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April 27, 1945 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1945-04-27

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

Friday, April 27, 1945

Harry Dermer, Son
Buy Greenbush Inn

Evening Classes
At Shaarey Zedek
Close on Tuesday

Mizrachi Launches
Chinuch Campaign

Harry L. Dermer, 2971 Tux-
edo, and his son, Morton, have
The closing sessions of the
purchased the Greenbush Inn.
This popular summer resort is Shaarey Zedek evening classes
situated at Greenbush, Mich., on will be held Tuesday, May 1,
the shore of Lake Huron, 190 when final examinations are
scheduled, according to Simha
miles from Detroit.
In addition to the 49-room Rubinstein, Shaarey Zedek educa-
Inn, Mr. Dermer has purchased tional director. Students will get
139 acres of land surrounding regular credits for the courses.
the hotel, which includes the lake A social . program will follow the
frontage, a nine-hole golf course, examinations. Tea will be served.
Cantor J. H. Sonenklar will sing
clubhouse and riding stables.
All reconditioning will be Hebrew songs and Theodore Bar-
uch will address the students.
c ompleted in time for the formal
The Adult School will be en-
opening of the hotel, June 15.
larged next season. New classes
will be added and more teachers
ANNOUNCEMENT
hired, Mr. Rubinstein declared.

Leo A. Coskey announces the
removal of his law offices from
2124 National Bank Bldg., to
Suite 948, Buhl Bldg. Phone
JERUSALEM -- Division of
Randolph 6267.
Jerusalem into separate Jewish
and Arab civil areas, each hav-
ing its own mayor and council,
as a solution to the deadlock
RIGHTS
over the Jerusalem mayoralty, is
being discussed. High Commis-
(Continued from Page 1)
sioner Viscount Gort had pro-
"The abrogation of racial leg- posed that Jewish, Moslem and
islation is indispensable," he de- Christian mayors be elected in
clared, "and we have the right annual turns to rule over an
to ask that it be made one of undivided Jerusalem.
the conditions of membership in
The Holy City consists of two
the United Nations Organization, parts. One is inside the walled
Such a stipulation may be term- old city in which most of the
ed interference with domestic holy shrines—Christian, Jewish
policy, but you cannot separate and Moslem—are located, as well
the protection of basic human as adjacent areas outside the
rights from the problem of main- walls inhabited by Moslems and
tanning international peace—the Christians. The other is the mod-
main purpose of the United Na- ern city lying west and south
lions program. of a broad dividing line drawn
Senator Morse emphasized that through the center that is in-
"if intolerance and discrimina- habited mainly by Jewish resi-
tion are permitted to flourish in dents.
line country they will—as we
know from the example in Gev-
many—be exported to other'
lands. All our effors
t to abolishl2nd
anti-minority prejudices in this
country would be nullified if
such sentiments are permitted
NEW YORK (WNS) — Trib-
10 develop elsewhere." The Sen-
ato• commended the American ute to the "tens of thousands
Jewish Committee's "declaration of Polish Jews who died as mar-
of human rights," which asks tyrs in a desperate resistance
the adoption of an international against the Nazi oppressor's" was
voiced by Governor Dewey in a
bill of rights.
message on the second annivers-
ary observance on the "Battle
of the Warsaw Ghetto" last week.
More than 2,000 people joined
in a mass recital of the kaddish,
which was chanted at the meet-
ing.
The observance of the anni-
versary of the ghetto revolt was
also marked by the Jewish La-
bor Committee with a photo-
graphic and documentary exhibi-
tion, "Heroes and Martyrs of the
Ghetto," addressed by Gov. Dew-
ey, Mayor La Guardia and Wil-
liam Green, president of the
American Federation of Labor.
Mr. Green said that the Amer-
ican Federation of Labor will
press at San Francisco for the
establishment of a Jewish na-
tional homeland.
Adelph Held, chairman of the
Jewish Labor Committee, support-
ed the demand for the outlawing
Song-styler Jerry Wayne and of anti-Semitism.
A "Never Back to the Ghetto"
golden-voiced Evelyn Knight give
out some mighty sweet music tally, which also marked the an-
on the Borden Show Sunday niversary of the ghetto battle,
night . . . along with Larry Ad- was held at Carnegie Hall, with
ler, that celebrated harmonica Herbert C. Pell and Senator Wil-
wizard. And Jeff Alexander's liam Langer of North Dakota
orchestra keeps the half-hour among the chief speakers.
humming! Tune in the big Bor-
den Show Sunday night at 8:30
p• ni•, over WXYZ.

Partition Studied
For Jerusalem

N. Y. Jews Observe
Anniversary of
Warsaw Ghetto Battle

Sunday Night
They Star!

54 Farm Colonies
Formed in Yishuv

Does Your Business Need

Additional Capital?

it e Loan on Machinery—Equip-
ment — Chattel Mortgages — Cos -
t mete---Notes.

Prompt, Confidential Service

Commercial
Acceptance Corp.

Henry Jassy, Pres.
CA. 6472

614 Fox Bldg.

For SCHOOLS, CLUBS
or Home Social Events

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Page Five

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

JERUSALEM (WNS) — The
capital invested in Palestine ag-
riculture has risen from $16,-
000,000 at the outbreak of the
war to $40,000,000 today, it was
disclosed at the closing session
of the annual conference of the
Jewish Agricultural Workers Or-
ganization. It was also reported
that 54 new agricultural settle-
ments have been established since
the war.

YOU CAN RENT

Popular Full Length

Hollywood
Motion Pictures
. . . with SOUND

At Very Low Cos.!

Also
Shorts, Cartoons, Etc.

Phone PLAZA 8787

GRATIOT FILM CO.

6527

GRATIOT

Irving Schlussel, president of
the Mizrachi Organization of De-
troit, announced that the organ-
ization will celebrate Lag B'Omer
at a dinner at Lachar's Monday
evening, April 30. The evening
will murk the inauguration of
the Mizrachi Chinuch campaign
in Detroit. Meyer Beckman,
chairman of the Chinuch cam-
paign in Detroit, will deliver a
report on the initial efforts of
his committee.
Max Kaminsky, chairman of
the membership drive, will re-
port the progress of his commit-
tee.
Daniel Temchin, president of
the Midwest Mizrachi Region,
will give 'a resume of the work
being done by the Mizrachi in
the diplomatic field.

Yanks Free Jews
Used by Nazis
In Experiments

BUCHENWALD, German y
(WNS)—American troops enter-
ing Buchenwald have released
21,000 of the internees in the
concentration camp here. Of
these several thousand were
Jews.
In one barrack, Jews were
found who were being used by
the Nazis as guinea pigs in ex-
periments with a typhus vaccine.
The Gestapo forced several Jew-
ish professors to work in these
laboratories. Among these Jew-
ish scientists was Prof. Mark
Klein, histologist of the Univers-
ity of Strassbourgh and a fellow
of the Rockefeller Foundation,
Prof. Ludwig Fleck of the Uni-
versity of Lemberg, and Prof.
Elie Weitz of Strassbourgh Uni-
versity.
Records
of the camp show
that 3,000 died in the camp in
January, 5,400 in February and
5,600 in March. A great percen-
tage of these were Jews.

Annual Meeting'
Of Temple Israel
Sisterhood May 14

Temple Israel Sisterhood's an-
nual and closing meeting of the
season will be held in the form
of a luncheon at the Hotel Stot-
ler at 12:30 p. on. May 14.
Reservations are available by
calling Mrs. David Ruby, chair-
man of the day, at University 2-
9074.
Annual reports will be read
and election of officers will take
place.
Cantor Tatman will sing a
group of Russian and Vienesse
melodies.

MOVES LAW OFFICE

Norman N. Fealk announces
the removal of his law offices
from 2124 National Bank Bldg.,
to Suite 948, Buhl Bldg. Tele-
phone Cherry 3979,

List Names of Jews
Freed from Camps

The Jewish Social Service
Bureau is in receipt of lists of
Jewish survivors liberated by the
U.S. Army in the towns of Bonn
and Munchen-Gladbach, Germany.
The list contains 26 munes.
A new list of 193 Polish Jew-
ish refugees now in the USSR
has also been received.
Both lists were made available
through the World Jewish Con- .
gress and may be consulted at
the office of the Bureau, 5737
Second Ave. (near Palmer), Mon-
day through Friday, from 8:30
11. Ill. to 4 p. no.

Bnai David Sisterhood
Board Meeting Set

A board meeting of the Bnai
David Sisterhood will he held on
Monday, April :30, at the home
of Mrs. Irving Berson, 2481
Highland.

#eeeadete,

WARNING

• About that old prescription Dr.
Jones wrote for you two years ago.
It would be safer for you and your
family to discard it. Someone might
take it by mistake, or a child may be
attracted to it by the bright color and
do himself harm. Yes, the safe thing
to do is to throw it away. Bring
his prescriptions to us for accurate
compounding.

the house of

10 locations

rilptfirr's

one in your
neighborhood

DRUGS

tit

No wage is "too high"
that is earned!

W

HAT OF THE wages of the future?
This question is bound to come up
in any discussion of post-war planning.

tribute much toward building a better and
stronger American people. But these alone
are not enough.

On this, our attitude is clear. No wages
are high that are earned. Fifty dollars a day
earned is none too high. But a dollar a day
unearned is much too high.

Confidence is the first need... confidence
that work brings reward. Such confidence
cultivated in a people generates enterprise
and effort.

More Productive Methods

Industry, being part of the people, re-
sponds to the same stimulus... and is ready
to initiate and work and invest all for the
treasure of life in America.

Wages are a part of the product. They are
not the result of the employer's generosity,
nor the employee's ability to bring pressure
to bear.

American Industry has continuously de-
veloped methods whereby a man receives
more pay for fewer hours but still increases
production. And so it will continue to be.

But wages are only one of Industry's
problems.

A Better World Must Come

Millions of young men and women have
been withdrawn from their homes and
careers. Business is shorthanded. Many in-
dustries have been seriously disrupted.
Public debt and the casualty lists mount
higher every hour.

Victory, therefore, is the greatest con-
cern of everybody. After Victory, all of us
must strive to build a better world . . . a
world in which such misfortune can never
happen again.

Material things... radar and plastics and
television and giant planes .. . will con-

Youth Must Have Opportunity

The way must be kept clear for independ-
ence in business... and for young men to
start new businesses. Vigorous competition
and initiative have carried our country
safely and far.

American business is not performing its
complete function unless it makes available
to every family traditional American stand-
ards of living. American business also must
serve social order and social advance. There
is little room for racial or religious preju-
dice or class distinction when a country is
alive with energy and is working.

These are some of the thoughts we hold
as we look toward the day when wages
will again be earned by building the goods
of peace.

.P4-4-7 947, 4

FORD MOTOR COMPANY

r.

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