Friday, May 29, 1942

THE JEWISH NEWS

Page Fourteen

Jewish Youth's

LISTENING
POST

By DANNY RASKIN

On LaSalle at Elmhurst, a car
stopped and honked. We walked
over, and there behind the wheel
was none other than Carl Bayer,
Chief Specialist, handsomely rig-
ged up in the regalia of the U. S.
Navy. Tanned and looking in the
peak of condition, the Wayne
University all-time all-star bas-
ketball player was spending his
last day in Detroit before leav-
ing for the Pacific Coast. He flew
in from Norfolk, Va., where he
was serving under Lt. Com. Gene
Tunney in the Navy's physical
fitness program.
We asked him bow he liked it.
"It's really swell," he replied. "I
was serving in Norfolk with a
lot of sport celebrities like Bob
Feller, Freddie Hutchinson and
Billy Susce and they got no
favors. They worked just as hard
as the rest of the boys."
"What are my duties? Well, I
give the boys calisthenics, teach
them how to march, show them
what's what about the guns, and
so forth."
"Give my regards to everyone.
Don't think the boys don't know
what the people at home are do-
ing. They talk about it a lot and
really appreciate it."

CAMPAIGN

(Continued from Page 3)

was raised on a coverage of 82
per cent of the assigned slips.
URGES COMPLETE COVERAGE
Isidore Sobeloff, dynamic dir-
ector of the Jewish Welfare Fed-
eration and the Allied Jewish
Campaign, pointed out on Wed-
nesday that many hundreds of
potential contributors are wait-
ing to be solicited and that the
goal of the campaign is in sight
if complete coverage is accomp-
lished.
Fred M. Butzel, general chair-
man of the drive, has been grati-
fied with the splendid set-up of
the campaign machinery and
with both the loyalty of workers
and the anxiety of the Jewish
community to cooperate in mak-
ing the drive a success.

ABRAHAMSON'S TALK
"Every additional dollar you can
bring in between now and the
close of the Campaign will make
possible that much more vital
work that the agencies we are
sponsoring can do," declared Dr.
Albert Abrahamson, executive
director of the National Refugee
Service and former professor of
economics at Bowdoin College, in
his inspiring and informative ad-
dress delivered at the report
luncheon Monday, May 25, at
Hotel Statler.
\ "The large contributions are
coming in splendidly," the speak-
er continued, "but do not neglect
the small ones. They are import-
ant. One more small sum may
make it possible for the J.D.C. to
PERSONALITY OF THE get another child to safety."
WEEK . . . David A. Goldman, ENTHUSIASTIC RALLY
first vice-president of the Junior
The gathering that Dr. Abra-
Division. and what a swell job hamson addressed was one of the
he's doing .. . Noted for his gift most enthusiastic of the whole
of gab . . . won Inter-collegiate campaign, and his message was
Oratorical Contest in '32, while accorded prolonged applause.
at Wayne U. . . . Campeted in
Commenting on current happen-
Nationals that year . . . Has de- ings, he drew attention to the
bated twice against England's new need for refugee aid with
Cambridge U. ... Captured Mich- the virtual entry of Mexico into
igan Interpretive Reading Con- the war. The J.D.C., he said, is
test in '35 . . . Elected to Macken-
sie Honor Society, Pi Kappa
Delta and Delta Sigma Rho ... all black stogie, who keeps pester-
speech—societies . . . Awarded ing -us to make him a personal-
Master of Arts and Bachelor of ity ... Ruthe Shapiro and Clara
Law degrees at Wayne ... Served Schwartz having a swell time
as instructor in Wayne U. legal with those two swell fellowS.
library and taught law of agency
classes there . . . Served as law
HERE 'N THERE ... Deborahs
research clerk to Justice Bert D. of Bnai Brith planning wienie
Chandler of the Michigan Su- roast in June, boating in July
preme Court . . . Now is in the and outing in August . . . Nation-
legal section of the Detroit Ord- al Council of Jewish Jrs. has tra-
nance District of the War Depart- dition that nzwly-elect presidents
ment as assistant attorney. •
marry during term of six months
after . . . All presidents in last
ABOUT TOWN . . . Nate Ross- seven years have lived up to it.
man helping his wife, Diane, How about it, Helen Goodman?
select her new Spring topper on Remember' the Jewish National
Washington Blvd. . . . but not for Fund's Flower Day, June 13 .. .
long . . . Max Shulak and Joe All the Zionist youth groups will
Hootner escorting three lovely be selling . . . Eliza Jacobson re-
ladies into the Fox theater . . . cently elected treasurer of the
They called it a patriotic gesture Pan-American League's Wayne
due to the manpower shortage chapter . . . What! That invisible
. Tch! Tch! Boys . . . You man story again? . . . No, but
know that Art Jaffe was called Morris Glazier has been room and
out of town . . . Alice Geer prom- boarding with Bernie Weisman
king a good time for June 14 .. . and Herb Rosenthal for two
That's the date of Junior Had- months, and they have never seen
assail formals at Bonnie Brook. him all that time! • .. Mrs. Leon-
Diana Rosenblatt exhibiting her ard Wiener, who, as Josephine
briefcase, sorry, pocketbook, after Stern, founded the National
a thorough cleaning . . . Mail Council of Jewish Jrs., is the
only from 1927 to '42 left in . . . youngest president to' serve for
That big 200 pounder with the the senior women's group.

working frantically to. meet this
emergency.
The speaker reviewed the sit-
uation created by evacuations
from the coastal areas, which, ne
intimated, might be increased.
Since Pearl Harbor, he said, 7,500
refugees have come to the West-
ern Hemisphere, and 1,500 of
these have found haven in the
United States. New problems
have arisen in the last six
months, because war develop-
ments have made necessary a
"screening process" much finer
than heretofore_
REFUGEES ENLIST
"Our country is at War," Dr.
Abrahamson said, "and it must
be extremely careful about those
admitted through its bor-
ders. This has brought up the eco-

nomic aspect of discrimination
against aliens. Many of our refu-
gees, in the caetgory that has
been called 'enemy aliens', want
to help us win the war. A protest
from them won the concession of
being classed as 'aliens of enemy
origin.' We are trying to help
1,500 refugee physicians who are
awaiting adjustment. In the last
10 days orders have come through-
permitting these doctors who join
the army as privates to become
citizens after three months, after
which they may apply for com-
missions."
Julian H. Krolik served as
chairman, and Leonard Simons,
Division G. chairman, called for
the reports, which indicated a
continued generous response, but

considerable coverage still out-
standing.

MONDAY'S TOTALS
Monday's report showed a total
of $784,347, er 80 per cent of the
quota, secured from 77 per cent
of the assigned slips.
The first division to go over
the top, in Monday's reports, was
Division J—composed of the jun-
iors and functioning under the
chriamanship of Jacob L. Keidam
The young people secured $15,-
522, which is 103 per cent of the
group's quota. This sum was rais-
ed from 67 per cent of the assign-
ed prospects. A total of 3,914 con-
tributors were reached by the
young people.

— BUY DEFENSE BONDS

Our Boys Can Take the War to the Enemy IF

We Here

iVretAde

Back Them Up With Ships and Tanks and Guns!

Stop ASKING what you can do to help win the war ! Start DOING it!
Buy U. S. War Bonds and Stamps Every Week ... get every member of
your family . . . all your friends . . . everyone you know to sign up!

REMEMBER WE'RE AT WAR

Pledge IV of Your Weekly Salary .. Buy U. S. War Bonds & Stamp i

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For registration and lnfOrmatIon call or write

DIRECTOR: MRS. LEO MELLEN
4830 Greenway Avenue
Detroit, Michigan
Tiler 4-0226

MRS. E. J. LEVENSON
2917 Glynn Ct. — TOwnsend 7-5772 — Detroit
REGISTRATIONS ... NOW BEING TAKEN

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