12
DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and Ms Legal Chronicle
INSTITUTE
(Continued from Page 1)
Association of New York, and the
Bureaus of Jewish Education of
Philadelphia, C i n c i n n a t i and
Cleveland.
Dr. Eisenberg was editor of the
Jewish School Quarterly which
was published by the United
Synagogue. He also served as
secretary and treasurer of the
National Council for Jewish Edu-
cation, as president of the Jew-
ish Teachers Association, the
Alumni of the Teachers Insti-
tute, the New York . University
'Menorah, business manager of
the Jewish Education Magazine.
etc. At the present time he is
serving as vice president of the
National Council for Jewish Edu-
cation, the professional body of
Jewish Education in this country.
Parent-Teachers Meetings
Monday, Tuesday and Wednes-
day, April 17, 18 and 19, are
set for Parent-Teachers gather-
ings. The following have already
completed plans for their pro-
grams.
The first of the series of Par-
ent-Teachers groups will be held
by the Parkside school in the
auditorium of the Custer Public
School. Linwood at Midland, on
Monday, April 17. The program
will open with the singing of the
national anthem, and a prayer
by the pupils. The pupils will
also present a pageant featuring
the complete cycle of the holi-
days with David Hyams as nar-
rator and Delphine Weisner, vio-
linist. Greetings will be extended
by L. Hyams in the name of the
fathers, and Mrs. Joseph Tromb-
ka in the name of the mothers.
Mrs. Miriam Kumove Feldman
will extend greetings in the name
of the alumni of the Parkside
School. Greetings will also be
extended by the Woman's Auxili-
ary and the members of the
board. One of the important fea-
tures of the evening will be vo-
cal selections by Cantor David
Katzman of Bnai Moshe Syna-
gogue. He will be accompanied
on the piano by Bella Goldberg.
The guest speaker is Philip Slom-
ovitz, and Henry Feinberg is
chairman. Alex Roberg is princi-
pal of the Parkside Hebrew
Schools.
L. Moser, Mrs. P. Arnold, Mrs.
C. Tepperman, Mrs. A. Baker,
Mrs. H. Kwilier, Miss Ruth Pas-
sin, Mrs. H. Goldberg, Mrs. H.
Nathan, secretary, and Morris
Plafkin, principal of the branch.
The program will include Pass-
over playlets, songs, recitations
and a musical program. The guest
speakers will be Rabbi Isaac
Stollman, spiritual leader of
Mishkan Israel Synagogue, and
Theodore Baruch, a member of
the alumni of the United Hebrew
Schools, will extend greetings.
On the same day the Bagley
Branch, located in the Bagley
Public School at Curtis and
Roselawn, will have its program
with Dr. B. Benedict Glazer of
Temple Beth El as principal
speaker. Parents of the school
will also be represented by Phil-
ip Slomovitz and Mrs. Sidney
Marwil. Greetings will also
be extended by two pupils
of the school, a boy and a girl,
and by Herzl Shur, a member of
the alumni. The program will
also feature fine musical selec-
tions.
Thursday evening, April 20, is
the Kvutzah Ivrith evening, with
Rabbi Leon Fram as chairman,
and Mordecai Medini, Hebraist,
guest speaker. The Ladies' Aux-
iliary of the Kvutzah are in
charge of refreshments.
Saturday afternoon, April 22,
Oneg Shabbat in the auditorium
of the Rose Sittig Cohen Build-
ing, headed by Maurice Landau
and assisted by the Women's
Auxiliary.
The closing and most import-
ant feature of the week's cele-
bration is the dinner which will
be held on Sunday evening, April
23, in the social hall of Congre-
gation Shaarey Zedek. The guest
speaker will be Dr. Emanuel
Gamoran of Cincinnati. The mem-
bers of the Women's Auxiliary
will act as hostesses and are also
in charge of decorations.
Aaron A. Silberblatt is gen-
eral chairman of the anniver-
sary; Fred M. Butzel, honorary
chairman ; Judge William Fried-
man, toastmaster of Sunday night
banquet; Rudolph Zuieback, pres-
ident of the schools.
untoward act has been commit-
ted by any of the responsible
Jewish organizations. The spirit
among the Jewish population is
one of hurt dignity and deter-
mination to carry on the fight
for Jewish rights in Palestine,
and for the revocation of the
vicious and discriminatory White
Paper, by all lawful measures.
To prevent any possible dis-
turbances, the Palestine Govern-
ment issued an order widening
the police powers. The order spe-
cifically authorizes every police-
man to arrest and detain, with-
out any warrant, any person
who fails to provide satisfactory
proof of his identity. Persons so
detained may be held for 48
hours, but the superintendent of
Police has been given the au-
thority to detain suspicious per-
sons for seven days providing he
immediately files a report of the
circumstances of the arrest to
the Palestine High Commissioner.
April 7, 1944
JWEWO to Hold Theater Junior Congregation of
Benefit at Littman's Apr. 11 Shaarey Zedek to Hold
A special meeting • of the Jew- Passover Services
ish Women's European Welfare
The Junior Congregation of
Organization was held Monday, Shaarey Zedek will hold services
March 27, at the Bnai Moshe quring Pesach. Eugene Maiitz
and Arthur Benevi will act a;
cantors; Bob Kash, Philip C a
Ian, Dale Boesky and Sheldoi
Lutz will act as Baal Korells.
Jack Rogvoy, Mrs. Rose Wolok
and Aaron Weisberg will deliver
discourses on the different day s
on various parts of Pcsael!.
Merkaz Lachizuk to Hold
Open Meeting on April 11
The Merkab Lachizuk Ilaior a h
Vaiahadus will hold an open
meeting on Tuesday, April 11
(Choi Hamoed Passover), at Con-
gregation Beth Yehudah Syna.
gogue, Pingree and Woodrow
Wilson, at 9 p. m.
The program of the uvening
includes a report an behalf of
Kashruth observing, Torihd,1 Ilat
zala work and others.
For more information call Har-
ry
Stolsky,
president,
Tyler
4-6749.
NUREMBERG
(Continued from Page 1)
picture licademies, banning all
Jewish interpreters and court ex-
perts from all judicial bodies
and barring Jewish lawyers from
practicing in any of the courts
of law.
All Hungarian Jews over 6
years old must wear the yellow
Star of David.
Hungarian Jews Arrested
MRS. BEN FELDMAN
Congregation. Mrs. R. Katzin,
president, presided.
At this meeting, Passover re-
lief was sent by cable to Pal-
estine to three orphaned families,
$120, and by mail in our coun-
try, $50.
Final arrangements were made
for a theater benefit at Litt-
man's People's Theater for Tues-
day, April 11 (Chol Hamoed
Passover), with Mesdames I. Is-
rael and Ben Feldman as chair-
Reports reaching here from
authoritative sources in the Bal-
kan countries and in Sweden dis-
close that the Nazis have al-
ready arrested more than 10,000
Hungarian Jews, most of whom
are said to have been deported
to labor and concentration camps
in western Poland and to "un-
known destinations".
The Hungarian Minister of the
Interior is reported to have is-
sued an order directing the po-
lice and military to round up
all Jews who entered the coun-
try unlawfully since the outbreak
of the war. The order said that
a
more than 70,000 Jews had en-
tered the country by subterfuge,
WHITE
that approximately 4,000 of them
had established legal residence
(Contnued from page 1)
To Meet at Brady Branch
and that the others were hiding
The Brady branch of the He-
in the interior of the country.
brew Schools will hold its pro- timately led to the abrogation of
In Budapest, capital of Hun-
gram on Wednesday evening, the Russo-American treaty of gary, the local government was
April 19, in the social hall of the 1832. Similarly, when at the end reported planning to seize the
Mishkan Israel Synagogue. This of last century, the Turkish Gov- approximately 50,000 homes own-
program has been planned in all ernment refused admission into ed by Jews and turn them over
its details by the parents and Palestine of American Jewish t German and Hungarian fami-
the teachers of the Brady School. citizens, the State Department lies
lies who were made homeless by
The committee consists of the took exception to the action as Allied bombings. Thousands of
violative
of
the
principles
of
the
following: Mrs. M. Merzon, chair-
Jewish children, whose parents
man, Mrs. H. Hirschborn, Mrs. treaty relations between the two have been interned, are wander-
countries. Since Palestine is a
mandated country in which the ing homeless and hungry in the
Sincerest Passover Greetings
interests of American citizens are streets of Budapest. Formerly
specifically protected by special these children were housed, fed
provisions, the ban on immigra- and clothed by the local Jewish
tion of American Jews for per- community, but now that most
manent residence. in Palestine, it of the Jewish communal leaders,
was pointed out here, was not rabbis, teachers and social work-
only contrary to the stipulations ers have been arrested, there ;3 k
the Mandate with respect to no one to take care of them. With
Window Shade Co. in
America, but a clear act of dis- the war moving rapidly toward
crimination against a specific Hungary, it is feared that most
WINDOW SHADES
of the children will perish of
group
of American citizens.
MADE TO ORDER
The feeling here is that the hunger or at the hands of the
Cleaned and Repaired
enforcement of the White Paper Nazi executioners.
The Budapest radio was heard
at this time would be an impedi-
LINOLEUM
ment to all efforts to save the announcing here this week that
Jews in Europe who might, other- at a special cabinet meeting last
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wise, have found a haven of week strict measures were adopt-
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refuge here. So strong is senti- ed looking to "the liquidation of
ment here against the White all destructive elements, includ-
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Paper that the slogan "Remem- ing Jews". The Nazi-controlled
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ber March 31" caught on here the enforcement of anti-Jewish
as strongly as "Remember Pearl Budapest radio announced that
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States after the treacherous ing to schedule, that all Jewish
8625 LINWOOD
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. and liberal newspapers had been
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But despite the bitterness of banned, that Jews would be con-
the Jewish community here no scripted for forced labor, that
Jewish property would be con-
fiscated and that the Hungarian
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people realized that the Jews in
Hungary "gambled for the en-
emy's victory and were doing all
they could to break the resistance
of the country".
KOSHER
While no official report has
been received here on the sped-
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lieved here that they follow the
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in Germany and in the occupied
countries. In a broadcast over
the Budapest radio, the Hun- II‘
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announced that he would wage
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and that he would "stake" his
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the Jewish elements and of the
Socialists".
Hundreds of Hungarian Jews
are reported to have committed
suicide rather than to fall into
the hands of the Nazis and cer-
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tain death and humiliation.
Men.
The organization, together with
the North Woodward branch, has
purchased a part of a forest in
Palestine for $1,500 through the
Jewish National Fund. The
amount will be paid from the
flower fund.
A special board electing will
be held Monday, April 10, at the
home of Mrs. R. Katzin, presi-
dent, at 3378 Elmhurst, at
12:30 p.
4
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