40—EMPLOYMENT ANN ARBOR Beersheba Independence Road Built with Aid of Israel Bonds Companion for elderly woman in nice quiet home in Ann Arbor. Own studio apartment upstairs. Write in detail (Yid- dish or English) to P.O. Box 1405, Ann Arbor. Real Estate Sales are booming. Large experi- ence Northwest office will take on 2 new Salesmen. Profit sharing & direct investment even to new men. MR. ROSS. Gross Realty DI 2-1300 WOWAN TO CARE for invalid. Live-in. Good pay. KE 4-8238. Real Estate SALESPEOPLE Male or Female Benj. Rich "GET RICH QUICK" 12545 Linwood TU 3-4000 40-A—EMPLOYMENT WANTED TAKE CARE of children for work- ing mothers. Also baby-sitting. Phone DI 1-6935, 19484 Schaefer. On Israel's 16th anniversary, which will be celebrated on April 16, the Independence Day parade will be held on this main street of Beersheba, capital of the Negev. A sleepy desert town at the time when Israel became a state Beersheba has grown with the aid of Israel Bonds to a bustling city of more than 50,000 persons. With Beersheba as the focus of Israel's Independence Day celebration for the first time, the entire nation will be reminded in dramatic fashion of the central importance of the development and settlement of the Negev for the future growth of Israel. MIDDLE-AGED woman will baby sit for working mothers. UN. 3-0806. Disney Salutes UNICEF at Fair 45—BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—All the world's children, their songs, dances, games and laughter— and also their need s, and UNICEF's role in helping to meet these needs—are vividly dramatized for New York World's Fair visitors in a spec- tacular attraction presented by the Pepsi-Cola Company and created by Walt Disney. From the Eiffel Tower to the Taj Mahal, from the South American pampas to Victoria Falls, "IT'S A SMALL WORLD— A SALUTE TO UNICEF" ignores the boundaries of age and dresses up reality in its own brand of fantasy and magic. A universal realm of splendid A REAL SNAP Liquor, Beer and Wine Epworth-Tireman area, does a $150,000 yr. business. Owner. 5100 paymts. "Get Rich Quick"—TU 3-4000 BENJ. RICH 50—BUSINESS CARDS LARKINS MOVING AND DELIVERY CO. Licensed Movers Professionals 3319 GLADSTONE TY 4-4587 LEVI MOVING COMPANY Courteous and efficient service. Free estimates. J. LEVI, OWNER 18276 STRATHMOOR DETROIT 35, MICH. UN 4-0708 I. SCHWARTZ. All kinds of carpenter work, no job too big or small. BR 3-4826, LI 5-4035. A-1 PAINTING, paperhanging, inte- rior, wallwashing. Immediate service. Guaranteed. Reasonable. GR 6-1066, UN 4-0326 after 5 p.m. WALL TO WALL CARPET CLEANING We also clean upholstered fur- niture. All work guaranteed. 42 years experience. 35 yards of carpeting, $15. SAM SMALTZ LI 2-4735 Call after 4 p.m. JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO. By Hour or Flat Rate Local and Long Distance Pack- ing, storage, pianos, appliances household furnishings. 8700 West McNichols Rd. UN. 2-6047 FOR BETTER wall washing, call James Russell. One day service. TO 6-4005. 526 Belmont. REPAIR and remodeling. Have your fur coat or jacket made into the lastest 1964 style. H. Waldhorn, DI 1-4539, UN 1-5932. DRESSMAKING and alterations. Prompt service. Reasonable prices. UN 3-9517. PAINTING, decorating. Interior, exterior. Free estimates. Reason- able. LI. 7-5639, K.E. 8-1047. LOUIE'S Re-upholstering, Repairing Satisfaction guaranteed. Reasonable. Free estimates. UN 4-3339, VE 5-7453. FURNITURE repairs and refinish- ing. Free estimates. Call UN 4-3547. 55-A—MISCELLANEOUS WTD. TURN YOUR old suits, shoes into cash. DI 2-3717. The University of Michigan was the first institution of high- er learning in this country to establish a professorship in transportation engineering, 1922. JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Mrs. mitteeof the American Friends Frances Gunther, a writer and of a Jewish Palestine. During long-time Zionist, died here the immediate postwar years, Monday at age 67. She was the she was a leading American former wife of author John supporter of Irgun Zvai Leumi. Gunther. At the time of her death she Born Frances Fineman in had been writing a book on the New York, Mrs. Gunther was a impact of Judaism, Christianity member of the executive corn- and Islam on politics and his- tory. She had named the He- brew University Medical School as legatee of her estate and also had willed her body to the school. In addition to her writings on Palestine and Zionism and her Benjamin E. Jaffe, of 28680 work as a foreign correspond- Streamwood, Southfield, for a ent, Mrs. Gunther was the au- number of years one of De- thor of a book, "Revolution in troit's leading communal fig- India." She had been the author ures, died last Friday at the also of many magazine articles. age of 67. Funeral services were held Sunday afternoon at Boris Gourevitch, Kaufman Chapel. He is survived by his wife, Nominee for Nobel Sylvia; son, Miles; daughter, Mrs. Oscar Katov; brother, Max; Peace Prize, Dead Boris Gourevitch, president of the Union for the Protection of the Human Person, and twice a nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize, died April 4 in New York. Mr. Gourevitch, 74, was an author in pre-Soviet Russia. He was nominated for the prize in 1957 and again in 1959 for his two-volume work, "The Road to Peace and to Moral Democracy." The union, of which he was president, had been active be- fore and during World War II in efforts for refugees and concentration camp prisoners and their resettlement, but in recent years had become primarily a private crusade by Mr, Gourevitch. Born in Umanj, Kiev pro- vince, he began is education at BENJAMIN E. JAFFE St. Vladimir University in Kiev sisters, Mrs. Esther Slutnik and but was arrested in 1908 for Mrs. Herman ' Nudelman, and political activities. He eventu- ally was graduated from the three grandchildren. One of the state's best known faculty of law. He fled to France when the patent attorneys, Mr. Jaffe also headed a number of community Soviets took over Russia. With projects. He was a former presi- the Nazi rise to power, Mr. dent of the Jewish Family and Gourevitch formed a committee Children's Service, was a trus- for the emancipation of Jews tee of Sinai Hospital, served on and later the Union for Protec- the board of governors of the tion. He came to the United Jewish Welfare Federation and States in 1939 to set up Ameri- served on the boards of a num- can branches. He leaves a son, George Gourevitch. ber of social service agencies. He was a member of Temple Emanuel and Franklin Hills S. African Rabbi, Zionist Country Club and of numerous Michel Kossowsky, Dies local, state and national organi- (Direct JTA Teletype Wire zations. to The Jewish News) JOHANNESBURG — Rabbi Born in Russia, Mr. Jaffe came to this country with his Michel Kossowsky, one of South parents in his childhood. He Africa's leading Rabbis and a came to Detroit after graduat- prominent Zionist and com- ing from the University of Chi- munal leader, died here Wed- cago Law School in 1921 and nesday at 56. He was spiritual leader of Hamedrash Hagodel practiced law here since. Congregation in Johannesburg. Born in Poland, Rabbi Kos- Yugoslavian Leader, sowsky came to South Africa in 1941. He was president of the Dr. Albert Vajs, Dies South African Mizrachi, a foun- Yugoslavian Jewish leader Dr. der and head of the Johannes- Albert Vajs died in Belgrade burg Yeshiva College and vice Sunday at age 59. Chairman of president of the South African the Union of Jewish communi- Zionist Federation. He also was ties in Yugoslavia, he also was a member of the executive of a member of the European the South African Jewish Board executive of the World Jewish of Deputies and of the Johan- Congress. nesburg Beth Din. Dr. Vajs. professor of law and political science at the Univers- ity of Belgrade, was Yugoslav Harold Brown Dead; delegate to the international Sealy Vice President military tribunal during the Nur- Harold King Brown, vice presi- emberg trial of Nazi criminals. His activity in revealing Nazi dent of Sealy Mattress Co., died crimes recently had subjected April 4 at age 46. A native De- him to attacks by neo-Nazis in troiter, Mr. Brown lived at 19234 Warrington. He also was an West Germany. officer in Brown Reliable Bed- ding Co. Yiddish Actress Dies He was a member of Cong. NEW YORK, (JTA) — Glicka Shaarey Zedek, Jewish Welfare Belaysky, Yiddish actress, died Federation, Standard Club and April 5 at age 80. She was the Furniture Club of Detroit. Mr. Brown leaves his wife, widow of a Yiddish actor, the late Morris Belaysky, and a niece Diana; a daughter, Joanne; a of the late famous Zionist lead- son, Robert; parents, Mr. and er, Nahum Sokolow. For the past Mrs. Samuel Brown; grand- 20 years, Mrs. Belaysky was mother, Mrs. Leah Shlaine; a active in the work of the Miz- brother, Peter; and a sister, Mrs. Gertrude Harwin. rachi Women's Organization. B. E. Jaffe Dies; Patent Attorney Headed_ JFCS 17350 Livernois Opportunity of a lifetime. Be connected with the fastest sell- ing and best advertised Organ- ization in Detroit. Top com- missions paid. Earn $20,000 a yr. or more. Call Mr. Benad- eret. . Writer Frances Gunther Is Dead; Long-Time Zionist Was Age 68 ORT Project Lauded by Mali's President Inauguration of a Science Center in the capital of the West African Republic of Mali, operated by ORT under con- tract to the U.S. Government, has been hailed as a major con- tribution to the human and technical development of this new nation. The Science Center was for- mally opened last month in Bamako in the presence of the President of Mali, Modibo Keita; the American Ambassa- dor, S. E. Handly; American ORT representative, Dr. Charles Levinson; and ministers of the Malian government. President Keita described the Science Center as a "nursery for young technicians." The ORT team is headed by Adam Scherer, a graduate of the Central ORT Institute in Switzerland, and formerly a specialist at the ORT vocational school in Tunis. - Other ORT personnel have been recruited from ORT schools in Israel, France, Morocco, Switzerland and other areas. Each is a care- fully chosen specialist in a tech- nical or scientific field. The Science Center in Bama- ko, a large, one-story building consisting of six sections, is providing instruction in auto- motive diesel engines, struc- tural design, civil engineering, secretarial skills and electron- ics. Special courses have been given to employees of the Bank of Mali, senior civil servants, and foremen and technicians of the Ministry of Public Works. A similar program of techni- cal and teacher training is con- ducted by ORT in the West African state of Guinea, like- wise under contract to the U.S. Agency for International Devel- opment. vistas, a pleasantly mysterious domain, a world with its own special flavor and color, it crys- tallizes the freshness, excitement and surprises by which present and former citizens of Childhood can best be delighted and amazed. Besides the happiest "globe- girdling" cruise that ever sailed, the U.S. Committee for UNICEF displays its books, records, maps, riosters, games and other intro- ductions to a very different world—one in which millions upon millions of youngsters owe much of their health and hope to the United Nations Children's Fund. Nearby, a dramatic photo- graphic exhibit vividly illustrates their needs and the work being done on their behalf in more than 100 developing countries. Serving as a 120-foot high ex- clamation point to the pavilion's entrance, the dynamic "Tower of the Four Winds" is one, of the most striking creations to come from Walt Disney and his staff of "imagineers" at WED Enterprises, Inc., of Glendale, California. Wonder Why,' Genuine Appeal to Race Justice In pictures, with a very few words of text, the story "I Won- der Why . . ." by Shirley Bur- den, published by Doubleday, tells the story of race preju- dice, exposing the injustice of hate for the colored, most im- pressively. Toby Holtzamn, who is asso- ciated with Boesen Books, 5480 Cass, states that this little classic is leaving its impact and is making it a best seller. The brief text, to be read in a few minutes, lists so many things in life that are loved and enjoyed and concludes with a photograph of a colored girl and an accompanying caption: "I wonder why some people don't like me." It is a great work of art and a genuine appeal to justice. 1,200 Guatemala Jews The Jewish Community of Guatemala, which dates back to• the middle of the 19th century, now numbers some 1,200 per- sons, most of whom live in the capital, Guatemala City. Eighty-three members of the University of Michigan Medical School's class of 1964 will take internship training in Michi- gan hospitals.