Sheruth League's Charity Ball A preview of some of the entertainment in store for those planning to attend the eighth annual Children's Charity Ball of Sheruth League is provided by BILL KANE, the hurdy- gurdy man, and his trained monkey, MIKE. Looking on are Mrs. SIDNEY E. LOCKE (left), and Mrs. THEODORE H. GRANT, chairmen. The ball, to be held amid a New York Central Park setting, is planned for 9 p.m., April 27, at Adas Shalom Synagogue. Proceeds will go to the Hawthorne Center at Northville and the Leukemia Foundation of Children's Hospital. For tickets, call Mrs. Harry Keller, EL. 6-3261, and Mrs. Allan Rosenberg, UN. 1-5322, co-chairmen of tickets. Marshall to Speak in Ann Arbor Brig. Gen. S. L. A. Marshall, chief editorial writer of the De- troit News and America's fore- most military historian and ana- lyst, will speak at an oneg shab- bat of Beth Israel Community Center, in Ann Arbor, Mich. The program will follow Fri- day evening services, which will begin at 8 p.m., April 19, in the congregation's chapel, 1429 Hill St. The public is invited for the evening, which will be con- eluded with a social hour. Dr. Maurice Shudofsky, dean of the College of Jewish Studies in Detroit, will be the final lec- turer in the Thomas Cook Lec- ture Series, at 8 p.m., April 26, in the community's social hall, at the Hill Street address. His topic will be "The Portrait of the American Jew in Modern American Literature." _ This year's Cook Series has Included as guest speakers Rabbi Morris Adler and Prof. Isaac Rabinowitz, of Detroit, and Prof. The message of Passover —the festival of Freedom —is a clarion call to all mankind to hold on to Our hard-won - freedoms. May it continue to inspire people of all faiths. The world's largest Marvin Felheim, of Ann Arbor. Beth Israel's Sunday school will present its annual Chil- dren's Seder at 10 a.m., Satur- day, in the social hall. Accord- ing to Osias Zwerdling, congre- gation president, children of the Beth Israel Hebrew school will conduct the seder, at which Rabbi Julius Weinberg, spiritual leader of the Center, will pre- side. Traditional Passover foods will be served. Arrangements chairman is Mrs. Leo Goldberg, who is assisted by Mesdames Julius Schaffer and Louis Op- penheim. Sinai Chosen to Train Hospital Administrators Sinai Hospital is one of four hospitals in the Detroit area and of 150 in the entire nation which now offers resident training for hospital administrators in the same manner as resident train- ing for specialists. Kenneth Peltzie, of Columbia University, has been appointed administrative resident at Sinai, Max Osno s, president, an- nounces. Sinai was selected as the hos- pital in which Peltzie will spend his year of residential training by Dr. E. Dwight Barnett, head of Columbia's graduate program in hospital administration and former director of Detroit's Har- per Hospital. Columbia is one of 14 univer- sities in the United States which co-operates with hospitals such as Sinai in carrying out resi- dence programs for future hos- pital administrators and which offers a graduate educational program in hospital administra- tion. In an editorial, itlensm in Egypt," the St. Louis Post-Dis- patch recently condemned the Nasser tactics and the expulsion of Egyptian Jews. The editorial stated in part: "When the violence in the Middle East broke into war and at last became an international concern, there were some 50,-000 Jews in Egypt. Compilations by the American Jewish Congress, based on ship and airplane ar- rivals in Europe, show that of these approximately a third have already fled the country. "And why have they done so? "Because Nasser has taken a leaf from Hitler's brutal book. The Egyptian tyrant has au- thorized the military forces to sequester property of Jews. Countless enterprises and other holdings have been taken from their rightful owners and handed over to the Nasser dic- tatorship. These include some of the most important businesses in the country. "Yet this is only the start of Hitlerism in action in Egypt. Jews of Egypt have been delib- erately and systematically im- poverished. Jewish physicians and others in the professions have been denied the means of earning a living. Here is a fur- ther statement of the situation by the American Jewish Con- gress, in its report, 'The Black Record': " 'Jews have been dismissed or suspended without compen- sation from posts in all public enterprises and services. The same fate has overtaken Jewish employes in the sequestered en- terprises and businesses. Non- Jewish employers have been forced, often against their will, to dismiss Jewish employes. The result has been that a once pros- perous community has been re- duced in a few weeks to the status of paupers' "But worse than the confis- cation of property and the pau- perization of a whole people is the violence that has accompa- nied this application of the Nazi rule—the violence and the seiz- ure of hostages. LEO ADLER UN 3-7400 . 3 Locations 3000 Fenkell W. of Livernois •• 19437 Livernois Passover Reservations Now Being Accepted 42We-9 A well-known Cantor and Rabbi to cart- duct the Services; to be held on the premises for the entire week. MINERAL BATHSavailableto alL Dietary Laws Strictly Adhered to HOTEL AND MINERAL BATHS Mt. Clemens, Mich, HOward 3-4505 yee4 el az teezag4 W ' acclaimed hotel that has everything—a complete vacation resort in itself, with 600 feet of tropical oceanfront beach, magnificent pool, colorful cabanas, ten acres of gardens! Supervised activities for children! 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ACA (4, +.1 NEW— MODIFIED AMERICAN PLAN S ee Your Travel Agent "Up to now 14,000 to 15,000 DeSOTO-PLYMOUTH Dealer are calculated to have fled, usu- ally with little more than the clothes on their backs. So far ships have landed refugees in Greece, Italy and France, while airplanes also have taken many victims to these three countries and in addition to Great Britain and Switzerland. But not to the United States. "There has been a singular lack ''of concern in this country over the plight of the Egyptian outcasts, as contrasted with the • . ---- • •