Novernbor

*HA E-HJ E Wt11-4

Jewish News- AZA Cigarette Fund
Continues to Receive Wide Support

Jewish Youth's

LISTENING

WEW S

OM.

Jews in Uniform

Pvt. Bale, Central
High Sport Star,
Now Overseas

Nosanchuk
Promoted to Captain

Joseph

Organizations and individuals continue to show deep interest in
The Jewish News 7A.Z.A. overseas cigarette fund.
Through Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Altman, sPonsOrs of the Jewish
Radio Hours on Station WJLB, the following contributions were
received this week: Ladies' Auxiliary of Chesed shel Emes, $5;
David Horodoker Independent Ladies' Society, Mrs. Burton, presi-
Pvt. Joseph
dent, $5; and $1 each from the following: Mrs. A. Katz, 'Mrs. Gins- Mrs. Maurice
berg, Mrs. Honigman, Mrs. Zetlin.
A contribution for $5 received by A.Z.A. this week from Purity Cortland Ave.,
his mother was
Chapter, O.E.S., helped to swell the fund. '
A graduate
Additional acknowledgments were received from officers at
points of embarkation of Jewish News shipments of cigarettes to
soldiers overseas.
Readers of The Jewish News. desiring to contribute.; to the
overseas cigarette fund are asked to use this coupon:

L. Bale, son of
I. Bale, of 3359
is now overseas,
notified this week.
of Central high
school, he was
attending Mich-
igan State Col-
lege when he
enlisted in the
reserve corps in
April, 1943. He
was captain of
three sports at
Central baseball,
basketball and
cross country.
His team won
Pvt. Bale
the Metropolitan
Detroit high school basketball
championship in 1942. He earned
seven athletic letters at Central
and a letter at MSC for fresh-
man basketball.
* * *
Sgt. Jack Geliebter, after 20
months in the service, is home
visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
A. Geliebter,w
3026 Clements
Ave.
Sgt. Geliebter
has been sta-
tioned s om e-
where in Alaska
and this is his
first furlough. A
Cum Laude grad-
uate of North-
ern high school,
he attended the Sgt. Geliebter
Detroit Business Institute before
entering the service. He received
his basic training in Texas.
• * *
Maurice Levin, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Meyer. Levin of 3342 Ful-
lerton, has beeri advanCed from
Seecind to First Lieutenant in
the Signal Corps. He is stationed
at the Army Air Base at Dyers-
burg, Tenn., and is the • officer
in charge at the 373rd sub-sta-
tiOn for air command.

•••••''' " s"F:3•: •:••

By. Danny Raskin

THANKS . . . To the Variety
Club . . . It'll bring its portable
projection outfit and present a
film program before the stage
show, at the Louis Marshall-
Listening Post All-Star Bond
Show at the Jewish Center this
Tuesday night . . . Also to Her-
man Jacobs and the Jewish Cen-
ter for swell co-operation and use
of the auditorium . . . It'll really
be a show of shows, so don't miss
it . .. Will start at 8 p. m. . . .
Admission . . . "A Clear Con-
science."
* * *
RETIRED welterweight cham-
pion of Michigan, Morrie Sher-
man, is with the Navy at Camp
Bennion, Farragaut, Idaho . . .
Lt. Harold Coblenz, former club
leader at the Jewish Center, was
in town looking handsomer than
ever.
* * *
AFTER emseeing the first show
at the State Guard Armory last
Friday nite, we stayed to watch
Mickey Wolfe saxing with his
little band to put on a terrific per-
formance ... His brother, Stanley
Wolfe, on the drums, wowed the
boys with his character singing,
and Ray Battani squeezed a solid
- accordian •. . . Boss Ben Johnson,
the furniture man, was there .. .
Vocalists were Maxine Harris and
Peggy Dermer, and Murray Sabin
took us back to his- harmonica
days with Borrah Minnevich .. .
(They'll all be on the bond show.)
* * *
•
LT. BERNARD B. BROWN was
on a mine-sweeper clearing the
South Pacific waters . . . After the
job was finished he signalled to
a nearby ship that everything was
okey and then went over to board
it . .. He asked to see the deck
officer and who should it be but
his old buddy and schoolmate
from Detroit, Martin Lattin, now
an ensign. Thousands of miles
of water and they meet.

REMEMBER your WAR
CHEST gift . . . A life depends
on you! .. . The date of the sec-
ond Holiday Hop at the Jewish
Center will be Sunday, Nov. 21
. . Julius • Friedman left fcir serv-
ice last Friday and Pvt. Morrie
Rosen hellos from. North Africa
. . . Jimmy Littman, the colurim's
favorite singer, has been released
from the Army . : . He'll be out-
Sinatra'ing Sinatra on the bond
show, Tuesday nite.
* * *
SEE YOU at the bond how,
Tuesday =nite.

Guist Family Club
Aids in War Effort

Guist Family Club, an organi-
zation originally organized to
serve as a social clubs is doing its
share toward aiding in the war
effort..
As part of its war service pro-
gram, the club has accumulated
and donated over 300 pounds of
clothing to the Russian War Re=
lief Agency, on Nov. .2. Alsci'
under the guidance of Irving
Gerger, the club is planning a
13lood Bank Drive and a Bond
Drive.
Officers of the Club are: Mor-
ris G. Drapkin, president; Israel
Zinstain, vice- president; Mrs.
.Morris G. Drapkin, secretary-
treasurer; Sy Vinocur, sergeant-
at-arms; George .White, chaplain.

MONUMENT ,UNVEILING
The Children of the late Jennie
Garfinkel invite relatives and
friends to attend the Unveiling of
the monument over her toinb-
stone at 1:30 p. m. on Sunday,
Nov. 7, at Beth Tefilo Emanuel
Cemetery, Woodward Ave. and
•Road. Rabbi Joseph
Eisenman will officiate.

JEWISH NEWS OVERSEAS CIGARETTE FUND

Money enclosed is for the purchase of cigarettes to be
distributed free among men serving in the armed forces
overseas.

Name of individual
or organization

Address

..

Amount

Donations may be sent to THE JEWISH NEWS, 21I4
Penobscot Bldg., or A. Z. A. Office, 606 Murphy Bldg.

I

Our Letter Box

AL SEGAL ON HIS

TOAST TO THE ARABS

Editor, The JeWish News:
Your commentary on my col-
umn entitled "My Cousin" is
based almost entirely on a gar-
bled statement of what it con-
tained.
I did quote the Arab as saying
that if I, the Jew, insisted on
taking over the government of
Palestine where has been resid-
ing these 2,000 ,years he should
feel obliged to slit my throat. If,
however, I came to Palestine
with the more modest intention
of working there and helping to
make the country good in co-
operation with the Arabs he
Would welcome me.
You quote this correctly. But
then you say: "And to this the
columnist (meaning Me) saw fit
to drink another forbidden cock-
tail with his Arab 'cousin.'
This looks to me like a delib-
erate distortion of what I did
drink to.
What I actually wrote was
this:
"He (the Arab) raised the
glass . . 'I drink,' he said, 'not
to Arab power, not to Jewish
power but to equal power based
on jUptiCe and er-St a rid in
"I: ,54. I could .
that
and dfank it , down
deed."
That's 'quite different from
drinking to. Jewish- t • hroats being
•-
•
of course, drinking, to, .equal
jiliStike. in :Palestine doesn't" suit
the Zionist taste which calls for
the stronger
drink of an eXclu-
,
Sive' Jeivish state in Palestine.
.
What •-I . drank to was the, bi-na-
tional- state., proposed •• by Dr.
Magnes than .,wh_oin ' there
no
more saintly_ Jew, ..no - more .en
lightened- ZioniSt.
--
-
You Zionists will accept • the
bi-national- state eventually,..___An
exclusive -Jewish commonwealth
is a moot issue. The Arabs never
will stand for it. The British: gov-
ernment, in deference to the
large population -of Arabs, will
never grant it. The Jews can't
fight for it. So why not be real-
istic and take the first best thing
— a binational state?
Sincerely,
ALFRED SEGAL.

. Commentator's Reply

Based on this letter alone, Al
Segal loses the right to speak of
"garbled" statements . ' and "dis
tortion" of. factS. When "a Jewish
writer, in justification 'of his
throat-slitting suggestions in the
course
a drinking party with
an Arab, Make§ the Charge that
".drinking to equal justice in
Palestine* doesn't • suit' the Zionist
taste which calls fOr the stronger
drink
an exclusive Jewish
state in Palestine," he beeOnies a
tool in the Hands of Arab ex-
tremists who thrive on such mis-
statements of facts.
This is the type of misrepre-

of

a

sentation. of actual facts which
incites to trouble. Anyone who
wants to know the truth with re-
gards to Jewish aspirations for a
Jewish Commonwealth can get
them without making the out-
rageous charge that the call is
for "an exclusive Jewish state."
Mr. Segal should read his own
column to see the danger in it,
and he should read The Jewish
News Commentator's remarks
relative to the justice of the
Zionist position which does not
seek- the unjust expropriation of
a single Arab. What . a pity that
an able pen like Al Segal's
should be dipped in venom and
should be used to harm his
people.
--P. S.
* * *
Thank You, David!
Editor, The Jewish News:
You are doing a good job, I
hope the people of Detroit ap-
preciate it.
DAVID. A. BROWN
812 Wm. Fox Bldg.
Los Angeles, Calif.
Dedicated to Mothers of Men
in the Armed Forces
.DORIS LEE• -ABRAMSOHN
•

-

•

• •

A Mother' s Prayer

. a

Obituaries

Mrs. Gertrude Copeland, 80, of
2080 W. Euclid Ave., died, at her
home Saturday. Funeral serv-
ices were held Sunday, and
burial was in Machpelah. Ceme-
tery. She came to the 'United
States from Germany 55 years
ago and resided in Detroit 27-
years. Her survivors are a son,
Lawrence of Owosso, and three
daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Hassen
and Mrs. Anna Chernfek of De,
troit and Mrs. Sarah Rosenbaum
of Cincinnati.

Abraham T. Kellman, 65, of
2670 Gladstone Ave., died Oct.
28. Funeral services were held at
Lewis Bros. Oct. 29. Burial was
in _Clover Hill ,Cemetery. The
survivors are his wife, Anna;
two sons, Samuel and Jacob; a
daughter, Taissa; a brother, Max,
and two sisters, Mrs. • Frances
Manheim and Ida Kellman.

Celia Horowitz of 1927 Pingree
died Oct. IS at the age of -62.
Funeral services were held from
the Ira Kaufman Funeral Home
Rabbi Nathan offici,ated. She is
survived by her husband, Jacob;
daughter, Sarah; • sister,- Mrs.
Tania Kutlov; four brothers ;
Solomon, Isadore and Joseph
Budnitsky of Detroit, Abraham
of California.

Sarah Ginsberg of 3289 Glen-
dale died Oct. 29- at the age of
74. She is survived by four
children, 'Ethel, Harry, Michael
and Philip. Funeral services
were - from the Ira Kaufman
Funeral Home. • Rabbi Isaac Stoll-
man .officiated.
• . •
•
Dora Hirshfield of 2749 Cort-
land died Oct. 29 at the age of
57. Funeral services •• were held
from the Ira . Kaufman Funeral
Home. Rabbi 'Harold ROsenthal
and Cantor J. H. Sonenklar of-
ficiated. She leaves her husband,
Leon; three children, Lyle • of
the U. S. Army, Sanford and
Mrs. Zora, Horowitz; one sister,

-

- -

-

Each nite before I go ta..„ bed:.
I saly a little prayer.
That my tWo boy's - keep . sate and
....
well.
While fighting over there;
-•

love them very. Mitch,
YoU - See,.
•
They .meari'the world to me,. -
Acid . 004h I • Miss- theni—still I
'' •
That's -how thin,gs.haVe. to

I still can,see their,-srniling
e d .gpodbye;-
When: thly
I know ,how-had:they must have
-: - felt . • t.
They 'tried hard not to cry.

And my heart went out to them,
As, they marched away.
So young—so strong and unafraid,
Each going alone his way.

Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Nosanchuk
received word thiS week that
their son, Lt. Joseph I. Nosan-
chuk, had been promoted to the
rank of Captain.
Lt. Nosanchuk
is a former Pon-
t i a c physician.
4:His present post
is at Majors
Field Station
Hospital, Green-
ville, Tex., hav-
ing been trans-
ferred th er e
from Perrin
Capt. NosanchukField after com-
pleting a course in laboratory
medicine at University of Penn-
sylvania Post-Graduate School in
Philadelphia. He is a graduate of
Wayne College of Medicine and
holds the B. S. degree from the
University of Detroit.

•

His father is an active leader
in local congregations and in
Mizrachi.

CLASSIFIED
LINERS

accepted from responsible
firms or persons by telephone up to
10 a. m. Wednesday. Rates: 25e a
line. Minimum two lines.

RAndolph 7956

ESTABLISHED apartment to share
with congenial girl aged 20 to 30.
Exchange references. 3825 Tyler.
H. 9762.

FURNISHED room for gentleman. TY.
5-6014.

LARGE comfortable room for lady.
TO. 6-3608.

YOUNG lady wanted for bookkeeper
and general offiCe work. Good salary
for one who qualifies. Call any eve-
ning after 6. TO. 8-8383.

ROOM FOR RENT—Nicely furnished,
3310 Rochester. Apt. 101. Mornings,
evenings, or Sunday.

ROOM TO RENT-1 or 2 business
girls. Northwest Section. TO. 5-1281.

SALESLADIES — Polish speaking, ex-
perienced' salesladies for. dresses.
coats, lingerie, children's wear. and
yardgoods department. Steady posi-
tions, 44-hour week. Salaries from
835 to $50 weekly. Splendid opportu-
nity for advancement. See Mr. Can-
tor at Rosenberg's Department
Store, Michigan, corner 30th.

FURNISHED ROOM in apartment.
Kitchen privileges. Strictly kosher.
Can be seen after 6 p. M. and all day
Saturday and Sunday. 2995 Pingree,
Apartment A-24.

AFTER ALL

APT. PRICES today, are only a frac-
tion of replaceinent construction .costs
—less than half original sales values.
Pay you to g;-et all the Facts and Fig-
ureS from Mr. Bedford right away.

17 APTS. Wonderful location, Alter
Road. Attractive solid brick marble
entrance; very clean; only $10,000. Ea-.
sy terms.

20 APTS. N. Wood. Modern 3 rms.
full tiled baths, shoWers, carpeted
floors, new stoves, new refrig., stoker.
new auto. hot water. Rent $12,000.,
Terms, $30,
000 cash to deed and mort-
gage. ,

13 APT. Webb Ave. Attractive, -well-
Inside of me I have this fear,
built. excellent cond. Rent $5,300. Only
And though I tell no one. _
$28,000 Terms $15,000 cash to deed
I cannot visualize my boys.
and mortgage.
_Killing with a gun.
..
•
10 APTS. All 4 rms., 2 bedrooms, extra
I cannot see them facing death,
wide bldg. on 60-ft. lot. New refrig.,
•
For they're so full of life.
stoker. rent $5,000, tenants pay elec-
Their world was peace and happi- tric. Sold once $57,000. Entire price
ness.
•only. $27,500, terms $7,500.
Not blood , and sweat and strife.

And yet I'm proud to have such sons,
Upholding "Democracy!'
Upon their shoUlders lies the task,
Of keeping our land free:-

HOMER WARREN.& Co.

CA. 0321.

And so we mothers, sweethearts and
wives,
Must have faith as -never before,
And perhaps our prayers will be
answered soon,
And we'll see the end of this war!

Mrs. Louis R. Cohn of "Great
Neck, N. Y., and five brothers,
Robert and Max Rosenberg of
Muskegon, Arthur and Joseph
of Detroit, Jack of Florida.
*
Samuel Cooper of 9590. Broad-
street . died Oct. 23. in Miami,
Fla, Funeral ,services were held I.
Oct. 29 from the Chesed Shel
Ernes with Rabbi A. M. Hersh-
man officiating. He is survived
by his Wife, Jeanette; four chil-
dren, Morris, Jack, Bessie Roth-
stein and Leah Fertel.
(atecIficifmrbyn

--- MONUMENT UNVEILING
The unveiling of a monument
over the grave of the late Hyman
Rosenthal of Ann _Arbor will
take place at 2 P. M. Sunday, -
Nov. 7, at Machpelah Cemetery,
Relatives. and friends are invited
to attend the ceremony.

BUSINESS

or

INDIVIDUAL

LOA S

on

MACHINERY & EQUIPMENT
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
WAREHOUSE RECEIPTS

'

•

• •

Auto Loans—Refinancing
Repair Bills Financed

• • •

.

PERSONAL
SIGNATURE ONLY

UNION

INVESTMENT CO.

Abraham Cooper, Pres.

320 Fort St. West of Wayne
9629 Livernois at Grand River
CH. 7474
23rd YEAR

4110111

