DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

Page Ten

Wayne University Scene
By Frank Beckman

Many of Gershon Konikow's
followers sat nervously in the
Rackham Memorial Building on
February 15 waiting for his piano
concert to start.
They knew that
he had been
away from the
keyboard f o r
three and a
half years and
wondered if he
had lost any of
that magical
touch. When
he began play-
ing, they knew
he hadn't.
A son of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan
Konikow, 2920 Collingwood Ave.,
Gershon took his first piano les-
sons from Rebecca Frohman when
he was 12. Thirteen years later, a
capacity audience (300 were turn-
ed away) packed the Rackham
Building as he played for his
Masters degree in music from
Wayne.
A graduate of Central High
School, Konikow spent 42 months
in the Air Corps as a 2nd lieu-
tenant, B-29 pilot. One of his few
regrets is that he never got over-
seas, although he was just Saved
by the bell from Pacific duty
when the Japs gave In.
Undecided about his future
plans, Gershon is now vacationirr!
in New York. The after-sensations
of thunderous applause still ring
in his ears.

*

*

already slit the cardboard wrap-
ping.
This was just one of the many
close calls Bud had during his 10
months in Europe. He was in-
ducted in August of 1943 and as-
signed as a combat infantry man
to the 8th Armored Division. Be-
fore his discharge in January of
1946 rolled around, Shapiro, like
most GIs, was sick of foreign
duty and the appalling results of
war.
A business administration stu-
dent at Wayne, Bud is secretary
of the Second Semester Frosty
Board, a pledge to Pi Tau Sigma
and a member of the Hillel Chap-

IProvide Matzoks
For Soviet Jews

By LEON LENEMAN

(JTA Correspondent)

MOSCOW (JTA) -- Soviet au-
thorities provided religious Jews
in the U.S.S.R. with matzohs and
assisted them in observing Pass-
over, Samuel Chobrutsky, chair-
man of the Moscow Jewish com-
munity, said here.

In Moscow, Chobrutsky revealed,
matzohs were sold in the sta'o
food stores at reasonable price:;.
The unleavened bread was baked
under the supervision of Rabbi 1

Friday April la, 194 6

Soviet authorities.
Hundreds of formations on the
The reports also cite aid receiv- moon, such as craters, mountalk
ed In rebuilding synagogues and and seas have been named an;
ly 52 if n ttn he e past
names
nave been
re-estab:7.,l'iing religious life in renamed
300 years,
b u;
Kiev, Zhitomlr, Odessa, Riga and only n these
retained.
other towns. The writers point out

that life is becoming more normal
for the Jews, and that, together
with their non-Jewish neighbors,
they are participating in rehabili-
tation of the towns, in various in-
dustries and scientific institutions.

Sale

Although flashes of lightning be-
tween a cloud and the earth are

seldom more than a mile long,
flashes between two clouds have
been known to attain a length of
twenty miles.

Ping ree-Ilattaiton sect. P.

tins.

city.

PEARLMAN'S
Delicatessen

He also reported that matzoh: 1
E
were available in many cities, in-
cluding Odessa, Riga, Kharkov. 1--
Kiev, Tashkent, and Kuibyshe•.
Reports to the Jewish community
12162 DEXTER BLVD.
here from Jewish religious com-
munities throughout the Ukrairr.
TO. 6.9808
and Bielo-Russia tell of assist-
ance rendered the Jews by local E11111111111111111i11111111S111111111111111111041111115111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

t

new
steel
es),
Sold
OlIce
$511

1.1 s. 3.5

nex

lit
in
St

$65,1100 half cash.
20 apt. all 1 & bat
new
re fri g, new atm. ea, $95,111111
job‘
only $ 511, 0 05, half rash.
40 opt 2 - 5 num.
St.% es. new refrig. (1111, t65,000,
to ins $25,000.
30 apt. Nr. Second-Pnrcst.
(Theo
SI 6 5.1100. nnly $70.000, It,'
$20,000.
l'ennsyls unto. nest s apt, n, city. 3
car ear. 50x120 vac. lot 1)11)1
CA*.
Rent $1.000.
Won6..r value
$26,500 terms $11,500. call Mr, fled.
ford.

Shliffer. Besides government bak-
eries a number of private matzoh ""111 115fintlfilISHMIIIMMOININIRMINIM121fillnlIngilnlillMHE
ter.
baking factories supplied the
*
Jews, and Chobrutsky estimatk.0
PERTINENT POINTS . . .
Sincere Passover Greetings
Warren Rovetch, representative that a sufficient quantity was bak-
of the U. S. Student Assembly, re- ed to supply all the Jews in thy S
E.:

turned recently from a 1,500 mile
tour of midwest colleges. He stud-
ied the work of the Assembly on
the various campuses. . . Al Gros
is a member of Wayne's varsity
tennis team. . . Bernard Shulman
and Betty Weinberg are chairman
and co-chairman, respectively, of
the Intersorority - Interfraternity
Council ball to be held April 27
at the Old Colony Club.

Apartment s

10 ST(111E8-11
h ti t;NT s
Fireproof, $500,000 1,14
price $250,000, lei fin
rent 842,000.
50 apt*. Marble
new
refrlg. p 1 i„
will
Idacc 2120.000 or ; .
)1'..1 RENT $32,001).

pt

CI
m

to

hl
pl

Homer Warren & Co

DIME BLDG.
CA, 0321
WE SPECIALIZE IN THE
SIANACEMENT OF APARTMENTS

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11

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sl

VETERANS . . .
While the military personnel in
the American Samoan Island
group were whooping it upon V-)
Day, AerM 2-c Bob Herman was
chained to his Navy duties. He
was a meteorologist, and since
his CO said "the weather doesn't
stop," neither did Bob's work.
Herman never dreamed he would
be forecasting weather for Army
bombers when he entered the ser-
vice in the latter part of 1942.
He took a course at Lakehurst,
N. J., and soon afterward was
checking on Jupiter Pluvius in the
rain-drenched Solomon Islands,
Twenty-five months later, he land-
ed in sunny California.
A civilian since Feb. 19, Bob
started an accounting course at
Wayne soon after his discharge
at Great Lakes. Tall and 25, he is
a member of the Rabbi Zager
. Lodge of Bnai Brith and the son
of Mr. and Mrs. G. Herman, 2292
Richton Ave.
* * *
BUD SIIAPIRO . . .
The weary 7th Armored Infan-
try Bn. had just finished cleaning
out another German city, and the
doughboys sat down for a "deli-
cious" K-ration meal. Bud Sha-
piro, 21-year-old son of Mr. and
Mrs. Sidney Shapiro, 18696 Cherry-
lawn, took out the rectangular
box, went to open it, and found
it wasn't necessary - a bullet had

(

:IT RESPECTS NEITHER AGE NOR SEX

PAGEL'S , Inc .

Photo Engravers
641 MONROE
CA. 0472

I

something is done about it, 17,000:

JACEY'S

000 American men, women and chil-
dren now living will die of cancer.

33 JOHN R
(511 Metropolitan Bldg.)

That means that an average of one
in every eight of us faces eventual
death from this most dreaded of all
diseases!

JEWELRY CO.

CA. 5768
CA. 4209
Just arrived for spring —
a new shipment of
HOBE JEWELRY

SAVE AT JACEY'S
Open every Monday until
9 p. m.

4)001::HXHXHX:I(HXHX/iXtt

41■••••••■••••••■•■•♦
r
-
LENDING
4 ;

LIBRARY

GIFTS

,

•

4 •
•
• • •
•

6

GREETING

CARDS

SAM GINSBERG

•• CENTRAL

V

•

4Florist and Gift shop. •

•

♦

A

do anything to save him from cancer.

Cancer now ranks second as a cause
of death in the United States: utiles.

t1-01:14:1-0-041:1-041:11:1-0-001

•
• • •'
1
•

F' this child were yours...you would

11525 DEXTER BLVD.
HOgarth 1160

We Deliver

4

Cancer is no respecter of age or sex:
more than 175,000 men. women and
children will be its victims during 1916
in this country alone. S bile medical
science has been %inning victories user
many diseases, deaths front cancer hav e
been steadily increasing. Today more
children between the ages of 5 and 20
die of cancer than die of the folio% ing

four diseases combined: Diphtheria, In-
fantile Paralysis, Scarlet Fever and

no sacrifice is too great to protect a

loved one from it.

A hooping Cough.

901RD 77ia5'E

The great tragedy of this is that 30(;1,
to 50% of cancer deaths are needless.
They could have been saved by early

recognition of the symptoms of cancer
and by early and proper treatment.

It is up to every one of us to help in
the light against cancer on three fronts:

1. To spread the knowledge that
cancer is frequently curable if diagnosed
in its earliest stars. 2. To provide the
most modern facilities for the care and
treatment of present cancer patients.
and, 3. To launch a really comprehen
sive, nationwide cancer research
gram to find the basic cause and cure
of cancer.

No one is safe front cancer. And

;vt- amtwe aoraz

T he American Cancer Society, Inc.
s:
330 Fifth As enne, New York I, N.Y.

❑

I enclose S

as my rift to

❑ filkillaece a snecieltri me, w ithout cost, in.
formation on
signal. "
of career, to protect myself and
my family.

the "danger

❑ Please send me the name and
address of the nearest cancer in-
formation renter.

Name

Street

City

(*IN I

', tate

ACS No. 2

Co,N. .ght -Amt., an Car c.I *uoot,

CURRIER LUMBER CO.
17507 Van Dyke

KOHLENBERG FURNITURE
CO.

SIMONS-MICHELSON CO.
Advertising Agency

7925 W. Jefferson

TEAL BROS.
Hudson Dealer
7641 Gratiot

GEORGE & HENRY
Michigan & Shelby

SHECTER FURNITURE CO.

M. JACOB & SON
2903 Beaubien

8928 12th St.

VARKLE IRON & METAL
CO.
26600 Bunert, Roseville, Mich.

.0

