Council Awards Membership Prizes
At Meeting of Campaign Workers

THE JEWISH NEWS
19
Friday, September 21, 1951

-

Calendars Available
At Wrubel and Kozin

A limited supply of calendars
still remains at Wrubel and Ko-
zin Furriers, 13326 Dexter, an-
nounced LouiS Kozin. The Cal-
endar, beautifully illustrated,
depicts the glorious milestones
of the Jewish people.
This offer is made to readers
of The Jewish News, and may
be obtained without obligation
from Wrubel and Kozin..
All holidays are fully explain-
ed. month by month. Interesting
stories and explanations of Jew-
ish legends are also told in this
colorful calendar. Sabbath can-
dle lighting times and Yahrzeit
dates are indicated.

Mrs. EDWIN A. WOLF (right) is awarded a prize tray by Mrs.
HAROLD ZIV, membership integration chairman of the National Rosenwald Warns Against
Council of Jewish Women, Detroit Section, for obtaining the most Liquidation of the IRO
new members during NCJW campaign. Watching the proceed-
ings is Mrs. MORRIS RAND, membership chairman.
PARIS, (JTA)—The scheduled
f•,`
* * *
liquidation of the International
At a meeting of membership ice Special Placement Commit- Refugee Organization operations

campaign workers of the Na-
tional Council of Jewish Women
last week, Mrs. Samuel R. Glo-
gower national- board member
and chaintian of the national
ways and means committee, dis-
cussed the aims and needs of
the Council.
She referred to the work
NCJW is doing in shipping boxes
to Etgope and Israel with play
equipment for orphanages and
nurseries, and told how the local
group cooperates in helping to
operate the Twelfth Street Jew-
ish Center.
The only national Jewish or-
ganization represented on the
Women's Congressional Commit-
tee in Washington, the Council,
nationally supports a home for
homeless girls in Paris and helps
to support and advise the He-
brew University in Jerusalem.
I Mrs. Morris Rand, membership
chairman, awarded a prize to
Mrs. Edwin A. Wolf, for securing
the most members during the
membership' drive. Runner-up
was Mrs. Irving Greenstone, and
other awards were presented to
Mrs. William Stein and Mrs.
Maurice Klynn.
Mrs. Robert N. Janeway,
Chairman of the Volunteers of
the National Council of Jewish
Women-Jewish Vocational Serv-

.

tee for Older Persons, announced
a training program for volun-
teers to assist in getting jobs for
older persons is now under way.
Council members are being
trained to visit prospective em-
ployers and to interest them in
employing older persons.
This special placement pro-
gram is being jointly financed
by the National Council of Jew-
ish womeili and the Jewish Vo-
cational Service, operating from
the offices of JVS, 1249 Griswold,
and under the direction of Al-
bert L. Levenson.
The annual membership tea
of the career group will be held
at the home of Mrs. Barney
Smith, 1247 W. Chicago, on Sun-
day, 2 to 5 p.m.
Officers, board members and .
committee . chairmen have been
announced as follows : chair-
man, Fay Gollob; vice-chairmen,
Faye Portner and Hermine
Stone; treasurer, Ruth Miller.
Board: Pearl Leventen, Mollie
Raider, Ann Robinson , Emily
Breuer, June Brezner, Mildred
Label, Barbara Rose and Ger-
trude Kantor. Committee : pro-
gram, Ruth Miller and Beulah
Smerling; ship - a - box, Emily
Breuer; publicity, Gertrude
Kantor; membership,, Mildred
Label; office, Sadie Grossman.

People Make News

JERRY BIELFIELD, Ford deal- TERMEYER has been appointed

er at 6845 Michigan, has been to the Wage Stabilization Board

named by the United Founda-
'm1.5,*,""""---"'''' tion as Torch
Olive' chairman!
for the South-1
western Detroit
region. Bielfield'
will direct or-
anization a n d
Solicitation f o r
the annual
'2 c h Drive,
Oct. 16 to Nov.
8 in the region
Bielfield
south of Grand
Boulevard and Tireman and west
of Woodward.
* * *
PHILADELPHIA, (AJP)—Jew-
ish economist, S. HERBERT UN-

as a public member of a panel
to study application of stabiliz-
ation policies to commission
earnings. He was an economic
adviser during World War II to
the National War Labor Board.
* * *
Four instructors have been
added to the faculty of the
school of creative arts at Bran-
deis University. They are LOUIS
KRONENBERGER, drama critic;
MITCHELL SIPORIN, artist;
IRVING FINEMAN, playwright
and literary critic; and HAROLD
SHAPERO, composer.

*

will bring untold hardships to
tens of thousands of displaced
persons, William Rosenwald, a
national chairman of the United
Jewish Appeal, said here. He
warned that creation of a suc-
cessor organization would leave
many problems and cause new
ones "whose significance can-
not be exaggerated."
The problem of European Jew-
ish refugees remains a pressing
one, Mr. Rosenwald declared. He
expressed the conviction that al-
most every Jewish displaced per-
son in Germany desperately
hopes to emigrate to a free na-
tion where he can start life
anew. The "hard-core" cases, he
said, were in a desperate posi-
tion.

U. S.- British in Talks
On Near East Strategy

WASHINGTON, (JTA)—Sec-
retary of State Dean Acheson
and British Foreign SecreIkry
Herbert Morrison pondered • the
problem of how to bring the
Arab League closer to the West
and at the same time utilize the
maximum potentialities of Is-
rael as a defense partner in the
Near East. ti
Their talks also included an
examination of the continued
refusal of Egypt to permit Is-
rael-bound tankers through the
Suez Canal and Egypt's defiance
of the United Nations Security
Council's order to lift the block-
ade of Israel-bound shipping.
The two officials also discussed
Arab obstruction at the San
Francisco conference.

Ground Breaking for Sinai Hospital Oct. 14

Marking another step in the
progress of Sinai Hospital, the
Jewish hospital of Detroit, mem-
bers of the Jewish community
will gather Oct. 14, to witness
the laying of the cornerstone for
the new institution, being con-
structed on Outer Drive, between
Whitcomb and Lauder.
Hon. Henry M. Butzel, chair-
man of the cornerstone com-
mittee, has invited all members
of the Jewish community.
. The hospital, designed by Al-

bert Kahn Associated Architects
and Engineers, is being financed
by contributors to a special drive
held in 1944, under the auspices
of the Jewish Welfare Federation
and by a grant from the Greater
Detroit Hospital Fund.
Max Osnos, president of the
Jewish Hospital Association,
sponsoring agency of Sinai, will
be chairman of the cornerstone
laying. Ground was broken for
the hospital in January of this
year.

For the Holidays

You'll find everything you want for the holidays at the most reasonable
prices in the oldest and largest book and music store in the city.
• CANDLE STICKS
• MACHZOR I M
• BECHERS
• CANDLES AND MEMORIAL CANDLES
• NEW YEAR'S CARDS
• TALISIM

In the Music Department

We still have a sale on large listings of CANTORIAL - FOLK SONG -
HUMOROUS AND HEBREW RECORDS.

Regular Price-89c, Now in our store-39c each

BUY WITH CONFIDENCE
You can always be sure of being treated with the utmost consideration
at

BORENSTEINIS
BOOK AND MUSIC STORE

12th St. between Blaine and Pingree

TY. 5-6811

Congregation Beth Itzchock

ANNOUNCES

HIGH HOLIDAY SERVICES

'

In Their Synagogue-

3836 FISCHER AVE.

The Services Will Be Conducted by

Rabbi I. Strauss

Who Will Also Preach the Sermon

Tickets on Sale Daily — 3 to 10 p.m*.

FOR INFORMATION CALL WALNUT 1-1048

You Are Welcome to Become Affiliated
with Detroit's Newest
Northwest Conservative Synagogue

CONGREGATION
AHA VAS ACHIM

19190 SCHAEFER, Near 7 MILE ROAD
Ephraim F. Einhorn, Rabbi
Rubin Boyarsky, Cantor

Seats for High Holiday Services now Available:
Daily-7:30 to 10 p.m. Sunday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Special Selihot services will be held at Saturday _Midnight
and will be conducted by Cantor Rubin Boyarsky

SUNDAY SCHOOL CLASSES ARE NOW IN SESSION AT '
THE JAMES VERNOR PUBLIC SCHOOL, PEMBROKE
and LESURE at 9:30 A.M.
•

Registrations Are Still Being Accepted

* *

John B. Ford, president of the
Detroit Symphony Orchestra,
Inc., announces the signing of
MISCHA MISCHAKOFF, as con-
TROY LAUNDRY
certmaster, and HENRI NOSCO,
assistant. concertmaster of the
DRY CLEANERS
Detroit Symphony. Mischakoff
GRAND RIVER AT I2.T4
Samuel Belkin, commander of is also concertmaster with Art-
LAWRENCE H. JONES POST, uro Toscanini's NBC Symphony.
Branches:
announces t h e season's first Nosco is a ,violinist.
2nd at Pallister
3rd near Seldon
meeting at 11 a.m., Sunday, at
the Memorial Home. This will
be a breakfast meeting. Regu-
lar meetings of the Post will be
held on the first and third Tues-
day of each month. Members of
Announces that Supplementary Services will be held in
the Auxiliary are invited to par-
its
social
hall on Rosh Hashanah, October 1, 2, and Yom
ticipate in these meetings.
Kippur, October 10. The services will be conducted by
* * *
LAWRENCE H. JONES AUXI-
LIARY will meet at 12:30 p.m.,
Wednesday, at the home of Mrs.
and
Edward H. Schaefer, 3270 W.
Outer Dr. Veterans at the Dear-
born Veterans Hospital were
awarded prizes at a party given
Sept. 6.
RABBI MOSES LEHRMAN WILL PREACH
* * *
LT. RAYMONr ZUSSMAN
ON YOM. KIPPUR
AUXILIARY will participate in
a donor luncheon rally and min-
Admission cards, $7.50, may be obtained at the congre-
strel show Monday evening, at
gation office, Lawrence entrance, daily 9 to 5 and 7 to 9,
the Memorial Home. The regu-
and all day Sunday.
lar meeting will be held Oct. 8,
at the, Home.

•••,.. k*

Fk/C3.

CONGREGATION B'NAI MOSHE

RABBI JULIUS WEINBERG

CANTOR A. A. ROSENFELD

A comprehensive Adult Educational Program has been
prepared and will stall' nextt Siinday, September 23rd,
with a weekly Sunday morning class to be conducted by
Rabbi Einhorn, at the. James Vernor School, at 9:30 a.m.
All are welcome.

