, local and nation- al, for her extensive ac- tivity f o r Bnai Brith Women. In this picture she is shown with - MRS. ROBERT A. COGGAN, president of the - Detroit Women's Bnai Brith Council, and MRS. LEON- ARD SIMS, delegate to the Women's Supreme Council, at the recent in- itiation of new members into the. "Frances Solo- vich Class." At the national wom- en's Bnai Brith conven- tion in Washington last week, Mrs. Solovich was elected vice president of the Supreme Council. Mrs. Hyman C. Weisman of St. Louis was reelected president by the Council, which also adopted a- resolution to provide $100,000 to estab- lish a home for neurotic children in Israel. . The Passover Record which was produced by the Jewish Parents' . Institute of the Jewiih Center is being sold in New York in 300 record shops and in Detroit at J. L. Hudson Co. and other record shops. "The Passover Story" is told to a child engaged in helping her mother prepare for the holiday. When she stops to ask her mother if there had been other children "like me" trying to escape from Egypt, the lis- tener is carried back to the days of Exodus. Symbolic foods and traditional Hebrew and Ameri- can songs are woven into the story. The record also is available at the Jewish Community Cen- ters on Woodward, 12th Street and Davison. JW V Initiates Luncheon Plans Mrs. Samuel J. Rhodes, de- partment of Michigan commun- ity relations chairman, will head the third annual Jewish War Veterans' Ladies Auxiliary good- will luncheon, it was announced by department president, Mrs. Leon Ginsburg. Open to the membership of 25 veteran and patriotic organ- izations and to friends of JWV, the affair will be held at 1 p.m., Mortday, April 10, at Kern's auditorium. Mrs. Rhodes will have a com- mittee of 70 women to assist her. Reservations must be in by April 3 to the auxiliary com- munity relations chairman. Mrs. Philip Cantor will be in charge of refreshments, Mrs. Bernard Hoffman in charge of waitresses and Mrs. Irving Hen- cken in charge of hostessesa•