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April 10, 1953 - Image 14

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1953-04-10

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

Monument
Unveilings

AJC Junior Division All-Out
Campaign Day Set for April 12

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(Unveiling announcements may De In-
serted by mail or by calling The Jewish
News office. WO 54155. Written an-
nouncements must be • accompanied by
the name and address of the , person
making-the insertion. There is a standard
charge of 52 for unveiling notices,
measuring an inch In depth) .

The family of the late Irwin
Et. Rosenthal announces the
unveiling of a monument in his
memory at 2:30 p.m., Sunday
April 19, at Machpelah Ceme-
tery. Rabbi Adler will officiate.
Relatives and friends are asked
to attend.
* * *
The family of the late Milton
M. Decker announces the un-
veiling of a monument in his
memory at 1:30 p.m., Sunday,
April 12, at Ghesed shel Emes
Cemetery. Rabbi Sperka will of-
ficiate. Relatives and friends are
asked to attend.
* * *
The family of the late Mrs.
Elsie Erlich announces the un-
veiling of a monument in her
memory at. 2 p.m., Sunday, April
19, at Chesed shel Emes Ceme-
tery. Rabbi Wohlgelernter will
officiate. Relatives and friends
are asked to attend.
* * *
The family of the late Hyman
Serota announces the unveiling
of a monument in his memory
at 2 p.m.. Sunday, • April 19, at
Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Rab-
bi Levin will officiate: Relatives
and friends are asked to attend.
* * *
The family of the late Bension
(Ben) Freedman announced the
unveiling of a monument in his
Memory at 1 p.m., Sunday, April
19, at Clover Hill Park Cemetery.
Rabbi Adler will officiate. Rela-
tives and friends are asked to
attend.
* * *
The family of the late Rose
Salinsky announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in her mem-
ory at 2 p.m.. Sunday, April 12,
at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi
Gorrelick and Cantor Goidring
will f of ficiat e. Relatives and
friends are asked to attend.

.**•\

Junior Division members met at the Bel-Aire for their Allied

Jewish Campaign kickoff luncheon. Hal Lehrman, foreign corre-
spondent and author, highlighted the gathering with his account
of Jewish life in the Soviet sphere. That same evening, at the
Lee Plaza, members of the special gifts board and their guests
met for dinner. Shown at the luncheon are (left to right)
BERNICE ALPER; Rabbi MINARD KLEIN of Temple Beth El;
LEHRMAN; and MILLI FOX. Six hundred Junior campaigners
will cover the city on Sunday, April 12, the All-Out-Red-Letter-
Day of the general solicitation phase of the drive. Fifty of the
workers will follow through on Metropolitan Division assignments.
Many workers will meet at their captains' homes for informal
kickoff breakfasts. The auditorium of the Davison Center will be
open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. to receive reports.

World Jewry Mourns Deaths of Seven
Prominent Communal Leaders

Jewry throughout • the world
this week is in mourning for
seven noted Jews, who passed
away during the week. The dead
are Dr. Nisson Touroff, Abraham
Mazer,, Zalman Cutler, Lester
Jaffe, Mark Eisner, Abraham
Reisen and Joseph A. Wilson.
. Jewish leaders in New York
where Mr. Mazer lived, and or-
ganizations throughout - the na-
tion joined in paying tribute to
the noted communal leader
and philanthropist. He died at 77.
Mr. Mazer came to the United
States from the Ukraine, arriv-
ing penniless at 17. During his
business career he established
paper product plants in Florida,
V e r m o n t and Philadelphia.
Deeply interested in Israel, Mr.
Mazer only recently was active
in establishing the American-
Israeli Paper Mill, now being
constructed at Hadera.
Find Remnants of Scrolls
Dr. Touroff, 75, was a former
,000-Years-Old in Jordan
LONDON, (JTA) --- The re- professor at the Jewish Institute
mains of at least 70. Biblical of Religion in New York and the
scrolls, 2,000 years old, have Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
been discovered in Jordan in
Monde Associates, Inc., Amer-
caves overlooking the Dead Sea.
Dr. Lankester Harding, director ican publishers of the forthcom-
of antiquities in Jordan has ing "Who's Who in • World
described the finding of Greek, Jewry," announce that HARRY
Hebrew anct Aramaic scrollS as SCHNEIDERMAN and ALLAN
the "Most sensational archeolO- ROBERTS have been added to
the editorial board.
gical event of our time."

-

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Two Lectures by Noted Author
and Psychologist

PROFESSOR F. SCEINEURSON

Saturday Evening
April llth

Monday Evening

April 13th'

Rose Sittig Cohen Auditorium,
13226 Lowton
Hebrew

Workmen's Circle Auditorium,
11529 Linwood
Yiddish

"THE PSYCHOLOGICAL
FORCES OF ISRAELI
HEROISM"

"THE PSYCHOLOGY
OF THE NEW
ISRAELI IMMIGRANT"

Lectures Sponsored by

ilebmw Teachers Association of the
4 ;53A'ed Hebrew 'Schools and KvOzah ivrith,
Vyolem Meletern insMate and
Workman's Circle 5.';h001
Admission for one lecture, $1.00; for both, $1.50

Under' the Czars in• his native
Russia, Dr. Tou-
roff was super-
intendent of
Russian Jewish
schools.
:n 1908, Dr.
Tour o f f was
named by the
Turkish rulers
of Palestine to
reorganize a n d
establish public

2 Nobel Prize Winners to Addres's
Tercentenary Conference Saturday

Two Nobel Prize winners will
be the principal speakers at the,
opening dinner of •-the first na-
tional planning conference . of
the American Jewish Tercenten-
ary Committee, at Hotel Corn-
modore, New York..They are Dr.
Selman A. Waksman, of Rutgers
University, and Dr. Isidor . I.
Rabi, of Columbia UniverSity.
Dr. Waksman discoverer of
streptomycin, was awarded the
Nobel Prize in 1952 in Medicine
and Physiology. Dr. Rabi won
the Nobel Prize in Physics in
1944 for the development of
molecular beam techniques for
measuring nuclear magnetic-
moments.
The tercentenary conference
will Continue at Hotel Commo-
dore through Sunday, when
business. sessions and a lunch-
eon will be held. This will be the
-first full meeting of the nation-
al tercentenary committee of 300,

which will determine the pro-

gram and policy for the observ-
ance in 1954 of the 300th anni-
versary of Jewish settlement in
the United States. The Commit-
tee is headed by Ralph E. Sam-
uel.

14



THE JEWISH NEWS

Friday, April 10, 1953

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• Dr. Touroff schools and a

teacher's seminary in Tel Aviv,
which had a Jewish population
of 150,000.
An authority on psychological
research, Dr. Touroff came here
in 1920, leaving in 1939 to join
the Hebrew U. Faculty. He re-
linquished the post at the out-
break of World.
War II. Dr. Tou-
roff died in New
York.
Another
former leader of
the Jewish In-
stitute of Reli-
gion, Lester A
Jaffe, who war
retired chair-
man of the
Jaffe
board of gov-
ernors of Hebrew Union College,
died in Cincinnati. He was. 57.
One of the oldest journalists
in Israel, Mr. Cutler _died at the
age of 77. He immigrated to the
United States in 1908 and wrote
for the now defunct "Tageblatt" .
of New York. He had resided in
Palestine-Israel since 1921.
Mark Eisner, the noted edu-
cator and former president of
t h e American
Association f o r
Jewish E du ca-
tion, died while
on a trip. to
Tucson, Ariz. A
lawyer and tax
expert, he had
served as chair-
man of the
Board of Higher
Learning in New
York City from
Eisner .
1926 to 1938. He also had served
a term as assemblyrhan in New
York, State.
Abraham Reisen, the- noted.
Yiddish 'abet and • writer, was
another fatality. The 77-year-
old lyric poet died in New York.
Born in Kaidanoff, near Minsk,
Russia, he migrated to the
United States in- 1914. His first
poem was published when he
was 15, and a year later saw the
publication of his first volume
of short stories. He wrote in He-
brew and RuSsian, and was one
of the most popular of contem-
porary Yiddish writers.
Funeral services were held in
Washington, D. C. for Joseph A.
Wilner, 74, a -civic leader there
for many years. A past president
of the Louis D. Brandeis • Zionist
District and District Grand
Lodge of /Anal Brith, he was the
son of the chief rabbi of Orlowa,
Poland. Mr. Wilier lost two
sons in miliary service during
World War g.

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