THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-26

Friday, March 29,= 1957.

Center Slates Activities .
for Older Adults, Girls

Special activities for older
adults and pre-teen girls have
recently been scheduled at the
Ten Mile Jewish Center.
Events slated for older adults
include, "Tomorrow is a Busy
Day," a Robert Montgomery
movie on April 10; a musicale,
May 1; a "trip day," May 15; ,
and a picnic, June 5. Older
adults are invited to participate
in the activities.
A • modern dance class for
girls, aged six through eight,
will begin this Monday, accord-
ing to Frank Loewenberg, Jew-
ish Center supervisor. Reva
Usher will instruct the group.
For information, call LI. 7-6161.

Oak Park PTO Plans
Pre-Passover Program

With a view to the approach
of Passover, the Parent Teach-
er's Organization of the Oak
Park Branch of the United He-
brew Schools will meet at 8:30
p.m., Monday, in the school
building, 15150 W. 10 Mile Rd.,
Oak Park.
A film of school children con-
ducting a model seder will be
shown, and Rabbi Emanuel Ap-
plebaum will speak on "The
Significance of Pesach."
Following the major portion
of the evening's . program, par-
ents will meet with their chil-
drens' teachers. For transpor-
tation, call LI. 6-2499.

Committee Back Suiters'
Re-Election to Council

-

A number of community lead-
ers in Oak Park have formed a
committee to support the re-
election of Joseph Suiter, in-
-cumbent Councilman, in Mon-
day's general election.
Suiter, who has been Mayor
Pro-Tem of Oak Park for two
years and a Councilman for
over four years, is executive
director of the Woodward Gen-
eral Hospital, in Highland Park.

Oak Park Pioneer Women
to Hold Membership Tea
A newly-formed Oak Park
iroup of Pioneer Women will
sponsor a metnbership tea at
1 p.m., Tuesday, at the home
of Mrs. Ann Lakin, 22030 Strat-
ford, Oak Park. Dessert lun-
cheon will be served.
Anyone interested in joining
the group is welcome to attend
the tea, according 'to Bea Shul-
man, PW Council membership
chairman. For further informa-
tion, contact her at LI 2-0584.

VOTE FOR

GEORGE M.

FOSTER

REPUBLICAN

FOR

STATE HIGHWAY
COMMISSIONER .

'',77F;M7 37.-MR :MMW M.:77. 7 7.17,-

•,.

Medal Awarded
for Creative Arts

.

0. R. Reid to Receive Hungarian Refugee
Gets His 'Kiss'
Eternal Light Award

Ogden R. Reid, president and
editor of the New York Her-
ald Tribune, will be honored
by the Jewish Theological Sem-
inary of America at its annual
Eternal Light Award Dinner,
Sunday, - at the Waldorf As-
toria, New York.
Announcing that Mr. Reid
wOuld be the 1957 award re-
cipient, Dr. Louis' Finkelstein,
Chancellor of the Seminary,
explained that the annual
award is given to that indivi-
dual who in his professional
and personal career has best
symbolized the purposes to
The above medal, created which the Eternal Light radio
by Peter Grippe of the Bran- program is dedicated.
The younger of two sons of
deis University faculty, was
Ogden
Mills and Helen (Rog-
awarded recently to the first
winners of the Brandeis Uni- ers) Reid, Ogden Rogers Reid
versity Creative Arts Awards. was born in New York, June
24, 1925. He is the grandson
R e cipients were William of Whitelaw Reid, U. S. Am-
Schuman, president of Juilli-
ard School of Music; Stuart bassador to Great 'Britain and
owner and publisher of the
Davis, contemporary artist;
William Carlos Williams, phy- New York Tribune, which was
founded by Horace Greeley.
sician-poet; and Mrs. Bailie
("Go West, Young Man") in
Flanagan D a v i s, professor- 1841.
emeritus of theater arts at
Reid was 25 when he joined
Smith College. Four $1,500 the staff of the Herald Tribune
grants-in-aid for leading per- in 1950 to begin an apprentice-
sonalities in the fields. of ship as a reporter and colum-,
music, theater, poetry, paint- nist. On April 8, 1955, he was
ing and sculpture also were named president and editor of
awarded to promising young the paper.
artists.
"The 'Fourth Estate' has be-
come the 'First Estate'," said
Mr. Reid in a recent speech,
Voters to Decide
"because without the free press
on School Facilities
there can be neither freedom
Whether 22,000 Detroit stu- nor free government."
dents will have seats when they
enroll for their first time in the
city's schools this September Eisenhower's 'Envoy
will be determined by citizens' Expected in Israel
votes on Proposition D at the
TEL AVTV - (JTA)—JaMes P.
Monday election.
A majority of "yes" votes will Richards, special envoy of Presi-
authorize a three-mill levy ($3 dent Eisenhower, is expected to
per $100(1. of assessed valuation) arrive in Israel during the latter
for two years. With this income, half of April. He is tentatively
700 classrooms will be built for scheduled to remain in this
pupils who wilt bring public country for several days for dis-
school enrollment to a record cussions with Israel Government
high of nearly 300,000 in 1959. leaders on the Eisenhower Doc-
According to the Citizen's trine.
Israel will be allocated a
Committee for Proposition .D,
the need for the three-mill levy share in the President's special
is exemplified by the over- $200,000,000 fund, these sources
crowding at Redford High said, "as required for her needs
School, where nearly 4,000 stu- to fight Communism." It was
dents must attend less than half- emphasized that the resumption
day classes without benefit of of regular American economic
library facilities, study hall and aid to Israel was not 'connected
daily counseling. Many small, with the Richards, visit.
Gerald M. Straus, acting di-
unventilated, poorly lighted ,
rooms never intended to be rector of the American opera-
classrooms are being used daily tions mission in Israel, began
a round of talks with Israel
for Redford classes.
The citizen's committee re- officials to ascertain the prin-
ports that 59 civic organizations cipal requirements of the Am-
urge a yes-vote on the propo- erican aid program when it is
reactivated.
sition.
When Washington finally gives
the green light for resump-
Judge Ernest Boehm Up tion of aid to Israel, it should
be possible to reactivate the
For Election Monday
Judge Ernest C. Boehm, re- grant-in-aid f o r development
cently appointed by Governor purposes and long-term loans
G. Mennen Williams, who is up for purchase of surplus foods
on Monday, April 1st, for re- within a brief period. Resump-
election for the office of Judge tion of technical aid would take
of Probate, is a former Judge of longer as some 60-American ex-
perts formerly stationed here
the Detroit r
are now scattered on temporary 1
Common
assignment over three con-
Court, has
tinents.
served as Chief
of the Circuit
0 bed! 0 bed! delicious bed!
Court Criminal'f'f.,
That heaven upon earth to the
Division of the.
weary head!
Wayne
—Thomas Hood
Pros e c ut or's
Office, and as I
Assistant Pros- L.
- -4(
ecuting Attor- Judge Boehm
ney for 14 years—nine years as
a Circuit Court felony-trial law-
yer, and five years as chief of
the Circuit Court Criminal Di-
vision. Judge Boehm received
recognition while serving as
Chief of the Circuit Court Crim-
inal Division for work done for
rehabilitation of youthful first
offenders in law violations.

-

Experienced Highway

Engineer

Vote April 1st

Sponsored by Jewish

Friends

ask for . .

LAND 0' LAKES

PASSOVER BUTTER

At Your Favorite Grocers

EDUCATION MAKES
AMERICA GREAT -

If America is to remain great,
its public schools must offer all
children equal opportunity.

Detroit's schools need 100
classrooms for 22,000 boys and girls.
The time is now . . the opportunity
is yours.

Yes, VOTE YES on PROPOSI-
TION D (for desks).

Good schools mean so much
t o so many.

Sponsored by: Citizens Committee

for PROPOSITION D

VOTE

KEEP

Competent, Progressive,

BONN (JTA) —The district
court at Kiel has rejected a
petition for release from pre- „-
trial imprisonment filed by Carl
Clauberg, the Nazi gynecologist,
Who carried out sterilization .
_"experiments" on Jewish women
prisoners in the Auschwitz con-
centration camp. Clauberg is
appealing - the decision to the
Penal Senate of the Schleswig
Superior Court.
No date has yet been set for
his 'trial on charges of "inflict-
ing heavy bodily injury while
in the exercise of an official
function" in at least 170 cases.
In four other cases so far,
is accused of- inflicting bodily
injury of a nature that death
ensued." The taking of testi-
mony by deposition is con-
tinuing in a dozen countries..

Smiling Nandor Burger, 50,
takes as his bride Aranka Kiss,
49, in a wedding celebrated un-
der the auspices of United Bias
Service, the worldwide migra
tion agency, in the United Bias
building at Camp Kilmer. The
Hungarian refugee couple ar-
rived together in Camp Kilmer
after having known each. other
for five years in their native
I.
Budape s t.

**********************

New York Museum Exhibits
Israel Travel Posters
The Museum of Modern Art
in New York selected tivo Is-
raeli posters for its Inter-
national Travel Posters Exhibit .
which comprises 60 posters from
15 countries. At the end of the
show on April 7, the travel
posters will be circulated by the
Museum throughout , the United
States.

Bonn Court Rejects
Release of 'Experimenter'

'

To.

RETAIN

No. 46 Non-partisan Ballot

For judge of the court that protects your home,
Vote for EXPERIENCE! Vote for Judge' Boehm!

JOB!

* ** * ** * *

APPOINTED BY GOVERNOR WILLIAMS

Endorsed by Wayne County CIO Council,
Detroit and Wayne County Federation of
Labor, Detroit Building Trades Council
and other labor, civic and church groups.

Preferred candidate Detroit Citizens League.

