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May 09, 1958 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1958-05-09

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

WARNING!

Fisher. States "58 Allied Jewish Campaign
Books Remain Open for Late Contributors

end of the Campaign," the chair-
man said.
In an effort to close the drive
s p e e d i l y, a luncheon of pre-
campaign and trades and pro-
fessional workers will be held
at 12:15 p.m., Monday, in the
Butzel Bldg.
The arts and crafts division
of the campaign's seven-mem-
ber Detroit Service Group is
campaign leader with more
than 90 per cent of its 1957
total achieved. Harvey Wil-
lens, arts and crafts chairman,
reports that the division is
still hard at work. In second
place is the professional divi-
sion whose chairmen, Paul M.
Randleman and Abraham Sat-
ovsky, say they are getting
ready to accept the DSG cup.
The food division under the
chairmanship of Merwin K.
Grosberg and Jules Mehler,
and the services division un-
der Sidney J. Bertin and
Maurice Sandler, are tied for
third.

JOHNNY LEBOW

Shift from 'Relief'
to Education Cited
by Nahum Goldmann

IS NOW
GENERAL MANAGER
OF

Il

ATLANTIC CITY, (JTA) -
Dr. Nahum Goldmann, president
of the World Zionist Organiza-
tion; returning from Israel,
addressed the
closing session
of the 32nd an-
nual convention
of the National
Council for Jew-
ish Education.
He stated that
Jewish educa-
tion must be-
come the cen-
tral theme and
concern of Jew-
ish life today
and of Jewish
Henkin
community and
organizations the world over.
"There never was a time," Dr.
Goldmann stated, "where Jewish
survival was in so much danger
as it is today. The main centers
of Jewish life and civilization in
Eastern and Central Europe
have been destroyed during the
Nazi period. There is no real
challenge to Jewish existence, as
Jewish communities in most
parts of the world are not
threatened by any serious anti-
Semitic danger, and are econ-
omically well-off. Only in Israel
is being created what we lost in
the ghetto life of the past,
namely, full Jewish reality.
"We must shift our emphasis
from 'relief' to Jewish educa-
tion. We must create a system
of education which will insure
the future of Jewish survival,"
Dr. Goldmann urged.
A resolution adopted at the
session requested "every Jewish
community, every synagogue,
every agency sponsoring Jewish
schools, to give Jewish educa-
tion first priority in terms of
personal involvement and budg-
etary allocations.
A. Hillel Henkin, of New
Haven, was re-elected president
of the council.

I

Center Choral Society
to Sing in Cleveland

HANLEY DAWSON

UN 4-2300

14501 W. 7 MILE RD.

fi Bl. W. of Couzens Hwy.)

ma••■■•■ .....

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f

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Current Rate



Main Office-Woodward at Congress
Dexter Blvd. at Cortland
Livernois at W. 7 Mile
Fort Street at Military
W. 9 Mile near Coolidge
Telegraph at Schoolcraft
Van Dyke at E. 7 Mile
40.

IOW *NO Om.

•■ ••• ■ •

.1./ MO .0

sm•• ■■ ••••

The mechanical trades divi-
sion, whose chairman is Robert
Trepeck, is 1958 leader in dol-
lars pledged, with well over
$1,000,000 this year. The real
estate and building council, with
a $1,227,591 achievement in
1957, is in second place under
the leadership of A. Alfred
Taubman.
The mercantile division has
been hardest hit by business
conditions but expects to do a
creditable job. Division chair-
men are Max J. Pincus and
Harold A. Robinson.
The division which reports
the largest per cent of in-
crease over the previous year
traditionally is awarded the
Detroit Service Group Stag
Day Trophy in the spring.
Of the four campaign divi-
sions outside the Service Group,
the Women's Division has pass-
ed 90 per cent of 1957 giving
with women in all the division's
sections still working hard. Mrs.
Lewis B. Daniels is division
chairman. The Junior Division,
under chairman Alan E. Luck-
off, the metropolitan division
under Richard B. Kramer and
the treasury gifts under Ben
Harold are all working to see
that each prospect is visited.

Members of the Center Choral
Society have been invited to par-
ticipate in the annual concert
of the Cleveland Jewish Sing-
ing Society, next Tuesday eve-
ning at Severence Hall. Julius
Chajes, music director of the
Detroit Jewish Center, will be
guest conductor, and Cantor
Jacob Barkin, of Adas Israel,
Washington, will be guest
soloist.

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"The books of the 1958 Allied
Jewish Campaign will remain
open until every potential con-
tributor has had a chance to
join our annual communal ef-
fort in behalf of our 13 member
agencies in Detroit, the United
Jewish Appeal and the 55 essen-
tial agencies locally, in our
nation and overseas that we
help support," said Max M.
Fisher, campaign chairman.
Thanking the army of cam-
paign workers "who did a re-
markable job despite business
conditions," Fisher urged them
to remain on the job until all
prospects have been visited.
"With added effort on the
part of each of us we will have
another $5,000,000 year," Fisher
said. He pointed out that any
campaign for funds, if it is to be
run within a manageable time,
must close before some contri-
butors can be reached. "Our re-
sponsibility to the potential
contributor, and to our bene-
ficiaries, does not end with the

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