Friday, September 3, 1943
•••■•■ •.•
THE JEWISH NEWS
Page Fifteen
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Church Leaders
Ask U. S. Move
to Prevent Riots
JWV Delegates
To Attend N.Y.
Encampment
Soldiers Impressed
In Palestine, Says
Rabbi Isserman
Post Commanders, Auxiliary
Leaders to Participate
in 4-Day Meeting
Red Cross Emissary Returns
Appeal Directed to President
From Africa; Relates
To Help Create Better
Troops' Experiences
Understanding
Jewish War Veterans of the
U. S. will hold their annual en-
campment • Sept. 16 to 19, at
Kiamesha Lake, N. Y. Michigan
delegates who will. attend are:
Samuel J. Rhodes, department
commander; Philip Cantor, na-
tional executive committeeman;
Harry Madison, past commander;
Harry L. Carson, past command-
er; Max H. Wise, Harry J.
Schaeffer, Alex Weinberg and
Herbert Wallace, commander of
Jones Post 190.
Attending the Ladies' Auxili-
ary meeting to be held in con-
junction with the convention will
be Rose Agree, Annette Kahn,
Henrietta Niman, past' command-
er of Ladies' Auxiliary 135; Lil-
lian Fink, president of 135; Ida
Schultz, president of the Lt. Eli
Levin Aux. 230; Mary Wallace,
president of the L. H. Jones Aux.
190.
Major subject to be discussed
will be the welfare of returning
servicemen after the war. The
JWV and Jewish Welfare Board
will jointly administer the wel-
fare and veterans problems of
members of the Jewish faith.
All officers of local posts have
been installed and are planning
activities . for the approaching
season. Installed as commanders
are Adrian A. Tobias, Lt. Eli
Levin Post 230; Lawrence Her-
bert Wallace, L. H. Jones Post
190; Harry H. Sherman, Detroit
Post 135; Ben Rose, Downriver
Post 225.
First Jewish Chaplain
In Navy Is Guest
on CBS Program
Rabbi Straus Witnessed .lap
Attack at Pearl Harbor;
on Duty 3 Years
The first Jewish chaplain to
see active duty in the Pacific war
theater, Chaplain H. Cerf Straus
. ...... •-• ......... • .. of the U.. S.
Navy recently
appeared as a
guest star on
"H o m e - Front
eporter," CBS
coast - to - coast
radio program
broadcast from
Hollywood.
Chaplain
Straus, 27 years
in the rabbin-
Chaplain Straus ate, has been in
the Naval Reserve for 12 years
and on active duty for nearly
three years. He was the first
Jewish chaplain to enter the
Navy and was at Pearl Harbor
when the Japs attacked on Dec.
7, 1941. Since then he has been
conducting services and looking
after the welfare of Navy men
at U. S. bases in the Pacific.
NEW YORK-In an interview
with the editor of The Detroit
Jewish News, Rabbi Ferdinand
M. Isserman of St. Louis, who
returned Saturday from a spec-
D.R.
F. M. ISSERMAN
ial mission for the American
Red Cross in North Africa and
the Middle-- EaSt, stated that Am-
erican . trooPs in 'Palestine _are
impressed with Jewish achieve-
ments in Eretz Israel.
. Dr. Isserman said that the
Americans are elated to find a
highly cultural center in Tel
Aviv. He pointed out that serv-
icemen who are unable to get
furloughs in Palestine are dis-
appointed. Those who secure
such furloughs visit Tel Aviv,
Jerusalem and the Jewish col-
onies.
These visits, Rabbi Isserman
stated, establish a spirit of good
will. He expressed the view that
the friendship between Jews and
non-Jews in the United States
will be strengthened as a result
of the experiences of American
soldiers in Jewish settlements in
Palestine.
Herbert L. Raskin
Now 1st Lieutenant
Returning for duty after
spending a 15-day furlough at
home, 2nd Lt. Herbert L. Raskin,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Moe Raskin
of Tyler Ave.,
discovered a pro-
motion to First
Lieutenant
awaiting his ar-
rival. He is sta-
tioned at the ad-
vanced flying
school at Stutt-
gart Field, Ark.,
where he is do-
i n g administra
Lt. Raskin
tive work.
A graduate of Central High
and a former student at Wayne
University, Lt. Raskin received
his first stripe in April, 1942,
while with the medical corp at
Gardner Field, Calif., as aide to
Jewish Fortress Gunner
the . flight surgeon at the station
•
graduated,
Awarded 11 Decorations hospital. He was
seven months later, from Offi-
PHILADELPHIA, (JTA) - cers Training School at Miami
S/Sgt. Marvin Mitchell,. 22, of Beach, Fla.
Philadelphia, has been awarded
the Air Medal and 10 Oak Leaf ing down four Nazi craft and
Clusters, the Jewish Welfare crippling many others. He en-
Board reports. Sgt. Mitchell is a listed in the Army Air Corps
Flying Fortress gunner and has two years ago upon graduation
been on 50 bombing missions.
from South Philadelphia High
Marvin is credited with shoot- School.
NEW YORK (Religious News
Service)-Sixty leaders of the
Roman Catholic, Protestant and
Jewish faiths are among the
signers of a statement appealing
to the nation to create an atmos-
phere in which no future race
riots can occur.
The appeal, directed to the
President, to federal:, state, and
local governments and to the
American people generally, was
released here by Dr. William
Allan Neilson, president-emeritus
of Smith College and a member
of the board of directors of the
National Association for the Ad-
vancement of Colored People.
The statement was signed by 138
eminent Americans.
Declaring that "every Ameri-
can who loves our nation and
respects the principles upon
which it was founded must have
been shocked and dismayed by
the recent race riot in Detroit,"
the appeal said:
"The Detroit riot embodied
many of the practices which have
been associated with Nazi Ger-
many and her partner, the Jap-
anese Empire. Here race was
pitted against race. Bloodshed
and destruction ruled one of our
.great cities for days. Hatred held
sway. Not until Federal troops
were brought in was order re-
stored.
"We know that decent Ameri-
cans abhor riots. We believe that
our country, engaged in. a war
to uphold decency and humanity
and democracy throughout the
world, does not intend that these
things shall be denied any Amer-
ican, Negro or white.
"We call, therefore, upon our
President and our Governments,
Federal, State and local, to use
all wisdom to prevent a repeti-
tion of . the horrorsi of Detroit
elsewhere in our country. We
call upon our people of every
race, color, station and section
to use all foresight in creating
the atmosphere in which no bat-
tles between our people can
occur."
Among those who signed the
appeal were Rabbi Milton Stein-
berg, New York City; Rabbi Ab-
ba Hillel Silver, Cleveland; and
Dr. Stephen S. Wise, New York
City.
Melvin Moss, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Sidney Moss of 18281 Penn-
ington Drive, received his com-
mission from the Adjutant Gen-
eral's School, Fort Washington,
Maryland.
*
*
Jews in Uniform
Komer Brothers
Realize Ambition
In U. S. Air Force
One a Lieutenant, the Other
Noted Detroit Athlete Earns
a Private, Were Aviation
New Rank for Activities
Enthusiasts Here
at Fort Eustis, Va.
Two brothers, sons of Mrs.
Hattie Komer of Webster Hall,
both aviation enthusiasts in civ-
ilian life, are fulfilling their am-
bition as members of - the Army
Air Corps.
•
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CA. 6472
a► I
Lt. Handler hopes to meet his
Detroit friends later this month,
when he hopes to get a few days
leave.
Lt. A. Komer Pvt. M. Konek
Lt. Jack Winokur
Dies In Air Mishap
a .citation for flying, and Pvt.
Myron .Komer is doing special
Mrs. Jack Winokur, 2601 Cort-
instrument work for the AAF
land Ave., received word from
at Orlando, Fla.
the War Department that her
In service two years, Lt. Korn- husband, Lt. Jack Winokur of
er was an aviation student at the Army Air Force, died in an
the University Of Detioit and airplane accident in the South-
is a graduate of the Parks Air west Pacific.
College of St. Louis. He recent-
Lt. Winokur was the son of
ly was Married in Detroit to
Mr. and Mrs. Abram Winokur of
Miss Betty Epstein, daughter of
16141 LaSalle Blvd. A native
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Epstein of
Detroiter, he was graduated
Cherrylawn Ave.
from Central High School. He
When he left for service, Pvt. also is survived by two sisters,
Komer was employed as an in- Molly and Celia.
structor in the aviation depart-
ment of the Packard Motor Co. * * * * * * * *
• The Komer brothers were stu-
dents at Cooley and Central
High Schools, where they re-
ceived many medals in swim-
ming and were highly rated in
natatorial circles.
Yeshivath Beth Yehudah
Dexter ,at Cortland
*
Patriotic Convocation
Sunday, Sept. 12, at 2 p.m.
Speaker: Rabbi S. P. Wohl-
gelernter of Seattle, Wash.
r"
* * * * * * *
*
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Does Your Business Need
Lt. Lou H. Handler, prominent
Detroit athlete, director of Camp
Tamakwa in Algonquin Park,
Ont., until his enlistment in the
armed forces, is a proud man to-
day.
Lt. Adolph Komer, an advanc-
Last week, on his birthday, he
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Field, Tex., recently was given was elevated to first lieutenant.
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September 03, 1943 - Image 15
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- Publication:
- The Detroit Jewish News, 1943-09-03
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