Halley Admits Firm Handled
Richards' Stations, Says ADL
Infants Service Group Chief Dubbed Move as 'Proper'

THE JEWISH NEWS-7

Sinai Hospital to Be Ready
For Use at End of '52 Under
Direction of Dr. Julien Priver

In another step toward final
achievement of a Jewish hos-
pital for Detroit, Dr. Julien Pri-
ver, who has come here to serve
as executive director of Sinai
Hospital, soon will begin con-
sideration of staff appointments
for the hospital being construc-
ted on Outer Drive between
Whitcomb and Lauder.

Name Committees
To Steer Program
Of JWF Women

-

As the Women's Division- of
the Jewish Welfare Federation
begins its sixth season of year-
round education and interpre-
tation for its 14,000 members,
Mrs. John C". Hopp, Division
president, announced the women
who would provide committee
leadership.
Each of the four vice-presi-
dents of the WOmen's Division
will coordinate the activities • of
specific 'committees under her
'• direction. Mrs. Abraham Cooper,
responsible for campaign struc-
ture, will work with the collec-
••tion and research committees;
- Mrs. Harry L. Jones will coor-
dinate program, publicity, -pro-
motion, arrangements, food and
personnel; Mrs. Julian H. Kro-
- lik. committee on c omMittees
and office; and Mrs. Alexander
W. Sanders, • education and
speakers.
Committee leadership for the
1951-52 year-round program is
. as -follows: Mesdames Samuel S
Aaron, chairman, Arthur Gould,
vice-chairman, committee on
- Committees; Raymond A. Soko-
lov, chairman, Charles O. Brisk-
man and J. Shurly Horwitz,
vice-chairmen, program; Isidore
Sobeloff, chairman, Harry L.
Jackson, vice-chairman, educa-
tion; Julian Tobias, chairman,
speakers; Sidney Rosen, chair-
man, publicity; and William H.
Frank, chairman, Gerald Spero,
vice-chairman, office.
K e yposts in the remaining six
committees will be filled =by Mes-
dames Perry Burnstine, chair-
man, Mrs. Bud Blum, vice-chair-
man, - research; William Isen-
berg, chairman, Samuel Aaron
and Lewis Manning,; vice-chair-
men, collections; Lawrence
Fleischman, chairman, promo-
tion; Maurice A. Landau, chair-
man, Nathan Simons, vice-
h a.i r m a n, arrangements; M.
George Wayburn,tchairrnan, Ben
Fishman, vice-chairman, food;
and T. Ben Kasle, chairman, Les-
ter Morris, vice-chairman, per-
sonnel.

.

_

.

Photographic Society
Honors I. A. Berger

Isadore Arnold Berger was
honored by the Photographic
Society of America Saturday
night with a
Fe 1 1 owship
which was be-
stowed at the
banquet held in
conjunction
with their an-
nual convention
in Detroit.
Mr. Berger is
the only one in
Michigan who
has a Fellow-
ship from the I. A. Berger
world's two greatest photo-
graphic organizations, Royal
Photographic Society of Great
Britain and Photographic So-
ciety of America. He has been
active in camera club circles,
was secretary of the Pictorial
Division of the P. S. A. and is
presently secretary-treasurer of
the Photd-Journalism Division
of P. S. A. He is president and
founder of the Photographic
War Services who were in
charge of the photographic
work on the home front of the
Detroit U. S. 0. and the inter-
national headquarters of the
American Legion during the last
war. He is past president and
hOnorary member • of Detroit
C a, m e r a Club, Photographic
Guild of Detroit, Greater De-
troit Camera Club Council and
Photographic Salon Society of
Detroit.

Friday, November 2, 1951

Names Show Chairmen

Dr. Priver, who comes, to De-
troit from the associate direc-
torship of Mount Sinai Hospital
of New York, is a graduate of
the University of Western On-
tario, where he received his MD
degree in 1940.
Sinai Hospital, under the aus-
pices of the Jewish Hospital As-
sociation, is expected to be ready
for community use toward the
end of next •year. Upon the oc-
casion of the cornerstone lay-
ing, Max Osnos, president of
the Jewish Hospital Association;
expressed gratitude to the
Greater Detroit Hospital Fund
for Its grant to Sinai and to
the Jewish Welfare Federation
for the special campaign it con-
ducted to raise funds for the
erection of a Jewish hospital in
Detroit.
Designed by Albert Kahn
Associated Architects and En-
gineers, in consultation with
Dr. J. J. Golub of New York,
Sinai will utilize the most
modern accepted techniques
in present-day health care, as
Nate S. Shapero, chairman of
' the building committee, has
pointed out. Provision - has
been made for oxygen to be
piped into every room, elimi-
nating the need for moving
tanks from one place to an-
other, and electric conveyor
belts from the central kitchen
to the floor pantries in each
unit will be installed to insure
the expeditious delivery of
food to the rooms.
Other examples of careful
planning that went into Sinai
include a graded approach, so
that patients may enter the
building without climbing the
long flight of stairs that greet
Visitors of most existing hos-
pitals; the placement of all ma-
ternity and obstetrics facilities
on one floor, so that no vertical
transportation will be required
for mothers or babies; and the
location of the radiology and
therapy departments on the first
floor of the center wing, where
they may easily be utilized if
an outpatient clinic is some day
constructed.
Dr. Priver began his career,
following his internship at the
Marine Hospital on Staten
Islan d, as •epidemiologist-in-
training with the New York City
Health Department. From 1942
until early 1946, he was in com-
mand of Medical Collecting Co.
of Sixth Infantry Division of
the Army and, upon separation
from the Army, became a resi-
dent in Hospital Administration
at the New York Hospital for
Joint Diseases. At the end of
1946 he was appointed assistant
director of Mount Sinai and was
elevated to associate in January,
1950.

.

Afficers Trained in Britain

NEW YORK, (AJP)—The re- an anti-Jewish, anti-Negro na-
ligious issue was dragged into ture.
a heated political battle for the
post of City Council President as
Democrats blasted Jewish candi-
date Rudolph Halley, Kefauver
Counsel and Liberal Party choice
FIVE
for the office, for representing
the late G. A. Richards, radio
Acres of imen
station owner charged with in-
Pleasure "8"
jecting anti-Semetic slants into
A BLOCK Of TROPICAL GARDENS "Illus
•
newsc asts.
*Oft
• A HUGE SWIMMING POOL
Halley, charging that his poli-
1
4::
• COFFEE SHOP • 'ROUND THE
tical foes had "dragged a reli-
CLOCK ACTIVITIES
gious issue" into the campaign,
SPECIAL SEASON RATES
said that Judge Meir Steinbrink,
Mrs. AL SKLAR (left) and national chairman of the Anti-
Mrs. ALLAN SALTZ will serve Dcfamation League, has told
as chairmen of the annual him he considered accepting
dinner-dance and show to be Richards as a client was "entire-
presented by the Infants ly proper." .
ADL was one of the two na-
Service Group on Jan. 20, at
Masonic Temple. Assisting tional Jewish organizations that
them will be Mesdames David charged Richards' three stations
Riseman, show direct or; —KMPC Los Angeles, WJR De-
George Bennett and Allen troit and WGAR Cleveland,—
-Fisher, tickets; Sam Schwartz, with presenting slanted news of
decorations; Alfred Wolf, hos-
tesses; Jabk King, newspaper;
NORTH STAR
Louis Merson, co-editor; Louis
*
Trotsky, Ralph Shook, Irving
AIRCOACH
Tyner, program chairmen, and
Manny Silverman and Sam
Marks, co-chairman; George
•
iegres
Klein, publicity.
L es
Los Ang

C7i

San

Cabinet Proposes
Abolitjon of Death
Penalty in Israel

TEL AVIV, (JTA)—The Israel
Cabinet decided to submit to
the Parliament a law proposing
abolition of- the death penalty.
(The Associated Press report-
ed that the Cabinet also decided
to shelve the controversial bill
which provides that girls in
Israel who object to milita. ry
service on religious grounds
should serve at non-military
work • for a corresponding
period.)
Finance Minister Eliezer Kap-
lan told the Cabinet that part
of the $68,000,000 grants-in-aid
voted Israel by the United
States might be used for pur-
chasing consumer goods, includ-
ing food.

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LONDON, (JTA)—Israeli and
Jordan army officers are receiv-
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the British Army's Larkhills
School of Artillery. Although For Reservations, Piton* or Write
Jews and the Arabs sleep in
separate barracks, they work
and eat together. When off duty,
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Sunday, Dec. 9, 8:30 P.M. - Regina Resnik
Metropolitan Opera Soprano

Wednesday, Feb. 20, 8:30 P.M.
Charles Laughton, Dramatic Star of Stage,
Screen and Radio

Monday, April 21, 8:30 P.M.
Mischa Mischakoff, Concertmaster,
Detroit Symphony Orchestra
George Miquelle, First Cellist,
Detroit Symphony Orchestra
Karl Haas, Concert Pianist
In a Program of Instrumental Music

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At Temple Israel, Manderson and Merton Roads

Series tickets at $7 .50 and S4.50

Call-Temple Israel Office, UN. 3 7769

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Mrs. Flarry C. Singer, TE. 4-5868 or Sol I. Stein, TO. 8-0219

