31-TRANSPORTATION _ • - DRIV1ING to Los Angeles, would like one or two passengers to help drive. Leaving within a few days. UN. r-4011. 35-INSTRUCTION BAR MITZVAH, Hebrew Bible, Yid- dish, English. Call experienced teacher. WE 4-1793. TEACHER, Hebrew, Yiddish, English, citizenship, Bar Mitzvah, free trial lesson. TO 5-3652. 40-EMPLOYMENT Fields Employment Colored Couples, Cooks, Maids. Chauffeurs, Janitors, Caretakers, Porters DAY or WEER TR. 3-7770 UNIVERSAL EMPLOYMENT service, : experienced help, days or weeks. Call TY 8-5310. ,REAL ESTATE SALESMEN 50-BUSINESS CARDS ALL CITY MOVING COMPANY Large, Modern Vans Always Open 14948 MEYERS VE. 8-7660 A-1 PAINTING, decorating. Reason- able prices. Free estimates. VI. 2-1026, BR. 3-6271. FURNITURE repaired and refinished. Free estimates. WE. 3-2110. 50-BUSINESS CARDS LARKINS MOVING and Delivery Service. Any time. Reasonable. 3319 Gladstone. TY 4-4587. FOR BETTER wall washing call James Russell. One day service. TO 6-4005. 526 Belmont. (AND WOMEN) PAINTING-Exterior, interior, deco- rating, wall washing. W. Williams, 7758 Prairie. TE. 4-0195. Work and grow with a new leader. Our two office system brings us the results you have seen! I. SCHWARTZ & CO. All types of carpenters work. TY 7-7758 or UN 2-6329. New optional advertising and commission set up. Call Mr. Williams at DRYERS vented and washers in- stalled. Dryers cleaned, call for free estimates. Wolfe, BR. 3-4446. GROSS REALTY CO. N.W. PAINTING and decorating, 6 rooms $85, 5 rooms $75, 4 rooms $05, 3 rooms $55. TO 7-2078. REPAIR, brick, cement, plaster, pointing, chimneys and porches. steps. UN 2-1017. 13420 W. 7 Mile -Rd. UN 4-3100 TILE TAILOR WANTED for pawn shop, apply Monday, 917 Michigan Ave- nue. DO YOU NEED TILE WORK? New and Repair Special U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO. 40A-WANTED, EMPLOYMENT UN 1-5075 EXPERIENCED woman wishes gen- eral office work. Call Sunday or EXPERT Wall Washing and Painting. TY 8-0288. evenings, WE. 4-1198. YOUNG married man wishes part- EXPERT PAINTING and wall wash- ing, references, call, TY 7-2501. time evenings and Saturday work. BR. 3-7224. PAINTING and decorating. Price reasonable, free estimates. TO RELIABLE woman wishes work as companion, light duties. TU. 3-3311. 7-1937. EXPERIENCED woman in the care of invalids, wishes work. Will do kosher cooking, light household du- ties, or care for children while par- ents go vacationing. Call TY. 8-8531. Golf Club Loses Licenser Drops 'Blackball kule (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) A-1 Carpenter, Finisher Library Paneling and kitchen cabinets. All kinds of alterations. PHILIP. BERKOVITZ UN 4-1897 EXPIACT . WASHING machine and dryers repairs, work guaranteed, free estimates. VE 5-09E06. LONDON-Belfairs Golf Club in the south coast resort town of Southend altered its black- A-1 DEPENDABLE WORKMEN ball rule which barred Jews PAINTING, PAPERING from membership an& led the AND WASHING club to losing its license to play REFERENCES on the municipal course. Henceforward, member ship CORBETT VE 4-4891 can only be refused by a ma- jority vote and not at before by only two votes. The club is Built Up Asphalt Roofing, now applying for restoration of Shingle Roofing and Siding, its licence. Gutters and Tin Decks All Work Guaranteed CEMETERY MEMORIALS Lowest Prices for Highest Quality Granite and Outstanding Designs DETROIT MONUMENT WORKS 2744 W. Davison, cor. Lawton TO. 8-6923 • DI. 1-1175 Cadillac Roofing Co. FHA TERMS AVAILABLE 2479 W. Davison Ave. TO 8-0071 55-MISCELLANEOUS FULL LENGTH NATURAL RANCH MINK Owner Distinctive Monuments Reasonably Priced 3201 JOY ROAD Corner Wildemere TY. 6-0196 Size 14 or 16, won on TV's "Big Pay Off," Never worn. $2,200. Write Box 214, The Jewish News, 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd., Detroit 35, Michigan. ,11 ■ 1111 ■ •••• ■ 1111•••111111MM.111M111•11. Strictly Confidential BY PHINEAS J. BIRON Still the Middle East Muddle The main trouble with the Middle East is the limited scope of political thinking of the statesmen of the world . . They do not seek for a way to promote the integration of Israel into the Middle East . . . All proposals, even the best, deal exclusively with re-estab- lishing the armistice lines and to find a blue-print for an en- during cease-fire . . . But that's as far as they go . . . This is brought home rather convinc- ingly in an article by James P. Warburg. Reporter Warburg is a distinguished political thinker who knows a lot about world affairs arid about economy . . . His piece is entitled "Steps Toward A Middle Eastern Peace," but you won't find . anything about peace in his erudite analysis .. . Warburg thinks that if the United States would agree to internationalize the Panama Canal Zone by turning it over to the United Nations, Nasser would be shamed into placing the Suez Canal and the Tiran Strait at Aqaba under control of the United Nations . . . How naive can one get . . . Warburg goes on to say that if this were to happen, the following ob- jectives would be attained: (a) The canal users, including Israel would be assured of the uninterrupted availability of the waterway . . . (b) a neutral zone would be established be- tween Israel and Egypt . . . (c) By free transit through the neutral zone, a land bridge would be established between Egypt and the Arab states of Asia Minor . . . (d) by similar free transit, Israel would have access to the port of Elath and unimpeded entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba through the Tiran Strait . . (e) The United Na- tions would have a suitable base for the maintenance of a per- manent Middle East police force . . . This, Warburg concludes, is the key to the whole problem of Suez and to much of the problem of bringing about an Arab - Israeli peace settlement. The major error in Warburg's suggestion is his wrong ap- praisal of what Nasser repre- sents . .. Nasser's ambitions to dominate the Arab world and to eventually achieve a pan-Is- lamic empire reaching from Egypt into Africa, these ambi- tions are predicated on the eli- mination of Israel from the Middle Eastern map . . . Nasser is not making a secret of his plans and yet mature politicians of the stature of Warburg speak as if Israel can do business with Nasser and get anywhere . . Actually the Middle East prob- lem, if it is to be settled, must be based on the overthrow of the Nasser regime . . . Nasser means a Moscow-Cairo military and 'political axis,-which repre- sents a grave menace not only to peace in the Middle East but to world peace . . . This is a direct answer-a very simple one to be sure-to the question of how progress can be made toward peace in the Middle East. In Memoriam Rabbi JOSEPH MILLER, of Brooklyn, was elected president of the New York Board of Rab- In loving memory of our dear bis. mother, wife and grandmother, Mrs. Emma Katzowitz, who passed away five years ago, on Feb. 12, 1952 (16 days in Shvat)., Sadly missed by her husband, Jacob Katzowitz; sons, Philip G. Kay and Dr. Harry H. Kay; and When Bereavement Comes eight grandchildren, all of Cali- Consult Us fornia. * * * In loving memory of our brother, William George Cap- lan, who passed away on Feb, 6, 1941. Though death has parted us, you live on in our hearts always. 9419 Dexter TYler 4-8020 Sadly missed by his brother, Dr. B." B..Caplari; his sister, Mrs. Ann Feldman and their families. 11•••••■• • :The Ira Kaufman Chapel Director of Funerals • Obituaries MARY BERICK, 18666 Indi- ana, died Feb, 1. She leaves her husband, Arthur; five sons, Coleman, of Burlingame, Calif.; Fred, of Mill Valley, Calif.; Ed- ward, of Redding, Calif., Harold, of University City, Mo., and Joseph, of Detroit; three daugh- ters, Mrs. Rose Sarasohn and Mrs. Herman Prady, of Detroit, and Mrs. Abraham David, of Allston, Mass.; a sister, eight grandchildren and three great- grandchildren. * * * FREDA EPSTEIN, 20 Tyler, Highland Park, died Jan. 29. Survived by her husband, Ben- jamin; a daughter, Mrs. Norman Jaslove and three grandchil- dren. * * * DAVID VERNICKE, 3791 Humphrey, died Jan. 28. Sur- vived by two daughters, Mrs. Fred Gage and Mrs. Hyman Abramowitz and three grand- children. * * * HARRY ISADORE LEVINE, 2711 Nebraska, died Jan. 30. Survived by his wife, Eugenie and a brother, Philip. * '* BENJAMIN POPPER, 351 E. Jefferson, died Jan. 31. Sur- vived by a brother, Harry; five sisters, Mrs. Louis Jay, Mrs. Harry Smead, Mrs. Mildred Smith, Mrs. Maurice Phillip, and Mrs. Celia Steinberg. * * * LEO NATHAN SPECTOR, 4053 Cortland, died Feb. 1. Sur- vived by his wife, Lilly; a son, Alvin; two daughters, Mrs. Irving Feldman and Mrs. Philip Minkin; three sisters and six grandchildren. * * * - ETHEL WEBERMAN, 16844 Mendota, died Feb. 2. Survived by her husband, Hyman; four sons, David, Morris, Theodore and Louis; a brother' and six grandchildren. * * * - ANNA COHEN, 8343 Hendrie Blvd., Huntington Woods, died Jan. 24. She leaves a daughter, Mrs. Harry Colton, and two grandchildren. * * * SHIRLEY ROTHENBERG, 20051 Chapel, died Jan. 31. She leaves her husband, Martin; two sons, Sol and Lawrence; her father, Samuel Kaplan, of Mt. Vernon, N. Y.; three brother and a sister. * * * MITCHELL HYMAN, 24727 Rensselaer, Oak Park, died Jan. 26. He leaves his son, Gerald; a daughter, Mrs. Jules Tabak; four brothers, four sisters and six grandchildren. * * * ARCHIE COHEN, 4001 Wav- erly, died Jan. 26. He leaves a brother, Morris; and two sisters, Mrs. Milton E. Wolfe and Julia. * * * SARAH ROTH GROSSMAN, 25891 Concord Rd., Huntington Woods, died Jan. 26. She leaves a daughter, MrS. I. Irving Bitt- ker; two sisters, seven grand- children and seven,great-grand- children. * * * BENJAMIN CHODUN, 10124 Lincoln Rd., Huntington Woods, died Jan. 27. He leaves a son, Saul; a daughter, Mrs. Ben Bloom and five grandchildren. * * * SARA KIRSNER, of Milford, Mass., died Feb. 3. Survived by two daughters, Mrs. BenjaMin B. Gordon, of Huntington Woods, Mich., and Mrs. J. R. Smith, of Boston; and two sons, Myer, of Springfield, and Fred, of Milford, Mass. LOUISE SELLING, former Detroit social worker, died Feb. 5, at Hanover, N. H. She leaves her mother, Mrs. Harold E. Schlesinger, of Detroit, and an adopted daughter, Mrs. Jona- than C. Chace, Jr., of Dover, Mass. * * * MEYER BOGORAD, 4063 Monterey , died Jan. 28. He leaves his wife, Sarah; a son, Joseph; three daughters, Mrs. .David Lipshaw, Mary and Mrs. Raymond Broida; two brothers; five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. * * * FRANK SAM STEIN, 3345 Richton, died Jan. 28. He leaves his wife, Katie; two sons, Philip, of Detroit, and George, of Col- umbia, S. C.; a daughter, Mrs. Oscar Greenbaum and four grandchildren. * * * LENA DANIELS, of M i 1- waukee, Wis., died last week. She leaves four daughters, Mrs. Jack Friebert, of Detroit, Mrs. Lillian Margoles, of Milwaukee i Mrs. Jack M. Stenbuck, of New York, and Mrs. Jack Watson, of Los Angeles; a son, Oscar, of Milwaukee; a brother, two sis- ters, 10 grandchildren and 17 great grandchildren. Yiddish Writer Dies in Fatal Plane Crash NEW YORK, (JTA) - Leo, Robbins, noted Jewish author, playwright and member of the editorial staff of the Jewish Daily Forward since 1921, was among the passengers killed . in the airplane crash last Friday on Rikers Island en route from New York to Miami. Born in Russia in 1895 of a rabbinical family, he came to the United States at the age of 15 and later worked on a Bos- ton English-language newspap- er. In 1918 a book of his English short stories was published. He was the author of a num- ber of motion picture scripts and of a play "The Mother." Ir. the Jewish Daily Forward he wrote under the pen names of L. Malkes and R. Shayevski. Newark. Councilman Dies NEWARK, (JTA)-Samuel E. Cooper, newark City Council member and Essex County Jew- ish leader, died at the age of 46. The City Council, in a res- olution, mourned Mr. Cooper's ."sudden and untimely death" and o r der e d the City Hall draped and the flag at half-staff for 30 days. The Council also unanimously appointed M r s. Cooper to fill the Council post held by her late husband. Itzhak Berliner Dies _ MEZICO CITY, (JTA) Itzhak Berliner, noted Yiddish poet, died here Jan. 28 at the age of 57. He was born in Lodz and came to Mexico in 1922, where he became active in Jew- ish cultural life. He was the author of a number of volumes of Jewish poetry and the re- cipient of the 1955 Zvi Kessel Prize for poetry. Ferrer to Direct 'I Accuse' Jose Ferrer now is set to di- rect "I Accuse," n e w screen adaptation of the Dreyfus Af- fair. Ferrer, currently in Eng- land and France to select loca- tion sites for the picture, which will be produced by Sam Zim- balist, plans to portray the role of Captain Dreyfus, and not the part of Emile Zola as had been early announced by the studio. CARD OF THANKS Mrs. Mary Elias and Gilbert Elias, Edward Elias, Lena Stemlo, Bertha Brant, Helen Nelson, Rhoda Franklin and Sarah Elias, wife and children of the late MR. DAVID ELIAS Acknowledge with grateful appreciation the many kind expressions of sympathy ex. tended by relatives and friends during tha family's recent bereavement. Our special thanks to Congregation Bnai Moshe awl the Detroit Hebrew Congregation for their • special kindnesses. 4 T