Page Fourteen! THE JEWISH HEN'S Pfc. II. M. Broder Wounded in Foot; Gets Purple Heart . S-Sgt. Jack Rouman Back from Overseas With Many Medals . Recuperating in Army Hos- pital in England; Over- • seas Since December Pfc. Harry M. Broder, 19, who received a shrapnel wound Jan. •12, in France, now is recuper- -eting in an army hospital some- where in,/ Eng- land. Pfc. Brod- er is the recip- ient of the Pur- ple Heart, He suffered a foot; injury. A _graduate of Central high, he was a student at Michigan State College at the time of his en- Pfc._ Broder iistment in May of 1943. He took his basic training at Camp Mc- Quade, Cal.., and was an ASTP engineering student at Stanford University until the collapse of the ASTI! program. • Sent to Bulkeley Field, Colo., he later was assigned as an . air student at Washington State Col- lege. When this branch of the air force service was discontinued, he was transferred to the in- fantry and was stationed at Camp Adair, Ore. From there he went to Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., and was shipped Overseas in De- cember of 1944. Pfc. Broder is the son of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Broder of 2285 Lawrence. Mr. Broder, a leader of Jewish affairs - in Detroit, is I the. president of the board of directors of the Jewish Com- munity Center: • S/Sgt. Jack Rouman, 25, who has the distinction of having participated in the first heavy bomber mission flown over oc- cupied Europe, has... returned to this country from his last. base in Italy. Overseas 32 months, he ser- ved in England, North Africa and ,Italy. S/S g t. Rou- man, who was a n Armament S/Sgt. Rouman Flight Squadron Chief and an armor gunner, brought down an enemy plane over Bucharest, Romania. With the 15th Air Force, he wears six battle stars, has received the Air Medal and has been awarded the Presi- dential Unit Citation and two Oak Leaf Clusters. He also possesses the Airplane Armor's Badge for special technical skills and abilities. A Wayne student majoring in educational psychology, he had completed two and one-half years when he enlisted on Jan. 27, 1942. He was sent overseas four months later. S/Sgt. Rouman has- two uncles in service. T/4 Morris M. Green- spon is in 'Wales at an Engineer- ing Repair Depot and Cpl. Sam- uel Greenspoon is with the 14th hospital train in France. They are his mother's brothers. S/Sgt. Rouman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert S. Rouman of 2744 Gladstone Ave. On March 26, 1943, The Jewish News published an essay in which S/Sgt. Rouman gave his version of the significance of the "Bill of Rights", 2 Graff Brothers, Pvt. Norm Kolin Seaman Kilberg Meet in England Fought With GIs Cpl. Morrie Graff, 28, stationed On (Jap Islands in England since April, 1943, has had the good fortune of meeting his brother, Cpl. Jack Graff, 23, Helped Keep Beaches Clear For Troops, Materiel as well as his brother-in-law, Pvt. Norman Kolin, 19. It was a And Aided Wounded • Despite the fact that BM 1/c Gabriel I. Kilberg, 22, is serving with the Coast Guard, he has spent almost as much time in foxholes as on the sea. He is a veteran of three amphibious at- tacks on Jap islands. As a member of a Coast Guard beach party, he went ashore with the first landing craft and help- ed keep the beach clear for incoming assault troops a n d ma- terial. He also gave first aid to wounded Yanks and helped cuate e in to S 1/c Kilberg hospital ship s. During. that period he spent a good share of the days in a fox- hole fighting like an infantry- man. "It was sure good to get back to my .ship", comented Kilberg. He is assigned to a landing ship tank, used as a Coast Guard "attack transport". Son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank- Kilberg, 9327 Martindale, he was graduated. from Central . high in June 1941 and ernisted the fol- lowing December. He received his Jewish education at Temple Beth El. Jack Graff, Morrie Graff thrilling experience for him to hear news of a son-who was born while he was overseas and whom he had never seen. . Morrie Graff is attached to an Air Depot while his brother, Jack, is a reconnaissote scout fighting somewhere in France: Pvt. Kolin is at an Ordnance De- pot in France. The Graff boys are the sons • of Mr. and Mrs. Graff of 2282 Glad- stone Ave. and Pvt. -Kolin is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Max Kolin of 9327 N. Martindale Ave.. Cpl. Morrie Graff was em- ployed by the United Shirt Dis- tributors before entering service and is the husband of the former Esther Kolin. They, have an 18- month-old son, Barry David. I Cpl. Jack Graff was an em- ploye of the Federal Department .Stores before entering service. Pvt. Kolin, who has been over- seas 14 months, was an engineer- ing student at the University of Detroit at the time of his in- 'Germans Segregating Jews Among Polish War Prison _ ers GENEVA, (JTA)—The Inter- national Red CroSs has received Greek Jewish Leaders Testify information that the - German Against Quisling Premiers ISTANBUL (JPS)—Represent- military authorities have divided atives of the Jewish-Cominunity Polish war prisoners - into Jewish Councils of Athens and Salonika and non-Jewish 'Categories. Jewish circles . are urging that have been called to testify at the trial here of the first 25 Greek a competent international organ- quislings to be brought to trial ization make strong interventions on charges of collaboration with immediately • to , prevent harm the Germans. The Jewish testi- from coming to the Jewish pHs ,- mony is to be directed mainly oners. at three former Premiers: John Rallis, George Tsolakoglou and Painting - Paperhanging Logo Theotopoulus accused of Paint That Washes—Guaranteed Jobs major responsibility for the ex- termination of Greek Jewry. M. Green & Son HO. 4020 friday, Mara 2, 194 Pfc. A. Z. Cutler, Pvt. Katz, Athlete, Hctbonim Leader, Linguist, Injured Wounded in Reich Injured by• Shell Fragment, He's Reported Recovering In British Hospital Pfc. Aaron Zelig Cutler, one of the leaders of the Habonim movement in Detroit, is recover- ing in a British hospital from wounds he sustained in Germany on Jan, 27, ac- cording to in-. formation r e - ceived b y his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Cutler, 2566 Ful- lerton. A graduate of Central high, he h completed two years at the Pfc. Cutler Michigan State Agricultural College when he was inducted on April 24, 1944. After basic training at Camp Hood, Tex., he was sent to Eng- land, from there to France and on to Germany. He was fight- ing, with the infantry in Ger- many when he received a shell fragment wound of the left thigh. Pfc. Cutler had studied He- brew for many years with the late Isaac NoVag. An active member of Habonim, he had played a vital role in the build- ing of Kinneret, the regional Ha- bonim camp at Chelsea, Mich. Zelig, a member. of Kibbutz Ali- yah, is planning to settle in Pal- estine. , Pvt. E. Newmark Killed in Action Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Newmark of 3345 Sturtevant Ave. have been informed that their only son; Pvt. Edward L., 19, was kill- ed i n Belgium on Jan. 19. Pvt. Newmark w a s graduated from Central High at the age of 16 and was a second year pre- dental student at the Univer- Pvt. Newmark sity of Detroit at the time of his induction on Dec. 17, 1943. With the infantry, he had been overseas since Oc- tober•when he was shipped to England. • While there he met his uncle, ,Capt.. Sigmund Gabe, who has been in England for 18 months and is serving with the medical corps. From there Pvt. New- mark was sent to France. Grace Moore to Give Concert Here March 19 • Grace Moore internationally famous lyric soprano, was the first great star to sing in the mo- vies, over the air, and now do- ing her work in army camps, she has, as newspaper editorials have said, "taken the high-hat out of opera and given it to the people." Miss Moore will appear at the Masonic Auditorium on Monday evening, • March 19. Tickets for the concert are on sale at Grinnell's. . Noted Speakers at Marriage Institute Capt. Albert C. Jacobs, USNR, director of the Dependents Wel- fare Division of the U. S. Bureau of Naval Personnel, in Washing- ton, will be one of the principal speakers at next Thursday even- ing's session of the Marriage and Family Life Institute being held in the Rackham Memorial Build- ing, 60 Farnsworth, March 6-12. Capt. Jacobs will discuss the problems of service families and ways in which the community can help meet them. He will share the program with Capt. Dorothy C. Stratton, director of the SPARS, whose topic will be "Women After the War." Dr. Lowell Selling, Detroit psychiatrist, will speak on the "Mental ' Hygiene of Engage- ment," Thursday noon, March 8, Local leaders will participate in a series of conferences to be held simultaneously during the late morning and afternoon hours. Assigned. to lead discus- sion within their respective areas of interest; local participants in- clude Rabbi Leon Fram of Tern- ple Israel, Herman Jacobs, of the Jewish Community Center; Mrs. M. S. Perlis • and Dr. Morris Raskam of the UAW-CIO Health Center. The Service Wives, a group of servicemen's wives who meet regularly at the Jewish Commu- nity Center, under the le,adership of Mrs. Esther Mossman, is one of the groups sponsoring special programs within the Institute of Franklin Life Sets particular interest to service- March as Month to men's families and the rettwned servicemen themselves. These Honor Morris Fishman programs will be conducted each Franklin Life Insurance Co. of evening,. except Saturday and Springfield, Ill., announces that Sunday, through Monday, March 12. March has been set as Fishman All sessions and discussion Month in honor groups of the Institute will be of Morris Fish- open free to the public. man, local gen- eral agent, with Jascha Schwartzman off ices at 807 Lafayette Bldg. Is Symphony Soloist This observ- ance marks the Jascha Schwartzman, cellist 33rd year of Mr. extraordinary and long-tirne Fishman's active member of the Detroit Sym- service in the in- phony Orchestra, is the soloist surance business. M. Fishman chosen by Karl Mr. Fishman is prominent in Krueger for the local community activities and is March 3 concert. especialy active in the United DVorak V i .o - Hebrew Schools • and its Minyanirn loncell o Concer- in the David W: Simons and Rose to as /played by Sittig Cohen Branches. Schwartzman, will be heard on the Mutual Noted, Sport` Figures network as will To Attend Marshall the excerpts from the In- Lodge. Affair-Tuesday Schwartzman cidental M u s i c for "Peer Gynt" by Grieg. The Celebrities of the sports world Sibelius Legend from the Kale- will be the guests of Louis Mar- shall Lodge of Bnai Brith, Tues- vala, "The Swan of Tuonela" day, in the Educational Center, and the "Nutcracker" Suite by Linwood at Lawrence, at 8:30 Tschaikovsky will complete that evening's program. p. m. Manuel Hellman, the chair- Just 2 drops Penetro man of the conTrnittee in charge, Nose Drops in each says members may bring guests. nostril help you breathe freer almost It is expected that among the instantly. Relieve the speakers will be Charles E. head cold nasal misery. Only 25c-2'4 times as `Gus" Dorais, councilman, coach much for 50c. Caution: of the Detroit Lions football Use only as directed. Penetro Nose Drops team; Jack A. Adams, of the Red Wings hockey team, and Phillip "Cincy" Sachs, Center basketball coach. Motion pict- BUSINESS ures will be shown and refresh- or ments served. INDIVIDUAL Pfc. Charles Katz, 21, is hOs- pitalized in. France as a result o`f shrapnel wounds in the thighs which he sustained on Nov. 22, during a German raid in Bel- gium. However, his parents,- Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Katz of 2928 Doris Ave., have learned that he expects to return to action short- ly. Pfc. Katz, who received the Purple Heart, is both an excellent student and an. accomplished ath- lete. While in the 8th grade at Post School he was awarded a dictionary by the Detroit News in a city-wide spelling contest: After graduation from Commerce High in 1941, he entered Wayne University, majoring in govern- ment. He lacked one semester's work toward his degree at the time of his. induction in April, 1943. He won several athletic medals. . First stationed in Wyoming, then -at Camp McCoy, Wis., he was transferred . .to Michigan _ State College _ where he studied languages, excelling in Spanish. He was shipped to England with an infantry division in Septem- ber, 1944 and from there was sent to France. One brother, Sam, is a pharma- cist in the navy, and a second brother, Harry, is a private first class in the marines. Sam, who has been serving- 1m a troop trans- port, is now resting in Virginia, and Harry is stationed in Kins- ton, N. C. - - . Buy War Bonds! 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