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April 20, 1945 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1945-04-20

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

i

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The legal Chronicle

?ego Eight

Jewish Prisoners
Freed in Reich

PARIS—Thousands of Jewisn
internees in the Bergen-Belzen
camp have been liberated by
British troops which captured
the area near Hanover in which
the camp is situated. It is esti-
mated that about 60,000 persons
—Jews and political offenders—
are in the concentration camp.
The internees will not be re-
leased from the camp until a
detailed registration of all the
people held there is completed
by the military authorities. In
the meantime, it was established
that there are 1,500 typhus cases
and 9,000 cases of other diseases
among the internees.

Hillel Spring Dance
Saturday at U. of M.

The Bnai Brith Hillel Founda-
tion at the University of Mich-
igan, Ann Arbor, will start the
Seventh War Loan Drive at the
annual Spring dance this Satur-
day evening. The admission will
be the purchase of $1.00 in War
Stamps.
Members of Avukah, student
Zionist organization, will sell
flower corsages for the benefit of
the Jewish National Fund. Stu-
dent director in charge of the
Spring dance is Beryle Walters
of Detroit.

Artists to Present
Chajes Compositions

C apitol Letter

WASHINGTON.—When the Su- His lead article in the first issue

" preme Court speaks, Con-
gress stops and listens. Lower
courts take note, lawyers file for
future citation. When a member
of the Court steps down from his
high place and, on rare occasion,
speaks out, his remarks are giv-
en special attention. But when
a member warns against fascism
in the United States, that calls
for more than ordinary listening.
Associate Justice Hugo L.
Black recently told a distinguish-
ed dinner gathering in Washing-
ton that "it will not be enough
to stamp out anti-democratic
practices in the lands of our ene-
mies. The conditions which cre-
ated fascism there must not pass
unnoticed here. Their first, and
most dangerous symptom, is al-
ways the same everywhere—an
abandonment of equal justice to
all—the placing of some groups
in a preferred class of citizen-
ship at the expense of other
groups. True democracy must
continue the war on all such be-
liefs."
The occasion for these trench-
ant truths was the presentation
to Justice Black of the Thomas
Jefferson Award of the Southern
Conference for Human Welfare.
It was a particularly appropriate
time for the Justice to point out
that democracy, like peace, is
indivisible. Harmful parasites and
insects are kept from entering
the country through the efficient
plant quarantine methods of the
Department of Agriculure. Equal-
ly injurious ideas find much less
difficulty in entering and in tak-
ing root in sometimes fertile soil.
Witness these examples, which
occurred recently, not in some
foreign land, but here in this
one.

included a proposal, from a
prominent psychologist, he said,
to restrict professional training
of a particular "racial group'—
to prevent their "dominating"
the profession. When several
members of his editorial board
resigned in protest, and a storm
broke around the editorial cham-
bers, the professor was reported
to have apologized profusely for
the statement, which "escaped
editorial scrutiny" in the hurry
to make a deadline.
That puts education two ups,
and brings us to a Cpl. Kawo-
moto and the five shots. The
shots were fired at the corporal
by some Californians who fig-
ured an American uniform is not
an American uniform when as-
signed by the army to a Japa-
nese-American. Secretary of War
Stimson seemed to think other-
wise. When asked at a press con-
ference about the reported shoot-
ing, he forthrightly condemned
such attacks based on ancestry
as an "inexcusable and dastardly
outrage against an American sol-
dier who, like millions of others
of many different racial back-
grounds, has demonstrated his
loyalty to his country."
Justice Black has found it nec-
essary to repeat the elementary
warning that a government which
denies the essential dignity of
man leads to fascism. In accept-
ing the Jefferson gold medal the
Justice urged "each of us in our
own way" to join the constant
struggle for democracy, summed
up in Jefferson's own words,
"Equal and exact justice to all
men, of whatever state or per-
suasion. religious or political."

Friday, April 20, 1945

Seeks to Bar
Germans From
U. S. for ioo Yrs.

NEW YORK.—Representative
Samuel Dickstein, chairman of
the House Committee on Immi-
gration and Naturalization, de-
clared that he would introduce
legislation in the near future
designed to prevent the entrance
into the United States of nearly
all Germans for the next 100
years.
Mr. Dickstein discussed his
plans for such a law at the an-
nual meeting of the Ort Coun-
cil of Organization at the Hotel
Pennsylvania. The organization
helps Jewish refugees and war
victims by training them for new
jobs.
The only Germans he would
permit to enter this country, Mr.
Dickstein said, are those who
have been the victims of Nazi
persecution. The quota now per-
mitted Germany, he added, should
be divided among other European
nations with small quotas.
He attacked the present immi-
gration quotas set up in 1924 as
basically unfair to certain coun-
tries. His committee now is in-
vestigating the situation, he said,
and will soon make recommenda-
tions to Congress that will do
away with the present "discrimi-
natory" provisions.
M. Maldwin Fertig, chairman
of the council, also addressed
the meeting, pointing out that
the Ort has completed the 65th
year of its program of training
Jewish men and women in indus-
trial and agricultural skills.
The organization's 1945 cam-
paign quota was announced by
Dr. David Lvovitch, international
vice president of the World Ort
Union, as $2,450,000, of which
$1,550,000 is to be raised in the
United States.

Kurt Safir to Give
Piano Recital Sunday

Kurt Saffir, 15-year-old pianist,
will be presented in a piano re-
cital on Sunday afternoon, Ap ril
22, in the Center's Auditorium.
The program will include com-
positions by Bach, 13t ethoven,
Mendelssohn, Brahms, iebuss•
and Chopin.
The recital will be fry to the
public.

I

Masonic Temple

Scottish Rite Auditorium

2nd Ave. at Temple

One Performance Only
SUNDAY EVE., APR. 22

AT 8:30 P. M.
1..41"t, lit ItsTEIN

Popular Singing. NV
I talli•Ing I 'olitedlatl—t;Ili
Lu WS own Produ,

I

•.■ 1

"WHO IS GUILTY?"

Staged and Directed It)
Henry Siegl, well-known vio-
Mr. II indeitt
linist; Georges Miquelle, solo
play
Is an adaptation of
Thls
cellist of the Detroit Symphony
popular
.1e,‘ isle
PretIllall'S
Louie
radio feature of the same num,
Orchestra; Rose Cooper, soprano ;
THE ENTIRE ()I:MINA!, cAsT
Julius Chajes, composer-pianist,
'WILL, RE II E ItE, headed
and the Central Woodward
liar Rosenblatt, Henrietta Jacole.on,
Christian Church Choir, Marian
Julius Adler and Anna TOW,
Van Liew, director, will, present
as well as a sore of ,t lnr
Yiddish
well -known
id:o
a concert devoted to Mr. Chajes'
compositions at the Detroit In-
Change
Advocated
TWEETS IX 5.1 LE %T .
stitute of Arts at 8 :30 p. m. Discrimination Cited
Metro Music House, 10•8 DeNter
Harvard's eminent Professor In Palestine Rule
Thursday, April 26. Tickets are
TO. 8-4114, up to 5 p. m. dm
•4•.
of perfor
vailable at Grinnell's and the Albert Sprague Coolidge charged
FREE 190 JEWISH SLAVES
Atkins
Confectionery, 8640 Ilth •t.
NEW YORK—Sumner Welles,
at a Massachusetts hearing on
Jewish Community Center.
LONDON ( WNS). — When
Coe. Lee Place
anti-racial discrimination bills, former Under-Secretary of State, American troops entered Han-
'CIL 2-5859 - 2 8884
that the University's highest called this week for the estab- over, Germany, they liberated
A. Littman, 1129 Filigree
TIC. 6-9186
ranking chemistry student failed lishment by the coming interna- 190 Jewish slave laborers.
Day
of performance at Theater
tional
organization
of
an
inter-
to receive a scholarship because
TE. 2-6448
he was Jewish. And, according national trusteeship over Pales-
Every Bond You Buy Helps
to Professor Coolidge, the indus- tine to replace the present Brit-
to Shorten the War.
trial corporation—in Wilmington, ish mandate.
OC 0000
A peaceful world will not be
Delaware — which donated the
0
scholarship, had specified that achieved until the problem of
THE
YIDDISH
FOLKS
VEREIN
Boys & Girls
recipients were not to be Jewish. Palestine is settled, he told the
Invites its Members and Friends to attend
The scene is again Massachu- New York Chapter of Hadassah.
Ages 6 to 16
If the trusteeship is establish-
setts, the cast this time four
Memorial Services
Negro Wacs, the setting a court- ed, the number of Jewish emi-
Located in Northern Michigan
martial. The Wacs, assigned to grants permitted . to enter Pal-
near Charlevoix, Petoskey,
Lovell General Hospital at Fort estine should be limited solely
Honoring Our Late President
Frankfort and Mackinac.
Devens, were tried and sentenced by the capacity of the land prof-

FRANKLIN
DELANO ROOSEVELT
because they refused to obey an itably to take care of them, he
Sanitary facilities in each cabin
asserted.
order.
A
quite
particular
kind
Prominent
speakers
will
address you • Services will be held at


Referring to the relationship
of an order from the comman-
Laundry Service available
Beth Tefilah Emanuel Synagogue
dant of the hospital, "to do all between Jews and Arabs as
in camp.
the dirty work," such as mop- "highly intricate and controver-
Woodrow Wilson at Taylor Ave.
ng walls and scrubbing floors, sial." he expressed the hope basic
SPECIAL RATES
and forbidding them to take tem- questions between them could be
MONDAY, APRIL 23 at 9 P. M.
1:etoso at
before May
perature or engage in other non- settled by direct negotiations,
7 at Violin nil Wtitikly rate.
menial duties. To the 3000 Nazi which, he said, should be under-
$30.00 per wk.
prisoners at Devens, this must taken with the assistance of the
have sounded like old home week. international organization. He
—.."
At least until the general in urged the "great powers" to
command of the area voided the press for the success of such
Iteeommended for Hay Fr \ or and
SIIII.P ■ ii, dirrel'el- S.
court-martial, after consultation negotiations.

with the War Department in
I 'ompletely
staffed
by Expel t.
Washington, following widespread
perirtired
MURPHY
indignation at the disgraceful

episode.
ror folder,. and full pa rt i,ulars

r sswommooms-vomw4

-

CAMP

PLAYFA IRE

L

0

/111/

Phone

(Continued from Page 1)

Psychology Quota

Our next oxhibit is a professor
TO. 8-8382
of psychiatry at the University
FA
Vermont Medical College, one
LAMP PLAYFAIRE 0 of
Dr. Frederick C. Thorne. Doub-
0 Detroit Office (6)
ling as editor of a new "Journal
of Clinical Psychology," he ap-
1470 GLYNN CT.
parently was trying to compete
r 4100:1000000410MANWILV14,•C ■ , with the big-time "quota" boys.

"A NEW HIGH!" SIGHS JERRY WAYNE TO JOAN EDWARDS.
Joan, the Hit Parade songstress, hits plenty of sweet, high, and low
notes on the Borden Show Sunday night. Co-feature—rhumba master
Xavier Cugat and group, beating out South American rhythms. Add
to this Jeff Alexander's orchestra—and what a half-hour you'll have!
8:30
Tune in the big Borden Show Sunday night .. _WXYZ ..
P. M.

.

more alive today than ever be-
fore."
Asserting that "we must re-
new our faith in democracy,"
Justice Murphy declared that
"one cannot be Christian and be
anti-Semitic.'
Warning that "the hate now
draped over the earth may find
its way to this nation, in a dif-
ferent and perhaps unforseen
way," Judge Murphy said :
"Should it come in the form
of anti-Semitism, we must be
vigilantly on guard. Anti-Semi-
tism is anti-labor, anti-Christian,
anti-Constitution . . . Spritual
upheavals don't happen over
night. Europe for a decade, even
before the rise of Nazism, was
propagandized by wicked forces.
Hitler made anti-Semitism an in-
strument of international poli-
tics."
While urging vigilance against
the rise of bigotry, he declared
that "there is more tenderness
and good will here than anywhere
in the world" and that while
"the evil-doers may have their
hour in the sun" the American
people as a whole will not fol-
low them. He said "the greatest
sin of the people of Europe was
that they failed to act with firm-
ness" against the forces of evil
and that "we must act on time"
against any manifestation of or-
ganizer bigotry and anti-Semi-
tism.

,

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Liston to "Today's Champion," Mon. Tins Fri., WWI, 4:25 P.M.

AlIF

_AI/

1

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