Monument Unveilings Mr. and Mrs. Irving Alpert announce the unveiling of a -monument in the memory of their son, Steven Alan, at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 30, at Beth - Yehudah Cemetery, Gratiot at '141/2 Mile Rd. Rabbi Max Wohl- gelernter will officiate. Friends and relatives are invited to at- tend the .service. * * * The family of the late David Laichtman announce the un- veiling of a monument in his •memory at 2 p.m. Tuesday May 30, at Turover Cemetery. Friends and relatives are invited to attend the service. * * * The family of the late Israel 'Ezra" Moray announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory at 11:30 a.m. Sunday, -May 28, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Isaac Stollman will offi- ciate. Friends and relatives are invited to attend the service. * * * The family of the late Louis Forman announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his mem- ory at 11 a.m. Sunday, May 28, Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Samuel Pr e r o will officiate. Friends and relatives are in- vited to attend the service. * * * The family of the late Sig- mund Goldman announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory at 1 p.m. Sunday, May 28, at Beth Abraham Cemetery. Rabbis Joseph Thumim and Israel I. Halpern will officiate. Friends and realtives and mem- bers of Cong. Beth Abraham are invited to attend the services. * * * The family of the late Leah Entner announces the unveiling of a monument in her memory at 12 noon Sunday, May 28, at Zamosc-Tamashover Cemetery, Gratiot and 14 Mile Rd. Rabbis Leizer Levine and Joseph Roth-• enberg will officiate. Friends and relatives are invited to at- tend the service. * * * The family of the late Harry Lacow announces the unveiling of a monument in 'his memory at 1 p.m. Tuesday, 'May 30, at Turover Cemetery. Friends and relatives are invited to attend the service. • The family of the late Rubin Kravetz _ announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his mem- ory at 11 a.m. Sunday, May 28, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Morris Adler will officiate. Friends and relatives are invited to attend the service. I * * * The family of the late Wil- liam Seskin announces • the un- veiling of a monument in his memory at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 30, at CIoverhill Park Cem- etery. Rabbi Moses Lehrman will officiate. Friends and rela- tives are invited to attend the service. * * * • The family of the late Morris Cross announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, May 28, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi M. J. Wohlgelernter will officiate. Friends and relatives are invited to attend the service. * * * The family of the late Eser Zupnitske announces the un- veiling of a monument in his memory at 2 p.m. Tuesday, May 30, at Beth Tefilo Emanuel Ceme- tery, Woodward at 8V2 Mile Rd. Friends and relatives are invited to attend the service. * « The family of the late Nathan Gutenberg announces the un- veiling of a monument in his memory at 11 a.m. Sunday, May 28, at Machpelah Cemetery. Mem- bers of the Yiddish Folks Vere- in, friends and relatives are in- vited to attend the service. • • • The unveiling of a monument for the late Rev. Abraham H. Kutnick will take place at 11 a.m. Tuesday, May 30, Decora- tion Day, at Turover Cemetery, Gratiot and 14-Mile Road. Rab- bis I. Stollman, J.* Rabinowitz and J. S. Sperka will officiate. Friends, relatives and members of Shochtim Union, Poale Zion and Pioneer Women are in- vited to attend the service. The family of the late Louis Sacks announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory at 1 p.m. Sunday, June 4, at Mach- pelah Cemetery, Rev. S. J. Wie- ner will officiate. Friends and relatives are invited to attend the service. • The family of the late Charles Greenberg announces the un- veiling of a monument in his memory at 3. p.m. Sunday, May 28, at Brith Sholom Cemetery. Rabbi Leizer Levin will officiate. Friends and relatives are invited to attend the service. * # * The family of the late Louis Arnkoff announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his mem- ory at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, May 28, at . Clover Hill Memorial Park. Rabbi Joshua Sperka will offi- ciate. Friends and . relatives are invited to attend the service. * * * The family of the late Rebecca Herman announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her mem- ory at 11 a.m. Tuesday, May 30, at Yiddish Folks Verein Cemetery. Rabbi Joshua Sperka and Cantor Hyman Adler will officiate. Friends and relatives are invited to attend the serv- ice. * * * Mrs. Sadie Lauter announces the unveiling of a monument in memory of her mother, the late Sarah Kaplowitz, at 12 noon Sunday, May 28, at Chesed shel Ernes Cemetery, Gratiot and Fourteen Mile Rd. Rabbi M. J. Wohlgelernter w i 11 officiate. Friends and relatives :are invited to .attend the service. Second Group Leaves Hungary for Israel BUDAPEST—(JTA)—A group of 250 Israel-bound Jews from Hungary — composed principally of aged women—left for Venice where they will board a vessel fOr Haifa. This is the second contingent of Hungarian Jews permitted to emigrate under the terms of an Israel-Hungarian agreement providing for the transfer of 3,000 Jews to Israel. British Government Hit On Egyptian Policy LONDON—(JTA) -- The Brit- ish Government was requested in Parliament to adopt a strong- er line of action against Egypt's refusal to permit British oil tankers to travel through the Suez Canal to Haifa refineries. Conservative M.P. J. S. Arbuth- not drew the attention of the government to the situation in the Middle East. Solons Doubt FEPC Passage After Vote WASHINGTON, (JTA) — Con- gressional circles here voiced doubt that the bill providing for the establishment of a Fair Employment Practices Commis- sion which would outlaw em- ployment discrimination on grounds of race, religion or na- tional origin will be enacted in the near future. Doubt was expressed following the death blow which the meas- ure received on the floor of the Senate when the question of adopting cloture — to cut off debate and carry the issue to a vote—was defeated by a vote of 52-32. Adoption of cloture re- quires a majority of 64. Remains • of Oscar Oritsenberg, Defender of Mendel Beilis Are Transferred to Israel TEL AVIV, (JTA) — The re- mains of Oscar Grusenberg, fa- mous Jewish lawyer, who played an important role in the defense of Mendel Beilis, a Jew in the city of Kiev accused by the Czarist regime of killing a Chris- tian boy "for ritual purposes," were brought here from France together with the remains of his wife and were interred at the _Old Cemetery here. Beilis' acquittal was to a great extent due to Grusenberg's defense 'which was praised by leading jurists throughout the world. 26—THE JEWISH NEWS Friday, May 26, 1950 Obituaries HARRY ROSEN, 58, of Walled Lake, died May 20. Services were at Lewis Bros. with Rabbi Jacob E. Segal officiating. Sur- vived by his wife, Betty; sisters, Mrs. Clarence Bayles, Mrs. -I. Mellon; brother, D. Hiller. In- terment, Machpelah. * * * JACOB KAINE, /78, of 2701 Blaine, died May 16. Services were at Lewis Bros. with Rabbi Jacob E. Segal officiating. Sur- vived by his sons, William, Ben, Max; daughters, Mrs. Carl Ro- senfield, Mrs. Frank Sauls; brother, Samuel H. Kaine. , In- terment, Machpelah. * * * JEROME K. ABRAMOVITZ, 73, of 3245 Gladstone, died May 14. Services were at Lewis Bros., Rabbi Lehrman officiating. Sur- vived by his wife Lillian; sons, Henry and David Abrams; sis- ter, Mrs. David Rontal. Inter- ment, Workmen's Circle Ceme- tery. * * • ROSE BERNSTEIN, 2691 Glen- dale, died May 15. Services were held at Kaufman Chapel, with Rabbi Moses Lehrman, Rabbi Joseph Thumim and Cantor Katzman officiating. She is sur- vived by her husband, Majer; two sons, Irving and David; one brother, Sam Auslander; one sister, Mrs. Isaac Lipson. Interment, Oakview Cemetery. * • * HARRY HERMAN, 2224 Pin- gree, died May 16. Services were held at. Kaufman Chapel, with Rabbi Isaac Stollman officiating. He is survived by two sisters, Sarah and Mrs. Joseph Borten. Interment, Machpelah Ceme- tery. * * * JACOB J. .BLUMBERG, 1443 Glynn Court, died May 17. Serv- ices were held at Kaufman Chapel, with Rabbi Morris Adler and Cantor Jacob Sonenklar of- relating. He is survived by his wife, Rachel; two sons, Irving W. and Louis C.; three daugh- ters, Mrs. Jack Simon, Mrs. Philip L. Kanter and Mrs. Sam- uel Steinberg; one brother, Abe' of New York; two sisters, Mrs. Fannie Hertzberg of New York, Mrs. Esther Meltzer of Memphis, Tenn.; seven grandchildren, and seven great-grandchildren. In- terment, Clover Hill Park Ceme- tery. * * * JEANETTE BLOSH, 3333 Car- ter, died May 18. Services were held at Kaufman Chapel, with Rabbi Joshua Sperka officiating. She leaves her children, Irwin and Edith; one brother, Isadore Banks, and one sister, Mrs Ben Shiffman. Interment, Machpelah Cemetery . * * * WOLF WROTSLAVSKY, 65, of 3018 Clairmou.nt, died Tuesday. Funeral services were held Wed- nesday. Burial, Beth Yehuda Cemetery. A resident of Detroit for 37 years, he was the founder of the Wolf Wrotslaysky Monu- ment Works. He is survived by his wife, Anna; three sons, Harry Wright, Ben: and Paul, and four daughters, Mrs. Fay Margolis, Mrs. Blanche Freeman, Mrs. Roy Gellman. and Ida. Aaron Klein, Civic Leader, Father of Jewish News Society Editor, Dies at 81 Aaron Klein, for many years prominent in Detroit's com- munity affairs, a resident of Detroit for 52 years, the father of Miss Julia Klein, society editor of The Jewish News, died Thurs- day morning, May 18, at his home, 2284 W. Boston, after a brief illness. His family had decided to honor Dr. Hersh- man's 70th birthday (May 25) by publishing a book of his ser- mons. Funeral services for Mr. Klein were held at his late residence on Friday, with Dr. Hershman, Dr. B. Benedict Glazer and Can- tor J. H. Sonenklar officiating. Burial was in Machpelah Ceme- try. More than 500 people paid final tribute to Mr. Klein at the funeral. Refugee Kurdish Jews Get $25,000 JDC Aid LATE AARON KLEIN planned to celebrate his 81st birthday the preceding Sunday, but the event was cancelled three days prior to his natal day due to his illness.. Born in Austria - Hungary, May 14, 1869, Mr. Klein came to this country 65 years ago, at the age of 16. For the past 21 years, he was active in the in- surance business, with his son, Maurice. He was in his office in the Lafayette Building daily and after office hours retained a deep interest in community affairs, especially in Congrega- tion Shaarey Zedek. A life-long. Zionist, he was a delegate from Detroit to the ZOA convention held in Balti- more when the late Justice 'Louis D. Brandeis assumed lead- ership of the Zionist Organiza- tion of America, Justice Bran- deis was a guest in his home during a visit here. Mr. Klein was a charter board member of the Hebrew Free Loan Association and was ' hon- ored a few years ago with life Membership in this association. He was a member of the Kadi- mah Society, one of the first Zionist bodies in Detroit; was a pioneer in the establishment of the United Hebrew Schools and served as a member of t h e board of the United Jewish Charities. Besides his son, Maurice, and his daughter, Julia, he is sur- vived by another son, Victor W.; three grandchildren, two brothers and a sister. Mr. Klein was a great admirer of Dr. A. M.. Hershman. He was deeply attached to Rabbi Hershman and for many years urged him to publish his ser mons. One of the greatest joys of his life was to learn, a few weeks before his death, that Congregation Shaarey Zedek had NEW YORK — An emergency grant of $25,000 to provide im- mediate food and housing for 2,500 Kurdish Jews who 'recently fled to Teheran to escape anti- Jewish excesses' in northwest Iran, has been made by the Joint Distribution Committee, following an on-the-spot in- spection of the refugees' plight by Dr. Joseph J. Schwartz, di- rector-general of the American relief _agency which is supported by the United Jewish Appeal. According to Dr. Schwartz, about 1,800- of the refugees are camped in a Jewish cemetery outside Teheran, while some '700 are crowded in the local syna- gogue. Native Jewis of Teheran, at a meeting held last Satur- day night undertook to raise an additional $25,000 to add to JDC's emergency contribution for the refugees. U.S. Court Pampers German Vandals MUNICH (JTA)—The Supreme United States Occupation Ap- peals Court reduced sentences on three Germans charged with damaging a synagogue at Mark- treditz, Bavaria, on. Sept. 26, 1949. Sentences of 10 months on Max Dressel. and Hans Riess were reduced to four months each, and a four-month sen- tence on August Riess was sus- pended. The Appeals Court also rejected the lower court's find- ing that the three men desecrat- ed the synagogue. Twenty-eight tombstones in the Jewish cemetery in Hems- bach, located near Mannheim, were overthrown and damaged last week-end. There is an old Norman town in England called Broadway, dating back to the Eighth Cen- tury. - Cemetery. Memorials Lowest Prices for Highest Quality Granite and Outstanding Desigris DETROIT MONUMENT WORKS. - 2744 W. Davison cor. Lawton TO. 8-7523 TO. 8-6923 U. S. Sends Iron Lungs To Combat Polio in Israel LAKE SUCCESS, (JTA) — In response to an urgent request from the government of Israel, the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund has rushed two iron lungs by air to Haifa to help in combat- ting a serious increase in polio. The portable type lungs have already arrived, and are about to be used to assist stricken chil- dren. Two larger, nonportable lungs' are also on the way, hav- ing been loaned for six months by the British Government, to UNICEF, for use in Israel. Legion Toys in Israel TEL AVIV, (JTA)—The Israel vessel Akko arrived at Haifa with a cargo of 10 tons of toys for Israel children. The toys were collected in the United States by the American Legion for children in many countries overseas. Expanded Facilities OF UNEQUALLED BEAUTY A distinct departure from the usual conception of a funeral home, the new ad- dition to our Chapel is op- pointed and furnished with exquisite taste, presenting an atmosphere of dignity and refinement that is rest- ful and comforting. -29MINISMIgn The Ira KAUFMAN 9419 DEXTER BOULEVARD Chapel at EDISON Tyler 7-4520