DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-23 Friday, October 15, 1954 Obituaries LOUIS SANDLER, 90 Clair- mount, died Oct. 4. Services were at Hebrew Memorial Chapel. Survived by brothers, Max Sand- ler of Toronto and Harry Sand- ler of Pittsburgh; 2 sisters, Mrs. Sam Greisdorf and Bessie Sand- ler of Toronto. * * * SARAH PERGAMENT, 4274 Burlingame, died Oct. 4. Serv- ices were at Hebrew Memorial Chapel. Survived by sons, Morris and Henry; daughters, Mrs. Lena Sorin and Mrs. Morris Zi- vow; 2 sisters; 7 grandchildren; 11 great-grandchildren. * * * FRIEDA KORN LITTMAN, 11501 Petoskey, died Oct. 6. Serv .- ices were at Hebrew Memorial Chapel. Survived by two sons, Israel Korn and Sigmund Litt- man; a daughter, Mrs. Helen Moskowitz; 16 grandchildren; 21 great-grandchildren. i 5 MARY GORDENKER KAPLAN, 3045 Blaine, died Oct. 7. Services were in Mt. Clemens, through Hebrew Memorial Chapel, Sur- vived by sons, Sidney Gorden of Miami Beach and Samuel Gor- denker of Mt. Clemens; a daugh- ter, Mrs. Sophie Meyers, 5 grand- children. * * * ABRAHAM LINDEN, 17371 Prairie, died Oct. 8. Services were at Hebrew Memorial Chap- el. Survived by wife, Tillie; sons, Joseph, Sam, Charles and Morris A.; daughters, Mrs. Molly Gor- don, Mrs. Sam Molitz and Mrs. Albert Dubin; 19 grandchildren; 7 great-grandchildren. • • • ISAAC ABRAMOVITZ, 2521 W. McNichols, died Oct. 6. Services were at Ira Kaufman Chapel. He leaves his wife, Rebecca; son, Morris; daughter, Mrs. Adolph Goodman; three broth- ers and two grandchildren. * * * HYMAN BLACK, 21713 Snow, Dearborn, died Oct. 6. Services were at Ira Kaufman Chapel. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Minnie Black; sons, Edward and Bern- ard. * * * IRVING E. SALITER, 14540 Vassar, died Oct. 7. Services were at Ira Kaufman Chapel. He leaves his wife, Mary; daughters, Mrs. Richard Rycus of • Oak Park and Mrs. Leo Sussman of Toronto; his mother, two broth- ers, a sister and two grandchil- dren. * * CELIA A. MEYER, 2430 W. Philadelphia, died Oct. 9. Serv- ices were at Ira Kaufman Chapel. She leaves her husband, Herman; daughter, Mrs. Ken- neth. R. Eaton; four brothers, three sisters and three grand- children. * * a EUGENE JOSEPH HARTMAN, 2637 W. Boston, died Oct. 9. Services were at Ira Kaufman Chapel. He leaves his wife, Sara; son, Stuart; daughters, Mrs. Max Feldman of Detroit and Mrs. Irving Spitz of New York, and six grandchildren. CARD OF THANKS The family of the late JACOB MUST Acknowledges with grate- ful appreciation the many kind expressions of sym- pathy extended by rela- tives and friends during the family's recent be- reavement. MAX KRIEGER, 4277 Mon- terey, died Oct. 9. Services were at Ira Kaufman Chapel. He leaves three sons, Byron, Mil- ford and Lawrence; a brother and two grandchildren. * * a PAUL YALE G.ARELIK, 18510 Pennington, died Oct. 10. Serv- ices at Ira Kaufman Chapel. He leaves his wife, Ethel; a son, Laurence; mother, Mrs. Anna Garelik; three brothers and four sisters. * * * ELEANOR LINDER, 10451 Oak Park Blvd., Oak Park, Mich., died Oct. 8. Services and interment in Buffalo, N. Y. She leaves her son, Michael; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fox, of Buffalo, and a sister. * * • LENA ROSENTHAL, 2205 W. Euclid, died Oct. 11. Services at Ira Kaufman Chapel. She leaves three sons, Irving and Ben, of Detroit, and Joseph, of Buffalo, N. Y.; three grandchildren and a great grandchild. * * * ROSE KUHNRICH, 18419 Men- dota, died Oct. 11. Services at Ira Kaufman Chapel. She leaves her daughter, Mrs. Pauline Fox; a sister, Mrs. Isadore Bradfield; a brother, Adolph Einczig, and two grandchildren. Monument Unveilings (Unveiling announcements may be In- serted by mail or by calling The Jewish News office, VE. 8-9364. Written an- nouncements must be accompanied by the name and address of the person making the insertion. There is a standard charge of $2.00 for unveiling notices, The family of the late Ido. Sampson announces the un- veiling of a monument in her memory at 1:30 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 24, at Bnai David Cemetery, on Van Dyke. Rabbi - Donin will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. * a The family of the late Joseph Firestone announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his mem- ory at 12 noon, Sunday, Oct. 24, at Northwest Hebrew Memorial Park Cemetery. Rabbi Segal will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. The family of the late George Sofferin announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his mem- ory at 1:30 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 24, at Ma c hp elah Cemetery. Rabbi Fram will officiate. Rela- tives and friends are asked to attend. * * * The family of the late Morris Varkle announces the unveiling of a monument in his memory at 1 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 24, at Nusach Harie Cemetery. Rabbi Adler will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to at- tend. * * * The family of the late Ed- ward Feldman announces the unveiling of a .monument in his memory at 12 noon, Sunday, Oct. 24, at Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Rabbi Adler will offi- ciate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. CARD OF THANKS The family of the late Dr. Simon S. Farbman acknowledges with deep appreciation the many kind expressions of sym- pathy extended by relatives and friends during the family's re- cent bereavenient. CARD OF SYMPATHY The Officers and Members of the KESHENEVER BESSARABIER AID SOCIETY Extend deepest sympathy to Fellow-Member. Saul Share, and to the entire Share Family, on the recent passing of Mrs. Rose Share, beloved wife and mother and ardent worker in all charitable causes. Start Scholarship Fund Honoring Mrs. Altman The family of the late Mrs. Dorothy Altman this week an- nounced that a perpetual scholarship fund in her memo- ry has been established at Wayne University. Mrs. Altman, who was 47, died suddenly on Oct. 6. Funeral services were held Oct. 8, at Ira Kaufman Chapel, with burial in Beth El Memorial Park ceme- tery. Herself at, student at Wayne University at the time of her death, Mrs. Altman had long been interested in teaching and its problems. The scholarship fund will aid needy students planning to go on to teaching careers. The .family requests that in- stead of flowers, contributions be sent to the scholarship fund, in care of Mrs. Altman's hus- band, Dr. Raphael Altman, at the family home, 18645 Rose- lawn. Besides her husband, Mrs. Altman is survived by her two daughters, Phyllis and Mrs. Stephen Bromberg; her mother, Mrs. Gertrude Holinstat, a brother, Herman Holinstat; and six sisters, Mrs. George Seyburn, Mrs. Mack Lane, Mrs. Adele Kates, Mrs. Louis Mann, Mrs. John Sillman and • Mrs. Marvin Barnett. Zionist Leaders Urge Administration To Return to Bi-Partisanism with Israel Direct JTA Teletype Wire to the Jewish News NEW YORK — Leaders of the Republican and Democratic Parties were called upon by a conference of several hundred Zionist leaders here to safe- guard the traditional American bi-partisan policy of friendship and support for Israel. At the same time, they adopted a resolution expressing "in- creased concern of the harmful effects of the Administration's current attitude" on this policy. The resolution urged leaders of both parties to urge the Administration "to withhold arms shipments to the Arab States, to concern itself actively with maintaining Israel's se- curity as an integral part of American policy in the Middle East and to induce the Arab States to enter into non-aggres- sion agreements with Israel. The resolution was adopted at a spcittl?..1 conference of Zionist representatives from the met- ropolitan area convened by the Zionist Organization of America at the Hotel Vanderbilt. - Mortimer May, president of the ZOA who was the principal speaker, stressed that "American support of Zionist aspiration since 1948 of the state of Is- French Doom Two Joseph Opatoshu Dies Top Nazis to Death NEW YORK, (JTA) — Jewish leaders and representatives of major Jewish cultural, Zionist and labor groups attended the funeral of Joseph Opatoshu, famed Yiddish novelist who died last Thursday at the age of 67. Born near Plotzk, Russia, Opatoshu came to this country in 1907, after attending school in Warsaw. He was graduated from Cooper Union as an engi- neer but devoted himself en- tirely to writing. His first work appeared in 1910. Many of his works were translated from Yiddish into English, Hebrew and other languages. In addition to his best known work, "In Polish Woods," he was also the author of "Hebrew," "The Dancer," "A Day in Reg- ensburg" and "Rabbi Akiba." He was active for many years in the work of Jewish cultural groups. Anti-Semitic Oil Man, George Armtrong, Dies NATCHEZ, Miss., (JTA) W. Armstrong, Sr., oil man who once offered to endow a small college if it would agree to teach the doctrine of racial supremacy, died here at the age of 88. Armstrong, who denied he was anti -Semiti c, wrote several pamphlets accusing the Jews of attempting to gain financial control of the United States. He had offered Jefferson Mil- itary College land and mineral rights which he-estimated to be worth $50,000,000 if it would limit its student body to Chris- tians and would teach the prin- ciple of Anglo-Saxon superiority. The college rejected the offer following a national storm of protest. Dies in Berlin Synagogue While Delivering Sermon BERLIN, (JTA)—Dr. Hermann Schreiber, resident of, London and onetime rabbi in Potsdam, died of a heart attack while de- livering a sermon during the Rosh Hashanah services in the Pestalozzi Strasse Temple here. He was 72. . Dr. Schreiber had been active in the affairs of the West Lon- don Synagogue for many years. In recent years he had made it a practice to return to Berlin to attend Rosh Hashanah serv- ices with the Liberal congrega- tion here. Pleasant words are as a honeycomb, sweet to the soul, and health to the bones. = Prov. 16: 24. PARIS, (JTA) — Karl Oberg, one-time S.S. General in France, known during the occupation of France as the "Butcher of Paris," and his aide, former Ges- tapo Col. Helmuth Knocken, were condemned to death by a French military tribunal which convicted them of war crimes, including the mass deportation and death of tens of thousands of Jews. Both men, currently serving life imprisonment sentences im- posed by a British court for or- dering the execution of British paratroopers during the war, based their -defense on the ar- gument that in ordering mass executions or deportations they had acted on orders from Hitler or Heinrich Himmler. rael has always been bi-parti- san." He added that "this country's outstanding statesmen, Republi- cans and Democrats alike, have through the years worked to- gether to create the traditional American policy of friendship to Israel." Charging that "recent actions of our State Department, es- pecially the decision to send arms to the Arab States, have endangered this historic Ameri- can policy towards Israel," May said: "It is difficult to conceive of a bi-partisan approach based on the current attitude of the State Department. Clearly, therefore, the Administration must act immediately to pre- serve not only the traditional American policy but also the bi- partisan approach which pro- duced it." Israel Army Gets 400 New Officers Direct JTA Teletype Wire to the Jewish News JERUSALEM — Four hundred new Israeli Army officers Wed- nesday paraded through Jerusa- lem's main streets following their completion of an officers' training course. After the parade, the officers were entertained by President Ben Zvi at his. residence. Pre- mier Moshe Sharett, Defense Minister Pinchas Lavon, and I Army Chief of Staff Maj. Gen. Moshe Dayan took the salute. The graduates included 80 students of the Hebrew Univer- sity and 40 of the Israel Techni cal Institute at Haifa. Premier Sharett, addressing the cadets, called on them to hold high the standard of Jew- ish morale, and to combine their military training with "humani- tarian science." - He told them that their par- ade marked an important oe- casion because it was the first such parade in Jerusalem • and the first such exercise to be held publicly. JOSHUA S. SPERKA Author of "ETERNAL LIFE" In Memoriam In loving memory of our dear father, George Moskowitz, who passed away on Oct. 14, 1946 (17 days in Tishri). Sadly missed by his children, Alice, Belle, Molly and Pearl. * * * In loving memory of our dear daughter and sister, Lillian Kaf- tan, who passed away on Oct. 14, 1953 (five days in Heshvan). Sadly missed by her mother, father, sisters, Flora, Jerry and Natalie; and children, Frances and Bernard. MONUMENTS By Karl C. Berg owner Max Virotslaysky Monument WOrks I Distinctive Monuments Reasonably Priced 3201 JOY ROAD Corner Wildemere TY. 6-0196 17125-27 RABBI SPERKA Popular hand - book on the laws of MOURNING, KADDISH, YIZ- KOR and YAItR- ZEIT. Now re- printed in a new edition. Price 52.50. Available at all Jewish book stores and MENORAH CHAPEL 3800 PURITAN MENORAH ./ CAapd MENORAH—organized to fill a unique need—the need for a more personalized and un- hurried service. Menorah of- fers an environment of re- finement and dignity at a cost available to all. PURITAN cor. DEXTER UNiversity 1-7700 C. W. MOORE, Mgr. VAN RoiscH co. DYKE AVENUE Opposite main entrance to Mt. Olivet Cemetery DETROIT 3 4, MICH. TW. 2-6200 ,( DESIGNER . MANUFACTURERS MONUMENTS • GRAVE MARKERS•MAUSOLEUMS GRANITE • sR O N Z E • MARBLE WE ERECT WORK ANY PLACE IN THE UNITED STATES