Friday; January -26, 1945 Pvt.• Grossman First Gold Star At Shaarey Zedek Dies 3 Days After Suffering Wounds In Belgium, Just Before 20th Birthday Pvt. Mordecai Grossman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Grossman, 2688 Glynn. Ct., died of wounds suffered Dec. 20 during the Ger- man breakthrough in Belgium, his- parents have been informed by the War De- - • partment. H e died Dec. 23. His will be the first gold star on Shaarey Zedek's . roster of ser- vicemen. - P v t . .Gross- man, who would • have been 20 on Jan. 3, was in Patton's Third Pvt. Grossman Army. In.ducted in April 1943, he served in the Engineering Corps and• had been doing office work in England when he requested a transfer to combat duty at the •front. The young soldier • was grad- uated from Central high in 1942. He also was a. graduate of the United Hebrew Schools and of the Shaarey Zedek •Sunday School. He had been active in Hashomer Hatziar and other Jewish groups and his ambition •was to go to Palestine. Prior to his induction he at- tended Wayne University. While in camp he conducted services in the absence of the Jewish chaplain. Dr. A. M. Hershman, rabbi of Shaarey Zedek, eulogized Pvt. Grossman at Sabbath services. To Mordecai Grossman Killed in Action in France December 23, 1944 BY ABRAHAM CAPLAN - Slaclagn not the tempo of the Hora, Though he no longer sets the pace of the dancing. k: It. was not the dance which so enthrall- ed him; This whirling • of young people was but the token Of a nation, old so long, coming again into flower. Tall, broad-shouldered, kerchief around his neck, His untutored voice singing his be- loved Hebrew, He looked beyond the driving prepara- tory tasks Assigned to him by other fervent youths To fruitful exertions as workman and Halutz In the land which was sweeter to him than very life. This restless child of freedom who divined his mission Hurled himself into the battle at the enemy's gates And challengingly fought his war and died For majestic liberation—Israel's and the world's. Slacken not the tempo of the,. Hora, You who knew and greatly 1ored him. Remember the sacrifice which dar- ingly he brought And keep the name of your fallen comrade glowing 4 With the unabating flame of pure, adoring hearts. Sgt. Horvitz Gets Gallantry Award Detroiter Wins Silver Star; Volunteers to Evacuate Wounded in France "For gallantry in action near Dornot, France", reads the cita- tion announcing the award of the Silver Star to Sgt. Harry S. M. Horvitz. During the battle on the Mo- selle River while fighting with G e n . Patton's 3, Third Army, Sgt. Horvitz, a mem- ber of a recon- ftaissance p 1 a - toon, volunteer- ed to drive an ambulance for the medical sec- tion. He repeat- edly evacuated the wounded Sgt. Horvitz despite heavy enemy fire. Sgt. Horvitz is also the recipient of the Purple Heart. A graduate of Central High, he has been in the army since Feb. 12, 1941 and overseas since April, 1942. He spent 18 months in Iceland and from there was sent to England and Ireland. In July, 1944 he was transferred to France and then to Germany. He is married to the former &papa Kovargky. / THE JEWISH NEWS. Martin Selik Gets Promotions in Navy During the past two months Martin Selik has received two promotions, h i s more recent to the rank of Pharmacist Mate Third Class. In civilian life he was a regis- • ter ed pharma-, cist in the ploy of the Ash- PM 3/c Selik erson Pharmacy. T-Sgt. M. Benson Awarded Bronze tar in France Mr. and Mrs. Louis Benson, 18490 Strathrnoor Rd., have re- ceived word that their son, T/Sgt. Morton E. Benson, ha:w.: been awarded the Bronze Star for heroic action in Fran-ce. Having .?".• fought on four different fronts, he wears four battle stars. A Central high graduate, T/Sgt. Benson, operated a sportswear es- tablishment on E. Jefferson Ave. T/ftt. Behson before entering service almost three years ago. First sent to England, he has been overseas 18 months. He is attached to the ground crew of the air corps. His wife, Sylvia, resides with her parents in Yonkerq, N. Y. A brother, S/Sgt. Arthur, is serving with the medical corps at Ft. Lewis, Wash. DeRoven Conducting Friday Evening Services Overseas Detroiter Makes Use of His Knowledge of Hebrew at His Post in Belgium Pfc. Clarence 'DeRoven, 22, is utilizing his knowledge of He- brew in conducting Friday eve- ning services for the Jewish men in t his area. Since there is no Rabbinical Chaplain, P f c. DeRoven has as- sumed the Ire- sponbility of ar- ranging and ex- ecuting the re- ligious -services for the men of his faith. The son • of Pfc. DeRoven Mrs. Laura DeRoven, 2753 Hazel- wood Ave., he is a graduate of Northwestern and of the United Hebrew Schools. He had com- pleted two years at the Walsh College of Accountancy and was employed in the accounting de- partment of the Hudson Motor Car Co., while continuing his course in night school. Inducted on Dec. 30, 1943, he received his basic training in Texas and his ordnance training at Ft. Snelling, Minn. He was sent to England in July, 1944, and from there to France. At present he is stationed some- where in Belgium. Pfc. DeRoven is attached to a Railway Operation Battalion of the Transportation Corps. Organizations Serve Functions of USO, JWR Navy Promotes Rabbi Mark to Lt. Commander Page Twenty-One Pfc. cavern Wins Bronze Star for Actiot at Metz Brothers Reunited On English Visit; Sgt. Klein Wounded . Detroiter's Brother Chaplain at Pearl Harbor; Praises USO Photo Service. Mrs. Harry Buchman of. 3410 Chicago Blvd. was informed this week that her brother; Rabbi Julius Mark of -Nashville, Tenn., has been pro- moted to tenant - Com- mander in . his Chaplain's post in the U. S. Navy. Lt. Comm. Mark, well" known to many . Detroiters, hay- It. Comm. Mark ,ing lectured at Temple Beth El and before the Jewish National Fund, is believed to hold the highest rank among Jewish Chaplains in the NaVy. He has held his Nashville Post for 17 years. He at present is stationed in Pearl Harbor. He received his Ph. D. degree from Vanderbilt University. Commenting on the photo services being rendered by the Detroit USO, under the direction of Isidore Arnold Berger, es- pecially during the special ser- vicemen's event arranged by the Men's Club of Congregation Shaarey Zedek at which the Buchmans' photographs also were taken to- be sent to relatives in service, Dr. Mark commended highly the USO and the Shaarey Zedek Men's Club. Sgt. Levine Meets Lt. Woll in Italy Sgt. Arnold Levine has had the good fortune to be stationed with his close friend, - Lt. Louis Woll, somewhere in Italy. Lt. Woll, son of Mr. arid Mrs. Woll of Dexter 'had been report- ed missing sev- eral months ago, but since then >: has returned to his unit. ' Sgt. Levine, w h 0 received the Presidential citation in De- Sgt. Levine cember, was inducted into the army on Jan. 18, 1943. He pre- viously had owned and operated a tavern. Born and educated in Pittsburgh., he had been living in Detroit for nine years. Sgt. Levine, overseas since January 1944, is the -husband of Mrs. Sharon Levine and the son of Mrs. I. Levine both of 3305 Elmhurst. A sister-in-law, Yeoman _ 3/c Ruth Cohon is serving with the navy at Washington, N. C. HA2 C Alan M. Kohn Gets Boot Training - Seaman Hospital Apprentice 2nd Class Alan M. Kohn, son of Dr. and Mrs. M. E. Kohn of 1039 Vinewood Ave., is completing his boot training at Great Lakes Na- val Station, Illi- nois, and is ex- pected home in two weeks for a brief furlough. HA '2/c Kohn was a pre-med- ical student at the University of Michigan:-. when he enlist- ed in the Navy last November. HA 2/C Kohn He was graduated with honors from ''Western High School 1 a s t June - and was editor-in-chief of the - school publication, • "The Round-Up." He studied at the Shaarey Zedek school, was grad- uated from Temple Israel High School and was Bar Mitzvah at Congregation Bnai Moshe. Organizations which served at the Downtown USO, and at oth 7 er Jewish Welfare Board and at Romulus Air Base functions dude the following: Women's Auxiliary of Jewish Home for Aged, Women's Auxil- iary of United Hebrew Schools, Young Women's Mizrachi, Sister- hood of Bnai David, David Horo- doker Independent Ladies' So- Painting Paperhanging ciety, Sisterhood of Shaarey Zed- Paint That Washes--Guaranteed Jobs ek, 'Youth. - :Education League, RCArner Progresive Verein. M. Green & Son HO. 4020 . Sgt, Klein Capt. Klein Sgt. Herman Klein, 20, and his brother, Capt. Sander P. Klein, were united in England when a visit was arranged 'by •the Red Cross after Sgt. Klein had been sent to England for hospitaliza- tion. Serving with infantry in France, he was wounded in the thigh by mortar fragments. The son of Mr. and Mrs: Simon Klein, 17572 Stoepel Ave., he is a Central High graduate and was attending Wayne University as a pre-medical student until his enlistment on July 1, 1943. First stationed at Camp Grant, Ill., he had been overseas for six months., Capt. Klein is with the medical corps in England. Bnai Moshe Votes Free Membership For Ex - Servicemen Congregation Bnai Moshe board has voted that free mem- bership for one year be granted to veterans honorably discharged in order to encourage participa- tion of ex-servicemen in the synagogue, and to help them avail themselves of its facilities. . Already, ex:servicemen have availed themselves of this oppor- tunity. This is one of the many plans that are being - -made to facilitate the reorientation and re- adjustment of servicemen to the synagogue. Congregation Bnai Moshe has at present close to 300 men in all branches of the service. Letters signed by Rabbis Moses Fischer and Jacob J. Nathan, are to be sent to Bnai Moshe serv- icemen, informing them of this resolution. • Pfc. Stanley M. Gavern, with the 95th Infantry Division in Germany, has been awarded the Bronze Star for courageous and meritorious service against. the enemy in his division's successful operations against Metz, his par- ents, Mr. an d Mrs. Meyer Ga- vern of 3332 Cle- ments, have learned. An ammuni- • tion handler, Pfc. Gavern roll- ed wire from his own unit to the leading ele- merit in the as- sault undergoing heavy enemy Pfc. Gavern fire and then directed his mortar 'crew to a position behind a fort from which accurate fire was brought down upon the enemy in support of the attack. Pfc. Gavern is still hospitalized in • England, recovering from a Wound received on Nov. 16. He is the recipient of the Purple Heart. • Pfc. Cavern, 19, was graduated from Cass High in January 1944, having majored in mefalurgical chemistry. In the army since February 1944, he left for Eng in September and from there was transferred to France. His brother, Lt. Allan J., is stationed at the base weather sta- tion at Abilene, Tex. Buy War Bonds! MONDAY'S SINGING SENSA- TION is this handsome gent with dream-stuff in his justly famous voice. Jerry Wayne is his Afame —and he's on Monday on Bor- den's new radio show. Starring lovable Ed Wynn, with Mark Warnow, and Elsie, Elmer and Beulah. WXYZ, 9:00 p. m. EWT. Sponsored by Detroit Branch of American Committee of Jewish Writers, Artists and Scientists SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2:30 P. M. Bnai Moshe Hall, Dexter and Lawrence PARTICIPANTS: B. Z. GOLDBERG of New York Associate Editor of Der Tog DR. A. M. HERSHMAN Rabbi of Congregation. Shaarey Zedek RABBI MOSES FISCHER Of Congregation Bnai Moshe S. LIFSHITZ Mich. Sec't. Jewish People's Fraternal Order In memoriam for martyrs of the war, Gantor David Katzman chanting the El Molei Rachamim Jewish People's Choir. directed. by Henri Goldberg. r .Admission Free