• Pogo Ton Zionists Mourn Lloyd George NEW YORK — Paying tribute to David Lloyd George as "among the first of the great British statesmen to recognize the sig- nificance of the Zionist move- •trient." Dr. Stephen S. Wise, chairman of the American Zion- ist Emergency Council, declared: "Lloyd George was among the first of the great British states- men to recognize the significance of the Zionist movement and the role that Palestine was destined to play as the Jewish homeland. He regarded with great personal satisfaction the fact that 'recog- nition of Jewish nationhood and acceptance of the Mandate for the Holy Land by His Majesty's Government took place during my premiership.' "As one of the world states: men responsible for the Man- date, he bitterly denounced the Chamberlain White Paper of 1939 limiting immigration into Palestine, and on a number of occasions, in answer to those who sought to distort the mean- ing of the Balfour Declaration, stated in clear and emphatic terms what lay in the minds of its framers." At its last meeting the Ex- ecutive Committee of the Amer- ican Jewish Conference adopted a resolution expressing its deep sorrow over the death of David Lloyd George, "a great friend of the Jewish people and their national aspirations." The "deep sense of sorrow" of American Zionists at the death of Earl Lloyd George, Prime Minister of England during the First World War, was voiced by Dr. Israel Goldstein, president of the Zionist Organization of America. I as UHS Auxiliary Plans to Stage Final Program April 25 The final program in the series of this year's cultural events ' sponsored by the Woman's Auxil- iary of the United Hebrew Schools, will be held at 1:30 p. m. on Wednesday, April 25, • at 1:30 in the Auditorium of the Jewish Community Center. The program will be centered around the Jewish woman's cos- t tume. What did the well dressed : Jewish women throughout the ages wear? To what extent did their dress reflect the fashion of • the people in the midst of which the Jews lived? How was the :Jewish motif expressed? • Women famous in the history , of our people will be presented in their proper costume. The narrator will relate the story of that period, giving the back- ground both of the specific Jew- ish life of that period, as well as the life of the non-Jewish community. About 15 such per- iods will be discussed. The participants are members of the Woman's Auxiliary. The study is directed by Mrs. Walter Farber, a student of art who has done much research work in con- nection with this project. The program committee, is headed by Mrs. Burt Smokier. The presi- dent is Mrs. Jack Tobin. The ' program is open to the public. There is no admission charge. DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle Center to Present 3 Famous Dancers Wednesday, Apr. 18 Three nationally - acclaimed dancers will perform Wednesday evening, April 18, when the Jew- ish Community Center presents 003:8:H:l01:1-0-t:14>tual:H)-0-000.00-1:1-1:1-CH0 LA SALLE Window Shade Co. WINDOW SHADES MADE TO ORDER Cleaned and Repaired LINOLEUM Inlaid and Battleship Rugs and Furniture 1 VENETIAN BLINDS Drapery Hardware Get Our Prices and Save Free nalmaten Furnished 3625 LINWOOD CALL TYLER 5-1230 Yella Pessl Appears At Center April 17 PARIS (WNS) — A "myster- Yella Pessl, known as the "first iously organized" mob of 600 people this week prevented a lady of the Harpsichord," will Paris Jew from recovering his make her first Detroit appear- apartment which was being il- ance on Tuesday evening, April legally occupied by a person who had obtained it during the occu- pation, it was revealed here. The owner of the apartment had ob- tained a court order dispossess- ing its present occupant and was accompanied by police officials who were powerless to disperse the mob. The incident was disclosed by Julliette Jonvaux of the Move- ment Against Racism, at a meet- ing attended by 3,000 persons, called by a joint committee of various anti-racist and Jewish or- ganizations to hear a report on the present status of the restitu- tion problem. Mme. Jonvaux cit- ed the above case as an example of the anti-Semitic activities still going on in France. SEGAL (Continued from Page 4) MRS. OSCAR M. ZEMON its fifth annual dance concert in the main auditorium of the De- troit Institute of Arts. Headed by Mrs. Oscar M. Ze- mon, the Center's dance commit- tee has arranged for the presen- tation of a program of range and versatility by Jose Limon, Beat- rice Seckler and Dorothy Bird. Recognized as one of the greatest men dancers in the world today, Jose Limon is a private in the American Army and will perform in Detroit while on furlough. The Center dance committee, headed by Mrs. Zemon, includes among its members Fannie Aron- son of the Board of Education, and Edith Muskin of the Jewish Community Center. Shaarey Zedek To Form New Junior Group The youth of Shaarey Zedek on Saturday evening, April 14, will organize the Shaarey Zedek Juniors. The success of the Cur- few Hop held March 24, and the popularity of the entertainment on the evening of March 31 when the children were enter- tained by a feature movie and juke box dancing, proved the need for such an organization, Sey- mour Simons, chairman of the adult committee, declared. An election of officers will take place at 8 p. m. April 14, in the Shaarey Zedek Social Hall, and plans formulated by the Juniors for entertainments to satisfy the social needs of Shaarey Zedek boys and girls from 14 through 17 years of age. Refreshments will be served at this meeting. To be eligible to membership in the Juniors, the young people must be children of Shaarey Ze- dek members, or belong to the Boy or Girl Scout Troops spon- sored by Shaarey Zedek, or reg- ularly attend the Sunday School and Hebrew School classes, or attend Junior Congregation serv- ices in Shaarey Zedek. The Juniors will hold one dance Back the Attack—with Bonds. a month with music furnished by a popular dance orchestra, Every Bond You Buy Helps and in addition, other evenings, to Shorten the War. packed with fun and entertain- Paper is needed for victory. ment will be provided. Save all, and donate it to your charity. Or, call Randolph 8282. Paris Mob Stops Jew from Re-occupying Property Friday, April 6, 1945 Sigma Theta Delta Alumnae Party Apr. 11 The Alumnae Chapter of Sig- ma Theta Delta Sorority of Wayne University has completed plans for its annual card party. Proceeds will be donated to the scholarship fund, which en- ables a Jewish student to com- plete her college education. The card party will be held on Wednesday, April 11, at 8 p. m. at the Workmen's Circle, Linwood and Burlingame. Re- freshments will be served. Mrs. Frank Holtzman, presi- dent, announces that a set of dishes will be given as a door prize. Committee members are Mrs. Donald Barris, Mrs. Joseph Ellis and Mrs. Julian Klein. was a prisoner these several years. "I have seen the multitudes of my people destroyed in the fires and in the gas chambers. I have seen them fall dead into the graves which they were made to dig. By what grace of God I have been allowed to live I can not explain; yet it may be rather that I was cursed to live and see all that I have seen and to carry in my heart forever the memory of these things. "Are my credentials sufficient, gentlemen? I speak for the Jews and for all humanity as well, since the pain of the Jews is not separate from the agony of man- kind. The Jew was the first and remains the last of the multi- tudes that have suffered this martyrdom. He is one of these millions. "Therefore, I am not here to speak for myself, the Jew, alone. I can not separate myself and feel that this pain is exclusive to me and that justice should be something special unto me. Jus- tice is not divisible and it may be said to one man, 'here is this much justice for you' and to the other, 'this is your portion'. A Portion for All "Justice must be a full table for all the brotherhood around which all sit together. The broth- ers will not despise others among them when at this table every man gets his just portion of livelihood, well-being and con- tentment. "Evil men will have no cause to say, 'See, the Jew is getting more than you at this table, and you have scarcely enough,' or 'Look, the Rurita•ians live in rood cottages and what have we? Come along with us and we will make war and get these things YELLA PESSL 17, at the Center's Auditorium. Miss Pessl, who had to leave Vienna when the Nazi regime took over, has become a leading personality in New York's musi- cal life. She is the founder and organizer of the Bach Society. She is also heard in weekly broadcasts over the Columbia Network. Lare Wardrop, well known oboist of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, will participate in Miss Pessl's concert. Lehman Appeals For Clothing to Aid Refugees WASHINGTON, D. C.—Cloth- ing needs so urgent that one of the war-devastated nations al- ready has cabled UNRRA to give priority to clothing rather than to food, were revealed by Her- bert H. Lehman, director gen- eral of the United Nations Re- lief and Rehabilitation Adminis- tration. In an appeal for nation-wide support of the United National Clothing Collection for overseas relief, which opens on April 1, the former New York Governor said: "I have made two trips to the war areas to see the conditions of need with my own eyes. At Hadassah Honor Roll Luncheon Set for Tuesday The Detroit Chapter uf Ha- dassah has invited its entire membership to attend the open- ing of the 1945-1946 Honor Roll at a luncheon to be held at 12:30 p. m., Tuesday, April 10, at the Statler Hotel. The guest speak- er will be Dr. Hermann Voss, in executive secretary of the Chris- lr tian Council on Palestine. Mrs. Sidney J. Allen, the Hon- or Roll chairman, will be intro- duced by Mrs. Louis (; lasier, president of Detroit Hadas sah, Mrs. Allen will present her four vice chairmen, Mrs. Robert J. Newman, Mrs. Frank Wei sman, Mrs. J. J. Marks, and Mr.. Carl Gussin. The Honor Roll social commit- tee chairmen, Mrs. George Bre- man and Mrs. Randolph Weber, have asked the following to serve as hostesses at the luncheon: Mesdames Nathan Simo ,is, Sey. mour Simons, Fred Ginsburg, Sam Shetker, Leonard Sidlow, Herman Cohen, Max Kerner, Ab- raham Cooper, Nathan Goldman, Harold Salasnick, Sam Heyman, Robert Loewenberg, M orris Krause, Mack Lane, James Af- tel, Simon Weisman, Sam Lip- sky, Joseph Sommers, Robert Schiff, Eli Gross, George Sey- burn, David Flayer, Edward Krause, Phillip Kantor, Daniel Cullen, Julian Tobias, Herbert Warner, Aaron Kurland, Robert Marwil, Morris Garvett, Edward Atlas, Leon Winkelman, Lee Op- penheim, Sidney Wallace, Joe Horwitz, Phillip Weisman, Jacob Grant, Ralph Rubin, Ben Fish- man, George Kayes, Phillip Cher- rin, Joseph Falk, Ben Burdick, Dave Hersh, J. J. Goode, Ben Goode, Colonel Prenzlauer, Al Altman, Sandford Adler, Robert Lewison, Samuel Danto, Max Dushkin, Nathan Spevakow, Mor- ris Ruskin, William Grahm and Douglas Brown. Assisting with Honor Roll ar- rangements are the presidents of the four Hadassah groups : Mrs. David Cooper, University; Mrs. Adolph Ehrlich, Central ; John Frazer, Russell Woods; Mrs. Max Miller, Huntington Woods. Mrs. Harry L. Jones heads the Honor Roll program committee. Luncheon tickets may be Ob- tained from Mrs. A. C. Lappin, or from Mrs. Oscar Blumberg, TO. 8-5050; Mrs. Randolph Web- er, UN 3-6499 ; Mrs. Jack Ber- ger, HO. 9708; Mrs. Ben Jaffe, R. 0. 0628. the UNRRA refugee camps in Egypt I have seen victims of Nazi tyranny. Most of them ar- Back the Attack—with Bonds. rive in clothing which has been patched and re-patched, often re- I Does Your Business Need inforced with paper or straw or anything they can find. Many Additional Capital? are in rags. Shoes are scarce." we men on Machinery—Equip- Henry J. Kaiser heads the ment —chattel mortgages — "n - tracts—Notes. United National Clothing Collec- Prompt, Confidential Service tion as national chairman. The for you. goal of the drive, which will run Commercial "You see, gentlemen, I am through April, is 150,000,000 not asking anything special for pounds of serviceable garments, Acceptance Corp. myself. I know myself as one of shoes and bedding. Henry Jassy, Pro. mankind and my salvation is one 614 Fox Bldg. CA. 6472 Patronize Our with mankind's. I can not go Advertisers. apart to cry my own pain in a world loud with the lamentations of mankind, to summon special justice for myself when all man- kind cries for justice. "I know that when mankind sits together at a plentiful table and of justice, there will be justice The FARBAND Camp enough for me, too. The hates by which evil men profit will have no cause where people have enough by which to live and are content. Is not the hate which I, the Jew, have suffered the vile outgiving of poverty, injus- tice and frustration? "Yes, gentlemen, to build a world more just and lovely is your task—a world in which uni- versal poverty will be extinct like ancient plagues and no man or group of men may be en- riched by exploitation of their brothers. In such a world I, the Jew, will be at peace at last. I will no longer be like the he- goat of Scripture upon which people laid their afflictions and drove into the wilderness. "You may care to know what my name is. You may call me Mr. X. I am the unknown quan- tity—mankind—whose pain has- n't been solved yet. I happen to be a Jew but my main identity is that of a member of man- kind. A better life for mankind is your problem and I, the Jew, am not separate from it. Gen- tleman, emae m n.,,, I thank you for listening 100 pounds of waste paper makes 550 K-ration boxes. Save ALL paper. Back the Attack--with Bonds. KINDER WELT ON LONG LAKE NEAR CHELSEA, MICH. Will Be Open This Summer for an 8-Week Season JUNE 24 to AUGUST 19 Boys and Girls from 6 to 15 Admitted for Full or Half Season • A limited number of vacancies still open. R•gister early to avoid disappointment. • for Information and Registration Write Farband Camp and Kinderwelt, 18095 Appoline, Detroit 21 • Phone UNiversity 3-3626 Call our Registrars: Mrs. D. Kumove, UN. 1-7054 Mrs. S. Sislin, TO. 5.9772 Mrs. S. Levine, TR. 2.3001