27—LAKE PROPERTY FOR RENT Maurice Borisoff and Sy Borsen, who for the past 25 years assisted clientele in the community with real estate dealings and served as ad- visers in investment properties, are now located at 13730 W. 8 Mile Rd., under the firm name of Borsen Realty Co. Information on all real es- tate dealings, whether buying or selling, as well as accurate valuation or present market values, may be obtained by calling Borisoff or Borsen, LI. 3,2010. Evening calls may be made to LI. 6-4507 or DI. 1-8718. J. J. REILLY TAWAS CITY, MICHIGAN R. No. 2.303 17—HOUSES FOR SALE Briarcliff Rd. 19938 Open Sun. 2-5 Luxurious living in Exclusive Greenacres. Lovely 3 bedrm. brick, excellent r o o m size, breakfast room screened ter- race, pine rec. rim, gas a.c., carpeted, perfect cond. Best buy in entire area. UN 1-1411, LI 7-7222. Risdon Realtor OAK PARK, 3 bedroom ranch, car- peting, drapes, s t o r m s and screens, near school. LI 7-9326. HURON HAVEN COTTAGES - LARGE home in Lexington, corner Washington and Simons, all con- veniences, by month or week, reasonable. UN 4-7265. 31 35—INSTRUCTION BAR MITZVAH, Hebrew Bible, Yiddish, English. Cfill experienced teacher, WE. 4-1793. EXPERIENCED tutor in English, grammar and composition. High school level. DI 1-3221. Fields Employment Couples, Cooks, Maids, Chauffeurs, Janitors, Caretakers, Porters DAY or WEEK T R 3-7770 REEVES EMPLOYMENT AGENCY We have maids, day workers, janitors, laborers, etc. available immediately. LI 4-5138 AMAZING JOB OFFER PURITAN, 12909, modern store with apartment above, for rent with option to buy. KE 4-8631. • At once 8 full time-3 port time men • Earn equivalent $4,00 per hour • A:Isolutely no canvassing • Guaranteed weekly check • Present men earn $8 to $16,000 Call Any Time LAKEFRONT, Oakland Lake. Mod- ern 3 bedroom home, Jalousie VAlley 2-2205 porch, ledgerock fireplace. oil fur- nished, Jewish community, very reasonable. OR 3-6391 or EL WANTED—Sunday school teachers 6-8657. for 1st and 10th grades, good Jewish background, excellent sal- LEAMINGTON, ONTARIO ary. Ul‘", 3-0584. 418 ROBSON RD. Comfortable summer home on Lake Erie. Adjacent to golf course. Spacious grounds, ex- cellent bathing and fishing. 4 bdrms.. 114 baths, firepl., 2 fin. enclosed porches, pixie pan. thruout, basem't, oil heat, canoe, 2 car gar., $13,900. Sacri- ficing because of illness. 40-A—EMPLOyMENT WANTED COTTAGE AT 1876 CASS LAKE WATER FRONT EXPERIENCED practical nurse, capable, middle-aged, specializing post natal care, references. VE 6-1824. 2 bdrms., 2 porches, same as 2 more bdrms., hot and cold water. Excellent Iccation. Call, VE 6-6670 or DI 1-2311. EXCELLENT cook, housekeeper, care for invalid, sleep out. KE 7-4844. 27—LAKE PROPERTY FOR RENT WELL experienced laundress wishes 5 days, general and laun- dry. Call Thursday only. TR 3-3163, excellent references. South Haven, Michigan RETIRED man wishes full or part time employment. Various selling experiences. VE 5-4926. 54 Lake Shore Drive, 6 bed- rooms, 30 foot living room, 60 foot screened porch and patio. Shower cabana, beautifully fur- nished, lake front home, sacri- fice, best offer. GR 4-1121 South Haven, Michigan 54 Lake Shore Drive, 3 bed- rooms to rent, beach front home. GR 4-1121 FOR RENT or sale — Cass Lake front duplex, 6 rooms each, newly decorated, $450 a season. U/c, 2-7141. CASS LAKE, modern 6 room cot- tage, front lake, decorated, glassed-in porch, stall shower, reasonable. UN 3-9207. HURON HAVEN COTTAGES J. J. REILLY TAWAS CITY, MICHIGAN R. No. 2.303 3 bdrm. cottage, open June 20, to July 13, $125 per week. Phone 2-2626 FURNITURE repaired and refin- ished. Free estimates. WE 3-2110. B. AND D. window cleaners, eaves cleaned, KE 7-1018. LU 4-4724. All City Moving Company LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE APPLIANCES - PIANOS ALSO EXPRESSING AGENTS OF •U.S. VAN LINES 40—EMPLOYMENT STORE RENTALS FOR SALE or rent, Woodhull Lake, new modern cottage, 4546 Hill- crest, priced reasonable, owner leaving town, no reasonable o•er refused. DI 1-1573. Also Office Furniture. Any time. Reasonable. 3319 GLADSTONE TY 4-4587 - kANSPORTATION DRIVING to New York July 3rd, need 2 or 3 to help drive, share expenses. TU 3-1618 after 4 p.m. MAGNOLIA SUB-DIVISION. Op- posite Northland corner Brixton and Pierce 100x150, fully devel oped. Terms, reasonable. BR. 3-5227. LAKE PROPERTY FOR SALE LARKINS MOVING, AND DELIVERY SERVICE CASS Lakefront-4 Bedrooms, mod- ern, July or August. $250. UN 2-9219. Van — LI. 8-6219 — 50—BUSINESS CARDS COTTAGE for rent for season on Cass Lake. LI 7-5726. 40 foot business vacant in Oak Park. $3,000, for quick sale. Also 100 foot by 200, in Troy, $5,000. 26 Best established corner store on Dexter. Excellent going busi- ness. Inquire 10200 Dexter. Phone 2 2626 40-Foot Business VACANT in Oak Park — GROCERY - APPETIZER STORE Cottages on Lake Huron. 4 to 6 people $80 to $125 per week. OPENS JULY 1 17-A--LOTS FOR SALE 18 45—BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Med-Tech Student College girl desires employment in Doctor's or Dentist's office. Receptitonist, General Office or assisting in Lab. UN 4-7867. EXPERIENCED high school student wishes office work for summer. Will be able to continue part- time in fall. Good typist, some shorthand. TO 8-0066. EXPERIENCED nurse, excellent references, infant care specialty, WE 3-7642, UN 2-4803. 45 — BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 39 YEARS established Dry Goods business for sale. Owner retiring, will sacrifice. Call UN 4-0723 after 7 p.m. ATTENTION SHOE SALESMEN Shoe store. Joy-Southfield area. Equipped shoe repair dept. which pays expenses. Small in- ventory. Reasonable rent. Good opportunity for right man. VE 7-6359. FOR SALE DELICATESSEN & RESTAURANT Completely equipped, seats 70 comfortably, includes S. D. M. and TAVERN LICENSE. Good opportunity for right party. Call: TO 6-9804 14948 MEYERS VE. 8-7660 MOVING? Washers, aryers discon- nected and installed. Dryers vented. Wolfe, BR 3-4446. TILE DO YOU NEED TILE WORK? New and Repair Special U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO UN 1-5075 A-1 PAINTING, decorating. Rea- sonable prices. Free estimates. VI 2-1026, BR 3-6271. EXPERT painting and wall wash- ing, work guaranteed, references TY. 7-2501. CARPENTER WORK of all, kinds— Porch, floors, steps, kitchen cabi- nets, doors. Work myself. UN 4-1897. FOR BETTER wall washing, call James Russell. One day service. TO 6-4005. 526 Belmont. REPAIR, brick. cement, plaster, pointing, chimneys and porches steps. UN 2-1017. CARPENTER, all kinds of altera- tions. Reasonable. Call WE. 3-0815. A-1 PAINTING, exterior, interior, garages, ceilings, Coyle Painters. VE. 6-3514. PAINTING and papering, expertly done, free esitrnates. Call TO 6-6196. 51 — LOST AND FOUND LADIES short white coat exchanged by mistake at June 9th luncheon at Adas Sholom Synagogue. Please call UN 2-5072. 57—FOR SALE: HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND FURNITURE • 2-6 PIECE place settings, Gorham's sterling flatware "Celeste." $28.75, never used; also meat fork, bread knife, serving spoon, cheese spreader. UN 4-9065. DeGaulle Ministers Show Friendship for Israel PARIS (JTA) — The atmo- sphere of friendship toward Is- rael which emanated from Gen. Charles de Gaulle's Cabinet continued to hold true for the five new ministers. At least three of the five have, on many occasions, ex- pressed positive attitudes to- ward Israel. They are: Robert Buron, new Minister of Public Works, who was scheduled to visit Israel shortly with an eco- nomic study mission; Eugene Thomas, Minister of Posts, who has been closely associated with ex-Premier Guy Mollet and his attitude toward Israel, and Ed- mond Michele, Minister for Vet- erans Affairs. Eban Signs Agreement on $24 Million Bank Loan WASHINGTON, (JTA) — A detailed agreement on the ex- penditure of the $24,200,000 loan approved recently by the Export-Import Bank was signed in Washington by Ambassador Abba Eban and Samuel C. Waugh, chairman of the bank. The agreement provides for as- sistance in developing Israel's water resources outside the Jor- dan Basin. Emmanuel Ringelblum's Journal: 'Notes from Warsaw Ghetto' So many horrifying episodes are recorded in Emmanuel Ringleblum's eyewitness account of life in the Warsaw Ghetto, published by McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc. (330 W. 42nd, N.Y. 36), under the title "Notes from the Warsaw Ghetto," that they literally make one's hair stand on edge. Yet, the account by this archivist of the ghetto is so tern- pered with justice and mercy, with hope for a better future, with a human outlook, that one must sit in wonder, at what these people could endure, upon reading this deeply moving story. Under date of Feb. 28, 1941, for instance, there is this comment: "To a Jew who had lost his arm hand, a German police chief cried: `Sie, Jude, Sie haben das zwangziste Jahr- hundert verloren!' (`You, Jew, you have lost the twentieth cen- tury!')." This is indicative of the humiliations the harrowed people had to contend with. Scores of fragments from this book point to so many trage- dies that one wonders how beastly even Nazis could be. For instance, Ringelblum records: "A Christian was killed today for throwing a sack of bread over the Wall." Yet there is an occasional relieving note, as in this report: "One S. S. man came looking for a Jew, but took nothing when he found him. Instead, asked for a Jewish holy volume—as a charm." Nothing is left to the reader's imagination. Under date of April 26, 1941 we read, among other. items: "In Lodz there's a path running through Zgierza Street and through the Ghetto. The path is bounded on either side by 7)arbed-wire fence, so that Christians taking this path through the Ghetto need not meet Jews. Christians may not enter the Ghetto." Other fragments: "A woman offered 25,000 zlotys if they would let her child live. Refused . . ." "The mother of someone killed in January hit a German in the street . . . then took poison." Such are the stories related by the archivist who buried his true account of the Warsaw Ghetto in the Polish capital just prior to the Ghetto Uprising of April-May, 1943. His Journal was dug up from the rubble of the razed Ghetto and the truth is now available for all to read. When John Hersey wrote "The Wall," he used Emmanuel Ringelblum as the prototype for his archivist Noach Levinson. The introduction to "Notes from the Warsaw Ghetto, written by Jacob Sloan, declares: "To millions of people, the Warsaw Ghetto will remain for- ever a symbol of man's inhumanity to man — and of the heroic resistance of the human spirit. For within these walls, in an area of about 1,000 acres, or 100 square city blocks, some half- million Jews were methodically ground to death in the course of less than three years. Yet, at the end of that time, when more than 90 per cent of the Ghetto's residents had been sent to their fate in extermination camps, armed resistance broke out—resist- ance so fierce that a regular German army group was required to put it down." Who was the author of this revealing journal? "In May, 1943, in the middle of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, a radiogram from the fighters asking for help was received in London by the Polish government-in-exile. One of the three signers of the radiogram was Emmanuel Ringelblum. Captured by the Germans, Ringelblum was sent with some of his comrades to the slave camp at Poniatow. An armed revolt broke out there too, and many of the rebels committed suicide. But, two days before the revolt broke out, Ringelblum was smuggled out of the camp by the Jewish underground. They found a hiding place for him in the Other Side of Warsaw, where he lived with false papers, as an Aryan. "In his underground home, Ringelblum returned to his beloved writing of the history of his time. . . . In January, 1944, he had his last chance to escape. The Polish government-in-exile in London received a list from the Warsaw underground with the names of nineteen former Jewish underground leaders; the Polish government agreed to rescue these men from London, through the underground. Now only three of the 19 on that list were still alive — one being Emmanuel Ringelblum. But all three survivors obstinately refused to leave, 'because we must fulfill our duty to society.' "On March 1, 1944, Ringelblum wrote an account of the rich underground intellectual life of the Warsaw Ghetto. Before it could be smuggled out of Poland, the Gestapo discovered the subterranean cellar where he was hiding with his wife, .12-year- old son, and 35 other refugees from he Ghetto. "On March 7. 1944, Emmanuel Ringelblum went to his death, together with his wife, . child, and the 35 who had shared the bunker with him, among the ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto. As he would have wished, he shares a collective grave." Ringelblum did not lack humor. On the contrary, it was one of the elements of strength in his activities among his fellow- Jews and in setting down the facts about the horrors around him. Jacob Sloan's introduction describes how he organized a club for evening students, Saturday meetings when there were no classes, how "he ran meetings, lectures, special-interest classes. His enthusiasm was infectious." Jacob Sloan, an editor of the American Jewish Year Book, a native of Brooklyn who studied at the Seminary College of Jewish Studies of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, is known as a translator from the Yiddish, among the books he rendered into Yiddish being S. Y. Agnon's "Days of Awe," which was awarded a Louis LaMed Prize in 1949. His connection with the Warsaw Ghetto began in the 1920s, when Isaac Katznelson, later the poet laurete of the Ghetto, was his family's guest. When the Ringelblum "Notes" came to his attention he undertook the trying task of editing the book. Philadelphia Center Given $520,000 for Research Unit PHILADELPHIA, (JTA) — table Trust and will be used for Two major grants totalling more the building of a three-story than $520,000 have been re- research structure. The United ceived by the Albert Einstein States Public Health Service, Medical Center. through its. National Institutes One grant, for $250,000, came of Health, granted the medical from the Hyman Korman Chari- complex another $270,000. DET ROIT JEWISH N EWS — Friday, Ju ne 2'7 , 1 958 Borsen Realty Company Moves Office to Oak Park