People Make News H. H. FINSILVER, branch man- ager for Business Men's Assurance Company, qualified as a Senior Director of the 1966 BMA Life Club, an honor earned by selling Over a million dollars in life in- surance during 1965. This marks Finsilver's 10th consecutive year to top the million mark in life insurance sales. * * * DR. E. GORDON YUDASHKIN, of Baldwin, N.Y., has been ap- pointed medical superintendent of Northville State Hospital by Ro- bert A. Kimmich, M.D., director, Michigan Department of Mental Health. He will begin his duties April 4, 1966. * * * PAUL BRAGMAN, general agent for MacCabees Mutual Life Insurance Co., was honored at the company's 1966 international sales conference at the Grand Bahama Hotel, Grand Bahama Island, the . Bahamas. Highlighting the confer- ence was the awards presentation made by William H. Ellis, vice president and director of agencies. Bragman was accorded the gold shield club award. * * * H. Hentz and Company an- nounces the appointment of KEN- NETH E. ROCHLEN as a regis- tered representative in the Detroit office. * * * The Prime Minister of Canada, LESTER PEARSON, will be a principal speaker at the annual convention of The Rabbinical As- sembly in Toronto in May. Pear- son, a recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, proposed the UN Emergency Force in the Sinai-Gaza area, which has been keeping the peace along the Israel-Egyptian border, during his term as president of the United National General As- sembly, 1956-57. He was the Cana- dian Minister of External Affairs at the time. * * * Mrs. CHARLES D. SOLOVICH, 21820 Potomac Dr. Southfield, has been renamed to represent Bnai Brith Women on the national commission of the Anti-Defama- tion League of Bnai Brith. The ap- pointment was announced by Mrs. Arthur G. Rosenbluth, Bnai Brith Women's president, prior to the ADL annual meeting held last week in New York. Mrs. Solovich will serve on the policy-making body for a three-year term. She serves on the executive board of Bnai Brith Women and is a past president of the organization. A practicing attorney, Mrs. Solovich is active on the Detroit civic scene. • * * Dr. MAURICE L. PERLZWEIG, of New York, director of the World Jewish Congress department of international affairs, will attend the United Nations Conference on "Human Rights in Developing Countries," in Dakar, Senegal, next week. * * * Cantor VICTOR GELB has been engaged by the Waldman's Fam- ily Hotels in Miami Beach to offi- ciate during the coming Passover holidays. * * * Judge CHARLES KAUFMAN of the Wayne County Circuit Court will moderate a panel discussion on "The Draft and the Vietnam Protestors" before the 17th Dis- trict Young Democrats, Monday, Feb. 7, 8 p.m. at Region 1A-UAW Hall, 8222 Joy Rd. Panelists in- clude ERNEST MAZEY and Lt. Col. EUGENE BRUNK. The public is invited. * * * The creation of an association of Conservative day schools has been announced by Pesach Schindler, assistant director of the commission on Jewish education of the United Synagogue of America. HORACE BIER of Irvington, N.J., was elected first president of the new organization, to be known as the Association of Solomon ,Schechter Day Schools. A Cleveland architect, J. NOR- MAN STARK, has been appointed a member of the national arch- itects advisory panel of the Union of American Hebrew Congrega- tions, a voluntary association of more than 40 selected architectural firms who have built synagogues and are interested in advancing standards of synagogue architec- ture and in assisting congregations in the erection of worthy struc- tures. * * * CHARLES L. JARMAN has been named assistant to the execu- tive director of Goodwill Indus- tries of Greater Detroit. * * * AVROHOM TABATCHNIK, member of the Yiddish editorial staff of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, has been awarded a $200 prize for his "Poets and Poetry," a collection of literary essays on some of the major Yiddish poets in the United States. The prize was sponsored by the Nathan Chanin Cultural Foundation of the Jewish Workmen's Circle. Another winner was Kadia Molodowsky for a volume of Yiddish verse. The judges of the contest also voted a prize of $200 to The Jewish Mirror of Chicago, which is devoted sole- ly to the publication of transla- tions of Yiddish works. * * JOSEPH G. WEISBERG, co.: publisher of the Boston Jewish Advocate, and the weekly news- paper's executive editor, was ap- pointed by Gov. John A. Volpe to membership on the state's newly-constituted board of educa- tion. In that post, he succeeds Dr. Brin, publisher of the Jewish Advocate, who served for more than 25 years on the old state board of education. Weisberg's ap- pointment brings to four the num- ber of Jewish leaders on the re- organized bodies of the Massa- chusetts Department of Education. Norman S. Rabb is chairman of the new advisory council on edu- cation; Mrs. Sol Weltman is a member of the board of trustees of the state coleges; and Mrs. Frieda S. Ullian is a member of the board of higher education. The Jewish Advocate has also received the first-place award for "Best Editorial Page in Class V," given annually by the New Eng- land Press Association. New JWB President --- Louis Stern was elected presi- dent of the National Jewish Wel- fare Board Sunday at the win- ter meeting of JWB's board of directors at the Warwick Hotel, New York. He succeeds the late Mrs. Florence G. Heller of Chi- cago, Chairman of JWB's execu- tive committee since 1964, and before that a national vice- president of the organization. Stern is the immediate past pres- ident of the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds. Education Arlazaroff Topic Albert Elazar, superintendent of the United Hebrew Schools, will speak at a gathering of Arlazaroff Branch of Farband, Labor Zionist Order, 9 p.m. Wednesday at the Labor Zionist Institute. He will discuss "Jewish Education in a Changing World." The public is in- vited• at no charge. Susan Nelson Engaged It's About So High to Samuel Bernstein `Please, Sir, Take Me to My Tree' re, By CHARLOTTE HYAMS gets some in • memory of Presi- MISS SUSAN NELSON Mr. and Mrs. Harold R. Nelson of Burton Ave., Oak Park, an- nounce the engagement of their daughter Susan Hilla to Samuel Bernstein, son of Mrs. Mandell Bernstein of Shrewsbury Rd., and the late Mr. Bernstein. Miss Nelson is a senoir at the University of Michigan. Mr. Bern- stein is a graduate of Michigan State University, where he was af- filiated with Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity. He is presently attend. ing Wayne State University's school of law. A June wedding is planned. ,14•111111.1.11 ■ 041 ■ 0i00.111 ■ 04•111 ■ 04111111.0 ■ CI ■ 04 ■ 01•11. , ewry (9n the Air This Week's Radio and Television Programs ETERNAL LIGHT — RADIO Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday. Station: WWJ. Feature: "The Last Penny" by Joseph Mindel, adapted from a story of the same name by S. Frug, will be presented as seventh in the series entitled, "Fables and Folktales for Our Time." It dram- atizes the story of a townspeople who believe that when not a penny is to be found in the pocket of a single man, the coming of the Messiah is at hand. * * * HEAR OUR VOICE Time: 11:30 p.m. Sunday. Station: WCAR. Feature: "Contemporary Canto- rial Music" will feature renditions by Cantor Harold Orbach, host and commentator for the series. * * * HIGHLIGHTS Time: 9:45 a.m. Sunday. Station: Channel 2. Time: 9:15 a.m. Sunday. Station: WJBK. Feature: Views of Jewish art and artists currently being shown at the Jewish Center's "Festival '66" will be discussed on "Jewish Art and Artists." Participating in the discussion will be Louis Red- stone, architect and member of the festival art committee; Mrs. Shlomo Sperka, art instructor; and Mrs. Allen Berlin, hostess for this series. Selections from the exhibit will be shown. * * * TALK OF DETROIT Time: 2:35 p.m. Wednesday. Station: WERB. Feature: Rabbi Sherwin Wine of Birmingham Temple will be guest on this listening-audience partici- pation show. Rabbi Richard C. Hertz of Temple Beth El will be guest on Feb. 21. City of Hope Couples Set Saturday Night Session Detroit Mr. and Mrs. Group, City of Hope, will meet 8:30 p.m. Saturday at the home of Mrs. Sarah Fishkind, 20520 Charlton Sq., Southfield. A social evening will follow. Tickets for the group's annual games night to be held in May will be distributed. All proceeds go to the City of Hope pilot medi- cal center for research and pati- ent care 4n 'catastrophic disease. Ever wonder how your trees in Israel are doing? I wonder all the time, but I'm too ashamed to ask the Jewish National Fund to check up on them. It's not as though I can ask "How's my forest faring?" or "Is my grove getting along?" No, they would have to locate the 10 trees planted by the fifth grade of Park- side Hebrew School about 16 years ago. Mine's the scraggly pine at the very end. Why should it matter? Well, if you've ever planted a tree with your own hands—just one tree— you know. You watch it and water it and shelter it and worry over it when the wind blows. It becomes a part of you. Somewhere out there in the Galilee I've got a graceful cypress —it doesn't have my name on it, but it's mine; And there's a cedar for sure, and maybe even a euc- alyptus. Apparently there are other peo- ple who wonder. Percy Kaplan, who heads the JNF office here, says it's not at all uncommon for an adult to ask where he can find his tree when he visits Israel. And the questions go further. "One woman asked what the car- rying charges were on trees flown to Israel," Kaplan said. Some ask instructions on how to take care of them; others are wor- ried because the Israeli rela- tives, in whose honor the trees are being planted, "don't have much room in their apartment." Children catch on more quickly, Kaplan added. Although most students plant trees for themselves, or parents and teachers, the JNF office still dent Kennedy. Lyndon Johnson and Hubert Humphrey are high on the popularity list too. Planting a tree is a highly per- sonal matter: one child named his in memory of his dog. Last year, Detroit area stu- dents bought over 3,500 trees in Israel. (Non-Jewish children also help out; the First Baptist Church of Oak Park bought some 400 in 1965.) The first tree certificate is an experience, let me tell you. Last Tu b'Shevat, by Sunday-school first graders raised $4, and the agonies they went through to se- lect two worthy recipients was be- yond belief. Chana was all for naming the class trees in honor of herself and her little sister, but she lost on the third ballot to Caroline and John-John Kennedy. Ghana took the loss bravely, though, adding a philosophical "Anyway, we have a tree in our backyard, hah hah on you." THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 26—Friday, February 4, 1966 by HAL GORDON and Orchestras UN 3-8982 UN 3-5730 When you care enough to remember . CANDID ART photography of distinction by HERMAN JAFFEE LI 2-6373 Weddings • Bar Mitzvahs • Home Portraits SPECIAL WEEK-END 'SIMCHA' RATES FREE USE OF HOSPITALITY ROOM TO GUESTS 18850 WOODWARD 71!Zeind. 883-1970 Airport Limousine Service THE STANLEY STEAMER • y . STEAM BATH and HEALTH CLUB STEAM ROOM • MASSAGE ROOM • SLUMBER ROOM • SUN ROOM EXERCISE ROOM • PLAITZAS • RECREATION LOUNGE with RESTAURANT, Color TV, Magazine Library, Game Tables. COOLIDGE HWY. at CAPITAL (bet. 8 & 9 Mile) 544-3611