Fraternity's f 'Fifth Season' Coming to Shubert, Pioneer Women Set Program' Pharmacy Original Members Help Is Comedy About Garment Industry For World's Child's Day Celebrate 25th Year MILKY, the magic clown, entertains seven-year-old SUSAN MESSER (left) and ELAINE MESSER, 9, while looking on in back are Mrs. JACK GOSMAN (left) and Mrs. JACK ABRAMSON, chair- men of the children's program planned by Pioneer Women in be- half of World Jewish Child's Day. Detroit Council of Pioneer <1 Women has scheduled a three- on March 23, in the Veterans way effort to provide funds for Memorial Bldg. the rescue of children from Child's Day, which originally North Africa on the occasion of was proclaimed in Israel, has World Jewish Child's Day, to ft e become an educational and pub- celebrated March 20 in Jewish lie relations event for Jewish communities throughout the youth throughout the world. Its world. Pioneer women locally spirit has fostered a solidarity are planning a children's party, for American children with their cannister collection and Spring brothers and sisters in Israel, Ball. states Mrs. Gerson Berris, pres- The first of the three events, ident of the Detroit Council. Cooperating in the program the children's party, is sched- •uled for March 13, in the social of Child Rescue, or Youth Ali- hall of Cong. Bnai Moshe. yah, are Mizrachi Women, Ha- Harriet Berg, who will be mis- dassah and Pioneer Women, Their joint e f f o r t s enable tress of ceremonies, will intro- duce the guests of the day: thousands of children to look Milky, the Twin Pines magic forward to a home in Israel. Once the rescue is effected, clown, Gary Jennings Puppets, Habonim and children of the funds made available expressly through Youth Aliyah are used United Jewish Folk Schools. A coin book, which has slots to clothe, feed and educate the for nickels, dimes and quarters, youngsters in various immigrant has been issued by the organiza- training centers. To date, 15,000 youth from tion to be filled by the children, entitling them to attend the North Africa alone have come to Israel. Many of them have been program without charge. The cannister collection, in settled in strategic border areas; which students at various re- graduates from Youth Aliyah ligious schools throughout the schools are filling posts in im- city will cooperate with Pioneer portant aspects of Israeli life; Women, is planned for March about 65 percent of the gradu- 20. Concluding the Child's Day ates have gone into settlements activities will be the Spring Ball or the Army Corps. Twenty-five years ago 15 . young students at the Detroit College of Pharmacy pledged Al- pha Zeta Omega, 'professional pharmaceutical fraternity. Next Sunday, they will celebrate their silver anniversary as the Omi- cron Chapter of AZO. During the anniversary festi- vities, the members will review the spirit of fraternalism that sent aid to the destitute in the Louisville floods of the 1930's, the donation of an ambulance during Israel's fight for inde- pendence and the fund which permitted them to stock the pharmacy wing of the Hadas- sah Hospital in Israel. The fraternity also has estab- lished scholarship funds at both Wayne University and the De- troit Institute of Technology for pharmaceutical students. Of the 15 original members, all but one still resides in De- troit, most of them in the re- tail pharmacy field. They are Max Kbrnwise, Eppie Switzer, Morris Starr, Harry Berlin, Jack Borsand, Seymour Morton, Hen- ry Raskin, Harold Ellias, Sam Levitt, Gilbert Levy, Edward Rothenberg, Sam Rappaport, Ir- win Buchalter, Max Millman and Sidney Ellias. Phillip Neuman, who present- ly serves as president of the or- ganization, advises that Myron Levine is chairman of the an- niversary committee, with Joe Whitefield and Burton -Platt, co-chairmen. The major program will be a dinner-dance, at Bel-Aire Ter- race, preceded by a cocktail hour at 6:30 p.m. Dick Stein and his orchestra will play for dancing. Former members interested in information or reservations, should call Levine, UN. 4-4621. Pictured here in a scene from "The Fifth Season," comedy about models in the New York fashion industry, are, left to right: JOSEPH BULOFF, ALLEN COLLI, MELISSA WESTON, RENE ROY and RITA BERNARD The play comes to the Shubert Theater for two weeks beginning Sunday. * , "The Fifth Season," Sylvia Regan's hit comedy which co- stars- Chester Morris and Joseph Buloff, will open at the Shubert Theater on Sunday for a two- week engagement. The play has been singled out by Oscar Hand- lin, professor of history at Har- vard University as being one of the best representations of Jew- ish life in modern times, as told in theatrical terms. Tribute to the play appeared in Prof. Handlin's "Adventure in Freedom," published last Octo- ber as part of the American Jewish Tercentenary celebra- tion. Handlin wrote, "A comedy like 'The Fifth Season' ; . ; deals with the positions (of Jews) as Jews is human, realistic terms, for all the world to see." "The Fifth Season" is the story of two partners who man- ufacture women's suits on New York's Seventh Avenue—a firm named Goodwin and Pincus. The senior member of the firm is never specified as big Jewish, but the theatergoer suspects he chose an Anglicized name. Max Pincus, however, is clear- ly a Jew, and so is the girl named Miriam Oppenheim who comes to work in his office as a bookkeeper and with whom he falls in love. The play ran for 82 weeks in New York, and for four months each in London and Chicago. It has played to mixed audiences of Jews and non-Jews, and it has met with equal enthusiasm. 22-DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, March 4, 1955 Cincinnati Columnist Wins Honors For 50 Years of Service with Paper Alfred M. Segal, a columnist for the Seven Arts Syndicate, English-Jewish weekly feature • service, and for 50 years a news- man on the Cincinnati Post, was recently honored by the Nation- al Conference of Christians and Jews with a citation for exem- plary work. The honor accorded the col- umnist, brother of Mrs. Malke Gage, of Detroit, was given a place of prominence in Time Magazine (Feb. 28 issue) and in the trade publication Editor and Publisher, on Feb. 26. Segal who has conducted the Post's "Cincinnatus" column for 34 years was cited by NCCJ and the Cincin- nati Chamber of Commerce with 0 the praise: "His writings and his personal life have been t h e ideals and aims of the NCCJ. He has done much and is still do- Segal ing much to make Brotherhood more mean- ingful and more alive to the wide audience for which he writes." In the past, other groups have referred to Segal as a "Ch a mp ion of Minorities," "Good Neighbor of the Year" and he was even made a Grand Duke in the Hoboes of America., Inc., for writing "the most con- vincing column." Segal was given a gold wrist watch from the Post, with the inscription, "To Al, the Consci- ence of Cincinnati." The '11- year-old columnist was forced to miss a golden jubilee party thrown for him by the News- paper Guild because of illness. A student for the rabbinate, Segal gave the idea up ‘.`for the wider pulpit in print" where he could spread his ideas to the multitudes. When he graduated from Hebrew Union College, he started on the Post, and within three years was city editor. He did not like the desk work, and went back to reporting. In 1931 he started his column. The "warmth he gave his col- umn, Cincinnatus, which relates everything about the city from a warm, nice summer day to exposes of graft and corruption, has won Segal a wide and re- spected readership. Among the notes he cherishes most, however, is one from a Protestant clergyman who said: "I envy you, Al Segal. You have the largest congregation in the city, and you don't have to live with it." Brandeis GIts 1,000 Volumes WATHAM, Mass.—A consign- ment of 1,000 volumes, primarily in the field of Judaica, has been presented to the Brandeis Uni- versity library by Rabbi Louis I. Newman. of T•'m p 1 e _Rodeph Sholom, New York. OPERATES FOR PENNIES A DAY COLORED FABRICS STAY—SPARKLE —FRESH WHEN YOU DRY WITH SE-E—YOUR DEALER or DETROIT EDISON