THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

38—Friday, October 20, 1967

Ralph Lipshaw Is Head
of Society of Appraisers

The Detroit chapter of the Ameri-
can Society of Appraisers has.
elected its officers for 1967-1968.
They are: president. Ralph Lip-
shaw: vice presidents. Edward
Frome and James Barbour; trea-
surer. Gene Gracer and secretary.
Dean Nelson.

yrian Intelligence Paid
African Statesmen Visit AJCommittee S
by Stolen Jewish Money

JERUSALEM (ZINS) — Syrian
intelligence activities on the "Is-
rael Front" were financed to a
large extent by monies confiscated
from members of the Jewish com-
munity in Syria. A pamphlet re-
leased by the Israel army spokes-
. man Aug. 20 contains photostatic
copies of Syrian documents found
in intelligence headquarters in Ku-
neitra.
Stamped "Top Secret." they
concern the changeover of intelli-
gence commanders -in the South-
west District and reveal that about
80 per cent of the total Syrian in-
telligence budget in this area was
realized from the confiscation of
Jewish property in Syria.

Socialist International
Supports Israel, Calls
for Peace With Arabs

ZURICH (JTA)—The annual Con-
ference of the Socialist Interna-
tional adopted resolutions here ex-
pressing "full solidarity with the
people of Israel who are defend-
ing their existence and their lib-
erty against aggression" and de-
40—EMPLOYMENT
manded an end to all warlike
COMPANION and personal care to el- activities in the Middle East so as
derly woman. Light meals. Straighten- to lead to "negotiated peace
ing apartment. Saturday and Sunday
treaties between Israel and the
stay over if desired. 357-2733.
Arab states."
WANTED — Babysitter. 3 days week.
The resolutions also sharply
Own car. References. 541-6169.
castigated the Soviet Union for
continuing to foment strife in the
First National Credit Bureau
Middle East and for its virulent
is enlarging its staff and has an
opening for a good sales-person.
anti-Jewish propaganda campaign
This is a permanent, well-paid sal-
which "has revived fears for the
ary and bonus, executive position.
well-being and security of the
Applicant must have the ability to
meet and call upon business and
Jewish population of the USSR."
professional men. This is a life-time
The conference, which heard im-
position and offers an excellent
future.
passioned speeches by some of the
Mr. ZAMBECK
leading figures of the world So-
LI 6-0180
cialist movement, adopted the reso-
lutions unanimously lfter a long.
RECEPTIONIST
dramatic debate that spread over
1-8 P.M. MON. THRU FRI.
the full assembly and the resolu-
For a large Real Estate office in
tions committee.
Livernois-Outer Dr. area. Work con-
The fear for the "well-being and
sists of answering telephone and
miscell. typing. Knowledge of dicta-
security of the Jewish population
tion helpful. For an interview call
in the USSR" was stated in a
Mr. Richard Silverman.
special report prepared by a dis-
345.6050
HOME CORP.
tinguished panel of experts and
submitted to the conference by
40-A—EMPLOYMENT WANTED
Albert Acarthy, general secretary
EXPERIENCED medical assistant avail- of the Socialist International. it
able at once. Oak Park, Southfield or
was unanimonsly adopted.
Farmington preferred. 358-1693.
The resolutions were introduc-
ed by Dr. S. S. Levenberg of
45—BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
London, who served as chairman
and rapporteur of the resolutions
GOOD NORTHWEST LOCATION
committee. They were strongly
supported by, among others,
RESTAURANT FOR SALE
Jules Moch, former French de-
In business 20 years. Parking
fense minister and head of the
lot included.
French delegation; Willy Brandt,
foreign minister of the German
273-6838
Federal Republic; and Guy Mol-
let, former French prime mini-
45-A—BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
ster, who presided over the ses-
WANTED
sion at which the resolutions
were adopted.
The Middle East resolution put
CPA
the Socialist International squarely
behind
a six-point program which,
desires to acquire Accounting
it declared, must be part of any
and Tax Practice.
permanent solution of the Middle
268-4175
Eastern problem. These are "the
absolute right of Israel" and all
nations in the area to exist as
50—BUSINESS CARDS
sovereign states; the guarantee to
WALLPAPERING and antiquing. Excel- Israel and all nations of free pas-
lent work. Reasonable. 543-9234.
sage through the Suez Canal and
CARPENTRY WORK — Specializing in the Strait of Tiran; the establish-
recr. rooms and outside work. L
ment of a policy of regional dis-
Schwartz. BR 3-4826, VE 8-5073.
armament; international assistance
to build a future in the region
based on "social justice, democ-
RENEW OLD CABINETS
racy and economic development;"
with formica, adding new doors
a final solution of the refugee
and drawer fronts AND SAVE.
problem with international aid and
Coll after 5:30 daily and weekends
cooperation between the parties
concerned; and "guarantees for
689-9534
the maintenance of peace and na-
DRESSMAKING, wedding gowns. Altera- tional security within mutually
tions. New York experience. Gisele. agreed frontier."

KE 4-2309.

A-1 PAINTING, decorating, interior.
UN 4-0326. After 6:30.

FOR BETTER wall washing. call James
Russell. One day service. TO 6-4005.
526 Belmont.

FURNITURE refinished and repaired.
Free estimates. UN 4-3547.

MAYWEATHER MOVING CO.

Household and office furniture. No
job too large or too small. Licensed
and responsible movers.

Day or Night

861-2280

LARKINS MOVING CO.

Household and
Office Furniture

LICENSED MOVERS
PROFESSIONALS
894-4587

JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO.

Local and Long Distance Packing, stor-
age, pianos, appliances, nousehold furn-
ishings.
8829 Northend — Ferndale

543-4832

DECORATING, painting, neat and clean.
Also carpentry work. Call after 5.
542-3270.

VIENNA FURRIER. Remodeling. re -
pairs. Reasonable prices. DI 1-0462.

Lincoln on Respect
for Law and Order

"Let every American, every
lover of liberty, every well-wisher
to his prosperity, swear by the
blood of the Revolution, never to
violate in the least particular, the
laws of the country.. . . Let every
man remember that to violate the
law is to trample on the blood of
his father and to tear the character
of his own children's liberty. Let
reverence for the laws be breathed
by every American mother, to the
lisping babe that prattles on her
lap—Let it be taught in schools, in
seminaries and in colleges; let it
be preached from the pulpit, pro-
claimed in legislative halls, and
enforced in courts of justice. And
in short, let it become the political
religion of the nation; and let the
old and young, rich and poor, the
grave and gay, of all sexes, tongues
and colors and conditions, sacrifice
unceasingly upon its altars."
—Abraham Lincoln

Employment by newspapers aver-
aged 353.800 during 1966, a 2 per
cent increase over 1965 and an in-
crease of 42 per cent since 1947.

Barry Tower of Montreal;

Was Mumford Graduate

Barry M. Tower, a former De-
troiter who was in the automobile
fabric manufacturing business in
Montreal, died Oct. 12 at age 27.
Mr. Tower, a graduate of Mum-
ford High School, attended Ferris
Institute before marrying Judy
Bloomfield of Montreal. He went
into busines with his father-in-law,
head of one of the largest manufac-
1 turing concerns of its kind in Mon-
World War II, of life in the Soviet treal and Toronto. He was a
Union, describing the work of the member of Bnai Brith in Detroit.
Surviving are his wife; a son,
NKBD, of the citizenry and its
Samuel his mother. Mrs. Evelyn
folkways.
For the first time, his short , Tower; and a brother, Saul of De-
stories, "The Adventures of One ' troit.
Yitzchok," are available in English,
having been issued in a paper- Ralph Samuel,
back by as an Award Book by Uni-
versal Publishing and Distributing Philanthropist
NEW YORK (JTA) — Ralph E.
Corp. (235 E. 45th, NY 17).
There are 26 stories in this in- Samuel, banker and philanthro-
teresting collection of narratives, pist, died suddenly in Israel on
and in their totality they portray Monday while on vacation. He was
Russian life, they describe the 75. A prominent figure in Jewish
loves and reactions of people. the life here for a half-century, Mr.
human and often also the brutal.
Samuel was president of the New
York Federation of Jewish Philan-
The author has not eliminated
thropies from 1949 to 1951 after
the Jewish aspects of life in
having given nearly 30 years of
Russia, and one of his dramatic
Sunny
Tajikistan,"
service to that agency.
stories, "In
there is an incident of veterans
threatening their Jewish com-
Zionist Joke in USSR
rades and when the commander
NEW YORK (ZINS) — An
is revealed as a Jew he, too, is
American tourist who recently re-
attacked. The commander, sens-
turned from a visit to Soviet Rus-
ing the danger, asserts himself
sia relates the following joke
by shouting: "Yidn, lort zich
which is making the rounds among
nut! Derlank tzurik!" — "Jews!
Jews in Moscow: A Soviet police-
Don't let them! Hit back!"
man asked a Russian Jew if he
The concluding story, "Exodus," had relatives abroad. The Jew an-
describing the flight from the Nazis swered emphatically in the nega-
during the war, likens the exper- tive. The policeman who was aware
ience to the Bible story,
that the Jew had a brother in Is-
Yitzchok Perlov's skill is highly rael followed up with a second
commended and critically reviewed question: "You have no brother
in an introduction to these stories
abroad?" The Jew replied: "No,
by Isaac Bashevis Singer who tells
I have no brother abroad; I have a
about Perlov's background and ex-
brother in the Homeland and I live
plains the philosophy of the Polish abroad."
Yiddish writer. He culls from his
anecdotal works to indicate the
genius of the man whose works David Kopenhagem, 71;
now make known the creative ef- Jewish Leader in Brazil
forts of an eminent Jewish writer
SAO PAULO (JTA) — David
who has found his home in Russia
Kopenhagem, a Jewish community
after flight from Poland.
leader, died here Oct. 12 at age
71. He was honorary president of
Max Buckman Is Dead;
the Brazil Macabi, a board member
Canadian-Jewish Writer of the Macabi World Federation,
TEL AVIV (JTA) — Max Buck- and a leader of the General Zionist
movement.
man, Canadian Jewish journalist
who was touring Israel with his
wife, collapsed and died here on Poland Bars 'IT-Stamp'
the eve of Yom Kippur, while at-
JERUSALEM (JTA) — The Is-
tending a briefing for tourists at rael Post Office warned its clients
the Hilton Hotel.
today that Poland will not accept
Mr. Buckman was a contributor mail bearing Israel's victory
to the Canadian Jewish Chronicle, stamps, which were issued after
of Montreal, and the Western Jew- the Six-Day War.
ish News of Winnipeg.

S. Edward Peal, Liberian Ambassador to the United States (left)
looks on as Edward Moldover, American Jewish Committee leader,
welcomes Liberian Secretary of State J. Rudolph Grimes to recep-
tion given in his honor by AJC's New York Chapter. African
attitudes toward Israel was among topics discussed.

Yitzchok Perlov's Stories Present
Polish Yiddish Author's Adventures

Yitzchok Perlov is a Polish Yid-
dish writer who fled from his
native land, found himself in the
Soviet Union when he landed in
Bialistok, was joined there by his
wife, Lola Folman, the actress.
He has written impressions of

Child Abuse Study
by Brandeis First
of Its Kind in Field

WALTHAM, Mass. — Many
American adults may have at some
time felt the impulse to physically
harm a child, yet the phenomenon
of child abuse may not be as large
a problem as suggested by the
press, according to a preliminary
report on a nationwide study con-
ducted by Brandeis University.
The "Epidemiologic Study of
Child Abuse," conducted by Dr.
David G. Gil of Brandeis' Florence
Heller Graduate School for Ad-
vanced Studies in Social Welfare,
apparently contradicts impressions
held by the public and fostered by
mass media.
In a preliminary public opinion
survey begun in October 1965, the
Brandeis team, financed by a grant,
recently renewed, from the Chil-
dren's Bureau of the Department
of Health, Education and Welfare,
set out to determine the public's
knowledge and opinions of child
abuse.
About 90 per cent of the more
than 1,500 in the survey sample
said they had heard of the prob-
lem of child abuse. Three per cent
said they knew personally families
that had been involved in incidents
of child abuse.
Nearly 60 per cent said they
thought "almost anyone" at some
time might physically injure a
child, 20 per cent said they
themselves might "at some time"
injure a child, while one-half of
one per cent said they had, at
least once, abused a child in their
care.
The response'indicates, Dr. Gil
said, that the irffpulse to strike a
child may be a normal one among
adults. Yet, according to the study,
relatively few adults actually lose
control and injure a child.
The Brandeis study, Dr. Gil be-
lieves, is the first such application
of epidemiological principles to a
specific problem in the social wel-
fare field, and Brandeis maintains
the first central registry in the
nation for data and interpretation
of the phenomenon of child abuse.
Conceivably, through centralized
data systems devoted to any num-
ber of specified social problems,
their status could be known on a
day-to-day basis.
The swift processing of reliable
information could in turn mean
more rapid action in dealing with
the problem, nipping its growth be-
fore it could seriously affect the
social system.

Dr. Isaac Grossman;
Farband Medical Chief

NEW YORK (JTA) — Dr. Isaac
Grossman, more than 40 years the
chief medical director of Farband-
Labor Zionist Order, died Saturday
at Mt. Sinai Hospital. He was 80
and had maintained an office for
the practice of medicine until his
retirement five years ago.

The largest manufacturing com-
pany in the world (in terms of
sales) is General Motors Corp.,
with headquarters in Detroit. Dur-
ing its peak years of 1964 sales
totaled $16,997,044,468, including
6,114,478 cars and trucks.

Now Possible To
Shrink Hemorrhoids

And Promptly Stop Itching,
Relieve Pain In Most Cases.

Science has found a medication
with the ability, in most cases—
to relieve pain, itching and shrink
hemorrhoids. In case after case
doctors proved, while gently re-
lieving pain, actual reduction took
place. The secret is Preparation
H®. It also soothes irritated tis-
sues and helps prevent further
infection. Just ask for Prepara-
tion H Ointment or Suppositories.

Adv.

