un I KtifT )13Not, Lori t.3-1kurst...Le, anu

Page Sixteen

Our Athletes

By 111ANK BECKMAN

GOODY ROSEN, who played the
outfield for the New York Glarits
last year, will have two jobs this
summer.
Up to last week it appeared that
Rosen was all through as a play-
er. He had been sold by the Giants
to their Jersey
City farm, which
changed his
mind about
donning a uni-
t.. s form this year.
He had his
heart set on
playing with
Toronto, h i s
h o metown,
where he has a
Beckman thriving res-
taurant business.
In story-book fashion, Goody's
wishes came true. His contract
was sold to Toronto and now
Rosen is rarin' to go again.

SOUTIIPAIV s Atemnis Adds-
burg of Brooklyn was defeated
by top-seeded Jack Kramer, 6-1,
6-1, 6-1, in the quarterfinals of
the National Indoor tennis
championships. Adelsburg had
previously eliminated J. Hilbert
Hall, three-times hational sin-
gles winner, 6-2, 8-6.
• • •
NAT HOLMAN, City College of
New York cage mentor, has.been
named coach of the East squad,
which will meet the West in an
all-star basketball game March 29
in Madison Square Garden. Hol-
man, former member of the famed
original New York Celtics, is an
assistant professor at CCNY.
• • •
LEN WEINER of the Phila-
delphia Spins has a brother, Sid-
ney, who is quite a football play-
er . .. Starred at tackle for the
University of Miami . . Stands
6 ft. 3% in., weighs 240 pounds.
They are cousins of Bill Nofender,
2985 Hazelwood avenue.
• • •
THE JEWISH COMMUNITY
Center will once again conduct
the State Handball Doubles
Tournament March 23-29 under
the auspices of the AAU. Joe
Camden and Dr. Leon Katzin
are chairmen.
• • •
MARVIN LIBERSON and Les-
lie Greenbaum are co-captains of
the Central track team which
opened its 1947 campaign by
winning a triangular meet . . .
Score: Central, 55%, Southwest-
ern, 32, and Chadsey, 13.
Liberson competes in the half-
mile relay,' 220-yard dash and high
jump. Greenbaum runs In the
half-mile relay and 220.
Other leading Trailblazer thin-
clads include Marvin Sheplow,
Marvin Horwitz, Fred Kellman and
Eugene Mondry.
• $ •
THE JUNKET of the Ilapoel
soccer team of Palestine, which
will appear in Detroit June 1,
is being undenvritten by the
Jewish National workers Alli-
ance. All proteeds will go for
the construction of a 50,000-seat
sports stadium in Tel Aviv.
• * •
ONE OF THE best amateur
wrestlers in the country is Dave
Shapiro, winner of the 165-pound
intercollegiate title in 1916. Shapiro
led Illinois to the Big Nine title
this year.
•• •
CINCINNATI is still applaud-
* ing it's Jewish Center basketball
team. Cent/. won 34 out of 35
games and also the Queen City
Major AAU League champion-
ship. Hy Baumeister is coach.
* • •
BIG (6 FT. 9 IN.) Harry Boy-
kof f of St. John's University set
a new season's scoring record for
Madison Square Garden when he
dropped in 54 points against St.
Francis of Brooklyn. His total
was two better than St. Francis'
score. • •
BNAI BRITH BOWLERS from
five lodges will take over the
State Fair Recreation at 10 a. m.
Sunday for their city tournament.
Participating will be the Pisgah,
Louis Marshall, Keidan, Detroit
and Louis Brandeis lodges.
After the 350 keglers finish rol-
ling, they will join their wives
and guests for a dinner-dance,
starting at 6:30 p. m. at the Fort
Wayne Hotel.

MEZERITCHER CLUB
N. Davidson and A. Rosen are
chairmen of the cabaret night to
be held Saturday, April 12, at the
Park Avenue Penthouse by the
Mezeritcher Social Club. Proceeds'
will go • for charity.

L lid

Legal Cheetah...,

World News in Brief

Germans to Restore
Millions in Property

State Council in U.S. Zone Agrees
but Points to Lapse in Other Areas

STUTTGART, (JTA)—Tens of thousands of German
Jews whose property and businesses were stripped from
them during the Nazi regime will receive restitution under
a law approved by the German Council of States, comprising
the minister presidents of the four states in the U. S. oc-
cupied zone.
The value of the properties to be restored runs into

hundreds of millions of dollars.
The measure must be approved
by the American Military Govern-
ment before being promulgated,
but such approval is certain since
the legislation was adopted at the
miggestion and Insistence of the
Military Government officials and
the State Department.
In making public the law, the
German officials pointed out that
it might work a hardship on per-
sons who purchased 'confiscated
property in ignorance of its origin.
They also said that its enforce-
ment will be hampered until there
is uniform legislation throughout
Germany.
Dr. Hans Ehard, minister pres-
ident of Bavaria, said in an ac-
companying letter that the legis-
lation contains the same loopholes
that allowed Nazis to escape de-
Nazification by fleeing to another
zone. Similar legislation is in ef-
fect in the province of Thuringia
in the Soviet zone, but no restitu-
tion measures have been adopted
in the French and British zones.
Under the legislation, which

.

4

will benefit an estimated 15,000
Jews in the U. S. zone and many
thousands more now living in
other countries, as well as non-
Jewish persecutees, all applications
must be filed before Dec. 31, 1948.
Where there is a dispute as to
ownership, special German trib-
unals set up along the lines of
the de-Nazification tribunals will
decide the issues.
• •

Fridays March 21, 1947

Four meeting in Moscow. He
urged that the Moscow conferees
observe the proceedings carefully
and balance the accounts of what
happened at Oswiecin with the
Germans' plea, for mercy.
He charged that Hoess was re-
sponsible for the murder of 4,000,-
000, 75 percent of whom were
Jews.
Hoess, who was captured in the
American zone of Germany, Tie-
nied, when questioned by Amer-
ican investigating authorities that
he had sent 4,000,000 to death in
gas chamhers•at Oswiecin. Ho es-
timated that those gassed at his
orders totalled about 2,000,000.

This Week's
Recipe

MATZOH MEAL PANCAKES
V., cup Matzoh meal
1 scant teaspoon salt
1 T sugar
1 cup milk or water
2 eggs (separate)
Mix dry ingredients. Beat egg
yolks, add milk or water and
combine the two mixtures. Fold
in stiffly beaten egg-whites. Heat
frying pan, grease with any de-
sired fat. Pour cakes on pan from
end of a large spoon. When
Tivoli Names Rothchild the
cakes are full of bubbles and
brown on one side, turn with a
as Research Directbr
large knife and brown other side.
Howard H. Colby, president of Serve with sugar or jam.
Tivoli Brewing Co., has announced
the appointment of Harold Roth-
child as Tivoli's research and tech-
Meal director.
Rothchild was previously in
charge of the control and research
TAKE OFF
laboratories of the Genesee Brew-
ing Co.
THAT EXTRA

REDUCE

MAIMONIDES AUXILIARY
An illustrated travel talk will
be presented at a luncheon meet-
ing of the Women's Auxiliary of
the Maimonides Medical Society
at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, March
22, in the home of Mrs. Charles
Terris, 900 Lincoln road, Grosse
Admits 2 Million
Pointe. Assisting the hostess will
be Mesdames R. J. Mendelssohn,
Gassed at Oswiecin
Adolph Spiro, Alex Olen, Emery
WARSAW (JTA)—Rudolf Hoess, P. Kovoch and Manuel H. Hen-
former commandant of the Os- delman.
wiecin death camp, who has been
described as the "greatest mass-
PYTIIIAN SISTERS
murderer in history," admitted
Greater Detroit Temple No. 152,
responsibility for everything that
occurred at the camp in a state- Pythian Sisters, entertained the
ment at the opening of his war Knights of Pythias No. 55 at a
crimes trial before the highest Purim party.
Polish tribunal.
Before Hoess testified, the chief
prosecutor stated that the trial
was taking place at a very ap-
propriate time in view of the Big

WEIGHT

it POSITIVE

Iffi TREATMENTS

INCLUDING

* Swedish Massage

* FREE FACIAL

For .95°

SPA BATHS

1246 Library
CH. 0016
Opp. J, L. Hudson's

Open Daily for Ladles

Quality Drug Stores

Probably in no other great city in the world is there a
group of Prescription Druggists like Schettler's. The
fine practices and dependability of Schettler Pharma-
cists, and their long years of service, form one of the
better pages of Detroit's history.

It seems like yesterday

— NOW OPEN —

A FRIENDLY NEW

Schettler Drug Store

13060 WEST SEVEN MILE ROAD

AT OUTER DRIVE

PHONE UN 1.3523

Serving the Northwest Residential Area

You will like this friendly store, it is so clean

and inviting. You will like to browse around
and see things here, they all look so nice. But

best by far is the real Schettler dependability

for your prescriptions and all drug needs.

It seems like yesterday that Nancy was play.
ing with dolls. Now she's pushing her own
baby carriage. Yes, there's been a lot of changes
in the last 20 years—most of them so gradual
we hardly notice them at all.

Nancy didn't grow up all at once. A tooth at
a time—a curl at a time—an inch at a time—
and suddenly a little kid sister was Mrs. Joe
Jones, mother of Joe, Jr.

Like Nancy, the use of electricity has grown
a lot in the last 20 years. But the price of elec-
tricity has been going down steadily. You may
not have noticed it because your bill probably
stays about the same—but how many appli-
ances have you added to your home since
'27? Now, you arc getting nearly twice as much
electricity, for your money as you did then.

The Detroit Edison Co,

Quality Drug Stores

