30 40-A—EMPLOYMENT WANTED THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS -- Friday, February 10, 1961 — LADY WANTS baby sitting, call UN. 4-6364. A-1 GENERAL house cleaner desires five day week work or days, plain cooking, good with children, home nights, own transportation. TY. 8-8440. 45 — BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MODERN self-serve market, excel- lent business. 12540 Dexter. 50—BUSINESS CARDS TILE DO YOU NEED TILE WORK? New and Repair Special U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO. UN 1-5075 PAINTING and decorating, finest workmanship, free estimates. Sam Fishman. UN 1-3265. Steel Landscaping Co. Lawn Construction, Work Guaranteed BIG SALE ON ALL EVERGREENS 23910 W. 7 MILE RD. AT. TELEGRAPH KE 8-3530 DRESSMAKING All Kinds of Alterations Call for Appointments UN 3-8283 17175 ROSELAWN FOR BETTER wall washing, call James Russell. One day service. TO 6-4005. 526 Belmont. LOUIE'S Re-upholstering, Repairing Satisfaction guaranteed. Reason. able. Free estimates. UN 4-3339 VE 5-7453. PAINTING and wall washing. Reason- able price. Quick service. 20 years experience. TE 4-5864. I. SCHWARTZ. All kinds of. carpenter work, no job too' big or small. BR 3-4826, LI 5-4035. PLASTERING and decorating. Cement work. TY. 7-5654. LARKINS MOVING AND DELIVERY SERVICE . . Also Office Furniture. Any time. Reasonable. 3319 GLADSTONE TY 4-4587 PAPER HANGING WALL WASHING AND PAINTING IMMED. SERVICE REASONABLE INSURED UN. 4-0326 GREENBERG'S Building Maintenance and Repairs. Specialized. Electrical Appliances, door bells, locksmith, sash cords, window glass, carpentry work. Reasonable rates. TO 9-4815. PLASTERING, rock bottom prices and guaranteed work on attics, repairs, new work. VE. 7-9628. • PAINTING, decorating, work alone, low prices, Ben Wrotslaysky, UN. 2-8345. FURNITURE repairs and refinishing. Free estimates. Call UN 4-3547. MODERNIZATION, room additions, attics, basement, garages, cement work. Janitor Service. Special 5 rooms washed $28.00. A A A Build, ing Maintenance. LI. 5-2500. EXPERIENCED man wants wall wash- ing, window washing, waxing and polishing floors. Phone TO 6-7792. PAINTING, decorating, inside and outside, free estimates, reasonable. LI. 7-5639 - WE. 4-2339. 55 — MISCELLANEOUS About Jewish Names BY DAVID SCHWARTZ (Copyright, 1961, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) It's Abe Lincoln's birthday. Abe is a fine name. It has the feeling that we like to as- sociate with Lincoln. The name Abe must have helped Lincoln get elected. It has that same something as the rail splitting of which so much was made in Lincoln's campaign for the Presidency. It has earthiness, the common touch. I remember a bit of Yiddish doggerel that I used to hear in my boyhood about names. The first verse ran: "If his name is Mendel, You can eat from his fender (dish) Names have a certain logic. Jews frequently go fancy and translate Abraham or Abe into Arnold. But an Arnold is differ- ent from an Abe. Arnold has a tense look. His mother is always over him. "Arnold, have you studied your piano lesson? Ar- nold, put on your rubbers." . But Abe can take care of himself. His playmates are al- ways at home with him. The Abes get along very. well. The old simple Jewish names seem to be coming back. Mr. Eisenhower prided himself on Ike. Since Moshe Dayan became famous, Moshe has become popular—even Moish. A good lady social worker I know—a Jewess—recently told me of a little East Side boy she has been attending. He said to her, "Call me Moish." We can under- stand that. A boy named Moish is no sissy. He is a real boy. I know J u d a h s who have changed their name to Judd. They think in a non - Jewish world they can get farther with that. But Judah P. Benjamin did pretty well, becoming Sen- ator from LoUisiana and the first man in the Southern Con- federacy next to Jefferson . Davis. We are imitative in our names. Our ancestors did not Abe a Fine One ape high society. They went out to nature. Jonah is a dove; Debora, a bee; Zeeb, a wolf; Aryeh, a lion; Zipporah, a bird. They were bold. Sometimes they used whole sentences for a name. Thus, a prophet called his son "A Remnant Shall Re- turn." His idea in this name of course was to teach Israel a lesson. Probably at school it was a little hard for the teacher to call him by his name. Imag- ine his playmates saying to him, "Come on, play with me, ,, A Remnant Shall Return." It sounds odd to us, but such a name at leaSt gives you some- thing to think about. Suppose we named our children today such names as "It's Late?. Than You Think." It might prove very helpful socially. On the whole, the old Hebrew names were very simple. The earliest and most comprehen- sive catalog of Hebrew names is to be found in Chapter 46 of Genesis: "And these are the names of the children of Israel who came into Egypt. Jacob and his sons, Reuben . . . And the sons of Reuben: Hannoch and Pallu and Hezron and Carmi . . . And the sons of Simeon: ‘Jemuel and Jamin and Ohad and Jachin and Zohar and Shaul . . . And the sons of Levi: G e r s h o n, Kohath and Maran . . . And the sons of Benjamin; Bela and Bechel and Ahiel, Gera and Naaman, Ehi and Rosh, Muppim and Huppim . . ." and. so on. Imagine such names as Mup- pim and Huppim. What movie star would not envy them! Canadian Prime Minister Is Feted at Israel Bond Ball TURN YOUR OLD suits, topcoats, and shoes into cash. TU 3-1872. United Hias Will Aid Cuban Refugees "And they shall beat their swords into ploughshares And their spears into pruning hooks, Nation shall not lift up sword -against nation, Neither shall they learn war any more." —Isaiah 2:3-4 NEW YORK, (JTA) — The full cooperation of United Hias Service in implementing the program adopted at a three-day national conference in Miami on resettlement of Cuban refugees was pledged by James P. Rice,. Hias executive director, follow- ing his return from the confer- ence. ZARB FREED (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) LONDON — James Zarb, the British businessman whb arrived here Tuesday after his release from a Cairo prison Monday by presidential d e c r e e, said he thought his release was due "to some extent" to remarks made by Dr. Arnold Toynbee dm-ing a debate last week in Montreal with Israel Ambassador -Yaacov Herzog in which the British his- torian compared Israel's treat- ment of the Arabs in 1957 with the Nazi treatment of the Jews. Zarb was sentenced in 1957 to a ten-year prison term by a Cairo court on a charge of espionage. Editor of Zionist Record Dies in Africa Moscow Helps Nasser Develop Atomic Reactor UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., (JTA)—A nuclear reactor pres- ently under construction at In- shas, 35 kilometers. from Cairo, will become critical early this year, according to a report by the International Atomic Energy Agency. The reactor is described as identical with the WWR stroke C reactor of the Academy of Science in Moscow. The thh-d volume of the World Directory of Nuclear Reactors, published by the IAEA, describes the reactor as a tank type, ,using enriched uranium, light water moderated and cooled. The direc- tory gives its purpose as "re- search." The reactor is the prop- erty of the UAR Atomic Energy Commission. Fabrication of its components, according to the di- rectory, is by the USSR. Zarb Says Toynbee Debate Effected His Release from Cairo The Rt. Hon. John G. Die- fenbaker, prime minister of Canada (left), received the Canada-Israel Friendship Award at an Ambassador's Ball sponsored by the Toronto Com- mittee for State of Israel Bonds, with Israel Ambassador Yaacov Herzog (right) as host. More than 650 persons at- tended the Ball. AYENIP JOHANNESBURG, (JTA) — David Dainow, veteran • Jewish journalist who for 20 years served as editor of the Zionist Record here, died after a long illness. He was 75. Born in England, Dainow came to South Africa after World War I to engage in Jewish social work, and later became the editor of the Zionist Record. He retired from that post and took up resi- dence in Jerusalein, where he be- came an Israeli citizen. Several months ago, he came here for a visit and was stricken with ill- ness that proved fatal. WASHINGTON, (JTA) — Op- portunities in all fields of en- deavor will be greater within the next decade for American youth who are members of minority groups, teen-age leaders of the Bnai Brith Youth Organization were told here. The hospitable climate towards minorities will not be merely an advantage to young people, but will be America's gain in this critical age," Herman Edelberg, Washington director of the Anti- Defamation League of Bnai Brith said in an address to the open- ing session of the three-day exec- utive committee meeting of Bnai Brith's youth-serving agency. Edelberg pointed out that the 1960 Presidential election . "is an- other evidence that prejudice is a declining force in America." But, he said, this decline "is not, : a signal for relakation of efforts since there is still far too much prejudice for healthy society to tolerate complacently." Meanwhile, teenage leaders of the BBYO Tuesday presented Sen.: ator John J. Sparkman, a mem- ber of the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee, with a resolu- tion endorsing the Administra- tion's proposal for a "peace corps" of youths to assist other landS. The resolution was adopted by the executive boards of the BBYO's two. major divisions, Aleph Zadek and - the Bnai Brith Girls. Dr. Emanuel Olsvanger, Zionist, Man of Letters, Dies in Israel at 72 (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) JERUSALEM — Dr. Emanuel Olsvanger, a veteran Zionist and one of Israel's leading men of letters, died here Tuesday at the age of 72. An authority on languages and Jewish folklore, he was one of the leading proponents of Esperanto, an international lan- guage. Born in Grayeva, Poland, Dr. Olsvanger settled in Palestine in 1930 when he joined the staff of the Keren Hayesod. He was the recipient of the coveted Tabernichovsky Prize in 1946 for his translation into Hebrew of Dante's Inferno and of numerous citations from the Esperanto League. Among his other works are volumes on Jewish folklore and humor as well as translations into Hebrew of the Decameron and the Divine Comedy. Bernard A. Pearl Dies Bernard A. Pearl, 64, of Friendship is like money, 24101 Beverly, Oak Park, well easier made than kept. known attorney, died Tuesday —Samuel Butler. at the wheel of his car while driving in downtown Detroit. Funeral services were held BY HENRY LEONARD Thursday at Kaufman Chapel. Surviving him are his wife, Mary; two daughters, Mrs. Ar- nold Rayle and Mrs. Harold Nosan; three brothers; Dr. Nor- man, David and Saul Pearl; two sisters, Mrs. Sarah Thaur- att and Mrs. Ethel Haddock, and four grandchildren. A graduate of Northern High and Detroit College, he was a past chancellor of Knights of Pythias, past president of Ham- tramck Bar Association and a member of Detroit and Michi- gan Bar Associations, and was active in a number of Jewish movements. Chicago JWF Aids Agencies 50—BUSINESS CARDS Complete Moving Service No Job Too Large — Too Small Always Open BBYO Endorses Kennedy's Peace Corps Proposal "Then, Ladies, as our answer to all the recent bombings ... it is agreed that we shall go on record as 'DEPLORING HATE'." Iropr. 1959, Leonora Pritikin CHICAGO, (JTA) — The 12 medical and social welfare agen- cies affiliated with the Jewish Welfare Federation of Metropoli- tan Chicago will need $26,000,000 in 1961, and the Federation will have to provide $5,750,000 to- ward that total operating budget, Charles Aaron, Federation presi- dent, reported at the agency's 61st annual meeting.