• , / , ..tk Li • ZOD Balfour Concert Scores Triumph; Membership Plea Made by Its Leaders Attending the afterglow of the Balfour Concert Sunday at Zionist House are (from left) Dr. Sanford Bennett, concert co-chairman; Dr. Joel Hamburger, president of the Zionist Organization of Detroit, which sponsored the concert at Ford Auditorium; Pierre Hetn, con- ductor; Richard Tucker, soloist; Jason TIckton, program coordinator; Mrs. Ira Kaufman, concert co-chairman; and Dr. Jack Greenberg, concert chairman. • • • sion of the first half of the pro- A capacity crowd and a program gram and two more at the end. The Detroit Symphony Orches- that brought cheers from the audience that had assured a pack- tra, directed by Pierre Hetu, was ed house two weeks before the similarly acclaimed 'for a superb event, marked the most successful performance that included Men- Balfour Concert of the Zionist Or- delssohn's Symphony No. 4, Beet- ganization of Detroit, held at Ford hoven's Overture to "Egmont" and Marc Lavry's "Emek." Auditorium Sunday night. Peformance of the "Emek" Richard Tucker, the guest artist, and the Tucker concluding num- was given ovations and he respond- ber, "Shir Hapalmah" arranged ed with one encore at the conclu- by Sholem Seconds, were among the evening's highlights. Tucker sang selections from Mehul's "Joseph," Verdi's "Aida," Bizet's "Le Pecheurs de Perim" and Halevy's "La Juive." In addition to "Shir Hapalmah" he sang as encores arias from "Pagliacchi" and "La Tosco." The national anthems by the orchestra opened the program. Strong appeals for member- ship enrollment in the Zionist Organization of Detroit were made by Dr. Joel Hamburger, ZOD president, and Dr. Jack R. Greenberg, chairman of the Bal- four Concert committee. Dr. Greenberg told of the assist- ance given from concert proceeds to the agricultural high school in Kfar Silver, Ashkelon, Israel, and the cultural activities undertaken locally. He told of public relations activi- ties conducted by ZOD to refute misrepresentations regarding Is- rael and Jewry, and urged com- munity-wide cooperation in con- ducting these activities by inviting enrollment in ZOD. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 8—Fridoy, November 27, 1970 Were You Born In 1920 Or Earlier . . If so you can enjoy a 1-2-3 month vacation in Israel ... at your own luxurious country club for as little as $889 for I month (based on double occupancy). This price includes private room, bath and balcony, 3 meals and 2 snacks (kosher of cource), sightseeing and should you need it a nurse and physician in attendance EL AL For afore leformation about this exciting adventure call yoor travel agent or ... EL AL ISRAEL AIRLINES Century Office Plaza Suite 31S 24100 Southfield Rd., Southfield 352-5737 • • • Two Regional Zionist Conferences Here Launch 13 States' ZOA Membership Drive Joint conferences of the North Central Zionist Region and the Central States Zionist Region, held here during the past weekend at the Zionist Cultural Center, in- augurated a drive for 10,000 new members in the 13 states that com- prise the two regions. In a major address at the Sat- urday night session, Arnold R. Ginsburg of Philadelphia, national ZOA membership chairman, de- scribed the urgency of large-scale membership enrollments as means of strengthening the public rela- tions program of the movement. Guest speakers at the confer- ence included Jacob Snyder of New York, national chairman of the American Zionist Fund, and Sholem Ettinger of Indianapolis, co-chairman of the national ZOA administrative board. Louis Panush headed the Detroit arrangements committee for the conference. Panush also headed the resolu- tions committee which prepared declarations in support of the membership drive, calling for in- creased efforts in defense of Israel, protesting Ritssian persecution of Hall of Fame By RABBI SAMUEL SILVER (A Seven Arts Feature) The Hall of Fame is a balustrade in a courtyard of the uptown branch of New York University in the Bronx. There we find busts of famous Americans who are se- lected by a special committee every five years. Up to this year no Jew had ever been chosen by the committee (which is not part of the univer- sity) for the Hall of Fame. Aaron Rabinowitz, a realtor and builder who has become one of the nation's leading philanthropists, was most eager that the Hall of Fame should pick Lillian Wald. Rabinowitz was Wald-minded not because she was Jewish but be- cause she was one of the most , influential personages in the his- tory of our nation. Not only had she befriended Rabinowitz when she was young, but Lillian Wald, in her Henry Street Settlement, in downtown New York, had pioneered in a host of social service and nursing ideas. Out of her immersion in Jewish idealism, Miss Wald created a settlement house which not only provided recreation and education for the dwellers in ghettoes, but which radiated out to become the cornerstone of the New Deal philo- sophy: the obligation of the haves for the alleviation of the plight of the have-nots. Miss Wald's friends were the Roosevelts, the Lehmans, the Mor- ACCOUNTING SERVICE Monthly Statements All Tmas MI 7-2749 genthaus and many others. A spin- ster, she lived and - died in West- port, honored by millions. To get the Hall of Fame folks to select Miss Wald, Aaron Rabino- witz mounted a campaign like that of an election effort, mobilizing people and printing brochures and buttonholing all and sundry. Finally Rabinowitz was suc- cessful, and the Hall of Famers voted Lillian Wald into the pan- theon. At the same time, another person of Jewish origin (not much in the way of Jewish attachment) was honored too: the late Dr. Al- bert Michelson, a Nobel Prize-win- ner in science. Jews and providing added encour- agement to public relations activi- ties to refute Arab propaganda and the dangers stemming from bigo- try that is being injected on uni- versity campuses. Out of town delegates from 10 cities represented at the confer- ence were guests of the Zionist Organization of Detroit at the Bal- four Concert Sunday night. The conference luncheon Sun- day was addressed by Ettinger, Snyder and .Joseph Fremland of St. Paul. Morton Wax of Wilwaukee, presided at the opening session which was followed by a women's discussion, addressed by Mrs. Arnold Ginsburg o fPhiladelphia and presided over by Mrs. Norma T. Hudosh of Detroit. Cantor Jacob IL Sonenklar, ac- companied by Mrs. Herzl Shur, provided a musical program Sat- urday night. Participants in the sessions on aliya, youth work, fund-raising, membership and public relations included Richard Krimer, Dr. Sid- ney Z. Leib, Dr. Joel I. Hambur- ger, Mrs. Philip Slomovitz, Dr. Elie D. Abonlafia, all of Detroit; J. Abe tiff, Paul Flacks and Dr. Harold Rosenberg, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Morris Gordon, Burton P. Polansky and Seymour Pikof- sky, Milwaukee. 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