750 Attend Banquet Marking Centennial
•
of Pisgah Lodge's Service to Community
Memphis Baptist Hospital to Provide Kosher Food
By FRANK SIMONS
I more to influence me on your No. 6,
presented a plaque and
Pisgah Lodge No. 34 of the side of the border."
a certificate for 100 trees plant-
Independent Order of Bnai He said he had learned from ed by the District in the Bnai
Brith this week began its sec- ' and followed the example of a Brith Martyrs Forest in Israel
and century of service to the gl .
eat many D etr oi ter s and through the Jewish National
community and to humanity as ,mentioned specifically Judge Fund in honor of the occasion.
a wh !e.
Charles Simons and the late
Harry Katz, president of
Its first 100 years officially Judge Harry B. keidan,
both the Greater Detroit BB Coun-
came to a close last Sunday Pisgah members, Fred Butzel, cil, presented another plaque,
night at a Centennial Banquet Dr. Leo Franklin, Dr. A. M.
and extended greetings, while
attended by 750 members, Hershman, Frank Murphy and Mrs.
Philip Fealk, president
friends and representatives of a host of others.
of the Greater Detroit Wo-
the other Bnai Brith lodges and
The Senator's talk was a men's Council, brought greet-
chapters in the Sheraton- warm correlation of nostalgia ings from the women.
Cadillac Hotel.
and current events, which was
Concluding the greetings
The banquet marked the con- the overall mood of the .entire were Judge Theodore Levin,
elusion of a year-long series of evening.
president of the Jewish Welfare
festivities in celebration of the
Greetings were extended by Federation, • and Samuel J.
"once-in-a-lifetime" anniversary Michigan's Lt. Gov. Philip A. Rhodes, president of the Jewish
which brought together a host Hart, who substituted for Gov. Community Council, both past
of local, state and national dig- Williams who had a cold - U.S presidents of Pisgah Lodge.
nitaries to bring greetings and I Sen. Charles E. Potter; Mary
A special presentation was
accord honors. V. Beck, Common Council Pres- made by Harry Yudkoff, past
The program also marked ident, pinchhitting for Mayor District and Lodge president, to
the close of an historic chap- Miriani who was in San Fran- Elias Goldberg, a 35-year mem-
cisco; and Blanche Parent Wise, ber of Pisgah and its president
ter in local annals, and served member
of the Council.
in 1931-32, for a record of out-
as a prelude for the rededica-
Mrs. Beck presented Mayor standing work for the order.
tion of the ideals promoted
Miriani's
resolution
proclaiming
A musical program was ten-
by Bnai Brith in its motto of
"Benevolence, Brotherly Love the week of Nov. 24 to Dec. 1 dered by Cantor Nicholas Fen-
as
Bnai
Brith
Week,
and
Miss
akel, -of Adas Shalom Syna-
and Harmony." .
Wise presented a Council reso- gogue, accompanied by Betty
In the major address of the lution. Jack Leeds, Pisgah presi- Kowalsky
on the piano.
evening. Lt. Col. David A. Croll, dent, accepted both plaques, the
The invocation was given by
member of The Canadian Sen- first of a number which were Dr. Richard C. Hertz, of Temple
ate, called on Pisgah members received.
Beth El, and Rabbi M6rris Ad-
to seek new direction in its
Dr. Abe Greenberg, member ler delivered the benediction.
second century.
of the board Of governors of The singing of the national
The Senator, first Jew to hold Bnai Brith's Supreme Lodge, anthems of the United States
this high position in the Ca- came from Omaha, -Neb., to •ex- and Canada was led by Alfred
nadian government, said "The tend felicitations, and Harry Bounin, District Lodge board
time has come to seek new hori- Epstein, of MadisOn, Wis., presi- member and Pisgah past presi-
zons, both literary and intellec- dent of District Grand Lodge dent.
tual, in our Bnai Brith work." -
He emphasized the fact that
North American Jewry can no
longer expect rabbis, cantors
and schochtem to be imported
from Europe.
•
He stated that the emphasis
A representative gathering of polio "part of the American
was not on Orthodoxy, Conserv- community leaders in Wayne way of life." He described the
ative or Reform, but on Juda- County Wednesday evening March of Dimes' efforts as "the
ism;: and warned that our liter- heard an ottline of plans for uniqiie contributions of doc-
ary and intellectual fields are the 1958 March of Dimes, at a tors, scientists
and laymen,
waning.
dinner at Dearborn Inn.
i :working as volunteers to con-
, "We must now become
.
Basil O'Connor, president: of, qUer: a disease."
:builders , : of • Jewish institu- the National Foundation for :In-: "We attained results through
tions here," Sen. Croll said. fantile Paralysis, was honored' basic research," he added. "The
i"We are now at our last great by the -Wayne County Chapter fight against polio is not over.
;reservoir. We must begin to of March of _Dimes for his 20 We' have an effective .vaecine,
build today."
years' -.service in the fight but we must teach people 'to
Responding to a warm intro- against polio. Donald W. Bar-,use it 'Dr. Salk himserf was
duction of his accorriplishrrientS =ton, .administrator of the WaynelOrie :of our early Fellows in po-
during the years by Samuel W. Chapter, presided. Dr. Paul Bag- lio research. Now we must in-
Leib, the evening's chairman, well, of Michigan State Univer- struct p6ople to use the ,4vac-
Sen. Croll said that "in my im- sity, introduced O'Connor.
eine. Besides, it should be
pressionable years, there was
O'Connor called the fight on known the Salk vaccine does
not prevent polio—it prevents
paralysis from polio. This year
19114
we are asking for funds for the
LIVERNOIS
care and rehabilitation of those
who have been disabled by po-
lio. The work we do is good
for our families, for society and
for the economy of our coun-
try."
Basil O'Connor Inaugurates 1958
Campaign Here for March of Dimes
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■
19114
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N. of 7 Mile
Romanian Jews Seek
Emigration to Israel
JERUSALEM, (JTA) —
There are more. than 9,600 Jew-
ish families in Rornania who
are split with some • of their
members in Israel and the
others in Romania; Idov Cohen,
a leader •'of the Association of
Romanian emigrants in Israel,
reported 'here. •
In a plea for a more human-
itarian policy on the part of the
Bucharest 'authorities, - Cohen
noted that they admitted the
validity of his plea by allowing
50 to 60 Jews, most of them
sick and aged, to leave for
Israel. At this pace, however,
he pointed out, it will take 20
years for some older people to
rejoin their children in the
Jewish State.
He noted that in 1950 Ro-
mania had allowed 47,000 Jews
to quit the country for Israel
and currently was holding the
number to 400 a year. Pointing
to the more liberal attitude of
Warsaw and Budapest. Cohen
asserted there was no reason .
for Romania's current policy.
Furthermore, he asserted,
many Jews had been fired from
'important goverment and indus-
trial administrative posts and
were jobless.. • Their economic
distress, he said, added urgency
to their need to emigrate,
•
MEMPHIS (JTA) — The tients through the efforts of
Baptist hospital here has ar- M Rabbis Morton S. Baum, Isa-
ranged to provide kosher food
dore Goodman and Philip Gold-
trays to observant Jewish pa- I man.
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