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THE 'JEWISH NEWS

April 17, 1942

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Jewish Youth's

LISTENING
POST

By DANNY RASKIll

This c.olumn, representing the
Jewish youth of Detroit, pleads with
you to give to the Allied Jewish
Campaign. More than ever before
is the need for funds so great.
Workers from the Junior Division
will soon call on you, and your help
will be appreciated, not only by
those who are working hard to
reach this year's quota. but also by
the many people and institutions
for whom the Campaign is held.
Please do your share, and share
in their happiness.
• • •
SHORT STORY .. . Morton Ro-
sen. president of the Lonely Hearts
Club. tells us of time a young Jew-
ish man, hailing frcm New York
and unfamiliar with Detroit, was
referred to him . . . After talking
with the young fellow, Morton in-
troduced him to a girl whose ideas
and likes coincided with those of
the "lonely New Yorker" . . . Both
were withok parents, liked to dance
and enjoyed the theater . . He
called her a few times, and they
began going out . . . The couple
fell In love with each other, began
going steady and talked of an en-
gagement . . One day, conversa-
tion drifted toward their parents ...
She opened the locket hung around
her neck, and showed him a picture
. . He looked unbelievingly in
surprise . . . Asking where she got
the picture, the girl explained that
it was that of her mother . . . The
locket dropped from his hand . . .
His face flushed . . THEY WERE
BROTHER AND SISTER ! Parents
had died when they were small,
and relatives brought them up in
k:e para Le homes ... He had chang-
ed his name to that of his uncle's
and was in Detroit for a job.

• • •

PERSONALITY OF THE WEEK
. . . Al Lieberman . . . Chairman
Junior Division Pre-Campaign . .
Treas. Junior Service Group board
of directors . . Metnber of Execu-
tive and Inter-Racial committees
of Metropolitan Detroit Youth
Council . . . On board of directors
of League of Detroit Jewish Youth
. . . Well-liked by all, Al is a
Detroit attorney and a member of
Tau Epsilon Rho.
• • •

SEEN 'N HEARD . . . League of
Detroit Jewish Youth will cooperate
with the Jewish Center in helping
to publicize Center's Defense Insti-
tute . . . Lillian Schoolman, Ad-
ministrative Sec, of National Avu-
kali in Detroit to confer with chap-
ter executives and local Zionist
leaders . . . National Council of
Jewish Juniors to meet on April
19 at Center . . . Speaker frcm
Will Do My Best" organization
will be present • . . Rabbi Leon
Frani addressed Wayne U. Avukah
at Mackenzie Union . . . Zionist
Youth Council of Detroit planning
huge youth conference for May
Council comprised of Habonim,
Hashomer Hatzair, Avukah, Young
Judea, Little Wcmen of Hadassah,
Junior Hadassah . . Second and
third Youth Forums, sponsored by
Jewish Center, will take place in
May and June . . . To be titled
"Youth Acts Normal in Abnormal
Time of \Var," and "Youth's Posi-
tion After the War and How They
Will Help to Reconstruct."
• • •
ABOUT PEOPLE . . . Bob Mazer
now with U.S.O. In Virginia as
a Field Superviscr . . . Was work-
ing with J.W.B., but work was so.
good U.S.O. took him . .
Kopel
Rubiner,
youngest brother of
Charles Rubiner, recently received
his first-class private stripe at Fort
Houston, Tex., and about two weeks
later was made a corporal . . .
Morris Lipnlk, president, and Byron
Berlin, vice president of the Wayne
Avukah, were recently accepted, into
the Wayne College of Medicine .. .
Ephraim Horwitz, of the Avukah,
received a commission of Second
Lieutenant and left April 14 for
Camp Walters, Tex.

LEVIN J.W.V. LADIES

Lt. Eli Levin Ladles Auxiliary No.
230. J.W.V.. will hold a card party
Tuesday, Ma: 19, at 8 p. m., at
Jericho Temple, 2705 Joy road.

United Synagogue
Meets in Atlantic

Ex-Mayor Croll

Welcomed Back

City April 24 26

-

Windsor Leader, Now Offi-
cer, to Direct Commando
Training in Canada

Lieut. David Croll, former mayor
of Windsor, Ont., present member
of the Ontario legislature and one
of the outstanding community lead-
ers of the Border Cities, is enjoy-
ing a well earned 10-day leave of
absence after an exciting and dan-
gerous tour of duty in England.
Leaving Windsor 22 months ago,
while he was still mayor of the city,
he went overseas as a buck pri-
vate with the Essex Scottish regi-
ment. He studied at the Royal Mil-
itary College at Sandhurst, Eng-
land's West Point, trained at Al-
dershot and with the British In-
telligence service, and emerged as
a full-fledged commissioned officer.
His most recent service was with
the famous commandos, and dur-
ing the next five or six months he
will be busy directing similar train-
ing in strategy and tactics in
Canada.

Word has been received that
Lieut. Croll has been promoted to
the rank of captain. and will serve
with the Oxford Rifles Regiment in
Woodstock, Ont. The unit recently
was mobilized as part of the active
Canadian Army.

Dr.GorelickDies
InArmyTragedy

Service Near,
Young Captain Loses Life
in Fire at Camp Grant

Overseas

The many friends of Capt. Harry
S. Gorelick, 35 years old, former
chief orthopedic surgeon at Re-
ceiving Hospital, were saddened to
learn of his tragic death in a fire
which swept the officers' quarters
at Camp Grant, Ill. Capt. Gorelick
was one of two who were burned
to death, while two other officers
were seriously Injured.
Capt. Gorelick's wife, Edith, was
visiting him at the time, in the
expectation that he would be trans-
ferred overseas. Their children,
Susan, 9 years old, and Martha, 2.
were at the Gorelick home, 4715
Lakepointe Ave.
Dr. Gorelick, a graduate of
Northern High school and the U. of
M.. had lived in Detroit 18 years.
He served his internship at Deacon-
ess and Receiving Hospitals. About
a year ago he relinquished his prac-
tice to join the Army Medical
Corps. He will be missed especially
by the hundreds of poor to whom
he gave freely of his services.
A brother, Ben Gorelick, has been
secretary of Bnai David Synagogue
for many years, and a sister, Mrs.
Harris Wolk, was the first president
of the Sisterhood of Bnai David.

MORE ON MAYER

When the historians get around to
writing the story of the storm over
the Saturday Evening Post it will
make "Gone With the Wind" look
like an underweight "short short."
Now some of the boys in the lobbies
are saying that Milton Mayer's "The
Case Against the Jew" will be ans-
wered by none other than Wendell
Willkie . . . Mr. Winkle is mighty
handy at being the answer man for
everybody including the Chinese,
Russians and Negroes—but the Sat-
evepost said Mayer would have the
last word, so that Willkie idea
doesn't appear to be more than
high-class schmoos ... There is one
rather amusing by-product of Mil-
ton Mayers' article. It seems that
every time Milton whips out his
typewriter and goes to work on
somebody or other, the target of his
pen-lashing turns out to be his
brother, Howard's, client. Howard is
a publicity man who works for the
Chicago Sun and the Anti-Defama-
tion League. The Sun was lambasted
by Milton a short time ago and the
Anti-Defamation League was consid-
erably upset by the Satevepost piece.
However, Mayer's clients want to
knoW why he can't do something
about his brother.

industry is supposed to be planning
a super-duper sales-promotion cam-
paign for war bonds. The other day
Adolph Zukor and others flew down
to Washington to talk plans over
with Secretary of the Treasury Mor-
genthau . In the meantime Dan-
ny Kaye, the premier comic of the
current Broadway season, has start-
ed his own one-man war-bonds sale.
In one evening Danny sold a batch
of bonds amounting to $155,000. All
this happened at La Martinique,
where the waiters and musicians
chipped in to help beat Hitler.
JEWS WITHOUT MATZOHS

THE FRONT PAGE

Out in Flint, Mich., many young-
sters are named after Al Jolson.
A very common occurrence is to
bump into a towheaded boy. and
find that you have just met Al
Jolson Brown or Smith. All this
happened before Douglas Mac-
Arthur, of course.

which made repeated attempts to

Moro Is A KINSEL'S Comer Near You

Giant Size

PIGSKIN
SHAMAY

WITH APOLOGIES •

Everybody agrees that the Otto
Kahn story told by Mayer was a
lulu. With apologies to him, here
is one in the same key. It seems that
a Jew decided to be converted to
Catholicism. The Jew went to church
and asked that a special ceremony
be performed. At the end of the
service the priest pronounced a
prayer ending with the words:
"You're a Catholic, You're a Cath-
olic, You're a Catholic." Several
weeks later the priest visited the
converted Jew and was invited to re-
main for dinner. It was a Friday
evening and the Jew's wife prepared
a sumptuous meal for the occasion
including roast chicken. When the
chicken was served, the priest ex-
pressed amazement. "Don't you re-
alize that all good Catholics eat fish
on Friday and that you're not per-
mitted to have meat?" said the
priest. The Jew was somewhat be-
wildered, but after a moment's
pause he placed a fork on the
chicken and said: "You're a fish,
you're a fish, you're a fish."
•

LONDON (JTA) — Millions of
Jews in Poland spent a matzoh-
less Passover this year, according
to information reaching official
Polish quarters this week. The War-
saw Jewish community, council,

obtain some flour, was informed by
the German authorities that a little
Copyright, 1942, by INDEPENDENT would be sent them. But the flour
never arrived.
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• •

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MOVIE MILLIONS

Would it interest you to know that
the movie industry had a gross in-
come of 5600.030.000 last year?
Loew's was first in line as the top-
notch money collector with more
than $128,000,000 changing hands
across the box office counter in the
past twelve months . The movie

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NEW YORK, (JTA)—The con-
tribution of American Jewry to the
war effort of the United Nations
will be the theme of the 1942 bi-
ennial Convention of the United
Synagogue to be held at the Charles
Hotel in Atlantic City on April 24-
26,
The Women's League of the Unit-
ed Synagogue has issued a special
convocation to its 400 nation-wide
sisterhood to send delegates to this
meeting. In addition, the National
Federation of Jewish Men's Clubs
will hold its annual gathering coin-
dent with the convention.

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Camp Director: Phil Nickerman
Management: Mr: and Mrs. Jack Mann
For Inquiries Write to 1470 Glynn Ct.
Telephone Nos. TO. 8-8382, TB. 1-9734

BEAUTIFUL CAMP

