Page Sixteen

Friday, February 18, 1949

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE

Tots in Labor Zionist School

Our Athletes

Tasker Named
President of
Campus Club

BULLETIN

Members and guests of the LT.
RAYMOND SUSSMAN A U X-
ILIARY met at the home of Mrs.
Faye Katz for the bi-monthly
sewing of cancer pads for the
American Cancer Society. The
next business meeting of the
auxiliary will be held Monday,
at the home of Mrs. Eleanor
Silk, 19790 Lauder street. Pros-
pective members are welcome.
For information, call Mrs. Katz
at VE. 7-3107 or Mrs. Berry at
TY. 8-0775.

By MITCHELL TENDLER

L AST WEEK we

brought the
Campus Club through 1939. It
goes without saying that the fol-
lowing seven years were rather
difficult on
young Ameri-
c a n manhood.
The Campus
Club went the
way of mos t
organizati o n s
whose person-
nel was c o m-
posed of same.
From 1940 to
1947, the Club
Tendler
left Wayne's
athletic endeavors in the sensitive
hands of the ASTP brutes.

The GEN. MAURICE ROSE
POST has announced the open-
ing of its blood bank. Donations
to the bank by Jewish veterans
are welcomed. The Post meets
on the first and third Thursdays
of each month, at 8:30 p.m., at
Bnai Moshe.

• • •
`Call S0000ner'

AT LONG LAST the men
turned in their khaki, the ASTP-
crs went back to their natural
nail polish, and the Wayne wom-
en went ecstatic with joy when
they could say once again, ''But
why didn't you call sooner?"
With the campus getting back
to normal, the need for an outfit
like the Club became evident.
Milford Tasker, who will quote
Nap Lajoie's batting average for
1921 at the drop of a bat, realized
it. Hal Kutnick, who would play
basketball with a tennis ball
through a bushelbasket hoop
nailed on to a telephone pole, if
necessary, realized it.

J W V

Above are children in the Kindergarten and Day School of the Labor Zionist Institute Folk Schools.
Bus transportation is provided for children in the Six and Seven Mile road areas. Parents inter-
ested in enrolling their children are asked to call the office, TO. 8-9820.

Peace in Holy City

YMHA Speaker

The YETZ-COHEN LADIES
AUXILIARY will meet at 8:30
p.m., Monday at the home of
Betty Brodsky, 1993 Monterey
avenue. The auxiliary had a r&-
ord turnout of members and
guests at a recent television
party.

• • •
'You-5Ieshugener!'

AND RUSSIAN Prof. Harry
Josselson, who can tee off at a
referee in 37 Slavic dialects in ad-
dition to being one of the first
members of the Club as a cross-
country man way back when,
realized it.
The common need ultimately
brought these three sport minded
individuals together, and after
some slight skirmishes, it came to
be.
This month the Campus Club
was once again officially recog-
nized on the Wayne University
campus.

• • •

Takser President

v..,

JUSTLY DESERVING of the
honor, Tasker was chosen as its
first postwar president. Other of-
ficers include: Bill Constantine,
vice-president; Nate Feldman,
secretary; Murray Schwartz,
treasurer; and Bob Jaffe, athletic
chairman. Baseball coach Joe
Truskowski is faculty advisor.
Bernie Friedman, Hal Kutnick,
Pat Burpstein, Art Plotkin, Nate
Feldman, Perry Applebaum, Don
Fields, Hersh Goldberg, Ben
Stein, Lloyd Adelson, Charley
Frankel, Herb Hochberg. Sol
Cohen and Jerry Cohen make up
the rest of the Club.

Plans for a co-ordinated mem-
bership drive with the Post will
be discussed at a meeting of the
PFC JOSEPH L. BALE AUX-
ILIARY at 9 p.m., Thursday,
Feb. 24, at the Northwest He-
brew Congregation.
The white and blue teams rep-
resenting, the PFC JOSEPH L.
BALE POST will meet in a game
at the Bale Basketball party,
Sunday, at the Center. Members
of the post and auxiliary and
friends are invited. The auxiliary
will serve refreshments.

Dr. Isaac Ilerzog, chief Rabbi of Israel, is shown receiving the
flag of Jerusalem from the Commanding General of the Holy
City area at a recent celebration. The chief Rabbi is expected
to arrive in this country soon for a nationwide speaking tour,
according to a Mizrachi dispatch. He will report on the future
of Jewish religious life in Israel.

Vice-President Albers W. Bark-
Icy will be the principal
speaker at the 75th anniver-
sary celebration of the 92nd
street YM-YW1IA, New York,
on March 22. Oldest Jewish
Community center in the U.S.,
the 92nd street Y is one of 321
affiliated with the national
Jewish Welfare Board.

The GEN. MAURICE ROSE
AUXILIARY in conjunction with
Ginsberg - Rosenberg Auxiliary
has scheduled a program of enter-
tainment, plus gifts for patients
at the Marine Hospital, Grosse
Pointe. Next meeting of the Rose
group will be Feb. 24, at the
home of Selma Goodman, 3231
Monterey avenue. Visitors are
invited.

Council to Scan
Mental Health

To Hail Birobidjan

Clicnslochov'cr Gift

• • •
Lettermen Galore

Hapoel Ihunizraehi
to Meet Sunday

THE ABOVE GROUP has re-
ceived varsity and JV letters in
all of the major sports, basketball,
football, baseball, swimming and
tennis. The Club is now repre-
sented at Arizona U. where Chuck
Weisenthal, who was one of the
original group in 1948, is holding-
- down the second base position for
that school's varsity baseball
squad.
Chief contact between the Club
and the administration is Jerry
Cohen who, along with Josselson,
is a member of the athletic ad-
visory board which formulates the
athletic code of the university.
Cohen, incidentally, is sports edi-
tor of the school paper, the "Col-
legian."

• • •
All Sports Banquet

AT PRESENT, the Club is look-
ing forward to the all-sports ban-
quet which it will sponsor in
April. At the affair a trophy will
• be awarded to Wayne's outstand-
inA cross-country man.

A survey of the field of mental
health of children will be under-
taken by the National Council of
Jewish Women in a series of three
meetings in March. 'Destination
—Mental Health" is the name
given to the study.
Mrs. Robert Alpern and Mrs.
Major Siegel are chairman of the
committee planning the programs.
At the first meeting, Tuesday
March 1, Dr. Clark Moloney will
speak on "Healthy Parent-Child
Relationships."
Other meetings are scheduled
for March 15 and March 29. They
are open to members' of the
Council and will be held at
1:15 p.m. at the Center.

JAMES 1VATERMAN WISE,
son of Rabbi Stephen S. Wlse,
author, lecturer, war corres-
pondent and editor, will speak
at the Northwest Ilebrew Con-
gregation, at 8:30 p.m., Sunday,
March 6. His topic will be
"Israel and Ilirobidjan„ on the
occasion of Birobidjan's 15th

anniversary. For information
call TY. 7-3654.

'The Illegals' Slated
for Abington, Feb. 27

R. Bourdin of the Machinery and Equipment Exchange, Inc.

pointing out to members of the Chenstochover Rajoner Farein
the workings of the Ellwell Parker electric trucks which they
purchased for Israel. L. to r., I. Glicksman, secretary; N. Rich-
ter, treasurer; Mrs. S. Smorrow, board member; H. Halberg,
president; Bourdin, and S. Rechtman. vice-president.

"The Illegals," a full-length fea-
ture depicting the 20th century ex-
odus of the Jewish people from the
graveyards of Europe to their
homeland in Palestine, will be
shown Feb. 27 through March 4 at
the Abington Theater, 12th at Sew-
ard. The showing is sponsored by
Cinema Lodge, Bnai Brith,

Ilapoel Hamizrachi of Detroit
will hold a business-cultural
meeting at 8 p.m., Sunday, at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Wrotslaysky, 3424 Edison avenue.
Rabbi Avraham Ellison, mid-
western field director, will be
guest speaker, and Drora Selesny
will sing latest Israeli songs.

Mrs. Charles Gitlin
Polio Drive Chairman

Chairman of the hospital com-
mittee for the 1949 March of
Dimes is Mrs. Charles Gitlin.
Assisting her are Mesdames
Sadie Schwartz, Joseph Jacobs
and Max Schwartz.
Representatives of the Pythian
Sisters, Bicur Cholem, Eva Prenz-
lauer Maternity Aid Society and
the Maimonides Medical Society
Women volunteered their ser-
vices.

