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November 18, 1955 - Image 26

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1955-11-18

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

210—BUSINESS PROPERTY

Oak Park-9 Ml,

Cot. Geneva. 1,500 sq. ft.

Ideal for Wholesale, Retail or

office. Oil AC ht. lay., dble.

sink. Reasonable. Broker, UN

1-4300.

50—BUSINESS CARDS

A-1 PAINTING-DECORATING, con-
tractors, free estimates. J. B. Dres-
ser. TO. 8-6047.

PAINTER AND Decorator. White. Re-
moving paper, sanding and finishing
floors. TY 6-2999.

EXPERT painting and wall washing.
References. TY 7-2501.

31—TRANSPORTATION

NATHAN BORENSTEIN—Plaster con-
tractor. TY 7-0441.

GOING to Florida with new Packard,
want somebody to help drive, free
transportation. UN. 4-0143, 19464
Woodingharn.

FURNITURE repaired and refinished
Free estimates. WE 3-2110.

35 — INSTRUCTION

PROFESSIONAL Hebrew and Bar
Mitzvah teacher, reasonable. Refer-
ences. Call TO 6-7139.

PIANO, Juilliard methods. Your home
or studio. Master's degree. Alpiner.
UN 1-8215.

40—EMPLOYMENT

Fields Employment

Colored Couples, Cooks, Maids,
Chauffeurs, Janitors,
Cartakers, Porters

DAY OR WEEK

PAINTING — 5 rooms for $80. Good
work. James Taylor. TO 5-0801.

ATTENTION

SEWARD
MOVING-STORAGE CO.

Clean, modern, full ,equip. vans,
lowest rates, best service guaran-
teed. Pick ups, piano specialists
office. 24 hs. Local, long distance.

TY 8 - 2800

CARPENTER. Alterations of all kinds.
Free estimates. WE 4-4826, WE
3-0815.

FOR BETTER wall washing call James
Russell. One day service. TO 6-4005.
526 Belmont.

TR. 3-7770

DELICATESSEN counter man, expe-
rienced, age 20-35. Steady job. good
wages, vacation with pay. Apply
Northwest Delicatessen, 13436 W. 7
Mile Rd.

MARRIED MAN

Over 23, ambitious, good character
reference. Some mechancial ability.
Must be available at once. If You
are a willing worker, we can help
you double your previous income in
a permanent position. Write Post
Office Box 3981, Strathmoor Sta-
tion, Detroit 27. Giving past ex-
periences. Please include telephone
number for interview.

MAKE up to $900 monthly selling gas
heat. No canvassing, all leads. Full
or part-time. SE 6-2513.

IF YOU CAN SELL

TILE

DO YOU NEED TILE WORK?
New and Repair Special

U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO.

DI 1-0568

UN 1-5075

PAINTING—Exterior, Interior, Deco-
rating, wall - washing. W. Williams,
7758 Prairie. TE 4-0195 TY 5-9103.

I. SCHWARTZ & CO. All types of car-
penters work. TY 7-7758 or UN 2-6329.

FURNITURE UPHOLSTERED and new
made to order. First-class work.
Rubel's Upholstering, 12034 Linwood.
TU. 3-0285.

PART-TIME and relief bookkeeping
service, P. & L. and operation state-
ments. Tax reports, systems and
audits. Reasonable. UN 4-1920.

$2.50
ASH and Rubbish Drums
21 Gal. Galvanized Garbage Can $4.00
Heavy Wire Burning Baskets $2.50
Free Delivery—Matt Dean. Phone KE
3-4870—KE 1-1593.

Reply to this ad. It may be the
best move you have ever made.
Our present men averaging $400
weekly. State age, sales experience,
etc. Those that qualify, an inter-
view will be arranged. Write Box
139, THE JEWISH NEWS; 17100 W.
7 Mile Rd. Detroit 35, Michigan.

A-1 PAINTING. decorating. Reasonable
prices. Free estimates. VI 2-8997 .
BR 3-6271.

YOUNG man to work in pawn shop,
good opportunity for advancement.
Milton's Loan Office. 5545 W. War-
ren.

LEON KAHAN carpenter and cabinet
maker. Attics, rec. rooms, kitchen
cabinets. Loover doors, estimates
free. UN 2-8890.

SALESMAN, experienced, for pawn
shop. Milton's Loan Office. 5545 W.
Warren.

57—FOR SALE, HOUSEHOLD
GOODS & FURNITURE

SALESLADY for general ladies store,
part or full time. Best wages. WO
1-1847.

BABY SITTER wanted for Sunday
nights. LI 7-3069.

SECRETARY for • part-time work in
organization. Hours can be -arranged.
TO 8-8199.

HOUSEKEt,PER, to cook and keep
house for 1 adult. Private room and
- bath. TO 5-4898.

BOOKKEEPER for permanent posi-
tion. 5 day week. Apply Flom's, 8719
Linwood. TY. 6-6645.

GIRL or woman. Office work and typ
. ing, pleasant working conditions. Ex-
cellent opportunity for interesting
career. Phone TR. 3-9109 for inter-
view.

WANTED — Babysitter, vicinity Oak
Park. Steady Saturday nights. LI.
6-9112.

40A — WANTED, EMPLOYMENT

CHILD CARE, woman. References.
TO 6-4664.

45 — BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

35 YEARS established $80,000 volume
business for sale. • Building for rent
with or without inventory. Sacrifice,
retirement. Information call eve-
nings. UN 4-0723, 'til 6 p.m., VI
2-9594, Mr. Henig.

KOSHER meat market for sale, 11527
Dexter.

BAR BARGAIN

Class C and S.D.M. License, frame
building, 40x80, lot 40x100. Living
quarters. ,

Max Pitlosh Realty

TW. 3-3979

Built Up Flat
Asphalt Roofing
Gutters
Tin and Canvas Decks
- Roof Repairing

All Work Guaranteed

Cadillac
Roofing Co.

2479 W. Davison Ave,
TO 8-0071

-

3732 Joy Rd.

----9 26—DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, November 18, 1955

2 BABY CRIBS, mattress, 1 large bed,
mattress, spring. Reasonable. WE.
5-8630. 12061 Martindale.

DINING ROOM— Table, and chairs

server and breakfront, all or sep-
arate. Luxurious 18th century
Baker Line. French provencial
decorator couch and chair. All 31f,
yrs. old. 16514 Baylis, Sunday, 11
a.m. - 8 p.m.

70 — CARS FOR SALE

LATE '52 Mercury, over-drive, radio
and heater. Tinted glass. Owner.
16734 Oakfield.

Markel Homes Erects
110 Ranches in Oak Park

A development of 110 homes
is currently under construction
by the Markel Home Building
Co., just north of 10 Mile Rd., at
Gardner.
All homes are custom-built, all
brick, ranch homes. The develop-
ment is called Garden Park Man-
or, and is situated conveniently
only a half mile from the
Coolidge-10 Mile shopping area.
Eight different floor plans are
available, and every home is in-
dividually designed. Models are
available with three bedrooms,
plus paneled den or two bed-
rooms with two dens. Others fea-
ture four bedrooms with covered
terrace and attached two-car
brick garage.
Each home is located on a
paved street, and some offer a
bath and a half, while others offer
two baths. All have center pass
halls, rand are available with gas
or oil heat. There is an extra
lavotory in every basement.
Other features include parti-
tioned basements, roomy cup-
boards and closet space and many
other extras. Started only two
months ago, already 35 of the
homes have been sold. Some will
be ready for occupancy next
month.
The model is open daily from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday
and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to
6 p.m. For further information,
call LI 2-7860.

Schlussel Announces
JNF Committee Heads

Irving W. Schlussel, president
of the Jewish National Fund
Council of Detroit, this week an-
nounced the following committee
chairmen:
Blue-White Boxes, Mrs. Samuel
Croll; budget, Philmore A. Lee-
mon; Foundation, William Hordes;
lawyers, James I. Ellmann; or-
ganizations. Leon Kay; personnel
and office operations, Richard B.
Kramer; public relations, Ruben
Isaacs; special activities, Dr.
Israel Wiener; synagogues, Zvi
Tomkiewicz, Rabbi Jacob M.
Chinitz, Abraham Nusbaum, Max
Stollman, Morris Dorn, Daniel
Temchin; wills and bequests,
Mr. Schlussel; youth and educa-
tion, Rabbi Emanuel Applebaum
and Dr. Nahum Weissman.
Board members not listed after
the election announcement are
Rabbi Israel Halpern, Mrs. Abra-
ham Scheuer and Mrs. I. Kard-
ener,

Sinai Hospital Adopts
New Nursing Technique

Sinai Hospital has become the
pacemaker among Detroit hos-
pitals in a new nursing tech-
nique which offsets the citywide
nursing shortage.
The director of nursing,' Mrs.
Ruth Edelson, said Sinai "has
grafted extra arms and legs on
its professional nurses" by using
a higher proportion of non-pro-
fessional help on its nursing
teams than any other Detroit
hoSpital. Practical nurses and
nurses aides take over the rou-
tine bedside chores, freeing the
professional nurse for purely
medical duties and for the care
of the critically ill.
Sinai Hospital has been among
the hardest hit locally by the
nurse shortage, because it is so
new and because it has no nurs-
ing school of its own. Serious
ever since World War II, the
nurse shortage in Detroit be-
came especially acute since the
opening of four new hospitals
and 10 hospital additions within
the last five years, financed by
the Greater Detroit Hospital
Fund.
Recognition of Sinai's leader-
ship -in the new nursing tech-
nique has come from Wayne
University, from the United
States Public Health Service
and from Michigan's leading
philanthropic foundation in the
nursing field, the Cunningham
Drug Company Foundation.
Sinai is the training center in
team nursing and administra-
tion techniques for the Wayne
University School of Nursing;
every W a yn e undergraduate
spends six weeks as a member
of a Sinai nursing team.
Sinai was chosen by the Divi-
sion of Nursing Resources of
the U. S. Public Health Service
as the subject of a precedent-
making study of nursing ad-
ministration of national signifi-
cance, now under way.
The community hospital was
selected as the site of a pio-
neering experimental school of
practical nursing„ the Shapero
School of Nursintg, which will
open next fall. The Shapero
School is financed . by grants
from the Cunningham Drug Co.
Foundation and the Nate S. and
Ruth B. Shapero Foundation.

Our Letter Box

More 'Monsters'
In Shylock Story;

Editor, The Jewish News:
The statement by Mr. Frank
Tumpane (quoted by you in your
column "Purely Commentary" of
Nov. 11) that:
"Offhand I 'can think of only
one other monster in English
literature who has impressed
himself upon the public con-
sciousness to the same degree
as Shylock. And that is Simon
Legree."
prompts me to make mention of
another "monster."
In common with the apologists
of Shakespeare who claim Shy-
lock is depicted as having the
same feelings as anyone else, the
apologists of the other monster
claim their hero had only the
best interests of the Jews at
heart. In fact, so voluminous a
body of literature has been writ-
ten about this hero (and it is
even considered a high type of
English literature, also) that few
people, even among Jews, chal-
lenge the story.
I agree with you that it is one
of the major responsibilities of
Christians to erase the sin called
anti-Semitism. I also agree with
the late Thomas Sugrue, a Chris-
tian of the Catholic faith, who
wrote:
"Nothing can be done about
anti-Semitism until something is
done- about Christianity. The fact
that a Christian is able to feel
that anti-Semitism is not a sin,
and indeed, may be a virtue, a
participation in the divine chas-
tisement of a race of God-killers,
is the evil which spreads and
maintains and strengthens this
Christian violation of the law of
love. As long as this cool and
luciferian assumption is resident
in Christian thinking, the Jew
is a marked man."
Sincerely yours,
PETER OLIN MOYLE
11340 Dexter

Beth Abraham Rabbi
Shows Orthodox Growth

Editor, The Jewish News:
Your front-page story of Nov.
11 on the problems of mixed seat-
ing in traditional Synagogues
which face two Michigan congre-
gations begs for comment and a
correction of the record. To state
that "there is no progressive Or-
thodox synagogue in Detroit
without mixed seating" is inac-
curate. In the past six years and
earlier, Beth Abraham, now oc-
cupying the fourth new and mod-
ern religious center since its
founding 64 years ago, has con-
sistently grown in new, younger
membership (now totaling 400),
has its own religious school (in
addition to the United Hebrew
School branch), a youth group,
Sisterhood (recently merged with
its Woman's Club), Young Mar-
ried Couples Club, Free Loan As-
sociation (distributing interest-
free small loans to needy mem-
bers), Chevra Mishnayos Study
Society, Adult S c h o a 1, Burial
Society and Cemetery.
In addition to the varied chari-
ties and varied benevolent activi-
ties in which every synagogue en-
gages, Beth Abraham has recent-
ly completed a costly 10-year
project of sending many. thou- .

Detroit Friends of Yeshiva University
Plan Dec. 7 Dinner for Einstein College

The Detroit Friends of Yeshiva
University will salute the first
American University under Jew-
ish auspices, on the occasion of
the dedication and opening of
the newest unit, the Albert Ein-
stein College of Medicine, with a
local . dinner to be held at the
Veterans Memorial Building, 151
W. Jefferson Ave., Wednesday,
Dec. 7, 1955, 6:30 p.m., it was
announced by Max Stollman and
David I. Berris, co-chairmen.
Members of the committee
planning the dinner include: As-
sociate chairmen, Sam Brody,
Joseph Holtzman, Irwin I. Cohen,
Abe Kasle , Samuel Hechtman,
and Philip Stollman; vice chair-
men, Herman K. Cohen, Daniel
Temchin, Max Nusbaum, Harry
Do your duty, and leave the C. Friedberg, Isadore Gruskin,
rest to heaven.—Pierre Corneille, David Feldstein, Judge Nathan J.

Kaufman, 'Abe Nusbaum, Michael
W. 'Sumner of Winds o r, and
Maurice H. Zackheim.
On the rabbinical advisory
committee are: Rabbis Hayim
Donin, Bnai David; Israel I. Hal-
pern, Beth Abraham; Yeacov I.
Homnick, Young I s r a e 1, Oak
Park; Henry Hoschander, Bnai
Israel, Pontiac; Max Kapustin,
director, Bnai Brith Hillel Foun-
dation, Wayne University; Sam-
uel Prero, Young Israel of De-
troit; Charles Rosenzweig, Mt.
Sinai, Pt. Huron; Samuel S. Stoll-
man, Shaar Hashomayim, Wind-
sor, and Max J. Wohlgelernter,
Mogen Abraham .
The dinner will benefit the
university's $500,000 scholarship
fund which provides tuition,
dormitory and maintenance aid
for more than 1,600 'students each
Year.

_

sands of food and clothing pack-
ages to European and Israeli
homes and hospitals by parcel
post, all at its own expenses and
by its own 'voluntary effort.
As part of its religious worship
programs, Beth Abraham has
been conducting weekday, Sab-
bath, and festival services in an
enlightening and _dignified man-
ner, using prayerbooks and
Bibles with English translation,
its pulpit and platform sending
forth regular timely and edify-
ing messages directed to the
modern worshipper and listener
of today.
For the record, please note that
all this has been accomplished
and functions as an Orthodox,
modern congregation.
RABBI ISRAEL I. HALPERN
Cong. Beth Abraham

Upholds 'Progressiveness'
Of Young Israel Centers

Editor, The Jewish News:
I noted with mixed feelings of
surprise and chagrin that the
Jewish News of Nov. 11 quoted
‘'. . . a spokesman for Beth Ab-
raham" who stated that ."there
is no progressive orthodox syna-
gogue in Detroit without mixed
seating."
Even a superficial knowledge
of the synagogue and organiza-
tional structure of the Detroit
Jewish community would certain-
ly have established the fact that
at least two of the most "prog-
ressive orthodox synagogues",
Young Israel of Detroit and Oak-
Woods, adhere not only to the
traditional tenets of Judaism but
for the past 32 years attempted
to maintain standards and values
of orthodoxy which have been
the heritage of Judaism for thou-
sands of years.
I speak in the name of Young
Israel of Detroit, of which I am
the spiritual leader, and of our -
sister branch in Oak Park and
its spiritual head, Rabbi Yaakov
Homnick.
Very truly yours,
RABBI SAMUEL H. PRERO

Brevities

I

A group of firearms from the
private collection of MAX
SCHWARTZ is on display at the
Detroit Historical Museum, and
will continue to be shown through
December. Featured in the
Schwartz collection are a 1750
flintlock rifle, tomahawks and
powder horns. Schwartz is sec-
retary-treasurer of the Wyandotte
Muzzle Loaders Club.
* * *

VLADIMIR GOLSCHMANN
will guest conduct the Detroit
Symphony Orchestra's fifth eve-
ning concert tonight in the Ma-
sonic Auditorium.
* * *

During- its engagements at the
Masonic Auditorium, which be-
gins on Dec. 1, and ends with. a
matinee, Dec. 4, the SADLER'S
WELLS BALLET COMPANY
will offer a ballet new to Amer-
ican audiences, "The Lady and
the Fool," along with such well-
known favorites as "Swan Lake,"
"Coppelia" (Act III), "Facade"
and "The Firebird."
* * *

BODZIN FAMILY CLUB will
meet Saturday evening, at the
home of. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bod-
zin, of Birwood Ave. At its last
meeting, the following officers
were elected: Yetta Bodzin, pres-
ident; Alice Bodzin, vice-presi-
dent; Jay S. Bodzin, secretary;
and David Bodzin, treasurer.
* * *
Mrs. RENA T. KANTER, De-
troit representative of the Na-
tional Life Insurance Company
of Vermont, was invited to
speak last week at the annual
joint meeting of the Lenawee-
Hilisdale Association of Life
Underwriters and their wives.
Addressing the group on "The
Winning Team," Mrs. Kanter
explained how husbands and
wives can successfully work to-
gether in the insurance under-
writing business.

.A white man—Etienne Bade--
reached Michigan's Upper Penin-
sula in 1618, two years before the
Pilgrims landed at Plymouth
Rock,

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