Honor Raymond Zussmari, War Hero,
At Library Dedication on Feb. 4

The memory of a Jewish hero
Of World War II will be honored
when the Lt. Raymond Zuss-
man Post of the Jewish War
Veterans will dedicate the new
Lt. • Raymond Zussman Me-
morial Library in the Jewish
War Veteran Memorial Home,
4095 W. Davison.
The ceremony will be held in
the auditorium of the Davison
devtish 'Center at 8 p.m., and
will be highlighted by the un-
veiling of a portrait of Lt. Zuss-
man, the only Jewish GI in
World War II to have been
awarded the
. coveted Congres-
sional Medal of Honor.
Representatives of the Fifth
Army area will be present in
behalf of the Arniy. Other par-
ticipants will _be Samuel J.
Rhodes, president of the JeW-
ish War Veterans Memorial
Home Association, who will be
the principal speaker, and Rab-
bi Herbert Eskin, former na-
tional chaplain of the Veterans
Of Foreign Wars, who will de-
liver the invocation.
The Music Study Club Ensem-
ble under the direction of Dan
Frohman and R e v a Reatha
Jackson, harpist, will offer
musical selection. The cere-
monies will be followed by a
tour of the new JWV building.
Lt. Zussman's portrait will be
unveiled by his sisters, Bernice
and Betty Zussman. Arrange-
ments for -the program are un-
der the direction of Rube Ziss-
man, commander of Lt. Ray-
mond Zussman Post, and Mrs.
Harriet Mellin, president of the

Auxiliary.

Kvutzah Women Hold
Luncheon, ,Jan. 30

The 16th annual donor lunch-

eon of the Kvutzah Ivrith Ladies
Auxiliary will be given Tuesday,
at Zack's Catering. Rabbi Mor-
ris Adler will be guest speaker,
and Wyn Garden will render
several musical selections.
Mrs. Julius Ring, president of
the auxiliary, will open the don-
or program, while Mrs. Norman
Leemon, an alumna of the
schools, is in charge of the af-
fair. Reservations may be made
by calling, Mrs. Goldberg TY.
8-2629, or Mrs. Sinolinsky, WE.
3-2633.
The Kvutzah Auxiliary, whose
Main • purpose is the advance-
ment of Hebrew culture, lends
much support to the United He-
brew Schools. A special fund for
a special_ youth library was es-
tablished at a meeting Jan._ 16.
A check for $1,000 was presented
to Bernard Isaacs, superintend-
ent of the United Hebrew
Schools by the Kvutzah Women.
Guest speaker was Theodore
Baruch. Greetings were extended
by two United Hebrew Schools
high school students; Joseph
Katz. Kvutzah president; Mrs. A.
DeRoven, Mrs. A. Panush and
the late Mrs. Benjamin Stein,
who was well when she spoke
but died the' next morning.

THE JEWISH NEWS-9'

Friday, January 26, 1951

Two Detroiters
In UJA Cabinet

Lt. Zussman was cited for the
honor as a result of gallantry
in action on Sept. 12, 1944. He
was killed in subsequent action
a few days later and the medal
Louis Berry and Joseph Holtz-
was awarded posthumously. An man are included in the Nation-
identiCal replica of the medal al 1951 United Jewish Appeal
and a copy - of the citation from
the President will be on perma-
nent display in the Library be-
ing dedicated in his honor.

Jewish Women Lead
In Campaign Efforts
For March of Dimes

"We _walk for those who can-
not walk," is the slogan literally
put into action by local Jewish
women's groups, according to
Mrs. Charles Gitlin.
Under the leadership of Mrs.
Dorothy Jaffin, chairman of pub-
lic relations for the group, one
group of women is working for
the March of Dimed at the
Michigan Central Station, filling
the assignment, in shifts, of
meeting all incoming and out-
going trains. Sandra Grossberg,
a polio victim of several years
ago who has - recently returned
from Warm Springs, makes her
appeal from her wheel. chair.
Active on the Volunteer com-
mittee. are:

Mesdames Barney Weiner, Joseph Ros-
son, George Levin, Charles Weinbaum,
Hyman Lewis, Harry Miller, 'Morris Si-
mon, Sam Kane, Leon Golden, Joseph
Bussell, Sol Schreiman, Meyer Schiff,
Max Sampson, Morris Garber, Joseph
Greenberg, David Cohen, Seldon Leach,
Roy Chaffin, Louis Alpert, Charles
Grossberg, Sain Rapport, Percy Weiner,
. k, Louis Handelsman,
Joseph Beinensto e
Max Schwartz. Al Jaffin, Dan Glicker
and Samuel Selman.

Mrs. Gitlin, an active worker
on behalf of sufferers from In-
fantile Paralysis since the early
years of the National Founda-
tion, is in charge of a Detroit
area. Mrs. Louis Alpert is chief
aid to Mrs. Gitlin in this phase
of the March of Dimes. ACting
as Colonels in the area are:

Mesdames Ben Milstein, Louis Papo,
Emmanuel Klein, Charles Grossberg, N.
Meyers, Barney Winer. Majors in the
same area include Mesdames Ben Dean,
George Canvz -sar, Eugene Price, Jack
Leibowitz; George Greenspan, Harold
Tanguay and Max Snow.

Farband Conference
Opens Saturday Night

MICHAEL M. NISSELSON

Campaign Cabinet named this
week by Edward M. M. Warburg,
general UJA chairman.
Rudolf G. Sonneborn at the
same time became a_ national
UJA chairrnan.
• Michael M. Nisselson was
named assistant executive vice-
chairman of the UJA.

liadaSsah Groups
Slate Annual Oneg
Shabbats for Feb. 3

Mrs. Benjamin Lakin, Hadas-
sah Chapter oneg shabbat chair-

Israel Enumerates 5 Points
In Indemnification Claims

TEL AVIV (JTA)—Israel en-
voys to Washington, London and
Paris delivered identical notes
to the American, British and
French governments outlining
the Jewish people's claims on
Germany for the murder and
spoilation of 6,000,000 Jews in
Nazi-dominated Europe. A sim-
ilar note was handed to the
Soviet charge d'affaires here.
The communication made the
following five points:
1. Six years after the surren-
der of Germany Allied decrees
are largely unfulfilled requests.
The powers of the Allies under
the occupation statutes should
be retained by the four powers.
2. Israel, which has accepted
the largest number of Jewish
linmigrants, is especially inter-
ested in the satisfaction of their
clahns, and supports their claims
for compensation for physical
injury sustained in Germany
prior to and during the war.
3. The Israel Government re-
quests that the occupying pow-
ers utilize legal machinery to
ensure speedy and effeCtive set-.
tlement of these claims. It sug-
gests that a special law be en-
acted to cover all the German
states where claims cannot pres-
ently be processed because of ar-
bitrary restrictions concerning
dates and residence require-
ments. The general law should
prevent a victim's claim being
invalidated because the claimant
left the place of the crime after
a certain date and now resides
outside Germany.
4. These claim's are forwarded
not only in- the name of Israel,
but for the Jewish people as a
whole. The handling of claims
against Germany is rendered it-

man, -announced that eight of
the ten groups will hold their
annual oneg shabbat programs
on Feb. 3. Following is a list of
the groups participating and
Resume Emigration of Jews
their programs:

CENTRAL EAST, Mrs. Morse Saulson,
chairman; the life and works of Bialik.
Mrs. Lawrence 'Crolui will give a, -review
of the life of Bialik; Mrs. Benjamin La-
kin will give English readings, and Mrs.
Morris Friedman, Yiddish readings of
his poems-.
CENTRAL WERT, Mrs. Moses Lehrman,
chairman; Rabbi- Fram will relate his"!
Hamisha Asar b'Shevat discussion to the
Jewish National Fund; -
RUSSELL WOODS EAST, Mrs. William
Gottesman, chairman; Reuven Kaminer
will speak on "Partisan View of itrael.
Mrs. Maurice Landau will lead co mun-
ity singing;
RUSSELL WOODS WEST, Mrs. Meyer
Weisenfeld, chairman; Mrs. Sanford Sa-
perstein, of Pontiac, will give readings
on will
of Bialik. Mrs. Milford Pregers
report current events;
BAGLEY, Mrs: Benjamin . Gould, chair-
man; Mrs. Gertrude Oberstein will review
"Saints and Sinners;" ' • ' -
UNIVERSITY WEST, Mrs. Morris Rus-
kin, chairman; Mrs. Jacob Segal will de-
pict origin of Israel Symphony. Also a
an
on A m
sh efitsTINIZIITY EA S TerZ.ND SHERWOOD,
Mrs. Joseph Marwil and Mrs. Benjamin
Shlin, chairmen; Isadore Berger, of Royal
Society
a of Photographers of London, will
show trip through Israel in color film.

From Hungary After Freeze

BUDAPEST, (JTA)—The emi-
gration of Jews from Hungary
to Israel, which was interrupted
last October,- will be resumed
next month. Under the agree-
ment originally reached be-
tween the Hungarian and Israel
authorities, only 3,000 Jews can
leave HungarY. Of this total,
many left 'before the -October
freeze.

lusory because of lack of cur-
rency transfer facilities. It is

immoral to apply • currency
t si a n s f e r restrictions to the
claims of peisecutees, permit-
ting Germany to benefit from'
the mass murder and rapine
wrought by the Nazis.
5. Apart from the satisfaction
of individual claims, Israel re-
serves the right to forward gen-
eral *claims for the wholesale
destruction of European Jewry.
No official estimate has been
released of the total of the in-
dividual claims for compensa-
tion. Informed sources here be-
lieve that it exceeds 100,000,000
pounds ($280,000,000).

JwF Agency Members''
Hold Second Institute

Professional staff members of
local Jewish spcial service agen-
cies affiliated- with the Jewish
Welfare Federation will hold
the second session of their,. In
Service Training Institute at 8
p.m. Monday, at , the Davison
Jewish Center.
The topic for this session will
be "The Role of the Professional
in Jewish Communal Service."
Harold Silver will reside. M.
Mandelkorn will make the pre-
sentation.
At the opening session, Mau-
rice Bernstein, executive direc-
tor of the Jewish Welfare Fed-
eration of Columbus, discussed
"B a s i c Principles of . Jewish
Communal Service."

.

Pythian Joint InStallation
At a joint ceremony on Feb.
4, officers of the Pythian Sisters
and Knights of Pythias will be
installed. A dinner at 6:30 p.m.,
at the Park Ave. Hotel will pre-
cede the rituals. For reservations,
call WE. 3-5462 or TO. 9-0007.

ROSEDALE

SHOW BAR

19222

Grand 'River, nr. Outer Dr.

UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP

ENTERTAINMENT

Now Appearing

LENA BOX

_The annual city-wide co'n-
ORGANIST
ference of Farband, Labor
Formerly of Arganot, Houghton Lake
n
ds
One
out
of
22
persons
sPe)
Zionist. Order, will open Satur-
.Reasonable Price
part of his life in a mental hos-
day evening at the Labor Zion-
No Door Charge
Free Parking
pital.
ist Institute, 13722 Linwood. '
- J. -Katzman, assistant general
-secretary of Farband, will be
guest speaker. Reports on
phases of Farband activities and
plans for the forthcoming year
Normally, the heart is about as
will be discussed.
strong and vigorous at 50 as at
The conference will continue 20.
Children 7 Years and Older Accepted
Sunday, 2 p.m., with resolutions
Transportation Furnished
and elections of city committee
officers on the agenda. A dinner
Subjects Taught:
at 6 p.m. for delegates and
Yiddish
-
Hebrew'-
History - Customs
guests will end the sessions.
All members of Farband and
Holiday Celebrations - Jewish Music & Drama
affiliated groups are urged to
attend the conference.
TO. 8-5368
11529 LINWOOD

Ben-Gurion's Daughter Gets
Hebrew University's Degree

RENANA BEN-G1JRION, daughter of Israel Prime Minister
David Ben-Gurion; is shown receiving her Master of Science de-
gree certificate . from Prof. M. Schwabe, Rector of the Hebrew
University, in Jerusalem, at the 20th annual commencement exer-
cises in the auditorium of the Ratisbonne Monastery.- Miss Ben-
Gurion majored in bacteriology and hygiene.

New Semester Registration Now Open for
Workmen's Circle School & Kindergarten

Teenager Gets
Appetite Back;
Thanks Hadacol

HADACOL Supplies Vitamins 91
142, Niacin and Iron Which Hot.
System Lacked,

,

According to Sara Lorain.

Beck, Box 253, Coker, Alabama,
when a person is only 15 years
old and feels terrible, can't eat
or sleep the way they should, it's
mighty bad. That is the way-
Loraine says she used to feel,
but that was,
of course, be-
fore she start-
ed taking HAD-
ACOL. Loraine
found that tak-
ing HADACOL
helped her sys-
tem overcome
deficiencies in
Vitamins Bi, B9,
Niacin and
Iron, which
HADACOL-,$:',.$
contains.
Here is Loraine Beck's own
statement: "I- wasrun-down;
sick and skinny, and " weighed
only 90 pounds before I used
HADACOL. I would not eat be-
cause I had no appetite. Now I
weigh 123 pounds and have an
appetite. I feel a lot better. I
have been taking HADACOL 10
Months and am still taking it. I
am 15 years old. HADACOL has
done me lots of good."

• 1950, The LeBleno Corporation
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