16
Tales Out of Schoo
"The Youth of a Nation are the Trustees
of Posteritv."—Disraeli.
By
By
Barbara
Betsy
Levin
Brown
Mut-Ilford.
Central
High
High
Mumford has recently formed
an official chapter of the Intra-
Metropolitan Student Sports-
manship Council, whose purpose
is to promote better sportsman-
ship among the high schools of
Detroit. Carol Goldstein is presi-
dent of Mumford's chapter, and
is also publicity manager of the
main council.
Recently, the group sent three
representatives to the all-city
meeting at Olympia. Among the
delegates besides Carol were
Marilyn Spire and Richard Bud-
son. The city basketball finals
were played off at the meeting,
and the crowd heard the Sports-
manship Code read.
. * * *
The teen-age version of a
Paris night. club will be found
at the Bnai Brith Youth Organi-
zation's d a n c e, appropriately
named "Club Gay Paree," which
will be held March 31, at Bnai
Moshe on Dexter.
Bob Pike, entertainment chair-
man, arranged the- floor show,
and Howard Willner handles the
publicity. Lois Weinstein is in
charge of ticket sales. Club Gay
Paree starts at 9 p. m.. and is
open to all youth in the city.
Tickets will be sold at the door.
* * *
Russ Palmer, Bill Harmon and
Carol Goldstein were recently on
a disc jockey program on radio
station WDTR. The trio chatted
with the disc jockey through
45 minutes of Walt Disney tunes
and folk songs.
* * *
The Sigma Alpha Beta Organi-
zation will swing their partners
at their annual barn dance, at
9 p. m., tonight, at Van's Barn,
31160 Eight Mile Rd. Working on
the "Jean Jump" is Edythe Col-
ton, president and head of the
dance committee. Marge Kut-
nauer and Helen Isaacs worked
on publicity, while ticket sales
were directed by Carol Gould
and Muggse Meyers.
An old time caller and an in-
formal atmosphere will prevail,
and it promises to be an evening
of as much fun as the lively
square dances themselves.
Tickets may be purchased at the
door.
As Easter vacation nears its
close, many Central students
can be seen burning the mid-
night oil trying to finish last-
minute homework which was-put
off because of other interesting
activities. Among the events
planned for the week were the
Youth Conclave at Flint and
trips to Florida:
Participating in the week-end
conclave were Centralites Barry
Safir, Sharon Willis, Judith Hor-
owitz, Nancy Fisher, Kenneth
Bronson, Margo Jacobson, Mar-
cia Kleinman, Burt Shapiro,
Betsy Brown, Faye Belsky, Nina
Katz, Arthur Friedman, and
Janet Katz; while Patricia Tur-
ner, Martha Himmelhoch, Mar-
lene Jaffee, David Holtzman,
Janet Schuster, Janet Levy, Su-
zanne Radner, Beverly Falk and
Marilyn Pearl, who also go to
Central, enjoyed a glorious week
in Florida. I hope they don't
come back too tan, otherwise it
might put Detroit's "spring"
weather to shame.
On the musical front, Joe Paul
and his quartet, which includes
Centralites Ronald Bennett and
Joseph Bregman, played at a
special Purim Ball given by the
Goodfellows Club on March 25.
I rear the band was terrific.
Troop at Bagley School
Synagogue Youth Present
Fourth Spring Formal Ball
The fourth annual spring for-
/ al dance will be presented by
the Inter-Congregational Youth
Council at 9 p.m., April 14, at
Adas Shalom (Northwest) Syna-
gogue. Members of ICYC are
Shaarey Zedek, Bnai Moshe, Bnai
David, Temple Israel, Temple
Beth El and Adas Shalom.
Dress is semi-formal and
dancing will be to the melodies
of Roston Clark and his orch-
estra. Entertainment and re-
freshments are included. Tickets
may be obtained from Bob Sha-
piro, UN. 3-5571, or Norm Hy-
man, UN. 1-4215.
John Garfield to Star
in UJA Radio Series
THE JEWISH NEWS
Friday, March 30, 1951
Young, Detroit Pianist
In Yale Music Recital
The United Jewish Appeal
will present the third in a series
of four radio dramatizations
Monday evening, over the coast-
to-coast facilities of the Ameri-
Can Broadcasting Company,
from 9:30 to 10 p.m.
John Garfield, star of stage
and screen, will play the *fea-
tured role. The cast will include
noted Hollywood and Broadway
players.
Entitled "The Gift," the radio
show depicts the moving story
of Jewish immigration to Israel
in the face of deadlines from the
Moslem countries. A fourth
drama in the series will be
heard over the MBS network
before Passover.
The four-drama series is be-
ing presented by the United
Jewish Appeal during March
and April in connection with its
1951 drive for Israel aid, over-
seas relief and assistance to
newcomers to the United States.
Harriet M. Lewis was recently
honored by being named to par-
ticipate in the Yale lvfusic Sym-
posium, at the New Haven
school, as a representative of
the Eastman School of Music in
Rochester, N. Y. She is the
daughter of Mrs. Beulah Lewis,
of Cortland Ave.
Miss Lewis, a talented young
pianist, is attending the East-
man School on two scholarships
—the Howard Hanson Award
and the Delta Omicron, nation-
al music sorority scholarship,
presented by Wayne University.
She is a graduate music stu-
dent from Wayne, and is cur-
rently taking post graduate
work at the Eastman School.
Associates Honor President
Emeritus of Hebrew College
CINCINNATI (JTA)—Dr. Ju-
lian Morgenstern, president em-
eritus of the Hebrew Union Col-
lege, was honored at a recep-
tion attended by scholars, edu-
cators, civic leaders and rabbis
who- had been ordained by him.
The occasion marked Dr. Mor-
genstern's 70th birthday.
l Honor Yehudi Menultin.
With New Music Fund
TEL AVIV, Israel (AJP)—The
Jews of Israel have finally
signed a formal peace pact with
violinist Yehudi Menuhin.
Notice that all has been for-
given the brilliant concert art-
ist was contained in a modest
announcement that a Yehudi
Menuhin fund for talented mu-
sic students has been established
by the Israel Department of
Education and Culture.
The Israel government, one of
the most sensitive of all govern-
ments to popular opinion, would
not have taken that step, ob-
servers agreed, -had Israeli Jew-
ish feeling remained as anti-
Yehudi Menuhin as it was only
last year.
On his first visit to Israel, the
violinist was violently attacked
in some sections of the press for
his trips to Germany where he
played to German audiences.
Israeli officials quietly boy-
cotted Menuhin during the first
few days of his tour. The vio-
linist's playing and his 'impas-
sioned defense of his Jewish
loyalties soon won over even
that segment of Israel Jewry
whose memories of Nazi butch-
ery probably will never disap-
pear in their lifetimes.
Austrians Welcome SS Men
Released by Soviet Union
VIENNA, (JTA)—The Austrian
Minis=ter of the Interior and
the Mayor of Vienna were
among the crowd of several
thousand persons who turned
out here to welcome a group of
119 Austrian war criminals re-
leased by the Soviet authorities
from Russian prisons. The re-
patriated men, in most cases,
had been members of Hitler's
Elite Guard, and had been con-
victed of war crimes in Poland
and Romania.
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Potluck with the
Seek Six Stockholders
Owed Dividend Checks
Six residents, or former resi-
dents, of Detroit are being
sought by the Tracers Company
of America, 515 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y. They are among
11,500 missing stockholders now
being sought throughout the
United States for large corpora-
tions, who can collect accumu-
lated dividend checks and other
interests owed them.
The six and their last known
addresses are are:
Alex Dilweg, 7310 Second
Blvd.
Albert Lord, 5443 Toledo.
John Morris, 5441 Holcomb.
Esther Saffer, 2665 Boston
Blvd.
Harry A. Sanders, 13306 Ker-
cheval.
.Youth Guidance Sponsors
Stanley Sikorski, 3348 McLean.
Youth Guidance of Michigan,
Inc., is sponsoring Boy Scout
Troop 421, which meets at 7:30
p.m., each Thursday, in the Bag-
ley School play room, 8100 Cur-
tis. All boys of scouting age are
eligible to join. Meetings will be
resumed April 5, following Easter
recess.
Al Josephson is scoutmaster.
Serving as troop committeemen
are Abe Sampson, Samuel Ra-
vitz, Lew Levin and William
Ribiat. Money Shepherd, presi-
dent of Youth Guidance, Inc.,
serves as Institutional represen-
tative in scouting.
—
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ll cups boiling water
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6 weall onions
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