DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle
Detroit Brothers
Meet in Philippines
A reunion took place between
two Detroit brothers in the Phil-
ippine Islands. A supply ship
:ame to the Island on which Pvt.
PVT. HERMAN GINSBURG
SEAMAN LESTER GINSBURG
Herman Ginsburg was stationed,
and on the iship was his brother,
Lester Ginsburg, S.F. 3/C, of the
U.S. Navy.
The latter has been overseas
for two years and this was their
first meeting.
Pvt. Herman Ginsburg is the
husband of Mrs. Irene Ginsburg,
of 4298 Fullerton. Both are sons
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gins-
burg of 3342 Cortland.
"The Rainbow," New Soviet Film,
Playing at Cinema Theater
Every Bond You Buy Helps
to Shorten the War.
During the victorious march
of the Russian Army from Stal-
ingrad, newspapers were filled
with stories of the liberation of
hundreds of "populated places."
Many attempts were made to
describe what these places were
like, what the people went
through, their attitude towards
the Germans. But the most auth-
entic and stirring picture of
what liberation actually meant
to the people who lived in these
"populated places" is told in
"The Rainbow," the new Soviet
film now playing at the Cinema
Theater.
The author of the Stalin prize
novel on which "The Rainbow"
is based, Wanda Wasilewska,
personally visited many of the
"populated places" soon after
their recapture by the Russians.
And from first hand reports from
the people who lived through the
terror, she has fashioned a novel,
and a picture scenario, which
give an eyewitness account of
unbelievable suffering and un-
believable courage and fortitude.
ZIONIST BOOK REVIEW JUDGES: (Left to right) Dr. Solomon
Grayzel, editor of the Jewish Publication Society of America and
chairman of the Jewish Book Council of America; Dr. Ludwig
Lewisohn, editor of THE NEW PALESTINE magazine and author,
and Judge Louis E. Levinthal, chairman of the ZOA Publications
Committee and former president of the Zionist Organization of
America, who have been announced as the three judges in the
Book Review Contest on the biography of David Wolffsohn, Herzl's
successor, by Emil Bernhard Cohn, recently published by the
Zionist Organization of America. The contest, which is sponsored
by the ZOA Book Department, is open to every one and reviews
are limited to 500 words. Three prizes consisting of a fifty, a
twenty-five and ten-dollar Zionist shelf will be awarded to the
three winning essayists. Manuscripts postmarked no later than
midnight, May 1, should be mailed to the ZOA Book Department,
1720 1 3th Street. N. W.. Washington 9. D. C.
ROMANIA BACKS YISHUV
BUCHAREST (WNS) — Sup-
port of the Zionist demand for
the establishment of a Jewish
State in Palestine was promised
by Prime Minister Groza of Ro-
mania, who at the same time
declared that Romanian Jews will
enjoy equal citizenship rights
with others.
•
• About that old prescription Dr.
Jones wrote for you two years ago.
It would be safer for you and your
family to discard it. Someone might
take it by mistake, or a child may be
attracted to it by the bright color and
do himself harm. Yes, the safe thing
to do is to throw it away. Bring
his prescriptions to us for accurate
compounding.
the house of
rtIrttirr's
•
DRUGS
UHS Auxiliary
To Stage Fashion
Show of the Ages
Corky Gilbert, 5,
Wonder Child, Visits
Grandparents Here
The concluding program of this
Corky Gilbert,
five-year-old
year of the Woman's Auxiliary daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
of the United Hebrew Schools will Gilbert if New York, is visiting
be held at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday, her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Gersh Grand of 1706 Chicago
Military Operations
Limit Rescue Work
Of Jewish Reich
GENEVA (Palcor)—The pos-
sibility of rescuing Jews from
Germany or of administering to
them large-scale relief has be-
come exceedingly limited in the
last few days, due to military
operations, despite the reported-
ly successful negotiations con-
ducted by Professor Carl Burk-
hardt, president of the Interna-
tional Red Cross, with German
authorities.
All relief now seems limited
to on-the-spot help to internees,
especially in Southeastern Ger-
many, by sending them food and
medicaments in motor trucks.
The Nazis have also agreed to
admit International Red Cross
representatives to be permanent-
ly assigned to military and civil-
ian camps, including those for
Jews. But a German condition
is that those sent' into Germany
shall remain there for the dura-
tion with no contact with the
outside world. Very few persons
are willing to enter Germany un-
der such conditions.
The Germans have agreed to
exchange women, children and
elderly men, with priority given
to the French, for Germans in
the same category. But due to
chaos in transportation, the plan
is believed unfeasible. Only
those Jews who succeeded in
reaching the Swiss frontier on
foot have a chance for rescue,
but since Feb. 7 no such res-
cuees have been reported.
Friday, April 13, 1945
10 locations
•
one in your
neighborhood
Jewish Center
Elects Officers
Officers of the Detroit Jewish
Community Center were re-elect-
ed at the annual meeting Wed.
nesday night. II. C. Broder was
re-elected president: Mrs. Benia-
min E. Jaffee and Samuel H Ru-
biner, vice presidents; Mrs.
Charles Lakoff, secretary, and Ed-
ward Kahn, treasurer.
New board members elected are:
Mrs. Samuel Aaron, Bnai Brith
leader, Mrs. Sidney J. Allen, Vic-
tor Klein, attorney, and Seymour
Simons, composer and conductor.
Mrs. Charles Lakoff, Mrs. Ab-
raham Srere, Edward Kahn, Rob-
ert J. Newman and Louis Tab-
ashnik, present members, were
re-elected.
Mrs. Aaron DeRoy, retiring,
was named honorary director for
life.
Honorary directors elected for
145 include: Hon. William Fried-
man, and those who served
before, Chaplain Morris Adler,
Fred M. Butzel, Clarence H.
Enggass. Rabbi Leon Fram, Dr.
Leo M. Franklin, Dr. B. Benedict
Glazer, Dr A. M. Hershman,
Henry Meyers, Charles Rubiner,
Isidore Sobeloff, Rabbi Joshua S
Sperka, Abraham Srere, and
Henry Wineman.
The committee on nominations
included Mrs. Joseph M. Welt.
chairman, and Mrs. Harry L.
Jackson, Mrs. Oscar Zemon, Sam-
uel H. Rubiner and Hyman G.
Schlafer.
MRS. JACK TOBIN
April 25, in the auditorium of
the Jewish Community Center.
This constitutes the last of the
series of four cultural programs
sponsored by the auxiliary.
The program entitled "Fashion
Show" will present costumes worn
by Jewish women throughout the
ages. These costumes, which will
be modeled by members of the
Women's Auxiliary, will depict
the history of those periods.
. The first period is the Biblical.
Such women as: Rachel, the wife
of Jacob; Miriam, sister of Moses
and Queen Esther, will be fea-
tured, to be followed by the Tal-
mudic period. The Spanish period
will be next and then there
will be featured some women of
the 16th and 17th centuries. This
historic panorama will be con-
cluded with the modern period and
with the Halozoth, Palestinian
pioneer women of today. Mrs.
Walter Farber is director of the
program, and Mrs. Bert Smolder
is chairman of the program corn-
mittee.
This cultural program will be
preceded by a dessert luncheon
and elestion of officers. The pres-
ent officers are: President, Mrs.
Jack Tobin; vice presidents, Mrs.
Charles Robinson, Mrs. John Hor-
witz and Mrs. Philip Gilbert; fi-
nancial secretary, Mrs. Joseph
Dorfman; recording secretary,
Mrs. M. S. Dann; corresponding
secretary, Mrs. Julius Berman;
asst. corresponding secretary, Mrs
Burton Seidon; second assistant
corresponding secretary, Mrs. R.
M. Katz; treasurer, Mrs. Rudolph
Zuieback; auditor, Mrs. Richard
A. Cott, and parliamentarian,
Mrs. A. B. Stralser. The chair-
man of the nominating committee
is Mrs Samuel Singer. The pro-
gram is open to the public There
is no admission charge.
■
Every Bond You Buy Helps
to Shorten the War.
CORKY GILBERT
Blvd. This child has been voted
the outstanding child model at
Walter Thornton's, one of the
most noted modeling agencies in
the country, and is being
schooled for television and the
movies by Harry Conover, mak-
er of "stars."
At Lincoln School, Columbia
University, she was recently
termed the most brilliant child
personality.
Her dramatic ability and her
ability to change from one mood
to another, will mark her as
one of the outstanding finds of
the year.
Corky is the youngest mem-
ber of the Children's Opera Com-
pany of New York. She is a
talented ballet pupil. Her photo-
graphs are on exhibit at the
Brooklyn Institute of Arts and
the International Exposition In-
stitute in Chicago.
Old Clothing
Depots Listed
William Friedman, president of
the Detroit Jewish Federation, has
appealed to all Jewish organiza-
tions and to the general Jewish
public to aid in the United Na
tions Clothing drive by collecting
their old but serviceable clothing
and taking bundles to the follow
ing collection places:
Al gas stations.
Al churches.
Al libraries.
Al police stations.
Al fire stations.
Al industrial plants.
Al office buildings.
Al schools.
The S. S. McKeever, on the
Campus.
If you don't know the depot or
bin neatest your home, telephone
Cadillac 2004.
•
1945-1946 Fashions
GIVE
clothing for
War Relief
Make your furs long last-
ing and smart. Have your
outmoded fur coat restyled
by Annis expert fur crafts.
men into a 45-46 Model
. . . Worn skins replaced
now will save additional
costs later.
Permit
to give you an
estimate.
145
Phone RA. 0022
Frigid Fur Storage ..
Vaults on Premises
ANNIS FURS
•
LIBRARY AT I. GRAND RIVER
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