Page Twen+y -TWO
TEE` JEWISH NEWS
Pfc. Lawrence Gorosh, Missing Since Golden Brothers
December, Is Prisoner in Germany Meet in Calcutta
Mr. and Mrs. A. Gorosh of 9664 Otsego, are rejoicing over the
news that their son, Pfc. Lawrence Gorosh is a prisoner of war in
Germany. He had been reported missing since last December.
There are two
other sons in
the armed for-
ces, Sgt. Ber-
nard, who has
been Overseas,
with the Fin-
a n c e Division
for 20 months
and now is in
France, and Pfc.
Sidney, in the
Signal Corps.
Pfc. Lawrence S g t. Bernard Pfc. Sidney
2 Detroiters Win
Citations for
Heroism in Action
Friday, April 21, 1945
Distinguished Service
Rosenberg lEscapes Prison;
Schlossberg Gets Citation
On March 25; Calcutta, India,
was' :t.he scene of a thrilling
meeting- between two brothers, Harry Rosenbergs' Son, Reported Missing, Gets • Away
Pfc.. _Harold' Golden and 'Pvt.
From Germans; Jacob Schlossbergs' Son, - a German
Sanford ObIden, who had not
Prisoner, Cited for Meritorious Achievements
Lt. Nathan Greenberg
Views Nazis' Sadism
Those who have seen the re-
sults of the cruelties and sadism
of the Nazis have come to des-
Harold and Sanford Golden
pise thein for the Suffering
which
they
seen each other • in two years. It
Lt. Schwartz Directed Fire
have visited up-
was through the efforts of the
Under Danger; Capt.
on humanity.
Red
Cross that this meeting was
Gaba Decorated
In a letter to his
rendered possible.
parents, Mr. and
Lt. Leonard Schwartz, who is Mrs. Albert
The servicemen, sons of Mr.
fighting with the 104th Infantry Greenberg, o f
and Mrs. Sidney Golden 6i 1727
. Regiment of Gen. Patton's 3rd 1 0 2 0 6 Twelfth
Tayler Ave., are Northern High
St., Lt. Nathan
Army, has received the follow- Greenberg, now
graduates.
ing citation:
Harold, 25, worked for the
stationed in Ger-
Cunningham Drug Stores before
"For heroic achievement in many, expresses --
military operations against an this sentiment: Lt. Greenberg entering service on Feb. 16, 1942.
"I've got so much hatred built With the signal corps, he was
armed enemy near Buderscheid,
stationed at Sumner, S. C., for
up in my heart for the Germans two years prior to being shipped
that I can hardly look at them to India on Dec. 15. He is in the
without being overcome-with the Bengal Province.
Sanford, 22, a Packard Motor
urge to kill. It really does your
heart good to see the cruelties employe, has been in service
since March 16, 1943. He is a
which they have practiced on
radio operator with the air force
others being brought home to and is based in the Assam Val-
them. All that is • left of the ley. He has been in India since
once great cities I have seen is August.
A cousin, Cpl. Alvin Schriber,
a pile of rubble."
Lt. Schwartz
Capt. Gaba
A graduate of Toledo Univer- is now at sea enroute to an over-
seas post.
Luxembourg, on Dec. 28, 1944. sity Law School, his wife, Idel,
The above picture was taken
The second battalion was advanc- resides in Toledo.
when the brothers were together
in Calcutta.
ing to seize and hold the high
ground north of BuderScheid
How to Pack Parcels
when it was temporarily halted
For Mailing Overseas
by heavy enemy artillery, mor-
tar and small arms fire. At this
Despite repeated instructions
point, Lt. Schwartz, a Company .
H mortar platoon leader, discov-
NEW YORK (WNS)—Honors by postal authoritieS relating to
ened that. Co. E and Co. F were galore are coining to Mrs. Esther parcels for the armed forces
overseas, many thousands of par- .
halted by enemy fire.
Stolnick, of the Jewish section eels arrive at ports of embarka
"Realizing the need for im-
mediate action, he disregarded of Brownsville, in Brooklyn. tion in a damaged condition. A
his personal safety and set up Mrs. Stolnick, 63, is the mother large force of employes must be
the observation post. He observ- of nine sons who are in the maintained to repack the dam-
aged parcels so they will reach
ed a large concentration of service of the country.
their destination.
enemy infantry forming to coun-
One of her sons has won the
Boxes for overseas transmis-
ter-attack. He thereupon direct- Silver Star and the British Fly-
ed the accurate mortar fire which ing Cross and was personally sion should be stronger than
was so effective that it broke up decorated by Gen. Eisenhower. containers used for parcels which
do not leave our shores. It is
the counter-attack which threat-
necessary that all articles be
ened the battalion.
packed in boxes of metal, wood,
He is the husband of the for-
solid fiberboard, or strong
mer Patricia Kroll and the son-
double4aced corrugated fiber-
in-law of Mr. and Mrs. Lou Kroll Given Bronze Star
board, testing at least 200 pounds.
of the Wilshire Hotel.
Each box should be tied with
Award for Capt. Gaba
NEW YORK (JPS) _ Brig. strong cord, preferably by four
In the Luzon invasion, Capt.
Gen.
Julius
Ochs
Adler,
was
pre-
separate pieces, two lengthwise
Howard Gaba, with the 63rd In-
fantry, lay in the open field sented with the Bronze Star and two crosswise; knotted at
dodging fierce enemy fire to aid Medal for Service in the defense crossings. Sealing the flaps with
the wounded, for which he was of Hawaii, by Maj. Gen. Thomas gummed tape where they meet
awarded the Bronze Medal for A. Terry, chief of the Second strengthens the box but the use
meritorious duty under fire. Service Command, at Governors of such tape alone is not satis-
Through all this, he remained Island here. Gen. Adler was factory since the tape loosens if
second in command of the Sixth the boxes become wet.
unscathed but was later evacu-
Boxes should contain sufficient
ated because of a back injury re- Infantry Division in the South-
ceived while diving into fox- west Pacific for almost three cushioning material so that the
years. He was placed on inactive contents will be tightly packed
boles.
last November because of to prevent rattling or loosening
Capt. Gaba, a Detroit doctor, status
ill health.
of articles within the parcels.
was promoted on the field to his
present rank in New Guinea. He
is a graduate of Western High,
Wayne University and Wayne
Medical School. In service two
and a half years, he is 34 years
old and has been overseas a year
"Passover: I have had much France, Belgium, Holland and
and a half.
added enjoyment in celebrating Germany.
Thanks Red. Cross
Writing to his wife, the former the traditional holiday of 'Free- • "Yesterday I went up to the
Tillie Hershman of 17300 Wood- dom' on soil that was enslaved services offiCiated, at by Chap-
ingham Drive, Capt. Gaba tells until such a short time ago, lain Marcus. These were con-
how, everytime he used blood and then to hold
ducted just a couple of miles
plasma, he thanked God for the the Seder in
from the front. He held serv-
Red Cross. He writes that so Von Runstedt's
ices at Cologne where there are
many times has he seen an "oth- headqua'rters
251 Jews still living. After the
erwise dead" boy returned to was nearly ask-
services I went up to the front
ing
too
much
—
life because of it. "The fellows
to have a look around," contin-
but
that
is
and myself will always be in-
ues Sgt. Silberstein in his letter.
debted to the people back home where the Army
Sgt. Silberstein is a graduate
services were
and the American Red. Cross."
of Detroit College of Law, class
Other than meeting many De- held."
of 1942, and was admitted to the
troiters, Capt. Gaba tells about
Thus writes
Bar of the State of Michigan in
treating a private from Hannibal, Sgt. Abraham J.
that year. He received his Jew-
Mo., who turned out to be a dis- Silberstein, son
ish 'education in the United
tant relative. He has been treat- of Mr. and Mrs. Sgt. Silberstein Hebrew Schools.
ing Filipino civilians who suf- Jacob Silberstein of 3242 Bur-
In service for three years, he
fered heavily at the hands of lingame Ave. With the Ninth Air has been overseas -since Janu-
the barbaric Jap forces.
Force, he has served in England, ary of 1944.
Jewish Mother
Has 9 in Service
Gen. Adler, Retired,
Sgt. Silberstein Celebrates Passover
In Von Runstedt's Headquarters
A letter from their son, Cpl.
Lee Rosenberg, occasioned great
rejoicing in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Rosenberg of 2752
Boston Blvd., this being the first
communication they had receiv-
ed concerning him since - he was
reported missing in France on
Jan. 17.
The letter informs his family
that he has escaped from a Ger-
man prison camp and now is in
a hospital somewhere in France.
Cpl. Rosenberg was unable- to
give the details of his escape or
his exact present location.
A graduate of Northern High,
he was associated with his father
in the Rosenberg Department
Store on Michigan Ave., prior to
entering service more than two
and a half years ago. He was
shipped overseas five months aft-
er his induction and had °served
in England and France.
Lt. Schlossberg Cited
Lt. Marwin SchlosSberg, orig-
inally reported missing in action
and later found to be a prisoner
of war in Germany, has been
awarded the Air Medal. The
presentation was made to his
mother in the home of his parr
ents, Mr. and Mrs. - Jacob Schloisz,
berg of 3242 CalVert Ave.
Cpl. Rosenberg Lt. Schlossberg
The award was for five bomb-
er raids over Nazi-held areas.
Lt. Schlossberg, a Central High
graduate, attended Wayne Uni-
versity • and Detroit Institute of
Technology as an aviation stu-
dent. He enlisted the day after
Pearl Harbor, was commission-
ed Feb. 16, 1943, flew overseas
in November, 1943, and has been
a prisoner of war since last April.
Describes Seder In
Sgt. Solter Meets
Former Gestapo Hall Schneider, Sable
Among the many letters re- At French Seder
ceived by families of Detroit's
"The one thing I. was most
Jewish servicemen . des-
cribing Sedorim on the far-flung worried about was whether or
not I would be allowed to go to
a Seder for Passover", writes
S/Sgt. Abba Solter who. is re-
covering in a hospital in France
from a wound in the left elbow
which he sustained in Belgium
on Feb. 2. Despite the fact that
he • had just recovered _from
pneumonia and from a slight
case of jaundice, his captain
permitted him to accompany the
other Jewish servicemen to, the
Cpl. Stashefsky S2/C Stashefsky synagogue in the nearby town.
Meets Algerian Soldiers
battlefronts of the world is one
"It . was exciting, going to a
sent to Mr. and Mrs. Bernard French synagogue. and seeing
Stashefsky, 2926 Richton, by and talking to French Jews who,
their son, Cpl. Jerome, stationed incidentally, speak a pretty clear
Yiddish. I met some French
in Germany, who writes
Algerian soldiers, also Jews,"
"The Seder was held in a he writes.
place where once the Gestapo
The highlight of the Seder for
held daily meetings. We have S/Sgt. Solter was - his meeting
with two Detroiters whom he
made history."
had known since boyhoodTorn-
In describing the hordes of my Schneider with whom he had
refugees from the various cotin- gone to Hebrew school at the
tries of Europe who are now Delmar Branch and Norman
wandering in the streets of liber- Sable whose family lives at 2200
Gladstone.
ated towns in Germany, he says:
At Several Camps
"No fraternization, this is the
S/Se. Solter, 23, son of Mr.
order of Eisenhower and it is and Mrs. Charles Solter, 3729
certainly kept. There are spies , Grand, a Cass graduate in arch-
everywhere, but most of them are itecture, had been employed by
foreigners brought in as slave the Northern Engineering Co. He
laborers. It is hard for me to re- entered service Oct. 3, 1942, was
frain from acknowledging their stationed at Camp Robinson,
greetings. Who knows, perhaps Ark., Camp North Hood, Tex.,
some members of our family are Camp Maxey, Tex., Brooklyn
College as an ASTP student,
among them."
Cpl. Stashefsky, a violinist, Camp Breckenridge, Ky., and
was the concertmaster of Cen- from there was shipped overseas
tral High and Jewish Center in November. He served in Eng-
orchestras. Upon his graduation land, France and Belgium.
S/Sgt. Solter and his brother,
from Central he was employed
as the manager of an office in a Pfc. Yehudah, who is with the
defense plant. With the signal air force and is at present tak-
corps, attached to headquarters, ing special training . in Los
he served at Ft. Jackson, S. C., Angeles, were active members of
after entering service on March Hashomer Hatzair.
15, 1943. In January, 1944, he
was sent to England and parti-
cipated in the invasion of Nor- Lt. Moyer, Former
mandy. With Patton's Third
Army - he is in Germany. He MSC
wears three battle stars.
A brother, S 2/c Irving, 18,
is temporarily stationed at the
First Lt. Sheldon Moyer, on
Dearborn Radar and Radio
School. Upon graduation from of Mrs. Gertrude Moyer of 8740
Cass High with highest honors, Dumbarton Rd., has been award-
prior to his induction, he was ed the Silver Star for "leader-
awarded a scholarship to the ship and gallantry under fire,
Michigan College of Technology. in Germany.
Lt. Moyer, who recently was
He has been in service since
wounded in action in Germany,
Dec. 12.
Both servicemen attended the is a former campus editor of the
United Hebrew Schools. Irving college paper at Michigan State
College at Lansing where he was
was an active leader in Hash-
a
student prier to his entering
°mei. Hatzair.
service. He recently sent 22
German literature books from
Additional Servicemen's
overseas to the Michigan state
College Library.
News an Pages 6, Z1 and 24
:
Editor, Given
Silver Star in Reich