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April 29, 1966 - Image 22

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-04-29

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

Mozart Concert
to Feature Works
as Free Mason

Onai
.activities

Walter RubensteintoWa Youth's Wish Realized in Handicapped Fund
Roger Alan Rogan did not live marked for handicapped students,
Lillian Brown of N. 17". long enough to do all the things (numbering 125 at WSU), is being

he aspired to do. But now, in some
measure, his de-P1g3K-.7`77':::1,,
sire to help
people is being
realized through
the Roger Alan
Rogan Memorial
Fund established
at Wayne State
University.
Roger, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Al-
bert F. Rogan,
Roger
8121 Hendrie,
Huntington Woods, lost his life in
a swimming mishap at Lake St.
Clair in September 1965, just a
few weeks before his 21st birth -
day. He was a sophomore at Fer-
ris State College.
Among his notes found in essay
books he had written: "what I
wish to do most in my life is to
help people."
Roger had already begun to
accomplish this hope as a hospital
orderly working with physically ill
persons and by assisting with the
mentally disturbed at Pontiac
State Hospital.
His family and friends are per-
petuating this hope through the

LOUIS MARSHALL CHAPTER
will meet 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Workmen's Circle Center. The film
"The Fire Within," narrated by
Joan Fontaine will be shown.
Special guest will be Mrs. Irving
Isaacs, delegate to the President's
Committee for Aid to the Handi-
capped in Washington, D.C., and
a vice president of the Detroit
Metropolitan Women's Council of
Bnai Brith. Refreshments. The
date listed last week was er-
roneous.
1791. L.
* * *
According t o
PISGAH
LODGE
will hold a
Dr. Geza Rech,
children's party and variety show
scientific director r
1:30 p.m. Sunday at the Labor
of t h e Interna-
Zionist Institute. Featured will be
tional Foundation
MISS LILLIAN BROWN
Donna Jean Wolfe, ventriloquist;
Mozart eum
the
Hall
brothers,
comedians;
in Salzburg, i t
Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Brown of
Sheryl Schmidt, baton twirler;
will be a music Mrs. Landis
New York City announce the en-
singer;
Bruce
Cathy
Jones,
folk
history-making program, for never
dancers; and the Sell- gagement of their daughter Lillian
before did a musical organization Bristol's
to Walter. Rubenstein, son of Mrs.
feature Mozart's works in con- ettes. Refreshments and souvenirs Louis Rubenstein of Kentucky
for
the
children.
Families
and
nection with his Freemasonic friends Invited, says Barney Le- Ave. and the late Mr. Louis Ru-
membership.
vine, president and there will be benstein.
Miss Brown is a graduate of
Mrs. Chajes, who also will be no admisison charge. Sol Steinberg
Brooklyn College and received her
annotator at the concert, has is chairman of the event.
masters degree from Hunter Col- creation of this memorial fund in
chosen instrumental music and
* *
lege.
excerpts from the Masonic opera
Roger's name at WSU.
WOMEN'S BOWLING ASSOCIA-
The couple plans a July wed-
The fund, first of its kind ear-
"The Magic Flute" for the pro-

The Pro Mozart Society of
Greater Detroit and its founder
and artistic director Marguerite
Kozenn Chajes will present the
annual concert 8 p.m. Sunday at
th Community Arts Auditorium of
Wayne State University.
The pragram will be entitled
`Mozart and the
Free Masons"
and will feature
works written by
him from 1785 to

gam-

It will open with the Free-
masonic cantata "You, who are
honoring the creator of the world,"
sung by mezzo-soprano Nora Skitch.
This cantata, written and per-
formed a few . months before
Mozart's death in 1791, was re-
vised by the great German singer

TION recently installed the fol- ding.
lowing officers: Mrs. Ira Albion,
president; Bunny Newman and
Mrs. Martin Weston, vice presi-
dents; and Mesdames Bernard
Rogow, treasurer; Arthur Weis-
berg, corresponding secretary; and
The Detroit Patrons Society of
Samuel Finegood, recording sec-
the Jewish Theological Seminary
retary.

Seminary Patrons
Plan Fete Here

Lill Lehmann, and her original

copy belongs to the Mozarteum
archives in Salzburg. It was sent
to Detroit especially for the
May 1 occasion. A photostatic
copy was made by the Detroit
Public Library and Is now part
of its collection of unique music.
Among the participating artists

will be soprano Wyn Garden
Landis. There also will be mixed
choirs from Windsor, under con-
ductor Frank Hahn.
Co-sponsoring organizations are
Wayne State University, the
Austrian Society of Detroit, the
Tuesday Musicale and its student
league, G.T.E.V. Edelweiss, the
United Community Services and
the International. Institute of
Metropolitan Detroit.
Prof. Robert F. Lawson of
Wayne State University will pre-
3ent the scholarship winner to the
Tnternational Summer Academy
Mozarteum in Salzburg.
Mrs. Kozenn Chajes will speak
about the principles of Free
Masons, which include love for the
Creator in all his manifestations,
virtue, wisdom, brotherhood and
silence. "The Magic Flute" is based
on all these commands.

Million-Dollar Gift
Aids Israel Schools

Oscar Gruss, 70-year-old head of
a New York securities firm, has
made a donation of $1,000,000 to
the Israel Education Fund of the
United Jewish Appeal for the
establishment of five religious
vocational high schools in Israel.
The gift, announced by Israel
Education Fund chairman Joseph
Meyerhoff of Baltimore and presi-
dent Charles J. Bensley of New
York, brings the total raised by
the Fund for high school construc-
tion in its first year and a half of
existence to nearly $11 million.
More than another $1,000,000 has
been raised for teacher-training
scholarships and the establishment
of youth centers and libraries.
Ralph I. Goldman of New York is
executive director of the Fund.
Part of the new gift will be
used to complete vocational
schools previously established by
Gruss in Nechalim and Shafir,
settlements in central Israel. New
schools will be built in the Lachish
Development Area capital of Kir-
yat Gat, in the port city of Haifa
and in the Sharon Valley.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
22—Friday, April 29, 1966

g

ewry

the Air

This Week's Radio and

Television Programs

MESSAGE OF ISRAEL
Time: 8 a.m. Sunday.

Station: WXYZ.
Feature: Former Minnesota

Governor Harold E. Stassen will
join in an interfaith discussion

with Irvin Fane, chairman of the
Union of American Hebrew Con-
gregations board of trustees, and
John Q. Adams, president of the
Manhattan Refrigerating Co.
* * *
ETERNAL LIGHT
Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday.
Station: WWJ.
Feature: "To Walk on the Way"
by Joseph Mindel. This is the first
in a series based on the late
Martin Buber's writing on Hasi-
dism, and dedicated to his mem-
ory.
* *
HEAR OUR VOICE
Time: 11:30 p.m.
Station: WCAR.
Feature: "Shabbat Hamalkah,"
a rendition of Shalom Secunda's
work, with Cantor Saul Meisels
of Temple on the Heights of Cleve-
land. Cantor Harold Orbach of
Temple Israel will present the pro-
gram.
* * *
HIGHLIGHTS
Time: 9:45 a.m. Sunday.
Station: Channel 2.
and
Time: 9:15 a.m. Sunday.
Station: WJBK radio.
Feature: "A, Member of Knes-
set" is the concluding segment in
this series on Israel. Host Harold
Berke, executive of the Jewish
Welfare Federation, will interview
S. Z. Abramov, member of Knes-

set.

City of Hope Unit to Meet

of America will celebrate the 80th
anniversary of the seminary's
founding as the international
center of Conservative Judaism by
sponsoring a private reception at
the Standard City Club in the
Sheraton Cadillac Hotel, Monday,
May 23, 4:30 p.m. Announcement
of the reception was made by
Benjamin Weiss, a member of the
seminary's national executive com-
mittee and co-chairman of the
local patrons chapter.
In addition to Weiss, other mem-
bers of the patrons chapter in-
elude Henry S. Alper, Julius Ber-
man, Louis Berry, Morris Blum-
berg, Al Borman, Tom Borman,
Irwin I. Cohn, Theodore M. Curtis,
Alfred L. Deutsch, Reubin Dubrin-
sky, Sol Eisenberg, Nathan R.
Epstein, Joseph D. Feldman, Wal-
ter L. Field, Max M. Fisher, Meyer
and Nathan Fishman, Arthur
Fleischman, Edward Fleischman,
Samuel Frank, Joseph Gendelman,
Ben Goldberg, Abe Green, Irwin
Green, Charles Grosberg, Louis
and Samuel Hamburger, Joseph
Holtzman, Morris Karbal, Abe
Kasle, Jule Kraft, Allen B. Kra-
mer, and Harold B. Kukes. Also,
Norman Levy, Victor Linden,
John E. Lurie, Sidney H. Mar-
wil, Philip K. Mebus, David
Miro, Joseph Nederlander, Al
Posen, Robert Ruch, David and
Hy Safran, George D. Seyburn,
Max M. Shaye, Samuel S. Simmer,
Samuel B. Solomon, Phillip Stoll-
man and Abner Wolf.

.-

Iron Cross Jewelry
a Fad No More

"Surfer's pendants"—a fad ver-
sion of the German Iron Cross—
are on their way out in the Detroit
area, many retailers feel.
The medals which stirred adults
to grim memories of World War II
are probably a victim of teen-
agers' quick-changing tastes, al-
though in many cases school
teachers and parents took active
measures to fill teens in on the
real meaning of the Iron Cross
and what it stood for.
The California Hell's Angels
motorcycle crowd is generally
accepted as the initiator of the fad.
Articles on them, with medals
dangling from their necks, spurred
interest among the teens.
But it looks as though the fire's
out.

A meeting of the Mr. and Mrs.
Group of the City of Hope will
be held 8:30 p.m. Saturday at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wally
Fein, 21350 Westhampton, Oak
Park.
Final preparations for "A Night
of Games" to be held in May
The first wife is matrimony, the
will be made. A social evening second company, the third heresy.
will follow.
—Italian proverb.

created through contributions to
the Wayne State Fund.
Roger's mother, Mrs. Elaine
Rogan, received her masters de-
gree from WSU in 1962 and is cur-
rently pursuing a doctorate degree
in sociology at the university.

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