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August 03, 1945 - Image 14

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1945-08-03

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Peg. Fourteen

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal

-:-CENTER ACTIVITIES-:-

Regular Film Program Tracy Stivester To Be
Slated for August 7
Heard In Recital

A regular film program will be
shown in the summer series of
Motion Picture Nights that are
being held at the Jewish Commu-
nity Center, Woodward at Hol-
brook, on Tuesday, August 7.
The featured film will be
"Swim and Live," which shows
the training of soldiers of the
U. S. Army how to sail through
submarine-infested waters. T h e
companion feature will be "Ac-
tion at Anguar," the story of
Anguar, one of the most strate-
gic islands in the Pacific.
The program will be held in
the Outdoor Court of the Jewish
Community Center, and will be-
gin at 9:15 in the evening. There
is no admission charge. The pub-
lic is invited to attend.

Camp Habonim in
Its Last Two Weeks

Camp Habonim, of the Jewish
Community Center, will accept
applications Monday for the last
two weeks of the camp season.
The plans for the last two
weeks include trips to Palmer
Park, Belle Isle, the Zoo, Boys
Club, Radio Station, etc. Activil
ties for this session will include
music, athletics, swimming, hob-
bies, crafts, dramatics, etc.
Campers have participated in
several contests Und some fine
prizes have been given out for
model crafts, swimming, lino-
leum carving, singing, and camp
craft. The Camp Habonim circus
was the highlight of the second
session.
Parents have expressed their
complete satisfaction with the
progress their children have
shown, especially in the swim-
ming pool. Many of our campers
have been swimming and diving
for their first time.

Open House Set
At 12th Street Camp

Manuel S. Simon, Director, 12th
Street Council Day Camp, an-
nounces that on Thursday, Aug-
ust 9, from 3 to 5 P. M., an Open
House program will be held to
acquaint parents and friends with
the purposes and functions of the
Day Camp. It will feature a dis-
play of camp projects, group ac-
tivities, and a dramatic resents-
tion; also, talks by Mr. Herman
Jacobs, Executive Director, Jew-
ish Community Center; Mrs. H.
V. Kreger, President, Detroit
Section, Council of Jewish Wo-
men; Mrs. L. Weiner, Chairmgn,
12th Street Council Center, and
Mrs. R. N. Janeway, Vice-Chair-
man, 12th Street Council Cen-
ter. Refreshments will be served.
The Camp is now beginning
its 7th week. A limited number
of registrations is being taken
for the weeks of August 6 and
August 13. The fee is $3.00 per
week, and the hours are 9:30
A. M. to 5 P. M. It has a number

of indoor and outdoor activities,
consisting of arts and crafts,
swimming, games, and trips to
various points of interest in the
city.
Thus, any parents who have
children between 6-12 years of
age, and who would like addition-
al information, may call at the
12th Street Center, or call TY-
ler 5-2300.

Breing our Soldiers back sooner
with the purchase of an Extra
War Bond.

FOR SALE

Largest Corner Lot
Available in

HUNTINGTON WOODS

ON CREST
LARGE TREES
PRIVACY



Near Excellent Schools

AT COST FOR CASH

Phone MADISON 1040

Chronicle

Citizens Committee
Outlines Postwar
Program for Detroit

Friday, August 3, 1945

The Legal Basis for
An International
Bill of Rights

publican form of government as
one of the prerequisites of per- .4.•
petual peace.

It was along that line of

(Continued from Page 3)
thought that the League of
by and accountable to him. The Nations w a s originally Con-
third major object of the second ceived as an association of dem. d
World War has been essentially cratic States. There are ma . we
the same. It has been given re- who believe that the toleration m

The Music Department of the
Jewish Community Center an-
nounces that the sixth in the
series of open-air concerts will
take place on Monday, August 6,
at 9:00 p.m. at the Center. Tracy
Silvester, Lyric Baritone, will be
heard in a full recital of arias
and songs by Donaudv, Leonca-
v a 11 o , Strauss, Tschaikowsky,
Moussorgsky, Hageman, Seaver,
Geehl, Lohr, Giannini and Malotte.
He will be accompanied at the
piano by Inge Gohde.
There is no charge for admis-

sion. In case of rain, the concert
will be held in the Auditorium.

Mothers' Clubs
Go to Put-in-Bay

The Council of Mothers' Clubs RICHARD T. FRANKENSTEEN
will give a Boat Ride to Put-in-
The Michigan Citizens Commit-
Bay Wednesday, August 15.
tee, in the interests of good gov-
The only boat leaves the foot ernment and the fullest expres-

of First Street promptly at 9:00 sion of the public will, urges all
A. M.
Detroit voters to go to the polls,
Tuesday, August 7th, to vote in
the primary city election. Voting
Zionist War Bond Sales booths
will be open from 7:00
A.M. to 8:00 P.M., Detroit time.
Total $120,000,000
The Michigan Citizens Commit-
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Addi-
tional reports received from its tee outlined the following pro-
branches throughout the country gram:
Full Employment and speedy
have boosted the War Bond sales
of the Zionist Organization of reconversion. Riddance of the
America in the Seventh War Loan black market. Increased educa-
Drive to over $120,000,000 accord- tional, housing and recreational
ing to an announcement by Er- facilities. A modern transporta-
nest E. Barbarash, Secretary of tion system to meet Detroit's
the War Effort Committee of the needs. Greater sanitation and a
organization. This amount brings more attractive city and improv-
up the aggregate total of War ed race relations.
Bonds sold by the organization in
The Citizens Committee is sup-
the last three official drives to porting the following candidates:
close to $217,000,000.
Richard T. Frankensteen for may-
The overwhelming success of or; Helen Bryant, Tracy Doll,
the Zionist War Bond effort was George Edwards Jr., Rev. Charles
again hailed on behalf of the A. Hill, George Montgomery, and
U. S. Treasury Department in a Eugene Van Antwerp for Com-
statement issued by William C. mon Council.
FitzGibbon, special assistant to
the Secretary of the Treasury.
Pointing out that the Zionist Berchtesgaden Has
Organization of America has orig- Sole Jewish Survivor
inally set for itself a goal of
NEW YORK (WNS) — The
$95,000,000, Mr. FitzGibbon, in only Jew found in the town of
his statement, declared that the Berchtesgaden, where Hitler's fa-
"present achievement of the or- mous villa was located, has been
ganization indicates the unswerv- hired by the military government
ing determination of each member as an interpreter, it is revealed
of the Zionist Organization of by Patricia Lochridge, war cor-
America to finish this fight quick- respondent of the Woman's Home
ly by providing extra weapons of Companion, in an article appear-
victory."
ing in that magazine.
The Treasury Department state-
ment continues:
The. highest reward for man's
"Little wonder is it, therefore, toil is not what he gets for it,
that on behalf of the Treasury but what he becomes by it. —
Department, I congratulate Dr. Ruskin.
Israel Goldstein as President, and
Ernest E. Barbarash, his chief
"a little bit of heaven"
lieutenant in charge of operations.
But permit me to go just a little
further and congratulate each in-
dividual member who helped to
make your drive such an out- Only Swimming Pool in South Havant
standing success. Each one may It Is under auspices of State itealth Dept.
TO OUR PATRONS
justly be proud of his part in this
patriotic undertaking and each We take this means of thanking you Cm
tour past patronage—and assure you that
should pride himself upon being your
stay with us this yearwlll be as pleas-
a member of the Zionist Organi- int aa In the past with the same courtesies
ind
service
necessary for an enjoyable va•
zation of America."
'alien. Sincerely

LEVIN'S RESORT

peated expression not only by
private individuals and organiza-
tions but also in solemn pro-
nouncements of the leaders of
the United Nations, such as the
formulation of the "four free-
doms" by President Roosevelt in
his Annual Message to Congress
of January 6, 1941, and their
(incomplete and, in a material
sense, self-contradictoty) reitera-
tion in the Atlantic Charter of
August 14, 1941. That major
purpose is, in the words of Mr.
Churchill, to ensure that the war
ends "with the enthronement of
human rights."
In the course of the first World
War the call to make the world
safe for democracy was more
than a convenient slogan of war
propaganda. It was the outcome
of the perception of two basic
facts. It was realized, in the first
instance, that the securing on the
part of international society of
inalienable human freedoms
through democracy is an indis•
pensable condition of the peace
of the world. Long before that.
Emmanuel Kant expressed the
same idea by postulating the re-

and the admission to membership
of States in the constitution of
which there was no room for hu-
man liberty in the accepted sense
reduced the League to a mere
shadow of its spiritual self. The
second fundamental factor which
underlay the association of de- .4
mocracy with the idea of a world
secure under the reign of law was
that no legal order, international
or other, is true to its essential
function if it fails to protest ef-
fectively the ultimate unit of all
law—the individual human being.

The two decades which fol-
lowed the first World War lent
weight, with ominous emphasis,
to these now self-evident propo-
sitions. They have resulted, in
the second World War, in the
widespread conviction that some
form of an International Bill of 7-
the Rights of Man is a major
purpose of the war, inasmuch as
it is an essential condition of in-
ternational peace a n d interna-
tional progress. Many believe that
without some such expansion of
international law the fabric of
international society will be built
on precarious foundations.

1111MNIIIIM

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