•

In UJA Broadcast

People Make News

DR. LAWRENCE W. SELTZER,
professor of economics at Wayne
University, has been named
chairman of the Fiscal Research
Committee, a group of univer-
sity and other economists form-
ed to serve as an advisory body
on fiscal studies for the National
Bureau of Economic Research.
* * *
The resignation of EDWARD
L. SARD from his post as ex-
ecutive director of the Ameri-
can ORT (Organization for Re-
habilitation through Training)
was announced this week. Sard
submitted his resignation in or-
der to become executive vice-
president of Barbera Originals,
Inc., of New York City.-
* * *
WILLIAM BEIN, who recently
returned to the United States
after more than four years • of
service as Joint Distribution
Committee director for Poland,
has been appointed J1209 director
for French Morocco, it was an-
nounced by Moses A. Leavitt,
executive vice-chairman of the
welfare agency. Bein, a veteran
of almost 30 years service with
JDC, will leave for his new post
April 14 abroad the SS Queen
Elizabeth. In Morocco, he will
administer JDC's assistance pro-
grams on behalf of the coun-
try's 250,000 Jews.
*, * *
DR. SAMUEL MARGOSHES,
editor and Zionist leader,- has
been named national director of
public relations activities of the
JeWish National Fund, - Dr. Har-
ris J. Levine, JNF president,
announced, following a meeting
_
m
of the Administrative Comm
of the organization. Dr.
Margoshes is to 'succeed the late
William Z. • Spiegelman, who
held that post for 19 years. Dr.

Aptekar List's Varied
Purposes of Summer
Camps for Children

.

Friday; April '7, 1950

•

etur

Margoshes was editor of the
Jewish national daily in New
York, for 25 years; vice presi-
dent of the American Jewish
Congress, and held various posts
in the Zionist Organization of
America, of which he is now a
member of the executive and
inner committees and chairman
of the Zionist Information Serv-
ice.
* * *
CHARLES MISHKIN, of Chi-
cago, formerly chief rationing
attorney in the Chicago office
of the Office of Price Admin-
istration, has been named di-
rector of the United Palestine
Appeal for the Mid-Western Re-
gion, Ellis Radinsky, UPA exec,
utive director, announced. An
active participant in local Zion-
ist' and religious affairs for
many years, Mishkin, in his
new post, will organize a large-
scale educational and promo-
tional campaign covering a- 13-
state region and geared towards
stimulatirig the United Jewish
Appeal drive of which the UPA
is a major beneficiary agency.
Mishkin will serve under Ben-
jamin R. Harris, UPA co-chair-
man of the Mid-Western re-

gion. * * • -
RABBI BENJAMIN "SCHULTZ
will address the Wolverine All-
American Conference on subver-
sive activities, sponsored by the
American Legion Dept. of Mich-
igan, at a banquet at 6:30 p.m.
Saturday, April 15 in Lansing.
His subject: "All Faiths Work-
ing for God Against World
Atheism."
* * t•
DR. E. M. BLUESTONE, direc-
tor of Montefiore Hospital, was
honored by the creation of a
$5,000 fellowship fund in hos-
pital administration in his name
by Hadassah. The- fund will be
used to enable Israel students
to study in this field in the
United States.
* * *
MRS. HARRY FRANK, 3039
Calvert, president of the De-
troit Women's Division of the
American Jewish Congress, was
elected to the executive com-
mittee, of the Metropolitan De-
troit Region of the Michigan
Commission on Americanism.
The Commission, sponsored by
Governor G. Mennen Williams,
has as its purpoSe "the encour-
aging and support of American-
ism programs."

"Parents contemplating sum-
mer camp for their children are
urged to give careful considera-
tion to the selection of a camp
which will serve their purpose
best," according to David Apte-
kar, 'president of the Michigan
Camping Association.
Michigan, with over 300
camps, offers a wide choice to
parents. "We have day camps,
special purpose camps, deVOted
to development of a particular
skill or idealogy, school camps,
crippled children's camps, Moth-
er's camps, trip camps, church
camps, and camps ministering
to the normal needs of boys and
girls," Aptekar pointed out.
Among these various camps,
are those offering a well-organ-
ized program of recreational ac-
tivities, others which use rec-
reation as an educational in-
4 strument, and where the rec-
reational-educational functions
are supplemented by a conscious
effort to aid in the social emer-
gence and personality growth of
children.
' Short term camps, where chil-
dren stay for a segment of the
summer, probably best serve
their purpose by undertaking
recreational and some educa-
tional objectives, with incidental
attention to using camp as a
place to assi st in the normal pat-
tern of emergence of a -child's
personality. Long term camps
have the opportunity and re-
sponsibility to do more with chil-
dren. The staff has an oppor-
tunity to study children's needs
and with intoelligent application
„Amok of sound psychology to produce
lasting and favorable changes in
a child's personality.
Standards of health, safety,
and sanitation are regularly in-
spected by officials of the -State
Health Department and" the
State Department of Social Wel-
fare. Camps which fail to corn-
ply with standards are refused
permission to operate. Most.
camps employ the American Red
Cross standards of waterfront
safety. Kitchen sanitation must
meet the same rigid requirements
aS set up for the operation of a
rest') uration.
It is in the areas of pro-
grr—lming, persbnnel and ad-
mi- ration that the greatest
va_iiLion exists between camps.

14—THE JEWISH NEWS

Industrial Bank
Offers Finance Book

on the ..Air

This Week's Radio and Tele-
vision Programs of
Jewish Interest

MESSAGE OF ISRAEL

Time: 10 a.m.. Sunday, April 9.
Station: WXYZ.
Feature: Dr. Barnett R. Brick-
ner, rabbi of Euclid Ave. Temple
in Cleveland, will speak on
"What Judaism Has to Say about
Education."

Nadon's Fashion Center
Sponsors Youth Dance

EDWARD G. ROBINSON,
the noted screen star who re-
cently returned from a visit to
Israel, will play the central
role in a United Jewish Ap-
peal dramatic broadcast to be
heard at 9:30 p. m. Wednes-
day, April 12, over the coast-
to-coast network of the Amer-
ican Broadcasting Company.
In Detroit the broadcast
will be heard over Station
WXYZ. Congressman ••Frank-
lin D. Roosevelt Jr. of New
York will speak after the dra-
matic presentation.
This third in a series of
United Jewish Appear nation-
w d e broadcasts, entitled
"Growing Pains," will drama-
tize the tasks of immigration
and settlement in Israel on
the eve of the second anniver-
sary of the establishment of
the Jewish State.

"Straw Step," the annual
dance sponsored by Nadon's and
the Nadon's 'teen fashion board
will be held at 8:30 p.m. Friday,
April 14, at Carpenter's Hall,
Puritan and Steel.
Dancing, both smooth a n d
square, will be to the music of
the "Cortland Down" band. A
professional caller will lead the
square dances.
Tickets are available at
Nadon's youth fashion center,
13516 McNichols. Rd., or from
members of the fashion board.

A new book called "Money
Management," published to en-
courage a better understanding
of the handling of money mat-
ters, by the individual and the
family, is now available at all
offices of Industrial National
Bank, according to Eugene W.
Lewis, chairman' of the bank.
"Money Management" tells
about handling income, bank ac-
counts, borrowing money, ac-
quiring a home, life insurance,.
investments and many other .
subjects. It is written in plain,
easy-to-read, every-day langu-
age.
People who prefer to write
for the book, instead of calling
for it in person, should send 25e
in stamps, with their name and
address, to: Public Relations De-
partment, Industrial. National
Bank, DetrOit 26.

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The Department of Commerce
reports that in 1946 the ice
cream industry for the first time
"entered the ranks of the billion-
dollar industries."

Coma in Now... See and Have

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DEXTER BLVD. AT CORTLAND
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MUSIC HALL

W. FORT AT MILITARY
VI. 3-7600

(Former. Wilson Theater)

One Performance Only Sunday Evening, April 9

HERMAN YABLOROFF and BELLA MYSELL

In the great New York success

"PAPIROSEN" ("Cigarettes")

Together With
* Feibush Finkel!
* Jacob Zanger
* Anna Tobak .
'Zelda Kaplan, Sarah Filler, Bertha Shargel, Morris Kroner,
David Danker, Arnold Rubin, Woody Dubrov
Fanny Wilensky, at the piano, will conduct the orchestra

Tickets, $1.20, $1.80, $2.40, $3, incl tax, available at Borenstein Book Store,
3663 12th St.; Metro Music House, 10328 Dexter; Detroit Hebrew Book Store,
12226 Dexter, and from A. Littman at the Barium Hotel, - WO. 2-5900.

—

New bigger nevem and Suitt-
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—All-wood mahogany cabinet, $
NOT plastic

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—12 channel station - coverage

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Opposite Book-Cadillac Hotel

