Friday, NovernliEr 13, Page EW I 5-1-1i' NEWS T U942 Seven Jews of Detroit in United States' Fighting Forces Dr. Rogoff Leaves For Active Service As Captain in Army Dr. Abraham S. Rogoff, a resi- dent of Detroit for 26 years and a medical practitioner here for 15 years, left last Friday for New York to be assigned to active duty in the U. S. Army, with the rank of captain. Born in Vilna and educated in the Yeshivah of that famous city, he came to Detroit in 1916, was educated in the local schools and received his B.S. -(1925) and his M.D. (1927) from the University of Michigan. In September, - 1932, he was married to Sarah Epstein, daugh- ter of the Rev. Samuel Epstein who died two weeks ago, and Mrs. Epstein. They have two children, Evelyn, 7, and Jerome, 4. Dr. Rogoff is a member of the Zionist Organization, American Jewish Congress, Philosophical Society and the Maimonides Med- ical Society which he served as vice-president and treasurer. He has worked in many Allied Jew ish Campaigns, taught First Aid Red Cross classes and was an examiner for the Draft Board. Jews in iiniform By BEN SAMUEL (This column is based on informa- tion supplied by the National Jew- ish Welfare Board.) LEVIN DOES IT WITH BOMBS; YOU CAN DO IT WITH BONDS! There's a bronze plaque in the hoiSe of Sam and Leah Levin in Brooklyn, presented by neigh- bors who gathered 2,500 strong last Sunday to pay homage to Meyer Levin, the bombardier of Pearl Harbor and Coral Sea fame. The Levins have the plaque, and the war bond coffers have an additional $250,000 pledged by those at the rally. The salute to the young hero was broadcast over a nation-wide chain. Mrs. Levin stepped to the microphone and read the in'scrip- tion on the plaque to the United States: "The friends and neigh- bors dedicate this plaque to hon- or Sgt. Meyer Levin, a bombar- dier of the U. S. Air Corps, who; through courage and gallantry in action, has distinguished himself in the service of his country." You can do your share by say- ing it with war bonds; Sgt. Meyer will say it with war bombs. Detroit Honors Major Max Weil Armed Services Maintain • Family Traditions 2 Doctors in Hero of Bataan, Missing Since May, Hailed Here for His Heroism Detroit last week paid tribute to a Jewish hero—Major Max Weil—by naming a tank in his honor. At ceremonies which took place '7 on Saturday at. the City Hall, the Wayne County "Buy-a- Tank" drive reached its cli- max when due honors were paid the Detroit hero. Brig. - Gen. Major Weil James H. Doo- little and Capt. Arthur W. Wer- muth, also Michigan residents, were the other heroes honored at these ceremonies. Major Weil has not been heard from since he distinguished him- self at Bataan on May 5. But wherever he is, he has the good wishes of an entire community. Mrs. Irene Weil, who was pres- ent at the ceremonies; heard prominent leaders express admir- ation for her husband's feats. With her were the four Weil children—Beverly, 14; Lee, 11; Cleveland, 10, and Lance, 4. In the battle of Bataan Major Weil brought down at 4least five Japanese planes by his accurate ,machine gun fire.. Details were told by Capt. Henry Thorne, one of the officers who escaped to Australia. MajOr Weil rigged up an old command car with armor and machine guns, decoyed the Jap planes into diving low to attack what appeared to be a de- fenseless vehicle and shot them down. - Major Weil is 32. He was grad- uated from Central High School and. Wayne UniVersity, was act- ive in the R.O.T.C. and in track and other sports. He volunteered for active service in -December, 1940; and was sent to the `Philip- as a captain on April 19, 1941. Mrs. Well and the children are making their home at 5501 W. Outer Drive. Major Weil's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Morris Well of 2689 W. Grand Ave. There are five sisters residing with Major Weil's par- ents. Refugees Over. '70 Get Jobs Two men in their seventies are among the 519 refugees for whom the National Refugee Service found jobs in October, and age constitutes a lessening barrier to job placements, it was revealed this week by Albert Abrahamson, executive director of the agency, which is a bene- Pvt. Joseph tosen, son of Mrs. ficiary of the United JeWish Ap- Libby Rosen of Pingree, Ave., peal. Its 1943 funds from Detroit has been in. the Army two months will come from the War Chest. and is stationed Jewish refugees from Nazi op- with a medical: pression who had been detained detachment a t in the Immigration Detention Fort Meyers Camp at Tiscornia, Cuba, are now Fla. A graduate gradually being released by the of Scranton ;, Cuban Government, according to Technical High, information made public by the Scranton, P a Inter-American Jewish Council. Pvt. Rosen was Jews in U. S. War Service active in ath- starringi letics, on the pitching mound for Sam's and United Dairies in Class A of the Detroit Baseball Federa- tion and is well-known in local basketball circles. He was Mar- ried eight months ago to Mollie Borden. * • • Lieut. Harold Pliskow, of 19149 Steel Ave., reported for duty this week to the regional office of the Army Medical Corps, Chicago, Ill. A graduate of the University of Michigan Literary and Medi- cal Colleges; Lieut.. Pliskow, who is 32, practiced medicine -here for seven years. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Pliskow of 1200 W. Grand Blvd. He is mar- ried and they have one son and one daughter. News received this week from two Detroiters—officers in the U. S. armed forces—serves to re- mind this community of the im- portant part that was played here by their _father and grandfather. Lieutenants Perry and Aubrey Goldman a r e the sons of the late Harry:: Goldman a n d Sophia Gold- Gold man, for years prominent i n social service work in t h e Their Lieut. . city. Perry grandfather, Goldman Hyman Goldman, was one of the most venerable Detroit Jews. He was the first chairman of the Keren Hayesod and was succeed- ed in the post by Abraham Srere. He was one of the leading figures in the United Hebrew Schools of Detroit. - Lieut . Aubrey Goldman is serving with the U. S. Medical Corps in England. Lieut. Perry Goldman, M. C. A. P. 0., 10035, care Postmaster, San Francisco, Calif., was grad- uated from the Detroit Colege of Surgery and Medicine in 1933. He was born and raised in De- troit. He practiced in Detroit prior to enlisting_ for active ser- vice in the Air Corps on Sept. 5, 1942. His first station was at the Army Air Base in Salt Lake City, Utah. He now is awaiting further orders in San Francisco. He was married to Sybil Lifshitz, on Dec. 23, 1934. They have a three - year - old son, Sidney Hirsch. Jerusalem Ex-Mufti Branded Nazi Agent By Russian Mufti KUIBYSHEV (JPS) —Denun- ciation of Haj Amin el Husseini, ex-Mufti of Jerusaleni, as an agent of the Gestapo and as a traitor to. the Moslem world, has been voiced by Abdul. Rahman RasSulayev, Mufti of- the Moslems in Soviet Russia„ according to the local . press. Head of the Central Moslem Council in the U.S.S.R., Rassu- layev is reported to have coupled the Jerusalem ex-Mufti with his condemnation of Hitler and Mus- solini. Another Russian Moslem leader, Mohammed el Gazani, Arab poet, is also reported to have appealed to the Arabs of the Middle East to side with the United Nations against the Axis. Good intentions alone won't win the war—Buy Bonds and Stamps TODAY. 2 %* 54 I ' ),' ' Welfare Board The names and deeds of servicemen of Jewish faith who have been decorated for valor. since Pearl Harbor are contained in a new publication issued this week by the National Jewish Welfare Board's Bureau of War Records, 200 Fifth Ave., New York City. The booklet, entitled "Distinguished Service," tells in detail the nature of the ex - ( ploits for which the men were cited' and includes biographidal information on each of the Jew- ish heroes. Get Two Awards Each Four servicemen listed in the pamphlet have received two awards each for valor since .Dec. 8, 1941. They are Lieut. Roy Bright, holder of the Dis-. tinguished Flying Cross and. the Silver Star, a native of Eveleth, Minn.; Lieut. Morris N. Fried- man, holder of the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Silver Star, of Grand Forks, N. D.; Sgt. Mey- er Levin, Distinguished Flying Cross and Silver Star, of Brook- lyn, New York, and Radioman David Goodman, U. S. N., Brook- lyn, holder of the Army's Silver Star decoration and the Oak Leaf Cluster. Other Jewish men whose sto- ries of heroism in action are re- counted in the booklet include Second Lieut. Irving Berman, a navigator aboard a bomber lost in action during an attack on a Jap base in the Aleutians, post- humously awarded the Order of the Purple Heart; Sgt. Robert Clifford, awarded the Order of the Purple Heart for wounds re- ceived in action at Pearl Harbor; Sgt. Mitchell Cohen, awarded the Purple Heart medal for bravery under fire and wounds received during action in the Far East; Lieut. Alfred Heyman, Youngs- town, 0., recipient of the Silver Star for his work as navigator in a flying squadron which effective- ly carried out a special bombing mission during the Battle of .the Coral Sea; Lieut. Commander Solomon S. Isquith, of Brooklyn, awarded the Navy Cross by Ad- miral Chester W. Nimitz for sav- ing 90 percent of the crew of the sunken target ship Utah on . Dec. 7, 1941, "by his cool and efficient manner of directing abandon- inent under the bombing at- tack;" Sgt. Julius Kleiman, of Staten Island, N. Y., . posthu- mously awarded the Order , of the Purple Heart for his heroiam as a turret gunner of a Flying Fort- ress which participated in a re- cent raid over Rotterdam, and which resulted in his death; Pvt. Sidney Schwimmer,•New York, awarded the Silver Star for shooting down seven Jap Zero fighters _and dispersing another enemy 'plane formation during an attack on the Rabaul Air- drome, Latunai, New Britain; Murray Weinru b, Machinists Mate, U. S. N., awarded the Sil- ver Star for participating in a daring exploit made by an Am _ eri- can submarine, of which he was a crew member, which made it impossible for the Japanese to seize stores of gold and securi- ties held at Corregidor. - Medals for Bravery Others listed as holders of var- ious medals for bravery include Sergeant Lester Kramer, Bronx, New York City, holder of the D.F.C.; Lieut. Henry Mark, Los Angeles, killed in action and posthumously awarded the Dis- tinguished Service Cross; Cor- poral Harry Newman, Army Air- Corps, New York City; Pvt. First Class Ralph N. Rentz, Lansdowne, Pa., now a Japanese prisoner; Lieut. Stephen Salzman, Wilm- ington, Delaware, who brought down a Jap plane with a service rifle; Sgt. Julius Schellenberg, Brooklyn,• the first refugee in the armed forces to be decorated; Pvt. First Class Louis Schleifer, who lost his life at Hickam Field, Hawaii, on Dec. 8; Lieut. Harry Schreiber, navigator of the Fly- . ing Fortress, "Alexander the Swoose," which is believed to have more battle flying hours to its credit than any other Ameri- can plane in combat, and Pvt. Leonard Ira York, responsible for downing two Jap planes dur- ing the Pearl Harbor attack. The National Jewish' Welfare Board, 200 Fifth Avenue, New York City, is the parent organi- zation of 325 Y.M.H.A.'s and Jew- ish Centers throughout the -na- tion, as well as being a member agency of the USO. Attention Women! SAMPLE SUITS Values up to $45, - While They Last... $ 2 4 75 * * LTD. WaileimAiddre/iTi 1148 GRISWOLP STREET Domestic and mported' Woolens PLANT TION PARTY Gabardines - Coverts Tweeds - Sharkskins * * RRY THOMAS Sunday Evening, Nov. 15, 1942 RAY GORRELL ORCHESTRA A Them Heroic Deeds of Jewish Servicemen Recorded in "Disting- uished Service", New Publidation of Jewish SCHOBLE HATS $5 - $6.50 - i8.50 Infant's Service Group = By Their Deeds Ye Shall Know SOUTHERN MUSICAL REVUE Men's and Women's CAST OF 30 CLOTHIERS BOOK-CADILLAC HOTEL $1.25 Admission at Door or Phone 0. 5-3802 Second Floor David Stott Bldg. CL 4027 STATE GRISWOLD &