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October 31, 1952 - Image 24

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1952-10-31

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Obituaries

In Memoriam

GEORGE ALEXANDER, 2650
MRS. JULIA MARCUSE, 83
9600 Dexter, died Oct. 21. Serv- Taylor, died Oct. 25. Services at
ices - at W. R. Hamilton Chapel. Hebrew Benevolent Chapel. Sur-
vived by his wife, Leah; daugh-
slew- She leaves a son, Philip.
* * *
ters, Marion and Nancy; and a
NATHAN KLINE, 16884 Bir- sister.
* *
wood, died Oct. 18. Services at
MICHART. GOODMAN, Wash-
Kaufman Chapel. He leaves his
wife, Ilone; son, Dr. Allan Kline; ington, D. C. died Oct. 20. Serv-
and daughter, Mrs. Julius Guns- ices at Kaufman Chapel. He
leaves his brothers, Dr. Herbert
berg.
L.; Benjamin, Allan, Albert, Ber-
* * *
FANNIE SOLDINGER, '3 2 0 0 nard and Louis; sisters, Mrs.
Tyler, died Oct. 19. Services at Ethel Home, Harry Haberman,
Kaufman Chapel. She leaves her Charles Berkowitz, Mrs. Mac
husband, Adolph; son, Harold; Waxer and Miss Saide Goodman.
* *
daughter, Mrs. Max Gould; six
DORA COHN, 952 Victoria,
sisters and two grandchildren.
Windsor, died Oct. 24. Services
*
*
BEATRICE WEISBERG, 18010 at Kaufman Chapel. She leaves
Northlawn, died Oct. 20. Services her sons Gabriel and Bernard;
at Kaufman Chapel. She leaves and daughters Mrs. J. L. Cohen
her husband, Herman; son, and Mrs. David Fink; a brother,
Marvin L. Weston; daughters, five sisters and six grandchil-
Mrs. David Fisher, of Elkins dren.
*
a.
Pk., Pa.; Mrs. George Korman;
DR. BERNARD ROSE, 2505 W.
and three sisters.
• * *
Boston, died Octl 27. Services at
MAX SCHWARTZ, 19211 Kaufman Chapel. He leaves his
Prairie, died Oct. 21. Services at wife, June; son, Richard; daugh-
Kaufman Chapel. He leaves his ter, Mrs. Ludwig Strass; a grand-
wife, Anna; son, David; daugh- child ,two brothers and a sister.
*

*
ters, Lillian, Rosalee and Mrs.
David Steharn-in; a brother, a
BESSIE VINE, 20168 Hartwell,
sister and four grandchildren., died Oct. 26. Services at Kauf-
* * *
man Chapel. She leaves her sons,
LOUIS I. KRAMER, 3 3 5 7 Milton and Sherwin; daughter,
Webb, died Oct. 22. Services at Mrs. Herman Emmer, two broth-
Kaufman Chapel. He leaves his ers and two sisters.
wife, Jennie; sons, --larold, Oscar
* *
*
and Charles; daughters, Mrs.
SIMON ZELDES, 3375 Ewald
George Stein, Mrs. Sol Fink; a Circle, died Oct! 28. Services at
brother and three sisters.
Kaufman Chapel. He leaves his
* * *
wife, Lillian; sons, Mayer and
HARRY LEVINBOOK, High- Hyram, of Israel; a grandson,
land Park Hotel, died Oct. 23. two brothers and a sister.
Services a n d interment i n
* * *
Toledo, 0.
EVA MANCHICK, of Cleveland,
* * *
0., died Oct. 24. Services and in-
SARAH • ZONDER, 2517 W. terment in Cleveland. A former
Buena Vista, died Oct. 20. Serv- Detroiter, she is survived by her
ices at Hebrew Benevolent Chap- husband, Louis; son, Bernard;
el. Survived by her sons, Arthur., daughter, Mrs. Anita Echt; a
of Ann Arbor, and Jack; daugh- grandchild; her mother, Mrs.
ters, Mrs. Esther Silverman and Dora Mendelsohn; sisters, Lillian
Mrs. Edith Averbuch; three sis- I. Wolok, of Detroit, Celia Reu-
ters and five grandchildren.
ben, of Washington, D.C., Mrs.
* *
*
Hattie Raymond; and a brother,
MATILDA PERENYI, 2701 Dick Mendelsohn.
• • •
Blaine, died Oct. 22. Services at
the Hebrew Benevolent Chapel.
JOSEPH KAHN, 197 W. Grand
Survived by a niece, Mrs. Helen Blvd., died Oct. 23. Services at
Hauser.
Hebrew Benevolent Chapel. Sur-
* *
*
vived by his wife, Sarah; sons,
JOSEPH ADELMAN, 11845 La H. Malcolm and Ellis L; a grand-
Salle, died Oct. 22. Services at son and a brother.
Hebrew Benevolent Chapel. Sur-
vived by his wife, Sarah; daugh- Chachmey Lublin to Honor
ters, Mrs. Esther Bernstein and
Mrs. Beatrice Greenblatt; moth- Yahrzeit of Its Founder
er, Mrs. Reva Adelman; two
Yeshivath Chachmey Lublin
brothers and five grandchildren. will observe the Yahrzeit of its
* * *
founder, Rabbi Me'ir Shapiro,
LOUISE ROSENZVEIG, 19505 with a memorial dinner at 6
Evergreen, died Oct. 22. Services p.m., Sunday, at the Yeshivah,
at Hebrew Benevolent Chapel. Linwood and Elmhurst.
Survived by her husband, Mor-
Rabbi Isaac Stollman, of Cong.
ris; daughter, Mrs. Sarah Gor- Mishkan Israel, and Rabbi
don.
Chaim Sachnovitz, a leadh* fig-
* *
*
ure in Chicago Jewry, will be
MOE GOLDSTEIN, 2680 Ro- guest speakers., -
chester, died Oct. 26. Services
and burial in New York City. Zurich Chief Rabbi Dies
AM" Survived by his wife, Blanche;
daughter,. Mrs. Marion Lazarus,
ZURICH, (JTA)—Dr. T. Lew-
of New York, and two grandchil- enstein,
Chief Rabbi of Zurich,
dren.
who died here at 83, held the
post of chief rabbi of The
Hague, Copenhagen and Zurich
at one time or another, was
president of the Agudas Israel
Lowest Pikes for Highest Quality
World Organization from 1919
Granite and Outstanding Designs
to 1923 and remained a member
of the organization's rabbinical
DETROIT MONUMENT
council until his death.
WORKS

Cemetery Memorials

2744 W. Davison cor. Lawton
TO. 8-6923
TO. 8-7523

24

THE JEWISH NEWS
Friday, October 31, 1952



Qualified for Service



Before being granted a license to

practice, • every funeral director must

meet certain standards of education

and professional proficiency — and

finally a State license examination.

This is your assurance that we are

qualified to serve you. Beyond this,

however, is our sincere desire to help

—not only as professional men but

as your friends and neighbors,

-3 101111M11111115014

The Ira

KAUFMAN

Chapel

9419 DEXTER BOULEVARD at EDISON

Funeral AllY4)ers and Directors

TYler 7-4520

••• ■ •1••• ■

In loving memory of my wife,
Anna Slobin, and dear mother
whom God called to her eternal
rest one year ago, on Nov. 14,
1951.

Happy and sad hours we once enjoyed;
How sweet their memory still.
But death has left loneliness
The world can never fill.

Monument Unveilings

(Unveiling -announcements may be 'in-
serted by mail or by calling The Jewish
News office, WO. 5-1155.
Written an-
nouncements must be accompanied by
the name and address of the person
making the insertion. There is a standard
charge of S2 for unveiling notices,
measuring an inch in depth).

*

The family of the late Elka
Feldman announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in her mem-
ory at 1 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 2,
at Westwood Cemetery, 26200
Michigan. Rabbi Gruskin will
Sadly missed by her husband, officiate. Relatives and friends
Norman Slobin, children and are asked to attend.



grandchildren.
The family of the late. Molly
A memorial service in memory
of Anna Slobin will be held at 3 Last 'announces the unveiling of
p.m., Sunday, Nov. 2, at Chesed a monument in her memory at
shel' Emes Cemetery. Friends and 2 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 2, at Beth
relatives are invited to meet at Abraham Cemetery, Woodward
2 p.m., at Blair Studios, 2528 W, at Eight Mile. Rabbis Gorrelick
and Halpern will officiate. Rela-
Grand Blvd.
tives and friends are asked to
attend.

She's gone but not forgotten:
The passing years will close the wound,
But the scars will always remain.
We know our paths will cross again
And .with a smile we'll greet her
Thank Mother Nature.



Jewry

o

n the ✓ ir

This Week's Radio and Tele-
vision Programs of
Jewish Interest

THE ETERNAL LIGHT

Time: 8 a.m., Sunday, Nov. 2.
Station: WWJ.
Feature: "The Miracle at Con-
vention Hall," story of the cour-
age and heroism of Raymond
Leizer, the pianist, who, after
posing his hands in the war,
learned to play the piano again
with artificial hands.
* * *

MESSAGE OF ISRAEL

Tithe: 10 a.m., Sunday, Nov. 2.
Station: WXYZ.
Feature: Dr. Louis L. Mann,
Rabbi of Chicago Sinai Congre-
gation, will begin a series of
four lectures on "Where Do You
live?" (Part I)
* * *

FRONTIERS OF FAITH

2.

Time: 1:30 p.m., Sunday, Nov.

Station :. WWJ-TV.
Feature: "As a Wind That
Blows," story of a young medi-
cal student who gives his life in
the yellow fever plague in New
York City in 1798 to alleviate
suffering will begin a series of
Jewish-interest prbgrams.

Say Dead Sea Scrolls
Were Looted by Arabs

PHILADELPHIA, (JTA)—The
charge that the Hebrew Scrolls
discovered some time ago at the
Dead Sea came from looted
synagogues and the library of
Judah Babis in the city of Heb-
ron, which were sacked by the
Arabs in the bloody riots of
1929, is made by Prof. Solomon
Zeitlin in the current issue of
the Jewish Quarterly Review,
published by Dropsie College.
Prof. Zeitlin, who from the
beginning questioned the anti-
quity and authenticity of the
Scrolls, claims that they were
not in fact discovered in caves
near the Dead Sea by Bedouins,
but were stolen by Arabs in the
Hebron massacres and then hid-
den for many years before being
produced as new finds.
He
ints out that for the
last fe* years many of the
Torah Scrolls which were stolen
from Hebron were offered for
sale by men connected-with the
Syrian Convent who also bought
the Dead Sea Scrolls from an
Arab.
"The Hebrew Scrolls, s u p-
posedly found by Bedouins, and
brought to the Syrian Convent
by merchants, - may also have
come from Hebron, concealed
for a time in local caves," Dr.
Zeitlin. says. He does not ques-
tion the integrity of any scholar
or anyone connected with the
Hebrew Scrolls, but does ques-
tion the veracity of the mer-
chants who claimed that the
Scrolls were discovered by Be-
douins.

Jews in India Number 25,000

BOMBAY, (JTA)—India's Jew-
ish population is 25,000, accord-
ing to the results of the 1951
census. The great majority of
them—more than 20,000—live in

Bombay.





Mrs. Lena Sherman, wife of
the late George Sherman, and
children, Mrs. Mary Cohen, Mrs.
Ruth Dobrowitsky and Jack
Sherman, announce the unveil-
ing of a monument in his mem-
ory. at 1 p. m., Sunday, Nov. 2,
at Bnai David Cemetery. Rabbi
Sperka and Cantor Adler will
officiate. Relatives and friends
are asked to attend.
* * *
The family of the late Becky
Meyers announces the unveiling
of a monument in her memory
at 1 p. m. o. Sunday, Nov. 2, at
Workmen's Circle Cemetery.
Rabbi Segal will officiate. Rela-
tives and friends are asked to
attend.
* • * *
Mrs. Becky Emmer and chil-
dren announce the unveiling of
a monument in memory of their
late husband and father, Joseph
Emmer, , at 2:30 p.m., Sunday,
Nov. 2, at Beth Abraham Ceme-
tery. Rabbi Halpern will offici-
ate. Relatives and friends are
asked to attend.

*

*

The family of the late Bernard
Eisenman announces the u n -
veiling of a monument in his
memory at 12 noon, Sunda y,
Nov. 2, at Clover Hill Park Cem-
etery. Rabbi Adler will officiate.
Relatives and friends are asked
to attend.
* *
The family of the late Made-
line Collins Bershad announces
the unveiling of a monument in
her memory at 12:30 p.m., Sun-
day, Nov. 2, at Clover Hill Park
Cemetery. Rabbi Adler will offi-
ciate. Relatives and friends are
asked to attend.
* * *
The family of the late Clara
Zarankin announces t h e un-
veiling of a monument in her
memory at 12:30 p.m., Sunday,

Nov. 2, at Chesed shel Emes
Cemetery. Rabbi Halpern will
officiate. Relatives and friends
are asked to attend.
*
*
The family of the late Goldie
Rudack announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in her mem-
ory at 1:15 p.m., Sunday, Nov.
2, at Workmen's Circle Ceme-
tery, Gratiot and 14 Mile Rd.
Relatives and friends are asked
to attend. ,
•* * *
The family of the late Max
Loeffler announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in his mem-
ory at 12:30 p.m., Sunday, Nov.
9, at Oakview Cemetery. Rabbi
Lehrman and Cantor Katzman
will officiate. Relatives and
friends are asked to attend.
* *
The family of the late Louis
Cohen announces the unveiling
of a monument in his memory
at 12 noon, Sunday, Nov. 2, at
Chesed shel Ernes Cemetery.
Rabbi Stollman will officiate.
Relatives and friends are asked
to attend.
* * a
Samuel Jacobson and Bessie
Kumove announce the unveiling
of monuments in memory of
their parents, the late Judah.
and Eva Jacobson, at 12 noon,
Sunday, Nov. 2, at Bnai David
Cemetery, 9535 Van Dyke. Rabbi
Levin will officiate. Relatives
and friends are asked to attend.
* a a
The family of the late Clara
Gussin announces the unveiling
of a monument in her memory
at 11:30 a.m., Sunday, Nov. 2, at
Chesed shel Emes Cemetery,
Gratiot at 14 Mile Rd. Mr. King,
sexton, will officiate. RelatiVes
and friends are asked to attend.
*
*
The family of the late Abra-
ham Finn announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in his mem-
ory at 1:30 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 2,
at Chesed shel Emes Cemetery.
Rabbi Prero will officiate. Rela-
tives and friends are asked to
attend.

*

.

Religious Instruction
Is Ended in Schools

UTICA, N. Y., (JTA) — The
Board of Education of New
Hartford, near here, has decided
to discontinue with the first of
the year the program of using
public school buildings for re-
leaSed time religious insturction.
Use of public school facilities for
religious instruction has been
under fire and the school board
has been conducting discussions
with religious groups in New
Hartford on the question.



On the Record

By NATHAN ZIPRIN

(Copyright 1952, Seven Arts Feature Syndicate)

Who Is Paying the Bill?
The recent disclosure by the American Jewish Committee that
a registered agent in the United States for the supposedly dis-
solved neo-Nazi Socialist Reich Party in Germany had sought
State Department advice whether he must register again now
that he has' lost contact with the leaders of the movement raises
a number of questions. Why has it suddenly occurred to this ad-
vocate of neo-Nazism in America to inquire whether he must reg-
ister if it is true that the party he agented has dissolved? If the
butchers he so adores have really vanished why the pious ques-
tion whether he must register as agent for mere phantoms? The
probing sounds suspicious since it is obvious that the Hitler-lov-
ing gentleman does not work for glory alone. Since 'he evidently
hoped for an affirmative reply from the State Department, the
question naturally arises who would pay for his services, the sup-
posedly dead new-Nazi party or the murderers whose lost contact
he so bemoans? Since registered agents don't operate gratis we
wonder: are there elements in this country ready to pay his bills?
As to the scoundrel's assertion that he has no knowledge of Nazi
atrocities against Jews or of the existence of crematoria in Hitler-
Germany, it is only pertinent to note that he seems to have mas-
tered Hitler's thesis of tb.e big lie. ,
*
*
A Strange Thesis
The outcome of the forthcoming presidential race will deter-
mine the composition of Ben-Gurion's coalition. If Ike wins he
will drag the General Zionists into the Israel Cabinet. But if Adlai
emerges triumphant Ben-Ourion will have to get along with sup-
port from other groups. If in your agnosticism you are inclined
to question this bit of 'nonsense we would like to remind that the
authority for this fantastic conjecture is none other than Dana
Adams Schmidt, New York Times correspondent in Israel. This is
an incredible deduction, particularly from the point of view of the
Jewish community in the United States. The implication that the,
composition of the Israel Cabinet may become a factor in the
determination of some elements of Americans to vote either for

the General or the Governor is as silty as it is false.

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