1950-1970 Attending a his- toric Allied Jewish Campaign meeting in 1955, from left, Golda Mein Julian Krolik, Gertrude and Henry Wineman. • 1950-1960: Missions to Israel, the remarkable coalescence of forces to con- struct Sinai Hospital in 1953 and a diverse community on the move north and west marked the decade of the 50s. With overt threats from the House Un-American Activities Committee, free speech underwent a sort of chilling effect. The Workmen's Circle/Arbeter Ring continued its lec- Collect ion o f Emma Schave r ture series, sponsoring known liberal and left speakers. America saw a reli- gious revival during the Eisenhower administration, in part a reaction to World War II, and thousands of young, increasingly suburban couples joined C iJ U newly constructed synagogues. Reform C Judaism grew by more than 30 per- cent. In March 1951, one Detroit 0 U woman noted that the government had "killed a Jewish mother.," as word Greeting Paula and David Ben-Gurion in 1951 at the Detroit airport are, from left, Florence and Max Osnos, Israel Davidson and Emma Schaver. came of the execution for treason of Ethel Rosenberg and her husband, U.S. District Court Theodore Levin spea at the ground-breakin ny for "New Maik Community Center Meyers. Irwin Shaw, eve vice president, holds Julius. O • 1960-1970: The decade began with the world's attention on the trial of 4e. Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem. Seven ,11 , 81, 00g&'"g846 years later, the penultimate moment of coming together to support Israel — the Six-Day War of 1967 — heralded a new era of Israel becoming the focus of American Jewry. Hallmarks of this decade were the growth and strength- ening of communal agencies and insti- Temple Israel, Manderson and Merton in Detroit's Palmer Park, 1961. The Reform congregation was ormed as an ourgrowth of Temple Bet El by Rabbi Leon Fram in 1941. C) N ro (r) C C C O U tutions, particularly those connected to Federation, and the Jewish communi- ,d4.,,ztKannevi:APtiV ty's continuing movement north and The soaring ma sanctuary of Shaar Zedek in Southfie 1962. west as old neighborhoods were aban- doned. Jewish businessmen of Detroit pooled their resources to join non- Jewish Detroiters in addressing prob- skAk,\ lems left in the wake of the Detroit riots of 1967, founding New Detroit 'Ns* Inc. The presidential campaign of 1968 brought anti-Vietnam War protests to. national public awareness. Jewish business district on 12th Street near Clairmont, after the 1967 Detroit riot.