building bureau of the National Jewish Welfare Board. The building program is part of a total Center movement which is expanding rapidly throughout the country in order to keep pace with changing Jewish community life. According to a JWB build- ing bureau report for the pe- riod from June 30 to Septem- ber, 1956, Center building projects were in various stages of construction in Har- risburg, Pa.; Scranton, Pa.; Atlanta, Ga.; Pelham Park- way, N. Y.; Allentown, Pa.; and Ottawa, Can. During September, 1956, four new centers opened in Camden, N. J.; Brookline, Mass.; Law- rence, Mass.; and Corpus Christi, Texas. In addition, plans are being worked on for new Center buildings in Oakland, Calif.; San Antonio, Tex.; Pittsburgh, Pa.; St. L o u i s, Mo.; Detroit, Newark, N. J.; Windsor- a n d -Toronto, Can.; Kansas City, Mo.; Long Island, N. Y.; Long Beach, Calif.; and Baltimore, Md. needs of the new Detroiters. Those who need temporary housing are received at the Jew- ish House of Shelter. The Jew- ish Community Center has held its first social program for the transplanted families and offers them a year's free membership. Sinai Hospital and North End clinics provide for their medical' needs. Resettlement Services spon- sors U. S. admission of refugee families, provides financial help to new arrivals, and gives guid- ance on the problems of adjust- ing to American life. Thinking of Cadillac Think of Me . . . JOHN LEBOW Representing EAST,JEFFERSON BRANCH CADILLAC MOTOR COMPANY 3180 E. JEFFERSON LO. 7-6811 — Res. UN. 3-5127 f it's the NATURAL thing to do! Boris Smolar's 'Between You and Me' ... ,(Copyright, 1957, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc) Communal Reflections: There is a good deal of disappointment among American Jewish community leaders over the fact that Moshe Sharett, former Foreign Minister of Israel, was prevented from coming to the United States to help the United Jewish Appeal campaign. . . . The decision to have Mr. Sharett stay in Israel, taken only a few days before his scheduled departure for the United States, provoked great surprise and all kind of comments among those in the United States who feel that his coming here would have contributed greatly to the success of the UJA drive. . . It would have contributed also to the strengthening of pro-Israel sentiment among non-Jewish elements in this country before whom Mr. Sharett could have appeared as the most popular private Israeli citizen. . . . Mr. Sharett has. many friends among Jewish com- munity leaders in all parts of the country. . . . He is highly respected by many non-Jewish intellectuals, labor leaders, and people active political affairs. . . . The cancellation of his visit to the U.S. is considered by many as neither a wise nor a prac- tical move. • Com: In or phone WO S-5800 for fro. POSTAGE PAID Savo- By-Mail Kit. Tireless workers . . . the bees. But they have something to show for it. Not so with many of us! Here's a practical way to make .sure that you ARE getting somewhere. Consider "savings" a debt you owe to yourself. Then every week come in or by mail put a fixed sum in a high-earning American Savings account. And saving comes naturally at American Savings . . . where the high return provides a powerful incentive to add to your account regulatly. US Echoes United Nations Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold refers to himself—in private conversations—as being "a frustrated friend" of Israel. What he actually means by that is a matter Of speculation in circles close to Mr. Hammarskjold. . . How- ever, the real friends of Israel in the United Nations do not like the "frustrated" part of Mr. Hammarskjold's friendship. , . They feel that during the current discussions on the Gaza and Aqaba issues he did not act even as a "frustrated friend" of Israel. . . . There was not the slightest sign of even "frustrated" friendship towards Israel in this report. .. . The importance of Mr. Harnrnarskjold's personal", feelings lies in the fact that as chief of 'the United Nations he is also the chief of the United Nations troops stationed between Israel and Egypt. Educational Trends: Exclusive of schools on a college level, New York Jewry spent $16,000,000 last yek• on Jewish education. . . . This does not include approximately $1,200,000 which Jewry all-day schools and yeshivas in New York received in Federal and state government funds through the JeWish Education. Association. . . . These funds are used to supply some 120 all-day schools with lunch, milk , and transportation to and from school. . . . Plans are being mapped by the JEA to have all Jewish afternoon schools — numbering about 400 — benefit from the special milk program established by New York State. AMERICAN SAVINGS WOODWARD AT LAR,NED LIVERNOIS AT W. 7 MILE open 9:30 to 4:30—Friday to 6 p.m. open 9:30 to 4:30—Thursday to 8:30 p.ta. DEXTER BLVD. AT CORTLAND W. 9 MILE near COOLIDGE open 9:30 to 4:30—,Tuesday to 8:30 p.m. open 9:30 to 4:30—Thursday to 8:30 FORT STREET AT MILITARY VAN DYKE AT E. 7 MILE operr.9:30 to 4:30—Friday to 8- p.m. open 9:30 to 4:30—Friday to 8:30 p.m. Member Federal Savings and loan Insurance Corporation p.m. Sarnood ‘Szpikat Work will start this summer on construction of the $2,500,000 main building of the Jewish Community Center, to be erect- ed at Curtis and Meyers. Final working drawings of the proposed building were made public this week, after months of planning. When completed, the Center will serve all age groups of both sexes, offering, educational, cultural and recreational serv- ices to individuals and organi- zations. Plans call for a Men's Health Club with a capacity of 1,000; a Women's Health Club, capac- ity 500; a complete' physical ed- ucation plant, consisting of a main gymnasium, auxiliary gymnasium, han d b all and squash courts and a regulation 30 x 75 AAU swimming pool. The fine arts wing will house a slant-floor auditorium with a fully-equipped pr o s c en ium stage, capacity 500; art, dance and music studios; and a large auditorium accommodating 750 people. An older adult wing on the first floor will have a lounge and meeting rooms, and there will be an elevator making it possible for older adults to take advantage of second floor club rooms and lower level crafts rooms. A modern playschool accom- modating 80 'youngsters also is planned, catering t o regular class enrollment and a drop-in playschool program. An exten- sive general arts and crafts pro- gram, club rooms and separate lounges and games rooms for juniors, teens and tweens are envisaged. Architect for the building is Paul Tilds and Associates. Sam- uel Frankel is chairman of the Center building committee, which includes Harvey H. Gold- man, Irving Rose, Nathan Sil- verman, Samuel S. S i comer, Richard Sloan and Tilds. The building committee and a number of sub-committees have spent over a year develop- ing Center plans. The commit- tee, as a group, visited new cen- ters in Milwaukee, Louisville, Montreal and Toronto, while in- dividual members surveyed centers in Toledo, Los Angeles, New Haven and Pittsburgh. ...Planning on the new main Detroit center incorporates the latest and best developments in center program and facilities as gathered from these visits, Frankel said. Reviewing special areas for the building were Irving Rose and Harold Sarko, men's health services; Mrs. Leo Mellen, wo- men's health facilities; M r s. Charles Lakoff; fine arts com- mittee chairman; and Richard Sloan, little theater facilities. Additional committee meet- ings- will continue to determine in advance the furnishings and equipment for the various de- partments to be housed in the building. The proposed structure is an- other step toward fulfillment of the master plan for developing Center facilities, which w a s adopted by the board in 1953. This is the plan which calls -for construction of a main build- ing and a minimum of three branches to serve the new sub- urban Jewish neighborhoods by providing a wide variety of services to the entire commu- nity. The expansion is the culmina- tion of a program which began in 1903 at the old Hannah Schloss Memorial Building and developed further in 1906 with the Jewish Institute. The Jewish Centers Associa- tion, an outgrowth of the Insti- tute, was founded in 1926, and in 1933 merged with the YMHA and YWHA to form the Jewish Community Center as it exists today. In the development of its plans, the Center has had the benefit of consultation with the Thirty Hungarian Jewish ref- ugee families, comprising 65 in- dividuals, have settled in De- troit up to Jan. 30, reports Har- old Silver, executive director of Resettlement Service, the Jew- ish community's agency for guidance and financial assis- tance to refugees. Jewish Vocational Service has been instrumental in finding jobs for the breadwinners of these families, reports Albert Cohen, executive director. Four other member agencies of the Jewish Welfare Federa- tion are cooperating to meet the Lg6i (See Picture on Page 1) 65 Hungarians Settle in Detroit 7—THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Begin Work This Summer on $21/2MillionMainCenter