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February 14, 1947 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1947-02-14

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4 1 94 7

Friday, February 14

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

Page Sixteen

Home Relief Continues Chicago Educato
to Aid Hospital Patients to Speak on Rash
Visits to local hospirais are be-

World News in Brief

Our Athletes il Morgan Urges Britain
Admit 250,000 DP's

Prof. Meyer Waxman, authc
and educator, will give the nex'
in-service lecture of the United
Hebrew Schools at 9 p.m. Thurs-
day in the Rose Sittig Cohen Bldg.
Prof. Waxman will speak in He-
brew. His talk is sponsored jointly
by the schools, the Hebrew Teach.
ers Organization and the Kvutzah
Ivrith. The public is invited.
ZIEVE FAMILY CLUB
His lecture here will deal on the
A meeting of the Zieve Family subject of Rashi, particularly how
the
study of the commentator's
Club was held Sunday at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Chait of writings should be presented in
Cortland avenue.
the classroom.

ing continued by the hospital com-
mittee of the Home Relief Socie-
ty, headed by Mrs. Harry Shul-
man.
The commitee supplies Jewish
patients with traditional foods for
holidays and arranges for religious
services. Gifts of clothing and
reading materials are also given.

131 FRANK BECKMAN

DETROITERS WHO partici-
pated in the Bnai Brith sectional
bowling tournament in Toledo last
week amply proved why the Mo-
tor City has few peers in the
sport of pin-toppling.
Edward Swartz, Pisgah Lodge
representative, rolled a sensation-
al 680 series to
capture the sin-
gles title. In
third place was
J. Fauden, al-
so of Detroit,
whose 666 was
just one point
behind the 667
connec ted by
runner-up Clark
Kovachs of
Beckman
Cleveland.
Pisgah came through with a
2,937 total for third-place honors
in team bowling. Wabash-Lag-
range Steel Co. of Toledo Lodge
No. 183 took first prize with 3183
and Shulan's Jewelers of Akron
were second with 2,096.
Top man in all events was IL
Littman of Dayton, 0., with 1,285.
• • •
A JEWISH PLAYER has
Joined the ranks of Detroit pro
basketball. He Is Moe Becker,
former all-American from Du-
quesne University, who this win-
ter had played with Pittsburgh,
Boston and the Jerry Lynch
All Stars before finally joining
the Falcons.

MANAGER OF THE Hapoel
soccer team of Palestine, which
will tour the U. S. in May, is Leib
Sirkin, who was freed last July
after serving 38 months of a 10-
year prison term for allegedly
running arms for Haganah.
• • •
THE REGISTRATION of Ira
Kaplan at New York University
has helped to bolster the Violet
track team's chances of becom-
ing one of the East's best. Kaplan,
an Erasmus Hall graduate, is a
sprinter of top caliber.
• • •
WHEN MIKE JACOBS, boxing
czar, was released from the hos-
pital after an elongated illness,
he returned home to find it had
been burglarized.

ASK MAX IIAIDY what his
favorite number Is and ho will
probably answer "161." Anchor-
man for the Tolerance team in
the Northwest Congregation
Men's Club Bowling League,
Haidy rolled his customary three
games last week. The score of
each? You guessed It-16t1 Hai-
dy carries a 161 average.

DETROIT FANS got a glimpse
Wednesday of one of professional
basketball's most promising new-
comers in Stanley Brown of the
Philadelphia Sphas. Only 17 years
old, Brown performs with the
finesse of a seasoned veteran.
He is a graduate of South Phila-
delphia High School, where he set
a new district scoring mark of
337 points in one season. He was
twice named to the all-scholastic
team in Philly. Stan is most ef-
fective in executing pivot ma.
neuvers.
• • •
SAM GORMAN is one of the
reasons Wayne University's fenc-
ing team is about the best in the
country. Sam swept six bouts in
a meet with Illinois last week as
the Tartars won 22% to 4%.
Wayne has been victorious in 15
consecutive matches. Among its
victims have been Ohio State,
Michigan, Michigan State, Lawr-
'nce Tech and Cincinnati.
• • •
NEW YORK'S faltering Knick-
erbockers return to Detroit Sun-
day for their fourth meeting with
the Falcons. The Knicks have con-
quered the Red and White on
three of those occasions. Such
players as Leo Gottlieb, Sonny
Hertzberg, Ralph Kaplowitz and
Ossie Shechtman will see action
for the New Yorkers.
• • •
ENGLAND'S NO. 1 fight pro-
moter Is Jack Solomons, who
has sprung into the limelight
the past couple years with his
Mills-Lesnevich and Woodcock-
Mauriello matches . . . Lesne-
vich, incidentally, is not Jewish.
lie's Russian.
• •
THE MOST TRAGIC event to
come out of a basketball game
this winter was the sudden death
of Joseph Kaplan, 25-year-old vet-
eran who was the victim of a
heart attack on a Rahway, N. J.
court.
Kaplan who had served as an
MP in Europe, had played three
quarters with no apparent strain,
when be suddenly collapsed



English General Who Was Accused
of Anti-Semitism Recants on Jews

LONDON (WNS)—The admission of 250,000 displaced
persons into Britain, particularly Jews, was urged by Lt.
Gen. Sir Frederick Morgan, former chief of UNRRA in
Europe.
Sir Frederick, who was subjected to much criticism
after asserting that the exodus of Jews from Europe had

been "organized" by Jewish or-
ganizations and that Jews fleeing
from Poland were "rosy-checked"
with "pockets-full of money," said
the 250,000 displaced persons
should be admitted an humani-
tarian and economic grounds. He
said he was thinking particularly
of Jews.
"It is inconceivable," he de-
clared, "that they should be ex-
pected to stay on the scene of
their decimation among the peo-
ple who have butchered their
nearest and dearest."

alcNarney Calls Zion
Only Refugee Haven

FRANKFURT (JTA)—Only re-
settlement in Palestine can solve
the problem of the 150,000 Jews
in Germany and Austria, Gen.
Joseph T. McNarney, former com-
mander of U.S. forces in the Eu-
ropean Theater told Herbert Hoo-
ver.
The general said that he in-
formed Hoover, who is in Ger-
many on an economic mission for
President Truman, that 95 per-
cent of the displaced Jews wish
to go to Palestine, and in view of
their determination, the only way
to settle the Jewish problem is to
allow them to immigrate there.

QUALIFIED - EXPERIENCED

Judge Ide Candidate
for Recorder's Bench

Recorder's Court Judge 0. Z.
Ide is a candidate for election in
the primary Monday.
A veteran of both world wars,
Judge Ide was discharged with
the rank of lieutenant colonel in
1946. He served in the judge ad-
vocate branch.
Noted for his work in inter-
racial relations, Judge Ide started
his political career in Detroit as
Common Pleas judge.

WOMEN'S SERVICE CLUB
Mrs. Ethel Klein and Mrs. Es-
Hier Rachleff were hostesses at a
membership tea of the Detroit
Women's Service Club in the home
of Mrs. Jean Martin, 2295 Phila-
delphia avenue. Mrs. Nora Gold
spoke ana Nadia Maysels assisted
the hostesses.

ETERNAL LIGHT
Brotherhood Week will be
marked on the Eternal Light ra-
dio series with the broadcast of
Morton Wishengrad's "The Legend
of the Mountain" over WWJ at
8 a. m. Sunday.

RETAIN JUDGE E. N. KARAY

COMMON PLEAS COURT — NON PARTISAN
Primary Monday Feb. 17, 1947

ENDORSED BY CITIZENS LEAGUE
ENDORSED BY LABOR



HE ADDED YEARS TO
YOUR LIVING

This man who was born one hundred years ago this week
spent most of those years working to make our lives easier.
Today, we are apt to take his achievements for granted—to
forget the wondrous changes he made in our daily lives.
The stenographer little realizes the drudgery of office routine
without typewriter or duplicating machine; the saleswoman
can hardly imagine a busy day without gummed wrapping

tape.

The list of his achievements is long and varied, but most of
us have some special obligation to Thomas A. Edison. Every

worker who finds his lunch-time sandwich fresh in its waxed-paper wrapping—every G.I. who crossed
an ocean safely with the aid of radar and submarine detection devices—can thank Mr. Edison.

But these specific contributions of the man become small and insignificant alongside his other gifts to
all mankind. For every one of us who sends a telegram or rides a street ear—evet l yone who enjoys a
radio, a phonograph or a movie—can thank Mr. Edison.

Some of these gifts have made our lives safer. Some have given us more pleasure. Most have made
our tasks easier. But all are eclipsed by his gift of electric light. For with that one invention he,
In a very real sense, added years to our living. Those years are made up of thousands of evenings
. and since Mr. Edison's invention of electric
light, evenings—with their hours of relaxation, of
IN HONOR OF MR. EDISON ...
The Detroit Symphony Orchestra this week
reading or games or good companionship—have
Inaugurates a new series of popular conceits each
become the best part of our lives.
Tuesday night at 700 over WWI.

Evenings have also become a time for study. Men
and women today, fired by the example of Thomas
A. Edison, are using them to continue his research
for even better ways of living.

THE

EDISON

DETROIT



kt



•• •

ti



And don't forget the Edison institute Museum's
special exhibit this week at Greenfield Village.
9 a.m.-4 p.m. daily. Admission 25c. All Edison
power plants will also be open this week from
1.1 and 5-8 p.m. daily, 10 a.m.•4 p.m. Saturday.
Call RAndolph 2100 for details.

COMPANY

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