Friday, March 3r, .1944 THE 'JEWISH NEWS Page Thirteen Five Brothers in Service Heroes of Warsaw Lt. Cooper Arrives Sgt. Ainbinder Home From Invasion Fronts Ghetto Honored in At Post in India Dresners Are Serving in Arm _ y Hadassah Campaign First Lt. Theodore I. Cooper, Sgt. Hyman Ainbinder, who And. Navy; One Is in China S2/C Dresner Pvt. J. Dresner Pfc. S. Dresner Pvt. Jo. Dresner - Among the outstanding con- tributors to the war effort in De- troit are Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Dresner of 18518 Santa Rosa, Ami 'Who have five sons in the arm- ' ed forces. C a p t. Morris Dresner, 34, as- signed to the Q u a r termaster Corps in charge of supplies, has been in service ,two years and is Capt. Dresner n o w stationed in China. He is a graduate of Eastern High School and studied in Columbia, Cornell and Har- vard. His wife is the former Mildred Adkin. The oldest of the five broth- ers, Pvt. Jack Dressner, 36, is an attorney; having graduated from Eastern High, University of Michigan> and Cornell University. He has been in the Army for 10 Capt. Fenton Views Medical Advance Since Pearl Harbor "The advances of medicine since Pearl Harbor are almost unbelievable," writes C a p t. Meryl • M. Fenton, former De- troit allergist, now in Dakar, CAPT. MERYL M. FENTON West Africa, in a letter to Dr. • Ruth Berkmarf who now is asso- ' ciated with his staff here. His letter, in part, follows: Being in Africa, away from family and friends, gives one plenty of time for reflection de- spite our busy schedule. _ There is so much to be thank- ful for even if we are engaged in a titanic struggle. The , ad- vances • of medicine since Pearl Harbor are almost unbelievable. Uncle Sam's low mortality rate is an everlasting tribute to Am ,- rican medical science. Message to Relatives If 'I can convey any message to my many friends back 'home, with sons, husbands, brothers and fathers in the service, it's this:, they are being well taken care of. Even the most agrava- ted. wound cases respond to im- mediate treatment and it is a constant source of satisfaction and pleasure to see our men completely recover from wounds and maladies. thal would. have cost their lives, without doubt, during World War I. I wish you• could . see this country; there is surprisingly a great amount of good business ▪ in evidence and the buildings are much more modern than ours; although they still stick to the old fashioned opens lifts and • have no central heating— just fireplaces. But you should See the native NEW YORK—Passover, which begins April 8, will mark the climax of a 42 day membership campaign launched Hadassah, the women's Zionist organization of America, and Junior Hadassah to commemorate the first anni- versary of the 42 day massacre of Polish Jews by the Nazis in the Warsaw ghetto. Each of the 100,000 members of. senior Hadassah and the 20,000 young men enrolled in Junior Hadassah has been asked to set a personal goal of at least one new recruit as her contribution to the drive which was opened simultaneously by chapters and units in nearly 700 communities throughout the country, accord- ing to Mrs. Herman Shulman of this city, national membership chairman of the senior organiza- tion. Miss Evelyn Ludwin of Ho- boken, N. J., and Miss Belle Mehl- sak of New York, membership co-chairman, are heading the drive for the Juniors. who is assigned to the Army Exchange Service, has arrived at his overseas post at New Delhi, India, Mrs. Cooper was informed last Friday. In service since June 21, 1942, Lt. Cooper, son of the late Sam- uel and Esther Cooper, studied months and is presenrtaking special courses at lilort Custer. Pfc. Sol Dresner, 27, a phy- siotherapist serving in the medi- cal corps has been in the Army eight rchtriths and is now at Nichols Hospital, Louisville, Ky. He is a graduate of Central High School and Cleveland School of Chiropody. His wife is the for- mer Mildred Auster. They have a 21/2-year-old 'daughter, Marcia Beverly, S2/C Milton and Pvt. Joseph Dresner, 18-year-old twins, are the other brothers in service. .Milton has been in the Navy three months. A Central High graduate and a student at Wayne LT. THEODORE I. COOPER at the time of his enlistment, he at the Army Exchange School is now studying to be a yeoman at Princeton University, and re- at Bainbridge, Md. Joseph, in ceived his commission July 7, service two months, is a Central Among the Red Cross nurses High graduate and studied at the who are risking their lives to 1942. He had been stationed at University of Michigan. He is cheer the Yanks with the Allied Camp Thomas A. Scott, Fort Wayne, Ind., Camp Breckin- now with the infantry at In- bridge, Henderson, Ky., was as- dianapolis Gap, Pa. signed to further studies at Princeton last October and was population! They are so fanati- sent to California recently be- cally set in their ways—the fore shipment overseas. ways of Biblical times. It seems He had studied at Princeton,• University of Michigan and at incongruous to see a native Wayne University. His marriage plowing with a team of donkey to Betty Hamburger took- place and camel, using a forked stick June 17, 1941. Mrs. Cooper is as a plow, in the shadow of a making her home with her par- modern building, a powerline or ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ham- one of our airports. It just does burger of 2423 Chicago Blvd. not seem right. Lt. C. H. Gershenson has been Directly from Bible promoted to captain. Enlisting in. Some of the roadside scenes August, 1942, he was commis- could be taken directly from the sioned in the Army Air Corps Bible, so closely do they dupli- on completion of his basic train- cate some of the pictures to ing at Miami Beach, Fla. He which we have become accus- was assigned to Buckley Field, tomed. The natives live, for the Denver. He was originally in most part, in poverty. Joseph's the Adjutant General's office "coat of many colors" would be' and later was an intelligence MISS CECILIA SHETZER a mild plaid compared with some' of the weird combinations 5th Army on the Italian front iS officer. He was president of Ned's Auto- Supply Co. I have seen." * * * Miss Cecilia Shetzer, daughter Before Capt. Fenton entered of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Shetzer. Sheldon Kushner, son of Mr. the service, he was a prominent Blair Moody, in his dispatches and Mrs. Morris Kushner, 15759 allergist here. His offices are to the Detroit News, this week Birwood Ave., was graduated as located at 1211 Eaton Tower. spoke of the work of these Red a second Lieutenant from the Recently, Dr. Berkman became Cross nurses, including Miss Mariana Advanced 'F l y i n g associated with his staff. She Shetzer. School, Florida, on March 12. He was formerly associated with A former supervisor in the was in Detroit on a furlough re- the hospital for Women of Detroit Department of Public cently. Maryland, and Jean's HoWtal, Welfare, Miss Shetzer, who en- * * * Philadelphia. Chaplain Louis Milgr * om of listed in May, 1942, going over- * * 1* seas last • July, is an- assistant 1670 Pingree has been pro- Dr. Harry M. Kirschbaum, of field direstor. She is a gradu- moted to the rank of Captain. 2240 Grand Blvd. has been pro- ate of Northern High School, moted to Lieutenant Colonel in University of Wisconsin and the Medical Corps. Wayne University. Miss Shetzer Ainong Red Cross Nurses With the 5th Army Buy War Bonds! has served overseas for 17 months, took part both in the African and Sicilian invasions. He is now home on a three-week furlough. During his overseas service, he had the good fortune of being able to 'visit Palestine, Egypt and other historical centers in the Middle East. Sgt. and Mrs. Ainbinder (Lil- lian Sutherland) are staying at the home of the latter's parents, 2507 W. Euclid. Pvt. Joseph Kline Wounded in Action Pvt. Joseph Kline, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Max Kline of 3292 Leslie Ave., is reported to have been wounded in action in Italy. Member of an anti-tank group, Kline has been awarded the Purple Heart. When he entered service last April, he was a sen- ior at Central High. He went overseas in September. His brother, Philip„ 22, is an air corps engineer corporal at Will Rogers Field, Okla. Chachmey Lubin Holds Memorial Dedication Louis Rose, vice-president of Yeshiv,ath Chachmey Lublin, will be chairman of the dedica- tion of the memorial plaques to be set up Sunday at 2 p. m., in the Yeshivath building, Lin- wood and Elmhurst. The memorial plaques of the rooms are dedicated by the fol- lowing: Mrs. Sarah Goldman in memory of her husband, Nathan Goldman, the Kushner family in memory of their parents, Re- becca and Isaac kushner; Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Newman in memory of their son, Mordechai; Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Spiegelman in memory of their daughter, Esther Dina; Robert S. Wisok, in memory of his father, David Aaron; and Mrs. Rose Wrotslav- sky, in memory of her husband, Max Wrotslaysky. 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