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LI 7-1511

Open Sundays 11-3

0-W Y oungIsrael
Fetes 5th Year

Grace Your
Seder Table

with

The Art
Haggadah

by ABRAHAM ISRAEL
Translated into English

by Dr. Sidney B. Hoenig

A treasure of art and
inspiration for every
Jewish Home
160 Pages with 160 multicolor
illustrations
Size 83/4 x 11 1/4
Bound in Blue Velour
Price $12.50
Appropriate gift—
all year 'round !

At All Jewish Bookstores

Hebrew
Publishing Co.

79 Delancey St., N.Y.C.

S EL BU RN •

Oak Porkers r-c'

Support
Your Friend
and Neighbor

ABEL J.

SELBURN

For

MAYOR

April 6th
Vote April

• SELBURN • SELBURN

Stan Wallace in Race
for City Commissioner
of Huntington Woods

Stan Wallace, who is well
known in communal circles, is
a candidate for City Commis-
sioner in Huntington Woods.
Wallace is the retiring presi-
dent of the Huntington Woods
Residents' Association.

b

Distributed y:

GOLDEN CRACKNEL

600 CUSTER AVENUE

Na ns ias • Nsn al as •

Reorganizing Fedayeen

NEW YORK (AJP) — The
Zionist Information Service re-
ports in its current bulletin
that "the units of Nasserite
assassins, the fedayeens, are
being reorganized in the Gaza
Strip.

• SELBURN • SELBURN •

• S ELB URN •

Oak Park East and West
Groups of the South Oakland
County Chapter of Hadassah
will jointly present their annual
"Dime Bank Tea" at 12:30 p.m.,
Tuesday, in the home of Mrs.
Melvin Shapiro, 24310 Dante,
Mrs. Mordecai S. Halpern,
wife of the spiritual leader of
Cong. Beth Shalom, will speak
on "The Magical 25—A Salute
to the Silver Anniversary of
Youth Aliyah," which is being
celebrated in 1959.
A new dime bank song, fea-
turing Mesdames Sheldon Ross,
Murray Shubin, Samuel Freed-
man and Harold Levett, with
Mrs. Seymour Krause as accom-
panist, will introduce an origi-
nal playlet written by the spe-
cial events committee.
"That Wonderful Year-1934"
is the theme of the presenta-
ti6n, which relates the begin-
ning of Youth Aliyah. Its
achievements in "That Wonder-
ful Year-1959" are also in-
cluded.
All dime bank holders may
present their banks for admis-
sion, or contributions may be
made at the door. There will
be a prize awarded of a dinner
for two at a local restaurant.
Mrs. Curt Lowenthal and Mrs.
Marvin Snyder, dime bank
chairmen of Oak Woods East
and _West, respectively, are
chairmen for the afternoon, and
Young Israel Center of Oak- are assisted by Mrs. Ben
Woods, the first South Oak- Cummis.
land County congregation to
establish its own synagogue, UN Official Goes to Israel
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.,
will celebrate its fifth anni-
versary at a dinner, to be (JTA)—Sterling Cole, director-
held April 12, in its newly- general of the International
expanded banquet hall, at Atomic Energy Agency, will
soon visit Israel.
24061 Coolidge, Oak Park.
The dinner, according to
Jack Ginsburg, president of
the congregation, also will
fete the culmination of a cam-
paign to acquire land and
buildings adjoining the origi-
nal synagogue building.
Planning the anniversary
festivities, states Ernest Cit-
ron, chairman of the board,
are Leon Wolock, Isadore Wo-
ron, Sigmund Littman, Jack
Weiner, Hyman Lipsitz, • Sam
Ginsburg, Morris Goldenberg
and Joe Levine, arrangements;
Louis Fein, Lily Fein, Leon
Mutchnick, Rose Feldstein,
Miriam Raimi, Dave Matz, Rose
Rodd and Alex Dprchen, tick-
ets.
Others are Citron, Gins-
burg, Mrs. A. Trager, Dianne
Arlin, Sam Glanz, Dr. M.
Green, program; David Feld
stein, Sammy Lieberman, Henry
Dworkin; Shimon Berris, pub-
licity; Morris Novetsky, Irving
Moskovitz, Claude Superstein,
Dr. Eli Brown, Henry Dorfman,
Saul Nusbaum, reception; Mor-
ris Flatt, Louis Kozin, Benno
Levi, Sam Rubin, Isadore Ros-
enberg, steering. •
Completing the list are Fay-
ga Dombey, Leon Wolok, Isa-
dore Woron, Gertrude Pitzak,
Gertrude Schwartz, Hilda
Cohen, Mrs. C. Superstein,
Lily Fein, Mrs. A. Engel,
David Spinner, dinner; and
Gwen Kelman and Elsie ROdd,
decorations.
For dinner reservations or
information, call the synagogue
office, LI. 6-6662.

ilege — so long as it is not
treasonous — is to complain
about the Way our government
is run and to berate the offi-
cials who are charged with the
responsibility of running it.
We believe there are few
things pertaining to elected of-
ficialdom more frustrating than
to vote for a candidate and
then find that the platform he
represented in his campaign is
not being fulfilled.
But it must be completely
maddening to the person who
failed to vote at all to discover
that the irresponsible elected
official who might have been
defeated was able to gain power
because hundreds of voters did
not go to the polls.
So, one of the paradoxes of
the democratic process, the
right to cast one's vote, which
is the bastion of our four
celebrated freedoms, will be
ignored by probably 50 per-
cent of the electorate.
Even in Russia, nearly 90
percent of the people vote—and
they don't even have a selec-
tion.

S ELB URN

By the Oak-Woodser
Only a few weeks ago, in the
Ferndale School District of Oak
Park, there came a great rumb-
ling about the dismissal of Dr.
Scott Street as principal of the
Paul Best School.
Criticism was voiced in many
quarters—mostly those support-
ing Dr. Street—that the Fern-
dale Board of Education had
acted in a most undemocratic
manner in removing him from
office.
The controversy also brought
into the open the conservative
composition of the schol board,
which had been voted into
office at the previous school
election and were now in the
majority, 5 to 2.
Some residents asked them-
selves and their neighbors how
such a situation had come
about, how did such a reaction-
ary group get elected to office.
But, the answer was easy
to come by. Those residents
who previously thought the
composition of the board too
liberal turned out at the polls,
while those who thought they
did not care stayed away.
And then a controversy came,
stirred up feelings and
brought about resolves to vote
at the next school election.
On April 6—this coming Mon-
day—there will be no candidates
up for the school board. While
there will be city officials and
county and state officers to be
voted upon, the school board
question will not come up until
later in the spring.
So we can expect that, as in
the primary elections of a few
weeks back, the vote from the
Ferndale school area, as well
as in most sections of the sub-
urbs, will be light.
the privileges of liv-
One
ing in a democracy is being
able to do pretty much as one
pleases—this includes the right
to.forfeit one's voice in the op-
eration of our government by
failing to cast one's ballot at
election time.
And strangely, another priv-

by Milton Mutchnick. About 30
children gather each Saturday
afternoon for fun, songs and
dance. -
Leon Mutchnick, building
fund treasurer, has stated that
a fund-raising drive will be
launched shortly to provide
finances for erecting the new
synagogue.

S ELB UR N

Voices in Our Government `Dime Bank Tea'
Set by Hadassah
Stilled by Voter's Option

Ground-breaking ceremonies
for a new synagogue in Oak
Park are currently being plan-
ned by Young Israel of Green-
field, which will be located at
15150 W. 10 Mile.
A committee, consisting of
Leslie Krakovits, Alex 'Kuhn
and Abbe Snow, has been
named to formulate the formal
program for the May 2 event.
When the group began ac-
tivity in the northwest section
of Oak Park nearly two years
ago, holding services at the 10
Mile Jewish Center, there were
less than 10 interested families.
Since that time, however, the
number has quadrupled.
In addition to regular sabbath
services each Saturday morning,
the Young Israel branch main-
tains a youth program directed

S ELB URN • S E LB UR N • S ELB URN •

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS—Friday, April 8,

The Suburban Community

YI of Greenfield Slates Ground-Breaking Date

SPECIALTY CO.

DETROIT. .

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