The excellent record estab-
lished by Jack Faxon as a Con-
Con delegate has earned so
much acclaim for his ability as
a legislator that he has been
given scores of
endorsements
in his cam-,
paign for the
nomination for
State Senator
on the Demo-
cratic ticket
in the 5th Sen-
atorial Dis-
trict, which
comprises
Wards 16, 18,
and 20 and
River Rouge,
and Ecorse. Jack Faxon
Labor and civic organizations
have joined in endorsing him,
and he has been given the sup-
port of the 15th Congressional
District Democratic Party Or-
ganization.
Faxon, who is a teacher of
American government and his-
tory at Southwestern High
School, is active in PTA and
t e a c h e r s' organizations, is a
member of national movements
and is associated with the Amer-
ican Jewish Congress. He has
Bachelor's and Master's degrees
from Wayne State University
and is a candidate for the de-
gree of Ph.D. at the University
of Michigan.
The youngest delegate to be
elected to the Michigan Con-
stitutional Convention, Faxon,
who resides at 17594 Kentucky,
sponsored 49 Con-Con resolu-
tions and testified before all its
committees. His platform in-
cludes vocational programming
improvements, an end of sales
taxes on food and drugs, lower
college tuition, a more repre-
sentative legislature, jobs re-
taining for unemployed a n d
other progressive plans.

George J. Fulkerson
Lists Six Issues in
Race for Congress

Six issues of major import-
ance in Congress were outlined
by George J. Fulkerson, candi-
date for the Democratic nomi-
nation for the U.S. House of
Representatives from the 18th
District, which covers all of
Oakland County.
Fulkerson is an attorney and
special assistant attorney gen-
eral for the State of Michigan.
His campaign com-mittee is
headed by Henry A. Schiffer,
Ferndale attorney and City
Commissioner.
The issues listed by Fulker-
son are: The abolishment of re-
strictive immigration quotas;
an educational aid program at
all levels so that no child with
ability is denied the right to de-
velop that ability; a proper
farm program to get the gov-
ernment out of the surplus
storage business; a medical care

program for the elderly, fi-
nanced through social security;
a program to deal with the 3,-
000,000 unemployed each year;
He is president of the Valley
Woods Elementary School PTA
and is a member of the Berk-
ley VFW post. After serving in
the Air Force, he received his
BA degree fro mthe University
of Chicago and his law degree
from the University of Detroit.
He is married to the former
Ruth Black of Boston. They
have two children.

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from London to its headquar-
ters in New York and to its
affiliated Israeli News Agency
in Tel Aviv.
The new system permits in-
stantaneous office-to-office com-
munication at the rate of 66
words per minute. It parallels
the communications system es-
tablished by JTA in New York
for delivery of the JTA news
service to distribution centers in
London, Tel Aviv, Johannes-
burg, Buenos Aires, Sao Paulo
and Lima, Peru. Operators
based in the JTA headquarters
in New York directly key the

In London, operators working which the British Post Office ings in costs.
in the JTA's Fleet Street office,

similarly feed the signal over
landlines to the transmitters
some 50 miles from London,
which JTA has leased from the
British Post Office. The London
signal to New York is inter-
cepted by automated, pm-tuned
Press Wireless receivers at
Northville, Long Island, and
automatically relayed over
leased landlines to the JTA of-
fice. The London signal to Tel
Aviv is received by an auto-
mated, pre-tuned receiving sta-
tion maintained in Tel Aviv by

JOHNNY LEBOW

Our Service Dept. is open to midnight!

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UN 3-7000

18045 LIVERNOIS

`Cast a Giant Shadow' to Tell
of Col. Marcus' Aid to Israel

OF BRJC it T1

"Chuck" Gershenson says:

"I Always Order

well-equipped Arab forces? Mar-
cus agreed to help in the search,
but after a couple of months,
only one possibility stood out
Mickey Marcus himself.
His military experience had
been wildly varied: divisional
judge advocate, commander of
the Ranger Training School, vol-
unteer "Observer" with the air-
borne wing at Normandy, ad-
viser at summit conferences.
But his other experiences were
equally diverse: intercollegiate
welterweight champion; magis-
trate, and Fiorello La Guardia's
Commissioner of Correction.
Given major credit for form-
ing the Israeli Army out of a
life, he was approached by a handful of heroic guerilla
representative of the provi- units, Mickey Marcus — like
sional Israeli government. Stonewall Jackson—was shot by
Where, the emissary asked, accident a few hours before the
could the Israelis locate a mili- triumphant victory he had de-
tary adviser to beef up their signed. At his death, David Ben
army and to help them prepare Gurion said, "He was the best
for a certain attack by the man we had."

Of the more than three
thousand graves at West Point,
only one holds the body of a
soldier killed fighting under a
foreign flag. The man is David
("Mickey") Marcus, Colonel in
the U.S. Army and the first
soldier since Biblical times to
hold the rank of General in
the Army of Israel.
The story of Mickey Marcus's
journey from Brooklyn to Jeru-
salem is told in "Cast a Giant
Shadow," by Ted Berkman, to
be punished by Doubleday today.
Late in 1947, when Colonel
Marcus had turned down a gen-
eral's star to return to private

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President,
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Building Corporation

Lauder's

One of

Jews in Hungary Anxious to Go
to Israel, Says Hebrew U. Dean

TEL AVIV, (JTA) — Many
Jews in Hungary would like to
emigrate to Israel, to reunite
with their relatives, if permitted
to leave the country, Dr. Walter
Preuss, deputy dean of the de-
partment of economics at the
Hebrew University, reported
here. Dr. Preuss just returned
from Budapest where he attend-
ed a Congress on Cooperatives.
According to the educator,
there seemed to be no anti-
Semitism in Hungary. He said

movement. Both governmental
and professional circles, he said,
are "highly appreciative" of Is-
rael's accomplishments in those
fields.

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he found the Jewish community

of Budapest partly integrated

into Hungary's new social pat-
tern. Nevertheless, he stated,
some Hungarian Jews would
choose to go to Israel.
Dr. Preuss reported that be
found in Hungary warm under-
standing of Israel, especially its

achievements in agriculture, the
growth and development of the
kibbutzim and the cooperative

Dr. Joseph, Yehuda

46 day cruise to the Mediterranean and Israel. Sail October 15 aboard the S. S.
Atlantic — 8 days in Israel, Canary Islands, Sunny Sicily,
Pompeii, Amalpi, French Riviera. All Inclusive, from
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Burla Awarded
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auf up
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JERUSALEM, (JTA) — The
annual Jerusalem Prizes were
awarded to two authors, Minis-

❑

Theatre Pleasure Tour to Mediterranean, Europe, Israel. 4 weeks from $998 and
up. Go by steamer, return by air. Sailings from the end of August thru Decem-
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ter of Justice Dov Joseph and
the well-known writer, Yehuda
Burla. Each received 500 Israeli

pounds ($167) at the - cere-
monies at City Hall here, at-
tended by many prominent Isra-
eli personalities, including

Prime Minister David Ben-

Gurion.
Dr. Joseph, who was military
governor of Jerusalem during
the War of Liberation, was
given the prize for his book,
"The Faithful City," which was
published in New York in Eng-
lish and in Israel in Hebrew.
Mr. Burla was cited "for his
unwavering devotion to Jeru-
salem as the theme of his writ-
41 ings."

1 3 4

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9 - THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Friday, August 3, 1962

Jack Faxon Gets New Radioprinter News Circuits Started for JTA's Transmissions
performed the actual operation
NEW YORK, (JTA) — The signal over landlines to power- JTA and INA.
Widest Support Jewish
The new transmission system for JTA. The new system will
Telegraphic Agency ful transmitters at Centereach,
opened its first directly op- Long Island, leased from Press in London replaces one em- speed the delivery of news copy
for State Senate erated
ployed for several years in and will effect substantial sav-
radioprinter circuit s Wireless, Inc.

