• Ptige Six THE JEWISH NEWS HAPPY REUNION Eliminates Hazards of Navigation! Center JWB Brunch Is Occa- sion for Reunion of Seaman and Corporal `A Great Advancement in Navigation', Officials of Sperry Gyroscope Corp. Declare; Detroiter Commanded Sub-Chaser in Pacific; Now Home A great. contribution toward navigation has been developed by David Jassy who invented and perfected a new type of instrument after discovering, while a command officer and navigator in the U. S. Navy, the need for a more accurate device to aid in pilot- seconds, it can be set at the bear- ing ships. ing wanted and then "ride" into The Sperry Gyroscope Corp. the one desired. Jassy's invention eliminates has patented the device in Jassy's name and royalties al- much of the difficulty and inac- ready are being curacy which the instrument now paid to him. used at times has a tendency to They are calling be when taking bearings on it, "Marvelous!" distant objects. Among its vast capabilities are "A great ad- vancement in also to obtain approximate loca- n avigation!" tion of stars, exact zenith of stars, While in New a known star and is an extreme York, he was usefulness in locating Venus in taken out and day-time. All these are import- ant to a navigator. feted by officials Four Years In Service of the corpora- Although only 27, Jassy has tion, who praised Lt. Jassy the instrument. crammed a lot of life into his A cross-hair telescope, the new short span. Since • presiding device serves the purpose of an over the graduating class at Alidale Self Synchronus Bearing Northwestern High, he has at- Indicator and was invented prim- tended the Universities of Mich- arily for use aboard smaller igan, Illinois, Notre Dame, North- vessels. It will, however, be western and Miami. He spent installed in every type of ship four years in service and held the distinction for two years of and possibly in airplanes. being commanding officer of a Many Advantages sub-chaser on convoy duty in the Although many advantages lie South Pacific while only a lieu- in its ability to obtain altitudes tenant (j.g.) and location of various stars, the Jassy received his discharge mechanism has its chief value recently as a full lieutenant. in piloting. Errors are eliminat- He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. ed due to change of course and, Henry Jassy of 19416 Gloucester rather than the standard method Dr. and now in the commercial of taking bearings every few financing business with his father. Navy planes are still searching for the patrol bomber on which Lt. Joseph Edelman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sol B. Edelman of 2250 S. LaSalle Gar- dens, was report- ed missing, Dec. 7. Mr. and Mrs. Edelman and Lt. Edelman's wife, Lorraine Joyce, have not given up hope that the Lt. Edelman ship will be found and their son and husband alive. Part of Patrol Bomber Squad- ron 122, the plane was last re- ported over Sitka, Alaska, Nov. 30, on a flight from Kodiak to Seattle. Lt. Edelman enlisted four years ago. He is a graduate of the Uni- versity of Michigan. Max Prohow Home After 3 1/2 Yrs. in Army Pvt. Max Prohow, discharged from the Army in November, is now home with his wife, the for- mer Esther Sil- verman, and their son, Philip, at 9441 Holmur. He is the son of Mrs. Mollie Pro- how of 2629 Haz- elwood. Inducted Mar. 19, 1942, Pvt. Prohow served in North Africa, ' Naples, Foggia, Max Prohow Rome, Arno, Southern France, the Rhineland and Central Europe. He holds the Victory Medal, American Theater Ribbon, Euro- pean, African and Middle Eastern Theater ribbon with one silver battle star, bronze service arrow- head, four overseas service bars, one service stripe and the good conduct medal. Hold Memorial Services For Cpl. Sampson Dec. 19 Memorial services will be held Wednesday, Dec. 19, for the late Cpl. William (Sonny) Sampson, at Bnai David, 14th and Elm- hurst. A. and M. Cohen Back Home After 4 Years in Service New JWV National Commander Chelsea Boys Meet Here After 6 Years Ex-Navy Officer David Jassy Commended for Invention Continue Search For Lt. Edelman Friday, December 14, 1945 'Hi, Seymour!" yelled S 1/c Meyer Hootstein, and - everybody in the USO lounge in the Jewish Center looked up startled from their Sunday morning brunch plates. "Well, I'll be . .", Cpl. Sey- mour Freedman couldn't say much, for Meyer Hootstein grabbed him in a tight and de- lighted armlock embrace, and neither soldier nor sailor could speak until the shock of the initial surprise wore off a bit. This reporter immediately be- came curious, and sensed a story, for very little tenderness is wast- ed between the army and navy in the normal course of relationship between the two service branches. What developed was that Sey- mour and Meyer had not seen each other for six years since both attended Hebrew school in Chelsea, Mass., and celebrated .a& JWB SWIM AT CENTER each other's Bar Mitzvah a week apart. In the interim a lot of water Brothers DiScharged About has passed under sailor Meyer Same Time, to Enter ship's prow in the watery wastes Business Together of the vast Pacific, seeing action MAJ. MAXWELL COHEN of Boston (left), a veteran of two World Wars, succeeds ARCHIE H. GREENBERG of Brooklyn as National Commander of the Jewish War Veterans of the U. S. Major Cohen, a member of the J. W. V. since 1922, was called for active duty in eight months before Pearl Harbor. He is the first veteran of the second World War to head a major veterans organization. JWV Military Ball Committee to Meet The military ball committee of the State Department of Michi- gan of the Jewish War Veterans will meet Sunday evening at their auditorium, 8212 12th St. All veteran members and those of the auxiliary have been invit- ed. Details will be given regard- ing the military ball scheduled for Saturday, Feb. 23, at the Ma- sonic Temple. Lt. Eli Levin Post No. 230 of the Jewish War Veterans on Dec. 4 was addressed by Edward Greenwald of the F.B.I. on the topic, "Your F.B.I." Lawrence H. Jones Post 190 of Jewish War Veterans on Dec. 11 heard an address by Rev. Ernest Arthur, state director of the Peo- ple's Institute of Applied Re- ligion, on the subject "Democ- racy, Fascism and the Veteran." Mlawer Aux. Plans Semansky Memorial Fund to Aid DPs The thrill of one son's home- coming was further enhanced for Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cohen of 4280 Pasadena, by the news that another had been discharged. Lt. Abraham Cohen has re- turned after four years in service, three with a military mission with the Caribbean Defense Com- mand in San Jose, Costa Rica, the Canal Zone, Panama and Lima, Peru. At present, he is on an in- active status, having accepted a commission in the. Officer Reserve Corps. T/Sgt. Morton Cohen has re- ceived his discharge, also after serving four years. He was sta- tioned 17 months as chief pharm- acist aboard the hospital ship, Larkspur, on which he returned more than 5,000 American pa- tients during crossings from Me- diterranean ports to hospitals in England and France. Following brief rests., they will enter the drug business together. Refugee, Now. GI, Pleads For Chance for Others A plea for homeless, uprooted Jewish children in Europe, to have the . same chance that was given to him to come to the U. S., was voiced by Pfc. Louis Maier, a GI with the American Army in Europe, in a letter to European- Jewish Children's Aid, affiliated with the National Refugee Serv- ice. Five years ago, Pfc. Maier, then 16, and his sister Agatha, then 12, were among the young- sters rescued from Europe by the EJCA and placed in foster homes in the U, S. under its auspices. As a medical aid man on the morning of Feb. 24, T/5 David Meyers distinguished himself dur- ing an attack on a German city with a great act of heroism for which he was awarded the Bronze Star Medal. Enemy ma- chine gun fire was coming from two pill- T/5 Meyers boxes and snip- er fire from less than 200 yards away. Then a PFC attached to the platoon, Meyers, noticing the plight of his comrades, rushed in- to the- open under direct enemy observation and opened fire, and proceeded to administer aid to the wounded. Wounded, Carries On Wounded, he continued on with his work as best he could, drag- ging comrades from the exposed crest of a hill. Only after he was satisfied that all the men in his vicinity had been treated did he stop administering aid. "His determination, out- standing devotion to duty and fellow men, and exemp- lary courage saved the lives . of many of the men of Com- pany 'F', the citation reads." When Mr. and Mrs. Louis Mey- ers, now of Los Angeles, received the notification they "cried like babies." He is 21, but they re- member when he enlisted with- out their consent on his 18th birthday. During the years he never mentioned his war experi- ences, let alone the act of hero- ism. Convalescing in Hospital Meyers finally wrote his par- ents from Madagan General Hos- pital in Washington, where he is now convalescing and instructing in first aid, of his deed. "If only peacetime associations were like those I found with the boys in service, when we were so close to death, this war would have been worth fighting for," he wrote. "There were no preju- dices, no greed or pettiness, but it was all for one and one for all in battle." in Saipan, and Seymour too was in the thick of combat in Hitler- In tribute to the memory of land, with both wondering what- Pvt. Jack Semansky, son of Mr. ever became of the other, and re- and Mrs. Louis Semansky, who membering their lovely child- died in action in Germany March hood experiences they both 15, 1945, the La- shared in the Hebrew school in dies Auxiliary Chelsea, Mass. of the Mlawer Umgegend Ver- Now fate brought them togeth- eM, of which er at one of the Sunday morning Mrs. Semansky brunches and splash parties which is a member, the USO-JWB runs for service- has set up the men of all creeds in the Jewish Jack Semansky Center where Meyer Hootstein Memorial Fund. is a regular guest, and where To honor the Seymour happened to drop in by deceased s e r - sheer accident and curiosity. Both Seaman Meyer and Cpl. Seymour Pvt. Semansky viceman's mem- are still in active service, the for- ory, parcels of food and clothing mer being stationed in Dearborn, will be sent to displaced persons' and the latter in Ft. Wayne, Ind. camps in Poland. Those wishing to honor his Thus a childhood attachment memory are asked to participate has found maturer friendship in this fund. thanks to the USO-JWB Detroit Readers of The Jewish News Army and Navy Committee's pro- will recall that when Pvt. Se- gram. mansky's death was announced a Christian pal wrote to his par- Capt. J. B. Brenner Home ents, telling how high Jack was held in the estimation of his After 33 Months in ETO friends and offering himself for After 33 months of service in adoption to fill the gap caused in the ETO with the Military Police their lives. Battalion which served with dis- tinction in the Italian campaign, Dr. Steinhardt Back ; Capt. Jack B. Brenner, son of Mr. and Mrs. . Samuel Brenner of Overseas 25 Months Clairmount Ave., has returned Maj. Milton J. .Steinhardt Tulcensky Is Discharged; home on a 90-day terminal leave. (MC), who served 25 months Makes $100 Gift to UJA He is a veteran of the Sicilian overseas, has returned to his and Italian invasions, has served practice in Detroit. The first act of Mr. and Mrs. at Cassino, Anzio invasion of Dr. Steinhardt joined the first Southern France and 'subsequent- division in England, and landed Joseph Tulcensky, upon Mr. Tul- ly in the drive through France in Normandy on D-Day, where censky's discharge from service, and Germany and in last year's he received the Bronze Star for was to send $70 to The JeWish campaign in the VoSges Moun- heroic achievment. He travelled News as final payment on their tains. with the First Division Clearing $100 contribution to the United Jewish Appeal. Since V-E Day Capt.. Brenner Co., through France, Belgium, The Tulcenskys now reside at Germany and Czechoslovakia. was commander of B Co. of the Among his many experiences, 3740 Glynn Court. 516th M. P. Bn. which was part of the occupation forces of Ger- he had many narrow escapes at many. For a short time before re- Caumont and the "Bulge," and Dr. N. H. Ketai Returns turning home he was command- trips to the concentration camps From Service; Opens Office ing officer of B. Co. of the 504th at Dacha - t and Nordhausen. For several months following Dr. Norbert H. Ketai, foot spe- M. P. Bn., the unit with which he V-E Day, he was medical direc- cialist and chiropodist, who has trained as a private in Texas. tor of a large camp at Ochsen- just: returned from service, has A graduate of Northwestern furt, Bavaria, which contained opened offices at 12632 Dexter, High School, he entered the army 5,000 German prisoners and 50 TO. 8-8439. He will hold open as a private in July, 1941. German doctors. house Saturday evening, Dec. 22. - Lt. A. Cohen Mgt. M. Cohen T15 David Meyers, Modest, Finally Tells Parents of Heroism