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January 04, 1946 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1946-01-04

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Friday, January 4, 1946

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

Ghost of Hitler Stalks Once More;
Secret World Jewish Plot Is Charged

Center .Ativi ti ej

t or Mothers' Clubs

Neuschatz Joins Center

"What Is New in Medicine" will
be presented by Dr. Mary M. Fra-
sier and other physicians.
Dexter Mothers' Club--Tuesday,
Jan. 8, at 1:30 p.m., at the Bnai
Moshe Synagogue, Dexter and
Lawrence. Members of the Dexter
Mothers' Club will be entertained
at tea by Mrs. Liza Lipkin, hon-
oring the return of her grandson,
Seymore Lipkin, from a global
tour with the USO, at 3260 Webb.
Young Women's Study Club —
Tuesday, Jan. 8, at 1:30 p.m., at
the Rose Sittig Cohen Bldg., Law-
ton at Waverly.
Woodward Study Club — Wed-
nesday, Jan. 9, at 1:30 p.m., at the
Jewish Community Center.
Twelfth Street Mothers' Club --
Thursday, Jan. 10, at 8:30 p.m., at
Lachar's Hall, 8939 Twelfth St.
On Tuesday evening, Jan. 22, a
banquet honoring the Twenty-
fifth Anniversary of the Mothers'
Clubs will be held in the Auditori-
‘, um of the Jewish Community Cen-
ter. Reservations should be made
with the Club Presidents or at the
Center, not later than Jan. 15.

Photography Club

Center members are offered an
opportunity to learn more about
photography and to have a great
deal of fun. A photography club
is being organized, with Sidney
Baron as the leader. Baron, a for-
mer Center member recently re-
turned from service, has had ex-
tensive experience in the field of
photography as an amateur and
as a professional.
The purpose of the club, he said,
"is to learn to take pictures, to
learn to do a better job of devel-
oping, and to learn all of the lat-
est tricks."
The first meeting of the Photog-
raphy Club is scheduled for Tues-
day, Jan. 8, at 8:00 o'clock.
Members are asked to register
with Mr. Neimand.

Book Chat

Gloster Current of the National
Association for the Advancement
of Colored People will be guest
reviewer at the Jewish Center,
Woodward at Holbrook on Wed-
nesday, Jan. 9 for a book chat
program.
Mr. Current will review "Black
Boy" by Richard Wright. The pro-
gram will begin at 9 P. M. and is
open to the public without charge.

Youth Educat'n League
Holds Board Meeting

The December board meeting of
the Youth Education League was
held at the home of Mrs. Martin
Friedman on Parkside Ave., with
Mrs. Benjamin Gelman as co-
hostess. A dessert luncheon was
preceded by the business meeting,
at which time Mrs. Jesse Rosen
anonunced that plans have been
completed for the Victory Lun-
cheon which will take place on
Feb. 19 at the Latin Quarter,
with a complete floor show pre-
sented by the Latin Quarter.
Mrs. Adolph Lichter, co-chair-
man with Mrs. Sidney Kalt, for
the year book, gave a report on
the splendid work of all the mem-
bers towards the success of this
affair.
The regular January meeting
will be held on Jan. 7, at the De-
troit-Leland Hotel, in the form of
a tea and rally, with outstanding
talent for the afternoon's enter-
tainment.
Proceeds of this affair go for
rehabilitation work both here and
abroad.

New Holy Lands
To Be Discussed

"New Holy Lands" is the title
of the address to be delivered by
Rabbi Ellezer A. Levi, at late Fri-
day evening services at Congre-
gation Bnai Moshe, Jan. 11.

Rabbi Levi will discuss the vari-
ous proposals to settle the home-
less Jews in other places than
Palestine, their righteous home-
land.
The services will begin at 8:15
and will be conducted by Cantor
David Katzman. A social hour will
follow.

Page Nine

Annual Presidents'
Day Tea On Jan. 7th.

(Continued from page 1)

own sufferings also so soon forgotten? Are your own dead

already out of your mind? Your blood, your sweat, your
tears? Will you ignore them also?

It is not hard to understand your perfidy. The Empire

comes first. Your officials fear the results of an impartial

search from the Anglo-American Inquiry Commission. They
must prejudice this commission with false facts. They must
poison the minds of the world to • whom that commission
will report.

But listen, British officialdom! The world will not accept
your calumnies. Your sins will find you out. Your own people
will reject you like a poisonous cancer. The English people
who crammed the Magna Charta down official throats, the
English people who bloodily wrested civil rights for them-
selves from the same kind of a selfish leadership, the English
SAMUEL NEUSCHATZ
Samuel Neuschatz has been add- people, who made their feeling of fair play respected wher-
ed to the staff of the Jewish Com- ever they went will cast you out.

munity Center, "in order to better
serve the needs of the Jewish
youth of Detroit," announced Sam-
uel H. Rubiner, president of the
Center. Mr. Neuschatz comes as
Director of Intermediate Activi-
ties, the department which in-
cludes the work of the high school
age group. In this position, he
will have charge of all the activi-
ties including clubs, athletics,
lounge and extension programs at
the D. W. Simons Hebrew School
and the Bagley Public School, in
which the teen age youth have
been participating. He will also
be available to give active co-
operation to all other Jewish
youth groups of the community
and invites their cooperation in
joint activities on behalf of the
whole youth community.

Your propaganda methods are not so clever that they
cannot be clearly seen. Your mouthings of Hitlerism are
not so disguised that they can fool a world which paid such a
price in blood and treasure because no one weighed those
words.

The Annual Presidents' Day Tea
will mark the monthly meeting of
the Detroit Section, National
Council of Jewish Women on Mon-
day, Jan. 7, at 1:30 p.m., at the
Jewish Community Center.
The presidents of all clubs af-
filiated with the Detroit Federa-
tion of Women's Clubs have been
invited as special guests.
Kathryn Turney Garten, "The
First Lady of Book Reviewers,"
will feature the program. She will
review Francis Winwar's "Life of
the Heart," the fascinating story
of the life of George Sand.
Miss Garten Is well known to
radio audiences, university groups
and women's clubs. She recently
received an enthusiastic reception
at Detroit Town Hall. Early in
life she developed a great narra-
tive power which she combines
with a flair for verbal portraiture
to make her reviews different and
memorable. She has published po-
etry, taught classes in Biblical
Dramatization and tried her hand
at novel writing.
Kurt Saflr, talented boy pianist,
will supply the musical portion of
the program.
The social hour and tea to fol-
low the program is being arrang-
ed by Mrs. Louis Baum. Mrs. Her-
shel Kreger will preside. All mem-
bers of the Detroit Section, Na-
tional Council of Jewish Women,
are invited to bring their friends.

Justice cannot be blind forever. Sooner or later the

scales will be lifted and the truth will be plainly seen. And

remember, England! You will be weighed in the balances
and found wanting.

Swiss Exonerate
Dr. J. Lowenherz

GENEVA (JTA) — The Swiss
Union of Jewish Communities has
issued a statement describing as
"baseless" the charge that Dr. Jo-
seph Lowenherz, former president
of the Vienna Jewish Community,
had collaborated with the Nazis
during the occupation.
The statement was based on an
own country and those of our own glorious America will re-
investigation in Austria by Alfred
ject your plottings and your maneuverings.
Weishut, a representative of the
World Jewi9h Congress. Dr. Low-
The Jews will still have Palestine in spite of you. They enherz, who is now in Zurich, was
of the Vienna Jewish
will have it because it belongs to them, because they will make president
community from 1937 until he fled
of it a paradise. They will have it as their land because in that Austria last Spring when Red Ar-
my troops started moving into the
land they will once more lead the way to a kind of life where city.

Your empire is tottering, England! Power is slipping
from your grasp. It is in vain that you resort to lies and
trickery to deceive a world you believe will trust you. The
Mr. Neuschatz arrived in Detroit commission will report the truth. The common people of your

recently after having served over
two years in the army and after
having seen service in England,
France and Germany in an Intel-
ligence Unit of the Office of the
Chief Engineer of the European
Theatre.

Professionally a Jewish educa-
tor, having taught Hebrew In the
New York City public high schools
and in the Hebrew High School
Department of the New York Bu-
reau of Jewish Education, he con-
ducted youth clubs in the Park
Avenue Synagogue and the Flat-
bush Jewish Center and has ex-
perience in the field of Jewish
Camping both as counsellor and
head counsellor of Camp Achvah
operated by the Bureau of Jewish
Education.

In his last will and testament, Hitler wrote, "My spirit
will rise from the grave and the world will see that I am
right." So soon, so soon, a British nobleman is attempting to
bring that prophecy to realization.

Mr. Neuschatz, who holds the
B.A. Degree, cum laude, from New
York University and the Master of
Science in Education Degree from
the College of the City of New
York, rounded out his preparation
for education and social work with
two years of residence in Pales-
tine which he spent both in work
and study.

But he cannot succeed. It must not be. Not England, not
Sir Frederic Morgan, not British officialdom, not any force
in the whole wide world can stop the ghost of Hitler from
being laid. A suffering humanity must recover at long long
last from all its ills. The time will come when truth and justice
will unite to usher in eternal peace. And that time is at hand.

S Z Sisterhood Plans
Annual Brunch

This year, Shaarey Zedelc Sis-
terhood's annual affair, compli-
menting its paid-up membership,
will take the form of a brunch
meeting in the social hall, next
Tuesday, Jan. 8, at 11:30 a.m.
Guests are requested to note that
the time is one hour earlier than
usual.

Following the brunch, which is
in charge of Mrs. Morris Krause
and Mrs. Joe Horwitz, the mem-
bership will be addressed by Rabbi
Henry Fisher of Chicago. Gradu-
ating with distinction from the
Jewish Theological Seminary in
1928, Rabbi Fisher received his
bachelor's degree from the Col-
lege of the City of New York and
his master's degree from Columbia
University. Prior to his present af-
filiation with the Bnai Zion Con-
gregation of Chicago, Rabbi Fisher
occupied the pulpit of Congrega-
tion Derech Emunoh of New York
for eleven years and of Temple
Beth El, Rochester, N. Y., for six
years. He has served as a member
of the Executive of the Rabbini-
cal Assembly and as Director of
Placement for the Seminary.

Mrs. Nathan Spevakew will pre-
side at the meeting, and Mrs.
Benjamin Imber will be on hand
to receive dues, the payment of
which makes members eligible to
attend this affair. Reservations
should be promptly telephoned to
Mrs. M. S. Dann, To. 7-0417.

justice is synonymous with charity and where
every person to "know the Lord thy God."

New Zionists Debate
Re-entry In Zion Fold

At a regular meeting of the
New Zionist Organization of De-
troit, held on Thursday, Dec. 27, at
the Jewish Community center,
Aaron M. Weisibrot and Caspar
Boyarsky were named delegates
to the national convention sched-
uled to open in New York City, at
Manhattan Center, Sat. night., Jan.
5, and continue through Sun.
and Mon., Jan. 6 and 7.
The convention promises to be
one of the most important gath-
erings ever staged by the New
Zionist Organization. On the agen-
da will be the question of reentry
in the organization of the general
Zionist movement and collaborat-
ing with all the constituent
branches of the movement in a
common endeavor to save the
Jewish national hopes. There is a
strong faction within the New
Zionist Organization favoring such
course.

Another faction, believing that
the constituted Zionist authorities
have proven incapable of coping
with the grave situation confront-
ing us in Palestine, vis-a-vis Bri-
tish perfidy, is dubious of the
effectiveness of collaborating with
the present Zonist leadership, and
would rather boldly pursue a
course of Independent action, in
the hope that ultimately all would
recognize the soundness thereof.
Another important question on
the agenda of the convention is
the attitude to be taken toward the

it is the aim of

Anglo-American Commission of
Inquiry.

It was also decided at the meet-
ing to arrange for a social eve-
ning for the members and their
friends to be held on Wed., Jan.
30, at the Assembly Hall of Bnai
Moshe Synagogue, Dexter and
Lawrence, to which the public will
be invited. A prominent speaker
will give an address and the dele-
gates to the convention will sub-
mit their report.

DR. J. M. GOLDSMITH
DR. B. M. SEYBURN

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