—The Suburban Community Alias Mr. Brown Explains Progress of Brotherhood By the Oak-Woodser His name is Mr. Brown, at least for the sake of anonymity, and he has been teaching school children in the South Oakland County area for many years. With each passing year, Mr. Brown says, he's noticed an in- crease in the number and qual- ity of Brotherhood programs planned in the schools. Mr. Brown feels certain that these programs have gone a long way toward bettering human re- lations and understanding among young students. Now teaching in the Oak Park school system, Mr. Brown explained that all of these Brotherhood activities would fall on deaf ears, if it weren't for changes in the home live of many youngsters. He is quick to point out that many sociological changes in the past few years have made for better racial and religious un- derstanding. Among these are better training- in the home, a greater willingness for people of one sect to get along better with their neighbors and a return to religion. The latter point Mr. Brown bears out by stating that more people than ever before have be- come affiliated with churches and synagogues of their choice. With guidance of clergymen ori- ented toward better human re- lations, some of that warmth for one's brothers is bound to rub off, he says. Mr. Brown also believes that living in the suburbs is a factor that will bring about the ulti- mate in Brotherhood—complete understanding of individual dif- ferences. For the most part, he ex- plains, the majority of subur- ban residents-are younger peo- ple, many of whom are parents who have similar problems re- gardless of race, religion or creed. - Then, too, these younger citi- zens are in the most part second generation Americans. Ties with fellow countrymen are not near- ly as strong or as limiting as in previous generations. They no longer depend on one another, to the complete exclusion of oth- ers, Mr. Brown explains. Mr. Brown is not really an au- thority, but he has been an ob- server for many years, and he has had an opportunity to talk to parents and children to learn .their ideas and reactions to fundamental precepts of Broth- erhood. His views, we thought, were refreshing. One of his favorite chuckles is over the mother whose beliefs excluded all others of differing opinion, until the day her young son brought her the guest list for a birthday party. In it were contained the names of his school chums, who included a Negro, a Jew and a Chinese boy. People Make News Dr. SHLOMO MARENOF, as- sistant professor of Hebrew language and literature at Brandeis University, has been elected president of the . Na- tional Association of Professors of Hebrew in American Inititu- tions of Higher Learning. * * * Mrs. ALISA SEKEY, of Haifa, Israel, who was chosen to re- ceive the first fellowship of the National Council of Jewish Women, under its volunteer leader training program, will arrive in the United States this month to learn methods of vol- unteer organizations in the U.S. which can be adapted to her . work as a volunteer leader with the Haifa Council of Social Agencies. * * * RAMIRO CORTES, 21-year-old composer from Los Angeles, is this year's winner of the award for the best original' musical composition bestowed annually by Bnai Brith Victory Lodge of New York as a memorial tribute to George Gershwin. He is the youngest person ever chosen to receive the award, which con- sists of a $1,000 cash prize and performance of the winning se- lection. He won the competition with his "Sinfonia Sacra," which will receive its first performance by Dmitri Mitropoulos and the New York Philharmonic Sym- phony. * * * Bnai Brith will honor SIDNEY G. KUSWORM, Sr., Dayton at- torney, on the occasion of his 70th birthday at a special testi- monial luncheon to be held in in Dayton, 0., Feb. 27. In tribute to Mr. Kusworm, the Bnai Brith administrative committee w i 11 hold its next session at Biltmore Hotel, Dayton, Feb. 26 and 27. * The endowment of the Dr. NAHUM GOLDMANN Founda- tion, in honor of the head of the Jewish Agency in the United States, who is regarded as one of the leading Zionist statemen of this generation, will take place at the jubilee dinner of Histadrut Ivrit of America (He- brew Language and Culture Association), Sunday at the Hotel Commodore, New York, New Yorker to Speak At Oak-Woods Dinner Morris Novetsky, president of the Young Israel Center of Oak- Woods, this week announced that Nathan H. Karper, of New York City, will be the principal speaker at the Dedication Ban- quet of the synagogue on Feb. 27. The program will begin at 5:30 p.m. with a cocktail hour, fol- lowed by dinner at 6:30 p.m. The banquet will be held in the synagogue, Coolidge and Allen Roads, Oak Park. Karper, who is vice-president of the National Council of Young Israel, has been active in the movement for 17 years. He has been president of Young Israel Synagogue of Manhattan, the parent branch, for the past three terms. A practicing attorney since 1941, Karper was instrumental in bringing about proper legal status for sabbath observance in New York. He also has served as secretary of the joint committee for sabbath law in New York State. Emanu-El Sisterhood Slates Open Board Meeting Monday The Sisterhood of Cong. Emanu-El, the Suburban Tem- ple, will hold an open board meeting at 12:30 p.m., Feb. 28, in the home of Mrs. Aaron Na- than, 26625 York, Huntington Woods. A report of proceedings•at the bienniel convention held last weekend in Los Angeles will be given by Sisterhood delegates, and plans for the coming year's program will be made. Otto Warburg Cairns He Has Discovered Secret of Cancer BERLIN, (JTA)—Prof. Otto H. Warburg, 71, winner of the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1931, re- ports in a German scientific journal that he has solved the bitterly-diSputed question as to the origin of cancer. For a quar- ter of a century he has directed the Institute for Cell Physiology in the Dahlem section of Berlin, formerly known as the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute. In 1948-49 he carried out researches in the United States. According to the famed bio- chemist and physiologist, who has studied the processes of liv- ing cells for more than three decades and is considered the world's foremost authority on the subject, cancer does not de- velop through outside causative agents such as viruses. It sets in when a cell does not absorb enough oxygen, so that its nor- mal "breathing" is chronically impaired. His findings, he be- lieves, show the way to future prevention of the disease. Final proof of his thesis was furnished recently, he indicates, when American researchers closest thing to paradise we know... Hot Springs Nil. Pk., Ark. For Health Baths and Recreation Come to The Famous • • • • BALFOUR HOTEL Finest American Plan Hotel Dietary Laws Strictly Observed 3 Delicious Meals and Snacks Few Blocks from Government Hot Mineral Baths,. You will enjoy the friendly hospitality as so many do at the BALFOUR. Rates very reasonable. Television—Entertainment For Reservations Call or Write: Hot Springs 2671-1. Schulman, Owner, Manager The *4 Completely Air Conditioned POOL '• THE Rabbi Eskin to Address Congregants on Jewish Music cAlakti-ts CLUE _ HOTE1 ON THE OCEAN AT 12th ST. MIAMI BEACH "Jewish Music Throughout the Ages" will be the sermon topic of Rabbi Herbert S. Eskin at 9 p.m. services today, at Cong. Beth Shalom. Services are held in the Andrew Jackson School, Rosewood and Oak Park Blvd. Sisterhood members will be host- esses at an oneg shabbat to fol- low. Dr. Goldrnann will be guest of honor at the dinner. * * * IDA JIGGETTS, a Negro psy- chiatric social worker and auth- or of "Religions, Diets and Health of the Jews," has corn= pleted her second book, "Israel Temple Einanu - El Service to Me," to be published this Temple Emanu-EI will hold spring by Bloch Publishing sabbath services at 8:15 p.m., to- Company. day, in the Burton School, Hunt- ington Woods. Rabbi Frank Ros- Beth-Sheva Laikin in enthal will officiate and preach the sermon. The Bar Mitzvah World Stage Production of Gerald Manuel Haking will be observed. A reception will fol- World Stage, Detroit's experi- low. mental arena theater, offers its third weekend of Luigi Piran- World War I Legionnaires :: dello's "Naked," To Meet in New York Friday through Veterans of the Jewish Legion, Sunday, at 8:30 who fought under Gen. Allenby p.m. Staged by with the British Expeditionary Fr e d Barnett, Forces during World War I to the cast in- liberate Palestine from the cludes Beth- Turks, will meet at a national Sheva Laikin in conference in the Hotel Diplo- the role of Er- mat, 108 W. 43rd St., New York, ilia with Frank March 5 and 6. Nastasi, Yvonne Elias Gilner, national com- ;Doolittle, Ed mander of the American Vet- Malooley, Pierce erans of the organization, Miss Laikin Rollins, Leonard known as Hagud Hagud Haivri Yorr and Beverly Markowitz. League, states that featured Miss Laikin will be remembered among the discussion will be a for her performance in Anton plan to settle veterans of the Chekhov's "The Boor." Legion in Israel when they reach the age of 65. Nearly 6,000 American Jews Flint Council Rebukes formed t h e 11,000-man-strong Egyptian Spy Sentencs Legion which helped to liberate the Holy Land. Members are In a telegram to Dr. Ahmed now scattered throughout the Hussein, Egyptian Ambassador 48 states and Canada. t_ the United States, the Flint Legionnaires who have lost Jewish Community Council ex- contact with the organization pressed "shock and horror at the are urged to contact commander brutal sentences of death and Gilner, 1009 President., Brooklyn lengthy terms" meted out to 17 25, N.Y. Egyptian Jews charged with COLOR BROCHURE on request being "Zionist" spies. A telegram also was sent to Secretary of State John Foster Dulles in appreciation of the re- ported intercession of the State Department with the Egyptian government. The Council's community re- lations committee announced its endorsement of the efforts of the Committee of 100 in Flint, Oceanfront, 25 to 26th St., Miami Beach which is working to enact a Fair Employment Practices ordi- DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-21 nance. Friday, February 18; 1955. . Harry Goldblatt and Gladys Cameron, the latter a biologist Connected with New York Uni- versity, were able to induce tu- mors artificially by impairing the "breathing" of healthy cells. Dr. Goldblatt, a distinguished pathologist born at Muscatine, Iowa, in 1891, is on the staff of the Institute for Medical Re- search at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in Los Angeles. Prof. Warburg, a doctor of both chemistry and medicine, remained in Berlin throughout the Nazi regime, escaping the more truculent measures of per- secution because of his half- Jewish descent. - C4refree,• Casual Days Under the Tropical Sun Strictly Kosher Cuisine In a Friendly Atmosphere Air Conditioned rooms Dining Room 8. 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