Landsman^ shaften Council Mannino Tribute to Israel'
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Members of the Landsmanshaften Council
committee on Israel Bonds meet to formulate
plans for its "Tribute to the State of Israel,"
which will be held at 7 p.m., Dec. 27, in Beth
Aaron Synagogue. Pictured are, left to right:
Z.;1
LOUIS LEVINE, MORRIS MALIN, co-chairman;
SAMUEL H. BELKIN, chairman; ISADORE SOS-
NICK, president of the Landsmanshaften Coun-
cil; and J. B. ORMOND, co-chairman. The commit-
tee has been active in numerous bond ventures.
New Names Added Chajes to Play His N etv Concerto
To Community List
With Detroit Syrnp horsy Thursday
The JWB Armed Services
Committee of Detroit reports
The Detroit Symphony Or-
that as a result of the Sept. 11 chestra will f eatur e Julius
article in The Jewish News, the Chajes, noted Detroit pianist-
following additional names of
servicemen have been added to
the community list:
Marvin Ancell, Joel M. Alexander,
Sherwin Berman, Charles Besack, Shel-
don Chatlin, Morley A. Cooper, Jacob
Driker, Alvin Edelson, Thomas Fromm,
Seymour Fenster, Charles J. Freedman,
Alfred W. Gaines, Milton Goldman, Dr.
Emanuel J. Green, Norman S. Greenberg,
Joseph Grossman, Joseph Hacker, Donald
L. Herman, Sidney Hochberg, Harold D.
Jacobs, Jacob Lampoon, Dr. Murray
Nussbaum, S. Daniel Levit, Allan Levy,
Frederic Prag, Herbert Rosenberg, Mel
Rycus, Mitchell Rycus, William Arnold
Schussler, Marvin B. Sheplow, Earl Sher-
man, Allan E. Sherr, Harold H. Singer,
Leonard Roy Thomas, Walter Weiss,
Harold Zieve.
Samuel H. Rubiner, chairman
of the local Armed Services
Committee, announces that the
committee is still interested in
receiving the names of addi-
tional personnel. These names
should be forwarded to the at-
tention of Mrs. Philip Bernstein,
Chairman War Records Commit-
tee, at 8904 Woodward Avenue,
Detroit 2, Michigan.
JULES CHAJES
composer, as soloist, Thursday,
CARD OF SYMPATHY
Chenstochover Rajoner Farein Dec. 17, 8:30 p.m. in the Masonic
wishes to express its deepest Auditorium. Under conductor
sympathy to fellow members
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Sborow on
the recent passing of their
brother, Mr. Joseph Sborow, in
Paris, France.
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Paul Paray's baton, Chajes will
play his own composition, the
Concerto No. 2 for Piano and
Orchestra.
Mr. Chaj es, who is director of
music at the Jewish Commun-
ity Center, has become recog-
nized in Europe as well as Amer-
ica as a pianist and composer
of the first rank. His composi-
tions are in the repertoire of
the world's greatest artists.
He began his piano study at
the age of 7, gave his first piano
recital at 9, and wrote his first
composition. At 13 he composed
a String Quartet, and at 15 he
played his Romantic Fantasy
for Piano and Orchestra with
the Vienna Symphony.
In 1933 he won the honor prize
in the first International Corn-
petition for pianists in Vienna
and was appointed head of the
piano department at the Music
College in Tel Aviv a year later.
He held that post for two years.
Since his arrival in America,
Chajes has appeared as soloist
in more than 300 concerts from
coast to coast. At New York's
Town Hall his three sonata re-
citals were acclaimed by critics
and audiences alike.
After World War II, Mr.
Chajes began a series of annual
joint-recitals in Europe with his
talented wife, Marguerite Ko-
zenn, soprano. I
His new piano concerto, to be
performed Thursday with the
105-member Detroit Symphony
as the accompanying instru-
ment, was first performed with
the Vienna Symphony in 1952.
This year Mr. Chajes performed
it with the Paris Orchestre
Symphonique in June, with the
Jerusalem Broadcasting Sym-
phony in July, and with the
Vienna Symphony again in Au-
gust.
Together with his wife, Chajes
has toured Europe and Israel
eight times in the past seven
years, as pianist and conductor.
He is the founder and honor-
ary president of Hashofar, the
society for the advancement of
Jewish music, is a member of
ASCAP, American Society of
Composers, the American Jew-
ish Music Forum in New York,
and belongs locally to the De-
troit Federation of Musicians,
ZOA, Bohemian s, Michigan
Music Teachers' Association, and
is music co-chairman of the
Detroit Round Table of Chris-
tians and Jews.
In view of the usual delays in mail deliveries oc-
casioned by the winter holidays, we urge the mailing
of copy at least two days earlier during the month of
December.
Due to Christmas and New Year Days, our dead-
lines for the issues of Dec. 25 and Jan. 1 will be a day
earlier than usual.
British Court Sentences Anti-Semite
For Threatening Jewish Firm
LONDON, (JTA) — Hugh Wil- field he was investigating Jew-7
son Cowie, 35, who was court- Ash, businesses for the "Aryan
martialled in 1945 for having League" but would drop his in-
voluntarily 1 d the Germans vestigation of Greenfield's busi-
while he was a prisoner of war, ness for 125 pounds ($350). The
was sentenced in Manchester information he was collecting,
Assizes to three years imprison- ' on Jewish businesses, Cowie fur,
ment for demanding money ther said, was to be included
under threats from a Jewish in an anti-Semitic pamphlet.
businessman.
I
•
The prosecution proved that ' 8 DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, December 11, 1953
Cowie had told Bernard Green- I
—
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