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November 30, 1962 - Image 14

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1962-11-30

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

Chesed Shell Emes Groundbreaking
Marked by Impressive Ceremonies

'71

- -
Speak
at
Beth
El
Harrison Salisbury, Noted Newspaperman, to

The Men's Club of Temple
Beth El, Woodward at Glad-
stone, will host the appearance
of the New York Time's Pulit-
zer prize-winning foreign cor-
respondent Harrison Salisbury
8:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Salisbury, who won his Pul-
itzer in 1954
for a series of
articles on
Russia titled
"Russia Re-
Viewed," will
offer his topic
for the eve-
ning,"Wanted
A New Viable
American Pol-
icy." Follow-
Salisbury
ing his speech,
there will be an open discussion
on the current Jewish situation
in Russia.
Salisbury, who joined the
Times in 1949, began his career
_as a newsman at the tail-end of
prohibition by covering the tax
evasion trial of Al Capone. He
also, while working for United
Press Washington Bureau, cov-
ered the assasination of Loui-
siana's governor, Huey Long.
With the advent of World
Shown here as they prepared to turn the soil at the War II, Salisbury was appointed
groundbreaking of the Hebrew Memorial Chapel, at Greenfield London manager for United
and 11-Mile Rd., Sunday morning, were, from the left: Edward Press, then in 1943, director of
Miller, vice president of the Hebrew Benevolent Society; Leo European coverage. In this • Ca-
B. Furst, treasurer, and Sam Nelson, honorary president. On
Nelson's left are Ben Schneider, vice president, and Morris
Dorn, president.
* * *
Groundbreaking ceremonies
Telegrams were read from
for the new Hebrew _Memorial Governor John B. Swainson and
Chapel being built by the He- from Max M. Fisher, president
brew Benevolent Society took of the Jewish Welfare Federa-
place last Sunday morning at the tion.
site of • the proposed building,
Rabbi Isaac Stollman, presi-
26640 Greenfield Road near dent of the Council of Orthodox
Eleven Mile.
Rabbis, and Dr. Jacob E. Gold-
Some 500 friends of the organ- man, director of the scientific
ization, including representatives laboratory at the Ford Research
of many other societies, were and Engineering Center, address-
present.
ed the gathering.
Morris Dorn, president, opened Participants included Oak Park's
the assembly with greetings. Municipal Judge Burton R. Shifman
Oak Park Councilman Sidney L.
Irwin I. Cahn presided.
Sh•yne, Wayne County Circuit Court
Brief remarks were made by Judge Nathan J. Kaufman, Rabbi
Levin, Rabbi Joseph Elias,
Mayor R. J. Alexander of Oak Leizer
Principal of the Beth Yehuda
Park and Philip Langwald, trus- schools; Rabbi Max Kapustin, direc-
tor of the Wayne State University
tee of the society, who brought Hillel
Foundation; James Holland
greetings from Detroit's Mayor and Stewart
A. Brown of the De-
troit Bank; William Liberson and
Jerome Cavanaugh.
Samuel A. Kayne, board members of

pacity he covered North Africa
and the Big Four meeting at
Teheran.
In 1944, he joined Eric John-
ston, then head of the United
States Chamber of Commerce,
on what was to be the first of
many Salisbury jaunts into Rus-
sia and its satellite nations.
Salisbury stayed on for eight
months after Johnston returned
stateside and returned to Amer-
ica in 1944 to become United

Press' Foreign News Editor.
In that capacity, among other
things, he covered the inaugural
of the United Nations in San
Francisco and its subsequent
doings through 1948.
He joined the New York
Times in 1949, assigned as that
paper's foreign correspondent
in Russia and was on that beat
through 1955, when he moved
on to make a fact-finding tour of
Russia satellite nations.

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the society who are the legal ad-
visors for the balding project;
Samuel P. Havis and Norman M.
Glovinsky, architects of the new
Hebrew Memorial Chapel; Rabbi
Israel I. Rockove, executive direc-
tor and member of the building
campaign committee; Albert Rosen,
commander, Department of Mich-
igan, Jewish War Veterans of the
United States; Joseph Shapiro and
Maurice Green of the Julius Rosen-
wald Post of the American Legion.

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"Only widespread benevolence
of the Abrahamitic kind can
save the world from itself," said
Rabbi Stollman. "We are proud
of our Chesed Shel Emes (kind-
ness to man and truth unto God).
Let us demonstrate that we are a
living energy, a living people."
Dr. Goldman elaborated on
the good deed which is "Chesed
Shel Emes." "Chesed" is a rela-
tionship between man and God,"
he said. "The mitzvos (good
deeds) of our religion are (1)
those which relate to man and
his fellowman; and (2) the rela-
tionship 'between man and God,"
explained Dr. Goldman.
Many contributions to the
building fund were announced
from orgamlations and indivi-
duals in the community, and the
ceremonies closed with the turn-
ing of the soil by Cohn, Dorn,
Nathan P. Rossen, - Hyman Mit-
nick, Solomon Rubin, Louis W.
Zack, Sam Nelson, S amuel
Hechtman, Eugene M. Zack,
Phillip Stollman, Harry Schumer,
Harry E. Citrin, Edward Miller,
Leo B. Furst and Ben Schneider.

Chajes to Present
Students in Recital

Julius Chajes will present a
recital of his piano students 2:30
p.m. Sunday in the music room
of the Jewish Center, 18100
Meyers.
Performers in elude Mariam
Gargarian, Edward Nord, Gor-
don Goodman, Stephan Weiss,
Beth Rhodes and Robert Jame-
son.

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