Page Sixfeen Israel Aronovitz Gives Life to Help Capture Saipan THE JEWISH NEWS David H. Sachs Named Sergeant At Bomber Base Single Handedly Blasts Pill- A NINTH AIR FORCE BOMB- box to Enable Troops ER BASE—Promotion of Cpl. to Get Ashore David H. Sachs, former Detroit Mr. and Mrs. William Arono- vitz of 2292 Clairmount were in- formed recently by the War De- partment of the death of their son, Pfc. Israel- Aronovitz, 23, who was wound- ed while storm- ing Jap positions at Saipan, this month. After servin In the Atoll and Gilbert Island campaigns, P f c. Aronovitz moved with the 2nd Pfc. Aronovitz Marine Division attacking Ta- rawa in November, 1943. It was On a Tarawa beach that Arono- vitz displayed courage and forti- tude that won for him the admi- ration of every man in his unit. In the initial thrust, U. S. Forces were prevented from making a landing by a stubborn Jap pill- box which raked the American barges with deadly fire, taking many casualties. Aronovitz leaped into the water and waded ashore with a pack-mortar on his back. He as- sembled it under sniper fire and single-handedly destroyed the pillbox. For this "gallantry in action" he was given a citation from Ad- miral Chester W. Nimitz which expressly stated that it was "im- possible to land barges ashore until his (Aronovitz's) mission was carried out." He subsequent- ly was awarded the Silver Star. Previous to his enlistment in /942, Aronovitz was a produce manager at Packer's Outlet and later was employed by the Bohn Aluminum Co. He served over- seas for more than a year. Besides his parents, Aronovitz is survived by three brothers, Al- bert, Harry and Morris, who is a member of a USAAF ground crew in France; and four sisters, Mrs. Fred Kohen, Mrs. Morris Brotsky„ Marian and Dorothy. Rules Relating To Shipment of Hanukah Parcels Postmaster Roscoe B. Huston announces that gift parcels to Jewish members of our armed forces overseas for Hanukah should be mailed during the same period, from Sept. 15 to Oct. 15, and under the same con- ditions as "apply to Christmas parcels to other armed forces. Parcels must not be more than five pounds in weight, 15 inches in length or 36 inches in com- bined length and girth. Such gift parcels which may be mailed without request there- fore should be conspicuously en- dorsed "For Jewish Holiday." Hanukah starts this year on Sunday night, Dec. 10. Pfc. Schwartz Suffers Leg Wounds in Italy Mrs. Bella Korin of 3741 Col- lingwood was informed this week that her son, Pfc. George Schwartz, a medical corpsman, was wounded in action in Italy. Schwartz, who is 26, suffered - leg wounds on May 21. 09LE "oN ;Pima(' 'HDIN `IioHiLaa 011id 3 aDvisod - S athletic coach, to the rank of sergeant upon recommendation of his squadron commander, Lt.- Col. William E. Hale, of Ash- land, Ky., has been announced here. Sgt. Sachs is assistant to the Special Service Officer of the Ninth Air Force Sgt. Sachs Silver Streak's Marauder group. He arranges athletic programs and supervises recreation and entertainment for the men. A graduate of Central High School, Sachs is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Sachs, 3329 Leslie Ave. He was basketball and baseball coach at St. Joseph Commercial College, Detroit, for 11 years. From 1940 until the time he enlisted at Fort Custer, in Oct- ober, 1942, he was employed by the Ford Motor Co. as a follow- up material man on the Sperry Director and the M-4 tank. Lt. Ted Margolas Home, Describes 2 Of Thirty Missions Recalls Falling 2,000 Feet Over England Before Chute Opened First Lt. Ted Margolas, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. Margolas of 3742 Glynn, is visiting his par- ents this week after returning from England. Attached t o the Eighth Air Force in Eng- land, Bombar- d i e r Margolas served overseas for six months, and is a veteran of 30 missions over the contin- Lt. Margolas ent. He was awarded the Dis- tinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal with four Oak Leaf Clusters. Lt. Margolas also is holder of a Presidential Citation awarded his entire unit. Margolas recalls two except- ionally vivid occurrences: Once, when he was forced to bail out over England, his chute refused to • open. Margolas fell 2,000 feet before managing to rip it open with his hands. Another time, Margolas' squad- ron was attacked by 40 German planes. Blasting their way out, the squadron roared homeward across the channel. Two engines of his bomber were knocked out, and, as the plane neared Eng- land, a fire broke out in the radio room. However, because of the pilot's skillful crash land- ing, the crew escaped injury. Before he enlisted in 1942, Margolas was employed by the Fisher Body Corp. He was grad- uated from Northern High. * * * ALBERT SCHULMAN, S2/C, is serving with the amphibious force at Camp Bradford, Va. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schulman of 2925 Glen- dale Ave. Friday, luly . P9sPr JDC Aids Yemenite Jews Relief, Medical and Immigration Aid Given Jews From Yemen Who Are Stranded in Aden - e ditor's Note: One of the most tragic chapters of 20th century Jewish history relates to the unhappy position of the persecut&I Jews in the Arabic country of Yemen. The Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, with funds received through the United Jewish Appeal for Refugees, Overseas Needs and Palestine, through the War Chest of Metropolitan Detroit, has come to the assistance of the Yemenite Jews now stranded in Aden. Thousands of Yemenite Jews have thus been helped to settle in Palestine. This report is from the current issue of the JDC Digest. Not all JDC activities stem from Axis-inspired tragedy. One dramatic program of aid now car- ried on by the JDC for Jews from Yemen dem- onstrates how the JDC helps in any emergency which may overtake Jews anywhere in t h e world. The progress of the Yemenites from their homes in Yemen, a small sun-baked strip at the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula, to Pales- tine, a journey not long when measured in miles, has been slow and difficult, beset with illness and virtual starvation. The life of the Jews in Yemen has always been • one of misery and deprivation and since the first World War, their lot has become almost unbearable. Discriminatory laws were passed limiting their employment. They were forbidden to do any agricultural work. Although famed as silversmiths, they were not allowed to buy metal. Transactions involving money were for- bidden to them. It was illegal to ride camels and donkeys, the common mode of transporta- tion in Yemen. Jewish testimony was • not ad- missible in the courts; they were looked upon as devils whose very touch is contagious. Maintain Their Jewish Culture Even in the face of such hardships they have maintained their Jewish culture. Because of famine and epidemics hundreds of Jews died. Since according to Moslem law, Jewish orphans under the age of 13 must become Moslems, Jew- ish families became parents overnight of 2 and 3 children orphaned by the epidemic. An intensely religious group, they maintained their religious schools for all children between the ages of 4 and 12 in spite of the additional economic burden involved. As a result, in a land where ninety- five per cent of the population is illerate, not one Yemenite Jew is unable to read and write. Yemenite law strictly forbids Jews to leave the country and the penalty for attempted es- cape is death. Armed with the knowledge, how- ever, that very little could be worse than the conditions under which they were forced to exist, large numbers of Yemenites have in recent years managed to cross the border into Aden, a British Crown Colony, as the first step in their journey to Palestine. Many traveled by foot; the more fortunate rode donkeys which they sold at the border. Like their co-religionists who fled from occupied Europe into Spain, Switzerland; a n d Sweden, they came to this new land penniless and with few possessions. Serious Relief Problem Arose On arriving_ in Aden their troubles seemed only to multiply. They found themselves subject to long delays. In addition to the difficulty of securing Palestine certificates from the Jewish Agency, they had to wait because of the shortage of shipping space from Aden to the Holy Land. As a result, a serious relief problem arose. The Jews of Aden to whom they naturally turned for help were in straitened circumstances themselves. These Orthodox Jews, numbering only about 4,000, live for the most part in a self-imposed neighborhood of four streets. They are engaged in commerce and trade or are em- ployed in offices. An unskilled worker earns' only between 30 and 40 cents a day, a skilled worker 60 cents, artisans $1.00 to $1.50; job assistants and office workers 20 to 35 cents a day. A man earning $60 a month is considered a member of the upper middle class. Before the war a family of five could live well according to East- ern standards on $10 a month. A central group manages the religious and charitable affairs of the community, such as providing food for the Jewish ward of 15 beds in the government hospital. Its budget of less than $200 is covered by schechita, marriage and divorce fees and income from a trust fund set up by a wealthy family. Although they con- tributed about $15,000 in cash and in kind to the 2,300 Yemenites who arrived in Aden in 1943, this was insufficient and the Yemenites were forced to beg in order to live. The Government's Ultimatum Many Yemenites were forced to find shelter in cellars, warehouses and tents. The government of Aden which had in the main been sympa- thetic to the refugees, issued a stern warning that unless conditions among the Yemenites were improved, drastic steps would have to be taken and the border would be barred to further im- migration. Urgent cables requesting aid reached the JDC's Lisbon office. In reply the first JDC ap- propriation to help solve the problem was made in March, 1943, when JDC allotted $25,000 to enable 600 Yemenites to reach Palestine. This grant was matched by the Jewish Agency and by relatives of the immigrants. In August JDC granted $30,000 for the trans- portation of an additional 1,000 to Palestine. as well as $3,400 for two months' relief in Aden. Later an additional $8,000 was granted. In December, the JDC dispatched a repre- sentative, Harry Viteles, from Palestine to sur- vey conditions in Aden and to effect an improve- ment. As the first step Mr. Viteles early this year secured a large ivory warehouse for their shelter. Shortly after, however, a severe typhus epidemic broke out necessitating quarantine for 1,300 of the refugees. Now the government of Aden insisted that immigrants would no longer be allowed to enter Aden. The JDC dispatched Dr. Israel Kligler, well- known public health authority of the Hebrew University, and three nurses to Aden. Dr. Kligler arranged for, the transfer of the refugees to a sanitary camp. The epidernic.,:w.as halted. Today the JDC is supplying • $10,000 monthly for relief and has authorized the expenditure of $40,000 to cover one-half of the transportation costs of 1,600 refugees to Palestine. Lt. Edelstein Cited Lt. Handler Views For Brave Command Camp Life Future In Postwar Era Arthur Edelstein, son of the Max Edelsteins of 1530 Lee Place has been advanced from Ensign Says Scientific Advance- to Lieutenant junior grade, in ments Made by War to the U. S. Navy. Improve Our Health Lt. (j.g.) Edelstein has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal by Vice Admiral T. C. Kincaid, Scientific advancements made USN, commander of the Seventh by the war are certain to im- Fleet, being cited for distinction in the battle off Aramer, New prove our outlook on physical ,„. c u 1 ture aspects Britain. The tank landing craft a n d to assure under Edelstein's command shot ;:better health for down 11 Japanese planes and our people, First probably destroyed six more. Lt. Lou Handler, who w a s here Cpl. Segall Returns last week on a From the Aleutians five - day f u s- Cpl. Mart Se- lough, stated. gall, brother of Lt. Handler Mr. and Mrs. c o m rnented on Harold J. Baskin, the future of has returned to Lt. Handler camp life when his home on a asked, during his Detroit visit, 22-day furlough. regarding the future status of Cpl. Segall has Camp Tamakwa, in Algonquin spent 28 months Park, which he organized and in the Aleautian directed. Islands. At present battery executive After his fur- lough, he will officer at Camp Stewart, Georgia, report for duty Lt. Handler revealed that Camp Tamakwa is well taken care of Cpl. Segall in Miami, Fla. and that plans are always being evolved to improve the grounds and to reopen it as soon as the war ends. Lt. Handler praised the Cana- Major Paul D. Bromberg has dian authorities for the manner been placed on inactive duty, af- in which they assured good care ter 22 months of service with the for the Tamakwa grounds. U. S. Army, and he has returned to the practice of accountancy Daniel Katz Leaves with officers in the Fox Bldg., it for Service in Army was announced this week. Starting as a civilian with the Daniel Katz, son of Mr. and War Department on Sept. 10, 1942, as a technical consultant, Mrs. Louis Katz of 18041 Griggs he was commissioned a Major on Ave., left Tuesday for the Army. Sept. 23. He was placed on in- Eighteen years old on March active duty on July 11. A graduate of the University 27, Daniel was graduated from of Michigan, class of 1925, Major Central High last January. In Bromberg practiced accountancy his final semester, he was editor since that time. of the school paper and, was one Major Bromberg. Reopens Offices Cpl. H. V. Kasoff Wounded 2nd Time Mr. and Mrs. Pauline Kasoff of 2334 Waverly Ave. were inform- ed recently by the War Depart- ment that their son, Cpl. Herman V. Kasoff, 19, was wounded in action in Italy, for the second time. Cpl. Kasoff is a veteran of the Italian campaign, and first suf- fered wounds on Nov. 28, 1943. At that time he was awarded the Purple Heart, and was hospital- ized in Africa. Serving with the 1st Special Service Force, Kasoff has been overseas more than a year. He was a student at Central High School at the time of his induc- tion. Pfc. Julius Rachmiel With Ground Crew At 19, Pfc. Julius Morton Bach- miel,, son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel of 2009 Calvert Ave., is making use of his civil- ian experiences to give his best to the service of his country. Stationed in Columbia, N. C., as First Mechan- ic with the Pfc. Rachmiel Ground C r e W, he has just completed his first year of active service. He is a graduate of Central High School and is a former president of one of the Detroit AZA Chapters. of the first members on the committee which formulated the plans for the school's teen-age night club, served as publicity director for the Club LaSalle. After graduation, Daniel at- tended Wayne U., and completed one semester.