Detroit Groups Mobilized To Aid Histadrut Campaign 10—THE JEW ISH NEWS Library of Congress Honors Yivo with Exhibit Friday, December 8, 1950 WASHINGTON — The Library of Congress has arranged an im- Negro Baptists Contribute SAN FRANCISCO, (J T A) — pressive exhibition of Jewish Members of the Negro Ham- ilton Square Baptist Church here contributed a substantial sum of money to the local Jew- ish Welfare Fund. The pastor is Dr. E. Franklin Hamby. books in honor of the silver jubilee of YIVO, the Yiddish Scientific Institute, whose 25th annual conference will take place in New York, Jan. 13-17. Included in the exhibition are 30 Yivo publications in the fields. of Jewish history, education, folklore, bibliography, and lin- guistics. The "Information Bulletin" of the Library of Congress (Vol. 9, No. 45) features an article titled "Yivo Silver Jubilee." It surveys the history of Yivo and lauds its achievements. In Place of Their Usual Hanukah Greetings — The Following Bring You This Important Message . . • . , During the visit in Detroit of Dr. Zalman Grinberg, director of the Beilinson Hospital in Israel, numerous groups were mobilized to assist in the Israel Histadrut Campaign. The top photo shows Dr. Grinberg conferring with a group of local physicians on health problems in Israel. Left to right: Dr. IRVING POSNER, Dr. MORRIS BACHMAN, Dr. ZALMAN GRIN- BERG and Dr. SAUL STEIN, chairman of professional division of Histadrut Campaign. Dr. Grinberg was honored at a luncheon sponsored by the professional division during his visit here. The second photo shows Dr. Grinberg with a group of leading members of the Women's Auxiliary of Maimonides Medical Society at a tea arranged in his honor at the home of Mrs. I. Walter Silver. Dr. Grinberg reported the progress of the Orthopedic Sec- tion of the Kupat Holim Zamenhoff Clinic which has been estab- lished and maintained with funds raised by the Women's Auxil- iary. Seated left to right: Mrs. I. WALTER SILVER and Mrs. IL S. MELLEN. Standing, left to right: Mrs. IRVING WEISENTHAL, Mrs. BENJAMIN BRAND, Mrs. HENRY SMALL, president of Maim- onides Women's Auxiliary, Mrs. CHARLES GITLIN and Dr. Grin- berg. At the 30th anniversary of Histadrut celebration last Thurs- day at Northwest Hebrew Congregation, the third photo was taken showing, left to right: Dr. JOACHIM PRINZ, guest speaker; Can- tor BENJAMIN SIEGEL, guest artist; MORRIS LIEBERMAN, cam- paign chairman; NORMAN COTTLER, campaign treasurer; MOR- RIS SCHAVER, campaign honorary chairman, and HARRY SCHU- MER, campaign executive board chairman. Histadrut Campaign leaders are shown mapping campaign plans in the bottom photo. Seated, left to right: MORRIS LIEBER- MAN, HARRY SCHUMER, SIDNEY SHEVITZ. Standing, left to right: IRVING POKEMPNER, LOUIS LEVINE and NORMAN COT- TLER. `The 13th Is Magic' Fine Youth Volume "The 13th Is Magic" by Joan Howard, ably illustrated by Ad- rienne Adams, will thrill the young reader who will be en- chanted by the plot, its charac- ters, the adventures which mark the tour of Ronald and 'Gillian Saunders through that myster- ious area. It is the story of a Central Park West apartment where the two adventurers live on the 14th floor—just above the 12th. Since the 13th number has its super- stitions, that floor is skipped. But the black cat Merlin, which plays its part in this drama, leads the two to that hidden • magical floor. There they meet the bats and owls and broom- sticks — the magic of 13. The park near their home lends itself well to the many things which happen to the Saunders' children. In the course of their play and adven- tures we hear about Scott and Shakespeare and Br ow n in g, about the heroes in English lit- erature whose escapades are mingled with theirs. "The 13th Is Magic," published by Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 419 Fourth Ave., N.Y. 16, will be received with pleasure by the youngsters for- tunate to read it. They fought polio because you helped. Sandra Grossberg, age 13, in wheel chair stricken in 1946 recently returned from Warm Springs, Ga., does her best for the March of Dimes. Suzanne Alpert, age 8, another polio victim stands beside her. The 1951 March of Dimes, only financial support of the National Foundation for 'Infantile Paralysis will be held January 15 through January 31. During the last three years, polio has reached the monstrous incidence of 100,- 000 ,cases. This is almost as many ca s es as irr the preceding ten years. Fortunately wherever and whenever polio hit, there was a chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis on the spot, ready to help the patient, his family and the entire com- munity. • Your local chapter was the first line of defense against this disease. Its chief' weapon was money—money contributed by the American people to the annual MARCH OF DIMES. Last year MARCH OF DIMES money paid hospital bills for thousands of families. Advance Glove Mfg. Co. 901 W. Lafayette Aetna Smelting & Refining 1826 Illinois Backman and Chodoroff 15500 Four out of five of the stricken needed financial assistance—and got it from the National Foundation and its chapters. Last year MARCH OF DIMES money paid 'for nursing care,' physical •therapy transportation, wheelchairs, braces and crutches. Help was given to all who wanted, without questioning age, race, creed or color. Respirators, hot pack machines, cribs, beds, iron lungs are only part of the equip- ment for which the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis must pay. There are nurses, doctors, therapists, researchists constantly employed to treat polio, to 'pre- vent its spread and to discover its cause. Dexter Theatre 11614 Dexter Fisher Wall Paper & Paint Co. 5840 1255 Broadway 1715 Michigan Ave. 14400 Wyoming Sanitary Laundry 1337 Winder Guardian Steel Corp. P.O. Box 87 Detroit Candy Co. Kelly's Service Station W. McNichols cor. Santo Barbara Vermont 5170 Serwers Wholesalers 660 General Smoked Fish Company 4058 Beaufoit W. Jefferson Restrick Lumber Co: Frank's Stadium Service Consumers Paper Co. 35 Formerly Co-operative Ports Co. 10288 W. Jefferson Woodward Woodrow Wilson Cadillac Furniture Part & Equipment Corp. Gratiot Sheeton Furs, Inc. 404 Michigan Bldg. Sid's Truck 5- Auto Sales 13815 Grand River Standard Stanchion Mfg. Ave. \ • 8053 Military Ave.