THE - JEWISH NEWS
Page Sixteen
UVES OF OUR TIMES
Brevities
MATTATHIAS TENT-HIVE of
the Maccabbees is planning . a
games. party at the Workman's
Circle at 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb.
26, according to Joseph Rosson,
entertainment chairman. The
event will be a fund-raising affair
with proceeds going *to charitable
institutions supported by the
group.
* * *
The -lovely Franz Lehar operet-
ta "MERRY WIDOW! will be the
third hit show ; on the Detroit
Civic Light Opera's gala fifth an-
niversary calendar. It will open
Monday, Feb. 16, for one full
week at Masonic Temple.
* * *
MRS. MORRIS ADLER will
review Dr. Milton Steinberg's
"Basic Judaism" in the final of
the series of book review sessions
sponsored by the JUNIOR SER-
VICE GROUP, at 8:30 p.m. Mon-
day. Admission will be to mem-
bers only, but non-members may
enroll at the door.
* • •
PAVOLOTCHER AID SOCIE-
TY will have an evening of
games- to benefit the Palestine
Histadrut Campaign Monday
evening, Feb. 16, at Bereznitzer
Hall, Linwood at Davison. Mem-
bers and friends are invited,
* * *
HOWARD PIERCE DAVIS,
editor of "World Obserter", and
a noted news analyst, will speak
at Detroit Town Hall in the
Fisher Theater, Wednesday morn-
ing, Feb. 18, at 11 o'clock,
* * *
BODZIN FAMILY CLUB will
meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
J. S. Bod.zin this Saturday eve-
ning. Plans will be made for ship-
ment of Passover, food packages
to relatives overseas.
* • *
BEVERLY LASTAR, young
Detroit pianist, student of Ed.;
ward Bredshall, will be guest
soloist with the Highland Park
band in a concert at 8 p. m.
Thursday, Feb. 19, at Highland
'Park High School. She will play
the Mozart Concerto in D Minor.
Tickets will be available at the
door.
* *
JULIUS TRATTNER of 4220
Fullerton was elected first vice
president, of the Wayne Univers-
ity Art Education Alumni Associ-
ation. MARIAN KAUFMANN of
14831 Glastonbury Rd. was elect-
ed secretary.
• • •'
VLNDIMIRITZER E M E R G-
ENCY RELIEF Organization cel-
ebrated the success of its annual
banquet at a social evening Feb.
3.. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Kayne
were hosts in honor of the birth
of their daughter.
• * . *
Students of the MEISTER
'STUDIO OF DRAMATIC ART
will entertain at the membership
tea-- of Rabbi Zager Chapter of
Bnai Brith Women Feb. 18.
* * *
MARKEL FAMILY CLUB will
meet Sunday, March 7, at the
home of Sam and Rachel Baril,
2550 Highland.
Council Has Messages
..From Relatives Overseas
Detroit Section, National Coun-
cil of Jewish Women, is seeking
information about the following
persons, for whom it has urgent
messages from relatives overseas.
Further information may. be ob-
taMed at the organization's office,
8904 Woodward, TR. 1-3701.
Laja Ferder Kohen, daughter of
-Koishe and Liebe from - Tomaszow--
Lubelski, Poland; .Chein-Welwi Lapid-
ysz. 53, born in Michaliszky. son of
Abraham and Rachele Jita, emigrated.
in 1920; the family of Eichner, emi-
grated in 1908 from Krakow, Poland;
Morris Krafden, formerly of 2635 Cort-
land: Jan Jelen, 84, born in Rowne,
Poland, emigrated in 1907.
Zelda and Itzik Levin and children,
Yessel. Motel. Samuel and Geneshe;
Karl Rose and Mose Ammer; Terez and
Hermine Pollack, born in Tiszafured,
Hungary; Matta' Goldie Silver • from
Plodsk, Poland and Nathan Silver:
Lewek Gewereman 50, forinerlv of
Indiana Avenue, emigrated in '1917.
Feld (first name unknown) occupa.'
Rion: violinist; Bejrycz Nirenberg, 53,
occupation: painter, emigrated in 1935;
Abraham Komarow born In Russia,
was a banker, married, has two daugh-
ters and a sofiT.7ssak Tenenbaum, 55,
born in Mieolaev. Odessa. employed in
1924 at Ford's;" Lazar Mantor born in
Cinesti-Lomes. Romania, son of Morde-
hai and Keila: Zelig NeuMann, 55,
born in Kojan Gordlok, Poland, son
of ScAmuel and Chala emigrated in
1914, occupation : shoemaker, married,
has four children.
David Brodski. 66, born in Zlatopol,
,Kirov04;radsl& Russia, emigrated_ in.
FOR MORE DOM A WAITER OE
A CENTURY, ONE OF THE MOST
PROLIFIC AND SUCCESSFUL WRITERS
OF POPULAR MUSIC HAS BEEN
Friday, February 13, 194
I RV I NC BE R
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pos
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BORN ISADORE SALINE, RI RUSSIA
IN 1888, HE CAME TO THE U-S.
WITH HIS FAMIL Y IN 1893.
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NE SOW HIS SECOND SONG.'DORANDO" FOR
S2S THE FOLLOWING YEAR. AT THE SINE
IIME,HE GLADLY ACCEPTED A WC POSI-
TION WITH THE COMPANY PUNISHING
HIS MON&
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CHIMING HIS NAME to IRVING SERUM, HE
WENT TO WORK IN A CHINATOWN SALOON
AS A SINGING WAITER WHERE ,IN 1907, Hi
COMPOSED NIS FIRST TUNeMARIE FROM
SUNNY ITALY'.
rid
DURING THE FIRST WOKE) WAII,HE WROTE THE
MUSIC FOR AN ARMY REVUE FROM WHICH CAME
THE ClASSIC '0H,HOW I HATE TO GET UP IN THE
MORNING'. HEIM COMPOSED 'ALL ALONE
"ALWAYS'AND 'BLUE SKIES'. SONGS WHICH EN-
, DEARED HIM TO THE AMERICAN HEART.
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Ili Iowa of BERLO CAM
BERLIN WROTE TAICSANCI MUSIC
FOR SUCH SUCCESSFUL SHIMS AS
'TOP HAT'(1935):01414 MUM'
(1936) AND "LOUISIANA PURCHASE'
(1940). '3;9,
VAS tWiCID
IN 194, WWI =EMI 1AAIN -IISEN1101 ■4 181,
MACARONSLIIIMITZ AND HALT.EY,HT DROVED
SCENE waif skit&
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4,
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THE
HOPE Mil,
WHEN HITLER CAME TO NAVER,BERUN
WAN TO WORK FOR THE UNITED JEW-
ISH APPEAL FOR GERMAN-JEWISH -RELIEF.
IN 1934.4 WAS CO•OUGONAN OF THE
NIGHT OF STARS IN NEW 'MK, TO RAISE
FUNK FOR THE APPEAL.
Hebrew and Arabic Will Be
Holy City Official Languages
(Continued from Page 1)
English and French recogniz-
ized of such size as the Governor ed as additional working langu-
deemed necessary "to assist in the ages.
maintenance, of internal law and
An "adequate" system of prim-
order and especially for the pro- ary and secondary schools would
tection throughout the city of be maintained `.`on an equitable
Holy Places." This special police basis" for the Arab and Jewish_
force would be selected as far as communities in their respective
possible withoutzegard to nation- languages and in accordance with
ality, except that no citizen of their respective cultural tradi-
Jerusalem or of the Arab and tions.
Jewish states would be eligible.
The city is to be included in
3.. Governor to be appointed the economic union of Palestine
for three-year term which could but would operate its own central
be extended if necessary, and bank control, its own fiscal and
would be eligible for reappoint- credit policy.
* * *
ment. No resident of the city or
of the ,Arab or Jewish states
Events Affecting Palestine
would be eligible. He would have
Important occurrence through-
supreme executive authority sub- out the world affecting the situa-
ject only to Trusteeship Council's tion in Palestine include the fol-
instructions.
ldwing:
Besides general powers, the
Seventeen ships carrying visa-
statute provides "if in opinion of less Jewish immigrants to Pales-
Governor city's - administration- is tine broke the British blockade
being, seriously obstructed by of Palestine since V-E Day and
non-cooperation or interference landed their passengers, it was
of one or more sections of the disclosed during a debate on Pal-.
population, the Governor . ;may estine in the House of Commons.
take measures to enact by order A total of 57 ships carrying "il-
such legislation as he may deem legal" immigrants attempted to
necessary to restore the effective break the blockade, but of these
functioning of the administra- 40 were intercepted by the British
tion." The Governor: also has authorities, it was revealed.
powers,in connection'. with main- . • Creech-Jones revealed that the
tenance and protection of Holy British Government and the U. N.
Places elsewhere in Palestine.
Implementation Commission were
Legislative Council
conferring on the subject of clos-
The Legislative • Council is to ing down the Cyprus camps and
consist of a single chamber com- transferring the more than 31,000
posed of citizens of the city over Jewish internees now on the
25 years of age. Citizens by island to Palestine.
definition would not include any
Criticism of the State Depart-
persons who chose citizenship' in ment's "mixture of unbecoming
either the Arab or Jewish states. timidity toward the Arabs and
Alternative proposals for decision thinly-disguised disapproval ,to-
by the Trusteeship Council in- wards the Jews," was voiced' in
clude the choice of .a 40-member the Senate by Sen. James Mur-
Legislature with 18 to k,e elected ray of Montana, who declared
by Arabs, 18 by Jews and four that the imposition of the em-
by other residents; or a 30-mem- bargo on shipment of arms to
ber Legislature with 10 Arabs, 10 the Jews in Palestine was a step
Jews and 10 Christians.
in the direction of "hindering
A tour-year term is proposed rather than implementing" the
for the Legislative Council whose U. N. partition decision.
term could be prolonged • if the
A list of expert technicians
Governor finds it necessary. A who will be available to leaVe
simple majority of members for Palestine at a moment's no-
would form a quoruin and de- tice is being- prepared by the
cisions would be by a simple ma- Jewish War Veterans. J.W.V.'s
jortiy of those present. The city national commander, Col. Julius
is to have an independent judicial Klein, and executive director,
system with a supreme court of Col. Charles Schottland, will leave
three to five members to be shortly for a visit to Palestine to
selected by the Trusteeship Coun- determine what American Jewish
cil.
veterans can do to help establish
Subject to the "requirements the Jewisr state.
of public order, security, public
"Dirty international politics"
health and economic welfare," rather than local issues were the,
residents and ctiizens of Arab deciding factors in the United
and Jewish states as well as pil- Nations decision to partition Pal-
grims and visitors would have estine, Prof. F. E. Jessop, British
free access to the city, Immigra- philosopher and psychologist,
tiiin would be controlled by the charged, in an addreSs before the
Governor under instructions of Montreal branch of the Royal
the Trusteeship Council.
Empire Society.
Arabic and Hebrew are to
Reports that an Arab . purchas-
be the official languages, with ing mission which came to Ar-
gentina last September to buy
1919; Fish/Tian (maiden name, first or arms for Arab countries is actu-
married name not known) . born in
Karpilowka near Rokitrid, Poland; ally shipping arms to Arab groups
Schaie Rivian, 60. occupation: printer in Palestine -are circulating in
Arran Blumenfeld, 51, born in
Bucha
rest, son of Leon and Rachell Jewish quarters in Buenos Aires.
Bucharest,
Rivian Deborah Drucker formerly of
Jaffa Customs guards seized five
3265 Boston Blvd. .
IN 1942, BERUN STAGED - nus is THE
ARCWHICH HE TOOK ON IOWA
ENTERTAIN OUR GI% MID ALLIES
ALL OVER THE WORLD.
boxes containing 100 pistols and
20,000 rounds of aknmunition ad-
dressed to an Arab in Jaffa.. The
contraband was smuggled in
aboard the S.S. Peksah. Customs
officials said that six of the pis-
tols are "missing."
The official casualty list for
the month of January said that
160 Jews, 222 Arabs, 19 British
soldiers and police and 19 other
civilians were killed. In addition,
317 Jews were wounded, as were
507 Arabs and 71 Britons. The
Jewish casualty figures include
civilians and . settlement police
while the Arab totals include
civilians, police and one member
of the Transjordan Frontier
Force.
Secretary of State Marshall
said that _the State Department
has information that betWeen 150
and 200 Communists were among
the 15,000 Jewish immigrants on
the Pan York and Pan Crescent.
Russian Jews' Union Seeks
Information for Relatives
The- Union of Russian Jews ,
asks assistance in locating the
following persons:
Grevnin, Shleilme-Itche, 70, and his
sister, Pesia, of Mogilev-Dnepr, sought
by their relative, Nechama Guslitser,
daughter of Leib and Bluma Berkovich.
Gittelman, Harry, son of Lazar and
Risha, born 1896, in Azdamich, near
Mozyr, his son, Leo, daughter Risha;
also Gittelman, Nathan son of Michail
and Sarra, his wife, Grtinia, and daugh-
ter, Velchik, sought by their relative,
Nathan Gittelman, brother Of Harry
and nephew of Nathan.
Anyone having such informa-
tion is asked to contact the Union
at 55 W. 42nd St., New York 18,
N.Y.
Centers' Delegate
D r . Maximo
G. Yagupsky,
4.Argentine Jew-.
ish editor and
youth leader, has
:ibeen named field
_representative in
South America
of the World
;Federation of
YMHAs. and
Jewish Commu.
Dr. Yagupsky nity Centers..
LONDON, (JTA) — Richard
Tauber, noted opera singer, com-
poser and conductor, died here
at the age of 56.
He was banished from. Nazi
Germany in 1933 and went to
Austria which he left after the
Anschluss.
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