1953 . Yearbook of Jewish Welfare
Federation Now Being Distributed

Congressman Roosevelt, Joseph Saphir, Cantor
Kusevitsky at Opening of Allied Jewish Campaign
Rally At Temple Israel Next Tuesday Evening

The opening r a 11 y of this port rallies will be held at 12:15
year's Allied Jewish Campaign. p.m. in the Fred M. Butzel Me-
scheduled for Tuesday, AIM]. 27, morial Building. Meanwhile the
seven trade and professional di-
visions, and the Metropolitan,
Junior and Women's Divisions
continue their campaign efforts
with no let up.
The Guest Cantor
Cantor Moshe Kusevitsky, who
will share the evening with Con- I
gressman Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Jr., of New York, and Joseph Sa-
Israeli Minister of Com-
munications, is one of the out-
standing tenor voices of our

time.

CANTOR M. :-.USEVITSKY

at Temple Israel, will touch off
an intensive period of solicita-
tion during which approximate-
ly 30,000 members of Detroit's
Jewish Community will be con-
tacted for their contributions.
In a final message prior to the
opening, Irving W. Blumberg
and Harvey H. Goldman, cam-
paign chairmen, u r g e d that
leaders, workers, and contribu-
tors make it a point to attend
and bring members of their fam-
ilies and neighbors with them.
Pointing out that the pro-
gram for the event indicates a
memorable evening, the chair-
men said: "It is indeed a rare
privilege to have on the same
program three such distingu-
ished and inspiring persons as
Joseph Saphir, Franklin D.
Roosevelt, Jr., a n d Cantor
Moshe Kusevitsky. The rally is
a demonstration of our deter-
mination to build a better
Jewish life in our own com-
munity, our countr y, and
around the world by our sup-
port of the vital services em-
braced in our Allied Jewish
Campaign."
On the Friday immediately
• following the opening rally, the
first of a series of workers' re-

MUMS

-0E- 'BOTTLES SOLD

When he was chosen at the
age of 28 to succeed world-fa-
mOus aging Sirota as Cantor of
Warsaw. Moshe Kusevitzy was
well on the way to an interna-
tional concert and operatic Ca-
reer. He was selected from a';
congress of more than 200 con-
testants from all over the world.
He was the first to be heard and
in the end was asked to sing •
again as the last.
He made his recital debut at
the Salle Gaveau in Paris in
1930 and was also heard at the
same time in Brussels and Ant-
, werp. England especially took
him to its heart and he ap-
peared there frequently in 1935,
1937 and in 1939, just before the
outbreak of war.
At the end of the war he
toured the British Isles during
the spring of 1946 appearing in
Glasgow, Manchester, Binning-
! ham and other cities and twice
iat the Royal Albert Hall in Lon-
, don.
During the last year Kusevit-
sky sang before capacity audi-
ences in all of the large cities in
the United States and Canada,
I receiving the widest acclaim • of
all music critics.

The Allied Jewish Campaign
embraces over 50 causes.
The United Jewish Appeal is
a major beneficiary of . the
drive and is American Jewry's
largest voluntary agency for
support of immigration, settle-
ment, welfare and rehabilita-
tion programs in Israel, Eu-
rope, North Africa, the Middle
East and the United States.
Funds raised through the
United Jewish Appeal make
possible the life-saving, reset-
tlement and rehabilitation ac-
tivities of three constituent
agencies—the United Israel
Appeal, Joint Distribution
Committee and United Service
for New Americans for the care
and adjustment of newcomers
to this country.

Other overseas services main-
tained through the local drive
are the Hebrew Sheltering Im-
migrant Aid Society for trans-
portation and housing of refu-
gees, the American Fund for
Israeli Institutions and a num-
ber of educational services, such
as the Hebrew University in Je-
rusalem, the Technion in Haifa,
and the Weizmann Institute of
Technology at Rehovoth, found-
ed by the first president of Is-
rael.

A major beneficiary in the
group of local beneficiaries is
the new Sinai Hospital on
Outer Drive which opened its
doors in January of last year.
The United Hebrew Schools,

otit LuxE
FINEST

Dispute on Communal
Property Is Settled

FRANKFURT, (JTA)—An un-
derstanding on the position of
Jewish communal property in
West Germany has been reached
here between representatives of
the re-established Jewish com-
munities of Germany, on one
side, and the so-called successor
organizations, on the other, thus
ending a long-standing dispute.
The successor organizations in-
clude: Jewish Restitution Suc-
cessor in the American zone;
Jewish Trust Corporation in the
British zone; Branche Francaise
of the Jewish Trust Corporation
in the French zone.
The tentative agreement pro-
vides for an equal division be-
tween the two parties of exist-
ing communal property and in-
demnification claims based on
the Nazi destruction of such
property. Settlements concluded
earlier between the JRSO and
communities of the American
zone retain their validity.

DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-3

Friday, April 23, 1954

Our Want Ads Get Results.

Thinkin of . .

a New Car for Spring?

See

CHARLES WEINSTOCK

For the best deal on

THE BEAUTIFUL NEW V-8

1954 BUICK

26th

Year

With

BUICK'S RETAIL STORE

Near G.M. Bldg.

6164 CASS AVE.

TR. 5-9700

SAVE $ APPLIANCES-TELEVISION SAVE $

After You See Your Relatives

BECAUSE:

See Us!

(A) WE WILL GIVE YOU A BETTER DEAL!
(B) WE WILL GIVE YOU BETTER SERVICE!

Why Be Indebted to Friends or Relatives?

BUY FROM 11S

WE A P PR E . E lATE YOUR s'IWZONAGE 1

WE STOCK FAMOUS MAKES!
• Whirlpool • Hamilton • Norge • Phitco • Crosley • R.C.A.
• Motorola • Admiral • Detroit Jewel • Tappon • Stromberg
Carlson • Frigidaire • G.E. • Zenith • Etc.

DIE XTEM SALES SERVICE CO.

i I 565 DEXTER, corner Burlingame

TE. 4-2858

Step over to

AMERICAN SAVINGS

. . . There's one in your ne;ghborhood

FORT ST.
corner Military

Thousands of Detroiters like the convenience of
American Savings' strategically located offices. For
many folks, they're within walking distance from
home or job. Business hours are just as con-
venient. Every office is OPEN FROM 10 to 5
AND ONE EVENING A WEEK. Visit the American
Savings office in your neighborhood see
how near it is to your home.

■ Nor

11•1101111111111

JACK MARKOWITZ

All Accounts Insured To $10,000

A SILVER DOLLAR GIVEN WITH EVERY
NEW SAVINGS ACCOUNT OF $25 OR MORE

INVITES HIS FRIENDS AND
CUSTOMERS TO SEE
THE NEW

BUICK

AMERICAN SAVINGS

for 1954

WOODWARD corner LARNED—Open daily 10 to 5, Fridays until 6

Glamorama

MADE AND B
, DETROIT. MI'''.
ILIN WINERIES OTTLEO

WICH/GAN BONDED WINERY 0 10. 1

which maintain seven neigh-
borhood units, also receive
their operating deficit from the
Allied Jewish Campaign. There
are a group of after-public
school programs, providing a
supplementary education for
Jewish boys and girls. Other
local services benefiting from
the campaign are the Jewish
Home for Aged, which, in adz
dition to caring for a group of
well aged, also operates a large
unit for old persons who are
chronically ill.
The organized Jewish commu-
nity also is giving casework
service to the aged through the
Jewish Social Service Bureau. A
sheltered workshop has been
opened for the employinent of
aged, handicapped and other-
wise dependent persons, many of
them in their older years.
Other local agencies in the
drive are: Hebrew Free Loan
Association, Houses of Shelter,
Jewish Community Center, Jew-
ish Community Council, Jewish
Vocational Service, Jewish Wel-
fare Federation, Midrasha,
North End Clinic-Hospitaliza-
tion Fund, Resettlement Service,
Sholem Aleichem Institute, Uni-
ted Jewish Folk School, United
Jewish High School, Workmen's
Circle Schools and Yeshivath
Beth Yehudah.
The national agencies in the
drive are coordinating bodies in
the federation and related fields,
such as the Council of Jewish
Federations and Welfare Funds,.
the National Jewish Board and
the_ , American Association for
Jewish Education.
The Welfare Board, along with
parallel national agencies of
other faiths, ministers to the
welfare and morale needs of
men and women in the armed
forces. Another group of agen-
cies devote their efforts to the
betterment of community rela-
tions. They include the Joint
Defense Appeal, of which the
American Jewish Committee and
the Anti-Defamation League are
members, the American Jewish
Congress, the Jewish War Veter-
ans, and the Jewish Labor Com-
mittee.

The 1953 Yearbook of the Jewish Welfare Federation of De-
troit is now being distributed, Samuel H. Rubiner, Federation
President announced;
Containing a record of individual participation in the 1953
Allied Jewish Campaign, the publication also contains considerable
information about how the money raised in the drive was put to
use.
. Other information provided in the comprehensive book in-
cludes descriptions of the functions of Federation agencies and
the work of the many local, national and overseas agencies that
benefit from the campaign.
In the foreward to the yearbook, Rubiner states that the pub-
lication is "much more than an annual report of agencies and
contributors. It is a tribute to the citizens of our community who
have shown their devotion and generosity to their fellow man."

26 Years
With Buick

at

BUICK RETAIL STORE

6164 CASS AVE.

Near G.M. Bldg.

TR.

5-M0

Res. TU. 3-3960

AND LOAN ASSOCIATION

.

Branchest

• DEXTER BLVD. corner Cortland — Open daily 10 to 5, Tuesdays until 9

• FORT ST. corner Military—Open daily JO to 5, Fridays until 8

• LIVERNOIS corner W. 7 Mile—Open daily 10 to 5, Thursdays until 9

