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Temple Beth El (Detroit)
Albert Kahn
1903
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Born in Rhaune, Germany, Albert Kahn moved with his family in 1880 to Detroit, where he was apprenticed to a sculptor and developed his drawing skills. Despite being color-blind, Albert was accepted as an apprentice designer to architect George Mason, who later elevated him to chief designer. In 1895, with his younger brother Julius, he established the architecture firm Kahn & Associates. Kahn’s innovations within automotive factories included roof lighting (Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Co., 1906), reinforced concrete (Packard Motor Car Company Plant, 1908), and the Henry Ford model assembly line (1913). He designed nineteen monumental buildings on the University of Michigan campus as well as more than four hundred residences, skyscrapers, institutions, and factories in Detroit, as well as a synagogue.
She turns the pages, naked uncles
so naked and skinny, run and
even aunties with fannies showing
and others in pajamas as in a show
with yellow cloth stars sewed on.
And everybody so ugly and thin,
a…
The echo that Marx’s writing arouses in Jews’ hearts provides clearer evidence [of Marx’s influence on Judaism].As everybody knows, a Jewish proletariat did not exist during Marx’s lifetime, certainly…