THE JEWISH Page - Fourteen Local Brevities Cpl. Rosenberg Miss Sarah Zweig, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Zweig of 2947 Fullerton Ave., was awarded first prize in the second annual literary competition for the Tompkins Memorial Awards at Wayne Uni- versity for her composition, "Re- action in Five Counts." This was announced by Dr. John Wilcox, associate professor of English and a member of the board. Miss Zweig is the managing editor of the school paper, Pan- orama, and is majoring in art education. * * * Morton Rosenbaum, 9737 Lake- point, and Bernard Meltzer, 3227 Richton, are among the five win- ners of scholarships providing for full-time work in the Wayne University Graduate School, Dr. William H. Pyle, the school's di- rector, announced this week. * * • Rabbi Leon Fram, Fr. J. Law- rence Cavanaugh and Rev. Irwin C. Johnson composed the Good- will .Team which appeared on Wednesday morning before the student body of Southeastern High School. The film "The World We Want to Live In" supplemented their addresses. * * * Ann Arbor is one of the mid- western communities which have exceeded their quotas in cam- paigns for the United Jewish Ap- peal for Refugees, Overseas Needs and Palestine. Osias Zwerdling was chairman of the Ann Arbor campaign. * * • Women's League for Sabbath Observance will hold a rally at 1:30 p. m., Monday, June 14, at - the Bnai Moshe, Dexter and Law- rence. Mrs. Alex Fisch, presi- dent of the Bnai Moshe Sister- hood, and a committee of women of the Sisterhood, will act as hostesses. Rabbi Moses Fischer will address the gathering. A dramatic program will be pre- sented. All women in the Dexter neighborhood are invited to at- tend. Beth Yehudah Ladies Hold Banquet Sunday Ladies of Yeshivath Beth Yehu- dah will hold their 16th anniver- sary banquet at the Yeshivath building, Dexter and Cortland, this Sunday. Guest speaker will be Rabbi. M. H. Eichenstein of St. Louis. Cantor David Katzman will sing several selections. Guests also will hear a report about the Beth Jacob work the ladies have undertaken. Plans for the future also will be announced. Mrs. Theodore Lipman is co- chairman • of the arrangements committee. For reservations call TO. 5-1171. Miss Cashman Reopens Downtown Travel Office ▪ Rhea E. Cashman, head of the World Wide Travel Bureau, has reopened her downtown office in the Farwell Bldg., 1249 Griswold. Miss Cashman urges that reser- vations be made at once for planned cruises and for resorts. Tours may now be mapped to Mexico, Colorado Springs, Florida and the East, Miss Cashman states. She also announces that 200 hotels are to be opened in Asbury Park and Atlantic City. The Grand Hotel at Mackinac will open on June 25. Edgewater Beach Hotel, Chicago, is also open for civilian guests, she says. On Sick Leave Commends A. Z. A. and-The Jewish News for Sponsor- ing Cigarette Fund After serving almost 11 months in "the worse weather in the world," and wounded by schrap- nel, Cpl. Alfred Rosenberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. 'Harry Rosenberg of 2752 Boston Blvd., is home on . a convales- cent furlough from the Aleu- :;tian Islands. "America looked like Heaven when Cpl. Rosenberg we first landed at San Francisco," he said. "When a person has been away as long as I have, he really appreciates this great country of ours." Al- though the comforts of home were gone, he speaks of the high spirits and confidence of victory which reigned on the island. When told about the cigarette campaign sponsored by A. Z. A. and The Jewish News, Cpl. Ro- senberg stated, "The flow of cig- arettes to us men overseas is very deeply appreciated and no campaign would be of more im- portance. Smokes help consider- ably in building the men's mo- rale and such campaigns reminds us that the folks back home are pitching in there, too." Cpl. Rosenberg is a graduate of Northern High and attended Wayne University, majoring in business administration. He was a member of Pisgah Lodge of Bnai Brith and the Knights of Pythias. In service 25 months, he was stationed at Camp Grant, Ill., Fort Sheridan, Ill. and Se- attle, Wash., before leaving for a strenuous training period at Dutch Harbor. He is 29 years old. His brother, Pvt. Lee Rosen- berg, is somewhere in England. Stein's Lodge Opens In Grand Traverse Only Jewish Resort in North- ern Michigan Announces Its Season's Program Mr. and Mrs. A. Stein, owners of Stein's Clover Lodge on Grand Traverse Bay, at Omena, Mich., announce that the Lodge is now open. Reservations are already being accepted and full information is available by calling UN. 1-6172. Located in Northern Michigan, 1,600 feet above sea level, this lodge is on a peninsula declared to be the healthiest section in the state by the Michigan Health Department. Arrangements have been made for Stein's car to meet all guests who arrive at the Lodge by bus. Greyhound buses leave Detroit at 10:20 a. m. and 12 noon and arrive in Traverse City at 7:30 and 8 p. m. Meat Markets to Close Four Days Next Week The Jewish meat markets will close here ffm Tuesday evening to Saturday night, according to a decision reached' by the Kosher Butchers' Ass'n Tuesday evening. SAVE ON DRY CLEANINV_ Try This Regular $1.09 Value! LADIES' MEN'S PLAIN DRESSES 3-PIECE SUITS DRY CLEANED AND PRESSED Pick Up and Delivery on 2 or More Garments STORAGE For Your Out-of-Season Garments 7 9Each ODD PANTS 5 cat CARRY & With Order If You Mention This Paper — 19c Friday, 'June 4,1943 NEWS Weekly Review of the News of the World (Compiled From Cables of Independent Jewish Press Service) AMERICA See Also Page 3 OVERSEAS The French Trade Unions of North Africa have petitioned General Giraud to seek the exchange of a certain number of German officers captured in Tunisia for French political personalities, including Leon Blum, interned by the Nazis. The Manchester Guardian reports that the heroic resistance of the Jews in the Warsaw ghetto has influenced the Jews in other Polish ghettos to the extent that they too are offering resistance to the Nazis. In the city of Nesw•esz, East Poland, 200 Jews barricaded themselves in the local syna- gogue and fought for several days, killing many Nazis. Unable to drive the Jews out, the Nazis burned the synagogue. A new ordinance barring Jews from residence in Amsterdam, ordering the liquidation of the Amsterdam ghetto and the deportation to Poland of the 50,000 Jews who resided there, has been issued by the Nazi authorities in Holland, accord- ing to the Danish radio. Sholem Lesko, who was tried and sen- tenced by a Polish court to eight years' imprisonment for defending himself against and wounding Endek pogromists several years ago in Przytik, was released from prison when Russian troops occupied Brest-Litovsk, the Soviet press reports. Twenty thousand Jews participated in a demonstration in the streets of this city in celebration of the Tunisian victory and the liberation of North Africa from the Axis yoke. Having taken cover after Pearl Harbor, t h e anti-Semitic a n d anti-democratic forces have re-emerged and the gossip against the Jews is assuming new viru- lence, it was asserted by Algernon D. Black, executive leader of the New York Society for Ethical Culture, in a radio broadcast discussing the war. The American Legion is opposed to postwar immigration i n t o the United States, it was asserted by Republican Con-. gressman Ward Johnson of California in a statement in which he attacked current efforts to repeal the Chinese exclusion act. Many New York Jews were among the first contingent of wounded American soldiers who entered this harbor with Purple Heart, Silver Star and other dec- orations for their exploits in the North African theater of war, hoping that they would be able to ,return to combat soon, after convalescing at the Halloran General Hospital on Staten Island. Attacking Congressman Emanuel Cel- ler whom, on a previous occasion, he had designated as "the Jewish gentlemen from New York," Mississippi Representative John E. Rankin implied that Mr. Celler's supporters were illiterate and declared that there was no Congressional district "south of the Potomac River in which the gentleman from New York could be nom- inated to Congress on either ticket." Dairy Products for Sh0V110411. Use United Dairies Rich Products in Making The Traditional Holiday Dishes for Your Family UNITED DAIRIES Hi-Test Milk Abandon meat meals and Feed your family the delicious, traditional dairy dishes during the holiday week . . . healthful, invigorating, unrationed! Milk and dairy produce with all its nutritious protein-high goodness, is rich in energy building vitamins and minerals. Prepare these time-honored, appealing dishes with UNITED DAIRIES' products for greater vim, vigor and vitality for your household. Order more than your usual supply. 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