Miss Selma Arkin,
Plans July Marriage

Tales Out of Schoo

"The Youth of a Nation are the Trustees
of Posterity."—Disraeli

By

By

NANCY
FALK

.

Mumford
High

MISS SELMA ARKIN

Announcement is. made of the
engagement of Selma Arkin to
Gerald Tenenbaum. Miss Arkin
is the daughter of M r s. I d a
Arkin, of Glendale Ave., and
the late Mr. Sam Arkin.
Mr. Tenenbaum, the son of
Mr. Max Tenenbaum, of Mon-
terey Ave., and the late Mrs.
Esther Tenenbaum, will grad-
uate this June from Wayhe
State University.
A July.• wedding is being
planned.

Center Schedules
Cage Playoffs

Beth Abraham, with a perfect
record of 13 wins and no losses,
is the favorite to capture the
Intercongreg.ational Basketball
League playoff title, play for
which begins - at 4 p.m., -Sun-
day, at the Davison Jewish Cen-
ter gym.
The Beth Abraham t e
wound up regular season play
well ahead of its rivals in the
Northern Division. The South-
ern Division, however, .wit-
nessed a cicise race, the outcome
of Which. was in doubt until
the final regular season game.
Young Israel, which Wound
up leading tho _pack, only
moved into first place in mid-
February, after Bnai David has
led most of the way. The final
standings in both divisions at
° the end of 'regular season plays
reads:

NORTHERN DIVISION
Team •
Won Lost
Beth Abraham
13 0
Beth Aaron
6 6
Ahavas Achim
6 7
Adas Shalom
3 10
Temple Israel
•
1 12
SOUTHERN DIVISION
Team
Won Lost
Young Israel
12 2
Bnai David
11
3
Shaar Hashomayim
10 4
5 9
Beth El
5 9
Shaarey Zedek
1 12
Bnai Moshe

The first four teams in each
division qualify for the play-
offs, although at this date the
schedule for Sunday's games
has not been drawn up. Four
single elimination games will
be played Sunday. •
Playoff time also is approach-
ing in the Teen Basketball
League, marking one of the
closest finishes in the league's
history. Top-running Zussman
AZA is being crowded by both
Del Monicos and Nationals.

Team
Zussman AZA
Nationals
Del Monicos
Saxons
Davison Imperials
Northwest Imperials

Won Lost
13 2
11
4
4
1.1
4 10
4 10
1 14

Playoffs begin Sunday, with
Zussman AZA facing Nationals'
and Del Monicos playing
Saxons. '
In the Class C • DiviSion, the
Lancers, a Berman Br a n c h
team, maintains the lead, fol-
lowed closely by the Dukes.
With the entry of a fifth club,
the Semanos, into the league,
a new -schedule is being drafted

Team
Lancers
Dukes
Vuleans
Counts

Won
7
6
5
0

Lost
2
3 •
4
9

Games this week will pit
Counts vs. Dukes at _6 p.m.,
Monday, and Semanos vs. Vul-
can at 6 p.m., Wednesday. All
teams will play Semanos once,
extending:-, season's play to
March 27. Losses to the new
entry, however, will not count
in the regular season's .stand-
ings,

In the spring, students and
faculty have their differences-
over a baseball diamond. But
now that basketball is the "sport
of the hour" the M Club and the
faculty will test their skill in
the annual game today. Should
be quite the game!
Faculty and students will
meet in a more gentlemanly
fashion on March 14 at a tea
sponsored by the Student Coun-
cil Program Committee. The
Council has recently added
four new members in the sen-
ate. They are 9B's T a mar a
Ackerman, Da v id Drachler,
Phyllis Lui, and Wendy Yowles,
They, as well as the other 9B's,
are presently in the process of
being "enlightened" on all of the
school's activities by members of
the council who visit the oc-
cupational planning classes
weekly for a lecture and ques-
tion period.
Last week at a special assem-
bly Anne Viney, Mumford's for-
eign exchange student,. spoke to
the group on her impressions of
the U.S.A. Also speaking were
E. Kelly, the local representa-
tive of the American Field Serv-
ice, and Mr. Clark, who once
served on the A.F.S. Ambulance
Corps. Maurice Rose A.Z.A.
held an auto wash last Sunday
at Leo Genser's Service Station.
The proceeds went toward next
year's exchange student.
Since this is Brotherhood
Month, the Radio Broadcasters
Guild; under the direction of
Mr. Matthews, presented. a ra-
dio play on brotherhood, heard
by most of the classes. The
Guild also completed Norman
Corwin's "Descent of the Gods."
This week was an unusually
hetic one for seniors. Their
schedule was bursting with elec-
tions, rallies, more elections,
etc. The end outcome was the
election of four officers who
will be anounced in next week's
article.
T h e Temple Israel Youth
Group will hold its annual
Purim carnival March 17, in the
afternoon.

Stutz to Continue as
CJFWF Committee- Head

George Stutz, of Detroit, will
continue as chairman of the
community bueget practices-
principles committee of t h e
Council of Jewish Federations
and Welfare Funds, it was an-
nounced by Herbert R. Abeles,
of Newark, N. J., CJFWF pres-
ident.
Mr. Stutz's committee ana-
lyzes current problems in com-
munity budgeting and develops
guides to help communities meet
their budgeting needs.
Mr. Stutz is a member of the
boards of the Jewish Welfare
Federation, United Jewish Char-
ities, Hebrew Free Loan As-
sociation and is chairman of the
board of trustees of the Shapero
School of Nursing at Sinai Hos-
pital.

DIANE
SKLAR

Central
High School

Inasmuch as the Student
Council has voted to hold elec-
tions once a year, recently-
elected officers Mike Kahan,
president; Tobi Fallen, veep;
Helen Lusky and Charles Ste-.
phens, treasurers; and Sam
Bernstein, ,secretary, will hold
office until June.
The council has made a great
profit on the sale of book covers
and handbooks and also on the
sale of refreshments at home
basketball games.
In their final game of the
season the Blazers chalked up
another victory against Red-
ford, making nine victories
against one loss for the team..
Central's hoopsters have taken
second place in the West Side
League for three consecutive
seasons. They clashed with
Miller High in the consolation
game at the U. of D. Field
House Tuesday.
Central's Parent Faculty held
a panel discussion moderated
by Mrs. Guy Nunn Wednesday,
discussing the topic "What We
Expect from Our School."
Club AZA, an annual affair
sponsored by BBYO will be
held April 6, at Cong. Shaarey
Zedek, under the overall chair-
manship of Chuck B 1 o tner.
Other chairmen are Danny Mal-
amud, Arnie Serlin, Larry
Greene, Mel Goldstein, and San-
dy Wallok.
Thought of the week—"if you
would move the world, you
must first move yourself."

Folks Farein Plants
Grove of Trees in Israel

The Yid di sh Folks Farein
marked completion of the plant-
ing of a grove of 1,000 trees in
ISrael, through the Jewish Na-
tional Fund, at a meeting held
recently at Sholem Aleichem
Institute.
A special Israel program was
arranged, which included the
showing of a new film from
Israel, "New Roots," describing
the work of the Jewish Na-
tional Fund in Israel.
Ben Harold, president of the
JNF Council, presented the
Farein with a certificate attest-
ing to the completion of the
grove which will bear the So-
ciey's name and will be planted
in the Detroit Landsmanshaften
Forest. Rubin Coopersmith,
president, and Julius Herman,
secretary and JNF chairman,
accepted the' certificate.

Deadline for Filing of
Indemnification Claims

The final deadline for the
filing of claims under the Ger-
man Indemnification Law by
Jewish victims of Nazi persecu-
tion expires Sept. 30, 1957, the
Conference on Jewish Material
Claims Against Germany made
known. An extension of the
deadline is not expected.
The German Indemnification
Law, enacted by the Bonn Par-
liament in June 1956, provides
for the payment of compensa-
tion on account of the loss of
life, injuries to health, depriv-
ation of . liberty and damage to
property, and to economic pros-
pects. About one million claims
of Nazi victims are currently
pending at German indemnifi-
cation offices.
Information sheets containing
data on persons eligible for
compensation may be obtained
by writing to "Information
Sheet," Box 1719, New York,
N. Y.

Fresh Air Camp, Tamarack
Now Accepting Applications
• Applications for Fresh Air
and Tamarack Camps, in Brigh-
ton and Holly, Mich., respec-
tively, are now being accepted,
according to Dr. Irving Posner,
Fresh Air Society president.
Both Fresh Air, serving boys
7 to 11, girls 7 to 10, and Tama-
rack, open to boys 12 to 16,
girls 11 to 14, will have three
camp periods: June 28 to July
17, July 17 to Aug. 5, Aug. 6 to
25. Applications may be ob-
He that is good at making ex-
tained from the camp office,
WE. 3-7380,. or at the Jewish cuses is seldom good for any-
thing else.—Benjamin Franklin
Community Centers.

Designers, Work Year on 'Commandments'

Costuming for Cecil B. De. dyed, and 300 leopard, lion and
Mille's production of "The Ten zebra skins used. There were
Commandments" is considered 2,500 pairs of sandals made to
the most enormous single dress- order, and 10 jewelers worked
to produce 1,100 pieces of jew-
making operation on record.
Three top-ranking film de- elry and jeweled props, such as
signers, six - time Academy the sword carried by the Phar-
Award-winner Edith Head, aoh, Rameses II, played by Yul
Ralph Jester, and Dorothy Jea- Brynner.
kins; and two of today's dis-
The fashions in "The Ten
. tinguished artists; John. Jensen Commandments" are the same
and Arnold Friberg, with five as the ladies wore them 3,000
sketch artists, provided designs years ago.
for 25,000 costumes which took,
Cecil B. DeMille's production
125 tailors and dressmakers
more than a year to complete. of "The Ten Commandments"
Eight additional artists were is currently on view in Detroit
employed to paint designs on at the Madison Theatre.
some of these costumes.
1 mpesootoommpsommiorno
•
Forty thousand yards of Ma-
Musical
•
•
terial were especially woven or •

; • Entertainment ;

JCC Plans to Include
Emigres, Arts Interests

O
•

FOR YOUR WEDDING
•
OR BAR MITZVAH BY •

: DAVE DAVIDSON

O

LI 5-4352 • LI 4-3042

•

Interpretive dance enthusi- 011100000410111111000041061611004118
asts, older adults with musical
interests and Hungarian em- 2EK>asi:+77;::411M7X.27.7.K.2723.3K>Z117.2a 4:.
igres will be catered to in forth- 7 Plastic Furniture Covers
MADE TO ORDER OR
coming activities at the Jewish
READY MADE
Community Centers.
CALL
ANNA KARBAL
The Spring term for adult
TO. 7-0874
modern dance, taught 6 p.m., 4.4
Separate Cushion Covers
s1
Wednesdays by Fannie Aron-
son, will begin March 13; con- ,c3azzeimeK:gwaw..?reatiolimo4:0.
tinuing for 10 weeks at the Da-
vison Branch.
You've 'Enjoyed Many Weddings
and Bar Mitzvahs with Music by
At the D W. Simons Branch,
4000 Tuxedo, older adults will
meet Thursday for the first
meeting of a music club, super-
vised by Eugene" Jaffe. This
UN. 3-6283
UN. 3-0404
Sunday,- at 5:30 p.m., a tea will
honor Hungarian arrivals to De-
troit.
LAMP REPAIR

3h12.

Detroit Socialites to Hold
Hamburger Roast Sunday
An indoor hamburger roast,
complemented by dancing and
informal entertainment, will be
held by Detroit Socialites on
Sunday evening at Westown
Hall, according to Harvey Ben-
enson.
The • organization has slated a
business - meeting for Wednes-
day evening at Cong. Beth
Abraham. •

C.ountzt.

Lamp Shades Cleaned

VOGUE LAMP and
SHADE STUDIO

18951 LIVERNOIS
UN 3-7322

BAR MITZVAHS
SHOWERS

JEAN'S
HEALTH
SALON

Office or Plant Parties

17302 W. McNichols

In Our Private Banquet Room

DARBY'S

UN. 2-7642

7 Mile-
Wyoming

Plans All

Details

Steam Cabinets
Swedish Massage

TRAY CATERING SPECIALISTS

BR 3-0284

BACK AGAIN BY POPULAR DEMAND
That Special Baby Gift

PINAFORES . . . . . . . . $6.95

Special Occasion Party Dresses Custom Made

HONES

UN 3-8779

GOLDIN'S KOSHER MEATS and POULTRY

20346 W. 7 Mile Rd.

are now serving the Evergreen Jewish
Community with the finest in Kosher
Meats and Poultry.

FREE PARKING FOR 1000 CARS

We carry a full line of Delicatessen and
Kosher Frozen Foods.
WE DELIVER

KE 4-5181

KE 4-0737

Original Cake Designs
For Every Occasion • • •

The Perfect Climax to Any Affair !

You'll enjoy the good old-fashioned taste

of our bread, rolls and pastries.

Special Attention to Organizations

ZEMAN'S NEW YORK BAKERY

9726 Dexter
TY 4-4800

13137 Dexter
WE 5-9102 -

12945 W. 7 Mile
UN 2-7980

Open 6 Days a Week --- ALL SHOPS CLOSED ON SATURDAY

