Page Twelve

THE JEWISH NEWS-

Inaugurate Cartoon Class

tPfc. Dan Hoffer

Center Cooperates With
Jewish News in Project

Ben Yomen Named Consultant of Class to Start Oct. 7;
Louis G. Redstone Heads Sub-Committee in Charge
of Community Plan; Cartoonists to Get Prizes

A pioneering venture in art Center where he acquired his
work will be inaugurated during initial training in art work.
the coming season at the Jew-
Louis G. Redstone, a member
ish Community Center, whose of the committee, has been
named chairman of the sub-com-
mittee which will have charge
of this class.
"While the art of drawing
cartoons is nearly as old as the
newspaper," Mr. Redstone, an
eminent Detroit architect, stat-
ed, "little emphasis has been
placed on this type of work in
community art classes. By in-
augurating this class, the art
committee of the Jewish Com-
munity Center feels that we are
opening a new avenue for ex-
pression by our students."
The new class, Mr. Redstone
announces, will take advantage
of the cooperation offered by The
Jewish News.
Each cartoon used in The Jew-
ish News will be paid for and
may be syndiCated through the
American Association of English-
Jewish NewSpapers, whose ex-
ecutive committee, at its recent
LOUIS G. REDSTONE ,
meeting in Detroit, approved the
project for national sponsorship.
Art School will sponsor a car- In addition, every two months
toon class, it was announced
The Jewish News will offer a
this week by Mrs. Edward
war bond as a prize for the
Quint, chairman of the Center cartoon selected as .
the best
art committee.
produced by members of the
The class is scheduled to open Center Cartoon Class during
Sunday afternoon, Oct. 7. A that period.
semester of 17 weeks is planned
Further details regarding this
and the class will meet from
project will be announced short-
2 to 4 p.m. on Sundays. There
ly. In- the meantime, those
will be a charge of $5. for the
desiring further information re-
course for Center members and
garding this project are asked to
viz() for non-members.
call the Jewish Center, MA 8400.
The Center art committee an-
The Jewish Community Center
nounces that Ben Yorrien, well art school also sponsors life class-
known Detroit artist, will be es 'for adults on Sunday morn-
consultant for the new Cartoon ings and Tuesday afternoons, and
Class. He is a product of the art art classes for children on Tues-
school of the Jewish Community day and Thursday, afternoons.

Pfc. Stein's Plan
Brings Cold Pop
To Battle Areas

Friday, August . 10, 1945

Cired for Heroism

Pfc. Daniel Hoffer, son Of
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hoffer of
3217 Leslie, has been cited for
heroism. The citation reads In
part:
"On the 19th of March, 1945,
elements of Co. F went forward
in a night attack on enemy high-
ground positions near Otterweil-
er. Advancing through pitch-
black darkness, Pfc. Hoffer, a
rifleman, and a comrade stumbl-
ed over a sleeping enemy soldier
and took him prisoner. On be-
ing questioned by an interpreter,
the prisoner revealed that a
squad of enemy infantrymen
held positions in a wooded area
25 yards ahead. Pfc. Hoffer and
his companion made their way
forward - to within .10 feet of
the 'hostile squad before they
were detected.
"As one enemy soldier raised
his rifle, the two men leaped on
the foe and knocked his rifle to
the ground. The rest of the

'City Without Jews'
To Be Filmed in Vienna

Okinawa Marines Hail
Lt. Pollak's Accuracy
With Naval Cannon

LONDON (JPS)—"City With-
out Jews," written in the 1920's
by Hugo Bettauer, an Austrian-
Jewish author, who intended to
show the deterioration of the
city should the anti-Semites suc-
ceed in making Vienna Juden-
rein, will be filmed here to bring
home to the Viennese the truth
about their city after the Nazis
made Bettauer's sature into a
grim reality. The author was shot
in 1926 by a militarist student.

Lt. Richard A. Pollak's ac-
curacy with a 14-inch naval
cannon has won him a citation.
He is a plotting-board officer on
the battleship Idaho.
When Marines on Okinawa
appealed for naval shellfire on
a .Jap strongpoint several thou-
sand yards inland, Pollak was
given the job of hitting \ the
small target. The ship was lying
two miles off shore. When he
learned the target's size and
that it was only 50 yards from
entrenched Marines, he radioed:
"Too risky. Move away from
target." The Marines replied:
"Go ahead, we have confidence
in you." It was a direct hit.
Lt. Pollak's Detroit address is
1682 Atkinson. -

enemy squad, taken completely
by surprise, surrendered. His
cool courage, resourcefulness
and loyal devotion to duty - re-
flect the highest credit upon
Pfc. Hoffer and the armed forces
of the U.S."

A native Detroiter, Pfc. Hoffer
was a student at Wayne Uni-
versity at the time of his in-
duction in 1944. He majored in
electrical engineering. He is a
graduate of Central High and
was active in AZA.

TEL AVIV (ZOA) — The Tel
Aviv School of Law and Eco-
nomics, the first Hebrew college
for legal and economic education,
is about to observe its 10th anni-

9 '449
ofytite, poe

"44

Jewish Vets Use
Our Ads FREE

Discharg4d Jewish service-'
IN THE PHILIPPINES—
Doughboys of the 40th Infantry men are taking advantage of
Division have - received through The Jewish News offer to pub-
their post exchange the equival- lish their Homes and Jobs
Wanted advertisements with-
ent of more than 150,000 foun-
out charge in our Classified
tain drinks for
columns.
the first half of
1945.
Both Jobs Wanted a n d
Homes Wanted advertisements
Before leaving
New Britain for
may be submitted to The Jew-
their Luz o n
ish News by returned service
operation, ,P X
men-at our office, 2114 Penob-
men of the 40th:: .
scot Bdg., merely by showing
Division inau-
the discharge papers.
gurated the first
The Jewish News sincerely
mobile fountain.
hopes that this new service to
Credit for de-
the community will prove
vising and put-
helpful to discharged service-
Pfc. Stein
ting into operation - the mobile men.
The Jewish News will co-
refreshment unit is Pfc. Morris
operate with the Jewish Vo-
Stein, husband of Mrs. Pearl
cational Service in the place-
Stein of 4082 Cortland, Detroit.
ment of the free jobs wanted
He had been operating the dis-
per4ing , machines on New Brit-
advertisements.
ain. The various units of the
40th were too distant to insure"
impartial metering of the cold H. Pearlman Home
drinks.
After 100 Missions
Stein called on the various
units With plan of mounting the
Lt. Ralph Pearlman, son of
machines on trucks. He watched
his plan develop five months be-. Max Pearlman of 8500 Midgard-
ens Place, is home on a 30 day
fore , the 40th left for Luzon.
D-Day plus two found the leave after having completed 100
40th Division mobile unit rac- missions as an escort fighter
pilot. He has been overseas a
ing up and down the Lingayen year
serving
beaches looking for thirsty dough-
with the 314th
boys.
Flight Squadron
Said Stein, "Going up to the
of the 324.th Fly-
frontlines was strictly a volun-
ing Group. Hav-
tary affair. The boys approach-
ed me_ with the idea, and we ing served in
made' out a schedule and follow- Italy, • Belgium,
France and Ger-
ed it religiously."
Each mobile unit truck when many, he pos-
arriving at the frontlines is sesses the Presi-
dential Unit
armed with enough ice and pop
to dispense an equivalent of 2,- Citation an
Five Oak Leaf Lt. Pearlman
500 fountain servings.
Clusters to his Air Medal.
CARD OF THANKS
At the completion of his leave,
The family of the late Ida Lt. Pearlman will leave for Cali-
Bressler wishes to express sin- fornia where he will report for
cerest thanks to relatives and reassignment.
friends for the kindnesses
'shown them in their recent be-
reavement.
•

Buy War Bonds!

"How I used to dread washday! And all the time I didn't
need to, for the all-electric laundry was proving its worth
in thousands of homes. Then, just before the war I bought
an all-electric laUndry. And ever since, washday has been
so simple there is nothing to it!

"To think of the time-consuming, wearying work I used to
do that was unnecessary! There was the drudgery of
handling the clothes through soaking, washing, rinsing
and wringing out, then the lobs of hanging them out to
dry, and gathering them in and ironing the lot by hand.
And the buttons that were torn off ... and broken ... and
lost! Well, those days are gone forever. Now I - Simply put
the clothes in the washer, and go on ilbout my business
while the washer goes on about its business. Liter I transfer
the damp-dry clothes to the dryer—the only time I touch
wetness—and in abOut 15 minutes they're ready for qUick
handling on the automatic ironer. My soapy-handed
friends are awaiting the day—not so far off now, I- hear—
when they, too, will no longer dread washday."

The achievements of elec-
tricity in industry have been
dramatized by their sudden,
mass application in war. The
development and acceptance
of new-electric appliances in
the home has been more
gradual . . . and hence less
noted. Now look about you.
Observe how electricity has
taken over the work in your
home: Reflect on the appli-
ances yot(want and plan to
buy. The changes in your
Own way of living demon-
strate a truth that becomes
increasingly clear: The old-
fashioned way is the waste-
ful way.

HOW THE AUTOMATIC WASHER WORKS

.

Metal basket on its
side agitates clothes by
revolving. Clothes lift
up and fall back again.

Machine automatical-
ly washes the clothes,
and rinses them three
times in fresh water.

Then basket spins,
driving almost 90% of
water out of clothes,
and machine shuts ofi

Hands stay soft and
smooth and keep their
youth, for they are not
placed in water at all.

The DETROIT EDISON Co.

5ee roya, Ade&

iantwavtraggewavasmiumigal,
-\

for helpful information. He will be glad to help
you select the model that will fir your needs.

