Friday, August 21, 1953 Varied Events Tuesday at Knollwood Joseph Gendelman, member Knollwood Country Club will be alive with activity Tuesday of the board of the mechanical when the men who worked in trades division, Detroit Service Group, is participating with • Mahler and Isaacs on the hos- pitality committee. A pictorial review of the 1953 campaign highlights, featuring George Keil, Food Service Coun- cil chairman, as commentator, and a quiz game will be fea- tured on the program. Prizes will be given for golf and the quiz. Habonim Conduct Mid-West Seminar JOSEPH GENDELMAN the 1953 Allied Jewish Cam- paign come out to spend a day of fun and good fellowship at the fourth annual Detroit Serv- ice Group Stag Day. The affair -will feature g o 1 f, swimming, cards, dinner and an evening program. Reservations may still be made by calling Mrs. Lerner, WO. 5-3939. Highlight of the evening will be the honoring of the leading division of the 1953 drive. The division will receive an engraved trophy which will be kept on display in the Fred M. Butzel Memorial Building and which will be awarded to the leading division each year. The evening program will in- clude the welcoming by John Isaacs, Knollwood president and co-chairman of the services- di- vision of the recent drive, and a report on the campaign by Irving W. tlumberg and Harvey H. Goldman, drive chairmen. Milton K. Mahler, Detroit Serv- ice Group president, will pre- side, and Samuel H. Rubiner, Jewish Welfare Federation president, will close the pro- gram. One hundred American and Canadian Jewish youth are meeting in the annual mid-west regional seminar sponsored by Habonim, Labor ZioniSt Youth, at Habonim C a m p . Kinneret, Chelsea, Mich. T h e seminar will continue through Aug. 30. The topic of this year's sem- inar is "The World Today." The educational phase of the sem- inar will he led by the top per 7 sonel of National- Habonim and by educators who will give lec- tures and lead discussion groups on topics of current importance in the world. Included in the Habonim Mid- west Seminar activities is time for swimming, sports, special in- terest groups such as singing, arts and crafts, and folk danc- ing, and in the evening special programs designed for fun. The seminar is also the time for Habonim members to meet people from other cities, renew old friendships, and make new ones. Youth between the ages of 15 and 21 from Detroit, Flint, Toronto, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Milwaukee, Chicago, M i n n e a- polis, and Winnipeg are attend- ing the sessions. ewry NEW YORK, (JTA) —A f ter more than four years of litiga- tion, instituted by the American Jewish Congress, the United States Court of Appeals has re- stored citizenship to Morris Mendelsohn, a naturalized American who has been strand- ed in Israel since 1936. Mendelsohn, who went to Pal- estine in 1936 to manage orange groves owned by his father, was forced to remain there when, in 1940, Congress passed the ,Neu- trality Act which revokes the citizenship of naturalized Amer- icans remaining out of the U. S. continually for . five years. War conditions, financial re- verses and the illness of his wife prevented - Mendelsohn f r o leaving within the. delegated time, and the State Department cancelled his passport and re- fused permission to re-enter the country. AJC raised the issue of dis- crimination in the Nationality Act, pointing out that citizen- ship .rights would not be taken away from native-born Ameri- cans who likewise stayed away from the U. S. for more than five years. The Court, while upholding AJC on Mendelsohn, failed to rule on the prime issue of dis- crimination. AJC officials said they were "disappointed" that the court failed to rule on the Constitutional issues and said that the statute, now a part of the McCarran Act, "will perpet- uate discrimination against nat- uralized Americans." o n 1_e AJC Wins Court Fight For Return of Citizen Epstein Heads Holy Day Bond Appeals 6--DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Annual Service Group Stag Day ir The Detroit Board of Educa- tion has elected Rabbi Leon Fram, of Temple Israel, to fill the unexpired term as a member of the Detroit Library Commis- sion caused by the death of Mr. Henry Meyers. The appointment is in effect until Dec. 31, 1956. Rabbi Frain came to Detroit in 1925 as assistant to Dr. Leo Franklin at Temple Beth El, and in 1941 organized Temple Israel. •He previously has held several city and state offices, among them membership on Mayor Van Antwerp's Chart e r - Revision Commission and Gov. Frank Murphy's Strike Mediation Com- missiOn. No Cabinet Crisis Expected Following Flare-lip Between Rokach and Lavon JERUSALEM, (JTA) -- New trouble flared in the govern- ment coalition as a result of a bitter exchange - between In- terior Minister Israel Rokach and Minister without portfolio Pinhas Lavon over the latter's charges that the Interior Min- ister was mismanaging relations with the municipalities. The Israeli press gave the dis- pute wide coverage, but both Mapai and General Zionist spokesmen discounted the like- lihood of a Cabinet breach. Health Minister Joseph Serlin, a General Zionist, called for a discussion aimed at ironing out the difficulties. At a regional meeting • of representatives of municipalities which was held in Tel Aviv two weeks ago, Mapai mayors and councillors voiced a number of grievances and urged Lavon to raise the question with the Gen- eral Zionist Minister of Interior. Rokach, who defended his poli- cies, in turn attacked the Mapai for not carrying out on the municipal level the coalition Week's Radio and Television Programs of Jewish Interest • 4 Time: 12:30 p.m., Sunday, Aug. 23. Station : WWJ. Feature: The eighth in a se- ries of 10 programs featuring Prof. Mark Van Doren and Mau- rice Samuel will consist of a discussion of "Joseph's Life in the Land of Egypt." The talks are based on Thomas Mann's classic "Joseph and His Bro- thers." * * MESSAGE OF ISRAEL Time: 10 a.m., Sunday, Aug. 23 Station: WXYZ. Feature: Rabbi Leon Fram, of Temple Israel, will conclude his series of four lectures over the coast to coast • facilities of the American Broadcasting Co. with a talk on "The Kingdom of God." BERNARD EDELMAN Bernard Edelman Associates of 10300 Woodward, corner Calvert, will soon celebrate their 17th year in the real estate business. The firm specializes in buying prop- erty anywhere in the United States. CONSTABLE 12th Ward alt decked - :out • • • Mothers' Club Camp To Welcome Husbands • The Council of Mothers' Clubs of the Jewish Community Cen- ter announces that the Mothers' Camp at Croswell, Mich., on Lake Huron will welcome hus- bands and wives during the last two weeks of camp, from Sun- day to Labor Day. Those attend- ing should bring their own bed- ding, unless coming by bus. A homecoming week-end cel- ebration is planned from Thurs- day. to Aug. 31 for all campers who have attended in previous years and new campers are wel- come. Reservations can be made with Mrs. Belle Pliskow. rkt. 5-8450, Monday through Thurs- day, at the Davison Jewish Center.. - Twelve 'Jewish university stu- dent leaders from Great Britain and the Union of South Africa are visiting the United States under the sponsorship.. of the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundations in cooperation with the World Union of Jewish Students. The students, including South Afri- ca's representative whose par- ticipation was made possible by a special UNESCO travel grant. will remain in this country for six weeks. CONGREGATION BETH SIIMUEL Dexter at Buena Vista announces That tickets for the High Holiday services are now on sale. The Ticket committee will be at the Synagogue daily from 9 a.m. to 12 noon; 2-5 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. From tip to toe the McAlpin is bright and fresh. Guest rooms and public space have been handsomely redeco- rated and everything's new but the rates. They remain a thrifty low, making the McAlpin New York's greatest hotel value. from $4.50 single, 7.00 doubt* 1500 newly redecorated rooms with bath and radio. Many rooms with TV. Broadway at 34th St. I' block from Penn Station and Empire State Building NM YORK ADAS SHALOM SYNAGOGUE (Northwest Hebrew Congregation) announces supplementary 12 British, South African Students Guests in U.S. FOR INFORMATION CALL agreement which is in effect in the national government. The press reported that Rokach also threatened to re- sign if his policy is overruled. It is understood that no single General Zionist minister may re- sign without the other repre- sentativei of his party also walking out of the government. of Hope" for 20 continuous years, is past president of Adas Shalom. Synagogue and a mem- ber of Cheed Shel Emes (De- troit Hebrew Benevolent So- ciety). • THE ETERNAL LIGHT TE. 4 0777 OR WE. 5-9107 Nathan R. Epstein, vice presi- dent - of Keystone Oil Refining Co., has been appointed bond chairman for the High Holy Day Israel Bond Appeals in pe- troit. He has enlisted the co- operation of 24 synagogues in the Detroit area for the purpose of securing Is- rael bond sub- scriptions dur- i n g the Holy Day period. Daniel Tem- chin and Phillip Stollman. of Mizrachi, and volunteer work- ers in previous Holy Day ap- peals, a r e as- s i s ting Epstein Epstein in the present drive. Epstein, a past president of the Detroit chapter of the "City Elect Rabbi Frain To Library Board HIGH HOLY DAY SERVICES Rosh Hashanah Eve. Sept. 9; 10, 11—Yom Kippur Eve. Sept. 18; 19 in the synagogue social hail OFFICIATING Cantor RUEBEN BOYARSKY Rabbi WEINET • Rev. AARON GROSSBARD . '15 RESERVATIONS FEU SEAT MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. EVES. MONDAY thru THURSDAY, 8 to 10 P.M: SUNDAYS, 10 A.M. to 1 P.M. at the Synagogue Offices 7045 CURTIS UN. 4-7474 SantPitosa - emmnsewomorwilolt