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October 30, 1953 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1953-10-30

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

_Center Opens Young Adult Lounge Bnai Brith Women's Five-Star. Show Slated for Tuesday,

The young adult department of the Jewish ComMunity Center
announces the opening of a Young Adult Lounge at the Aaron
DeRoy Memorial Building on Woodward next Thursday, at 8 p.m.
Opening night will feature George Margolin and his guitar in a
program of folk songs. Dancing will follow. Refreshments will be
served. Meeting at the Center to discuss the program was a tem-
porary committee of (left to right) MARVIN SCHPEISER, super.-
visor of young adult activities; LILLIAN LEWIS, DALE BERGER,
PHIL EPSTEIN, temporary chairman; JOE WEINBERG, lounge
advisor; EDITH BERKOWITZ and ANN EPSTEIN.

When the curtain goes up at
Tuesday night's .variety show,
.sponsored by the Greater De-
troit Bnai- Brith Women's Coun-
cil. it will mark one of the most
star - studded
revues ever pre-
sented by a
non - profit or-
e:, gani zation in
this city.
The show will
start at 8:30
p.m., in Masonic
Temple. -
In the cast will
be such notable
entertainers as
Carmen Miran-
da, the saucy
Brazilian bomb-
shell, the Billy
barmen MirandaWilliams Quar-
tette, of TV fame, Jackie Miles,.
brilliant young comedian, Flo-
rian ZaBach, violinist of "Hot
Canary" fame, and Angelea &
Winters, ball-room dance team.
For the 6,500 women members
in Bnai Brith of Detroit, the
program will mark the conclu-
sion of an intensive fund-raising

effort to raise $100,000 to aid
the organization's many philan-
thropic endeavors.
Carmen Miranda will be mak-
ing her first appearance since
returning from the London Pal-
ladium where her Portuguese
gibberish won her many friends
across the ocean.
Mrs. David Grosberg, program
chairman, stated that the show

Iiadassah Schedules Nov. 10 Meeting To Plan Membership Drive

Membership a n d Hadassah
Medical Organization will be
highlighted at a meeting of De-
troit Chapter of Hadassah on
Nov. 10, in -the social hall of
Cong. Shaarey Zedek. A dessert
luncheon, served at 12:30 p. m.
will start the program.
Judith Epstein, past president
of national Hadassah and cur-
rently national
Hadassah chair-
men for Israel
bonds, will be
guest speaker.
A leader in the
organization
since her youth,
Mrs. Epstein is
today one of the
foremost wom-
en authorities
on Israel and
the Middle East. Mrs. Epstein
Mrs. Norman Rom, local mem-
bership chairman, will be assist-
ed in planning the meeting by
Mrs. Julian Tobias, vice-presi-
dent of projects; and Mrs. Sam-

uel Cohl, Chapter HMO chair- Open house will be on H-Day,
man. Group chairmen of mem- and reports from all Groups
bership and HMO will serve as tallied during the day - long
ushers.
Group membership chairmen drive. Mrs. Joseph Ravit is
include Mesdames Jacob Jaffee, chairman, and Mrs. Joseph H.
Sander Hillman, Perry Burn- E h r 1 i c h, honorary chairman.
stine, Max Lebowitz, Harry Moss, They are assisted by Mesdames
Max Rosenfeld, Eli Harlick, Ju- Max Rosenfeld, Harry Krause,
lius Hackman, Raymond Levine, Ben
Maltzman, Bernard Zack,
-Paul Cavler, Harry Burnstein, Allan
Meyer Berk,
Ben Berlin, Samuel Kaner, Rich- James Robinson,
Goodfriend, Morris Lan-
ard Rocklin, Eugene Rosen, Ber- ter, Le6
Pollack, Irving Klein,
nard Beck, Ted Mason and
Louis Silverfarb and I. Murray
Richard Stegman.
HMO chairmen are Mesdames Jacobs, Group vice-presidents of
Albert A. Schwartz, Harfy Na- membership.
Culminating the membership
thans, Harry Himelstein, Sam J.
Berke, John Horwitz, Herbert campaign will be an Israeli
Goldman, Herman August, Ellis fashion show on Dec. 10, fea-
Fishman, M. J. Mandell, Max turing Hadassah's own models.
Newman and Milton Elson.
All membership chairmen and
key workers will be briefed on
Monday for the Chapter's mem-
bership drive, which will begin
with H-Day, Nov. 15, the day
when all Hadassah workers will
enroll new members.

By NATHAN Z1PRIN

'Copyright, 1953, Seven Arts Feature Syndicate)

Facts and Rumors

Is it true Dulles threatened to resign if Eisenhower did not
uphold his decision to cut U.S. aid to Israel? The President was
said to have reluctantly interjected himself into the situation but
had his hand forced when Dulles bluntly referred to the President's
defense of another Cabinet member, Benson . . . The attempt to
make Israel the scapegoat will fail before the United Nations.
When the head of the T J.N. truce supervision commission in Pales-
tine submits his full report on the realities of the situation, Mr.
Dulles may find out that his prejudgment approach may acceler-
ate his exit from the position he now holds.

Fair Play -

A former American rabbi who is now Deputy Minister of
Social Welfare in Israel found himself in the position recently of
bringing the American concept of fair play to Israel's broiling
political debates. The practitioner was Rabbi I. Solomon Rosen-
berg, formerly of Hartford, Conn., who is now in the United States
to address the 33rd annual convention of Mizrachi Organization
of America in Atlantic City next week. Because Agudath Israel
quit the coalition, there was no one to speak on behalf of an
Agudah request for a government subsidy for the Agudath-spon-
sored school system, which remained outside the new unified pro-
gram provided in the education bill. Rabbi Rosenberg, member
of a party opposed to the Agudath defection, nevertheless arose
L. Knesset to present Agudath's case and the subsidy was granted.

; ing her at TU. 3-9959.

DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-7

- Friday, October 30, 1953

Men who travel in the best of circles

...eventually come around to wearing GGG
clothes. This has been proved time and time
again since the turn of the century. 78 body
variations for tall, short, slim, portly or in-
between.

"Figure-Fitted" by

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6

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On the Record

Potpourri
Dr. Jonas Salk, the 38-year-old physician whose discovery of
a polio vaccine may well add another Jewish name to the list of
coveted winners of the Nobel Prize, once had other ambitions—to
study for the rabbinate. Salk in his early high school years hoped
to fulfill his grandfather's dream of having a rabbi in his first
grandchild, but the youth gravitated toward the sciences where
1-K,. has now made an indelible mark.
Dr. Marcus D. Kogel, who was recently made dean of the
Albert Einstein College of Medicine of the Yeshiva University,
comes from an extremely Orthodox Jewish home. This perhaps
more than anything else explains his attachment to the Yeshiva.
His father was a "melamed" on the EaSt Side with a reputation for
piety in a section of the city where seemingly none but the pious
lived . . . Incidentally recent reports of assaults on Yeshiva stu-
dents show a disturbing pattern. Yeshiva officials are reluctant to
give the development the attention it really merits because they
take the position that the situation is the -inevitable concommit-
tant to a neighborhood deterioration. However, there has been
police laxity and lack of full cooperation from other sourcds.
Over 90 percent of all Jews like to take a drink from time to
time. but alcoholism and alcoholics are virtually non-existent
among Jews, according to a recent survey on alcoholism by Yale
University.
The Jewish section of the Congressional Library is quietly
preparing to observe its 40th anniversary next year. Founded in
1913 with a contribution of 10,000 volumes by the late Jacob
Schiff, the library now has a collection of a quarter of a million
books about Jews in virtually every language of the world.




will be one of the "most love-
able, danceable a n d cryable
shows ever presented in dynamic
Detroit." Mrs. Raythond Sharkey,
ticket chairman, said that there
are a few tickets* remaining,
which may be obtained by call-

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