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April 19, 1946 - Image 27

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1946-04-19

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

4111Cfkall

4

Yeufish Periodical Cotter

Friday April 19, 1946

CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, 01110

Page Eleven

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

C enter Ativitieo .

Quiz Contest

pate in a series of activities
crafts, gym, pool, and on April 26
there will be a movie and a trip
On display in the Center lobby
are Passover Ceremonial Art Ob-
jects from the collections of
Charles Feinberg, Harvery
man and Henry Meyers. A beauti
ful pewter Seder plate, dating
back 350 years and of German
origin, portrays biblical scenes as-
sociated with the festival.
A lovely small silver Haroseth
dish and spoon of Russian origin
and a silver egg dish of French
origin date back to the 19th cen-
tury. Silver models of the Kid-
dush and Elijah cups are among
the objects that add to the beauty
of the display.

I 'rot. Abercrombie Paffifnikoft
\‘ id conduct a quiz contest, with
the audience participating, as one
of the highlights of the Minstrel
flies to be presented by Cub
_It 369 at the Center, Sunday
ehmon, April 28, 1946.

Life Saving

An American Red Cross senior

life saving course is currently be-
ing given at the Center every
Sunday at 11 a.m. under the su-
pervision of Jack Schwartz, Sol
Cohen and Ben Wolinsky, swim•
ming director. Register at the pool
for instruction.

Photography Club

The final program of the Yid-
dish Culture Series, sponsored
jointly by the Jewish Community
Center and the Jewish Commu-
nity Council, will take place on
Saturday evening, May 4, at the
Community Center Auditorium
Igo Gutman, leading operatic
tenor, will be the guest artist fea-
tured in a program of traditional
Jewish melodies. He will be ac-
companied by Miss Florence Kut-
zen at the piano. Assisting artist
who will also participate in the
program are the following: Ju-
lius C h a j e s, pianist-composer;
Emily Mutter Adams, violinist,
and Jacob Becker, cellist of the
Detroit Symphony Orchestra. They
will appear in solo and ensemble
numbers. The program is sched-
uled to begin promptly at 9 p. in.

Camp Habonim

The Center Photography Club
has arranged an exhibition, sttp-
plementing the display loaned to
the Center by the Museum of
Modern Arts and now on exhibi-
tion in the Ginsburg Lounge. Pho
tographic studies by George Mar-
golin, Ralgh Weinstock, Lon Rose-
berg, Leo Sklar and King Gerris
members of the club, are featured .
The exhibition is being present-
ed under the auspices of the Art
Committee of which Mrs. Edward
Quail' is chairman. Mr. Stanley
Fleisehaker is chairman of the
sub-committee on photography.

Entering its seventeenth year of
operation, the day camp of the
Jewish Center, Camp Habonim,
will open registrations on May 1
for children under 14, it was an-
nounced by Aviva Gootman, di-
rector of Junior activities. The
camp will be conducted Mondays
through Fridays and will be in
session for eight weeks, July 1 to
August 23. Children are required
to register for a minimum of twc
weeks.

Mothers' Clubs

Passover Activities

Passover activities at the Cen-
ter continue in full swing. The
Youth Seder, planned by the Seder
committee of the Intermediates,
will be held on Saturday, April 20
at 8:30 p.m. The program will in-
clude Pesach refreshments, songs,
skits and dancing. A new 1946
Hagadah will be introduced. Anne
Lesnick, Harriet Simon and Henry
Lonnerstater are officers of the
committee. Tickets are 15 cents
and are available at the Center
desk, and from representatives of
the two Senior Judea Groups, Lit-
tle Women of Hadassah, Saturns
and AZA.
Sylvia Weiss, chairman of the
Saturday Nite Dance Committee,
announces a party for Saturday.
April 20 in the Butzel Hall from
9:30 - 12:30 p.m. The dance wil•
he in keeping_ with the Passover
theme, and music will be provided
by Gene Fenby's orchestra.
A film showing and dance i.
being presented by the Los Tigres
Club on Wednesday, April 24 at
2:30 p.m. in Butzel Hall. Older
juniors and intermediates are in-
vited to see "World Series of
1945" and comedy cartoons.
A Young Judean. Passover party
open to children itge 10 - 14, will
be held on Thursday, April 25 at
2:30 p.m., it was announced by
Adeline Subar, Chairman of the
Young Judeans. The program will
include a film on Palestine, com-
munity singing, a skit, "The Story
of Passover," Palestinian dancing
and refreshments.
Aviva Gootman, Junior Program
Director, announces plans for a
Spring Vacation Post Passover
program to run April 24, 25 and
26. Juniors are invited to partici-

This week: All clubs invited by
the Lutheran Settlement to a POT
LUCK SUPPER PARTY, Thurs-
day, April 25, 7 p.m., at the Epis-
copal Church, Trumbull and Grand
River. Make reservations with
your club president.
DAVISON MOTHERS' CLUB--
Thursday, April :5, 8 p.m., at
Workmen's Circle.

BE SURE TO LISTEN . . .
TO AMERICAN FORUM

.

Mr. Gutman, who will be mak-
ing his first appearance in De-
troit, was formerly one of the
leading tenors of the opera houses
in Berlin and in Vienna. Since
his arrival in America he has ap-
peared in Town Hall and Carne-
gie Hall in New York, as well as
before various Jewish groups. He
ranks today among the leading
Jewish singers in this country,
and his repertoire includes Chasa-
nuth, Yiddish and Chassidie songs.
For his program at the Center
Mr. Gutman will offer a selection
of traditional Hebrew and Yid-
dish songs featuring the works
of Chajes, A. W. Binder, Zaii.a
and many others. Mr. Chajes will
play several of his original com-
positions for the piano and will
appear in several numbers wita

Chrisians Urge
Truman to Help
Detained Jews

"How Can We Bring Peace to
Palestine?" will be discussed on
the American Forum of the Air,
in a coast-to-coast broadcast, to be
heard locally over Station CKLW
on Tuesday, April 23, from 10 to
10:45 p.m.

NEW YORK — The Christian
Council on Palestine, representing
over 3,000 ministers and religious
educators, called on President
Truman last week to insist that
the 1,014 Jewish refugees detained
aboard the ship "Fede" at La
Spezia, Italy, be granted imme-
diate passage to Palestine.

Offer Zionist View
In Radio Debate

Condemning the detention of the
refugees, the Council declared in
a telegram to the President: "The
only way we can move toward a
solution of the specific problem of
the 1,014 refugees lingering in
misery and ignominy at La Spe-
zia, and of the great problem of
the displaced Jewish people
throughout Europe, is to insist
that the gates of Palestine be
opened immediately for free Jew-
ish immigration."

NEW YORK -- Mrs. Moses P.
Epstein, member of the Interim
Committee of the American Jew-
ish Conference, and Dr. Carl
Hermann Voss, co-director of the
American Christian Palestine
Committee, will present the Zion-
ist point of view in a radio de-
bate on "How Can We Bring
Peace to Palestine?" on Tuesday,
April 23, 9:30-10:15 P.131, over
Station WOR and the Mutual
Network.
The broadcast, a feature of the
American Forum of tlfe Air, is
one of a series of radio discus-
sions on Palestine in which the
American Jewish Conference pa:-
ticipates.

Miss Adams and Mr. Becker.
Tickets for this concert as in
the other programs in the Yid-
dish Culture Series are bells;
made available to constituent or-
ganizations of the Council at re-
duced rates. Additional tickets
will be on sale at the Jewish
Center on the evening of the con-
cert. This closing program of the
Yiddish Culture Series marks the
third consecutive year in which
the Jewish Community Center
and the Jewish Community Coun-
cil have united in bringing to the
community the best in Jewish
culture and folk art.

"The toll of six million dead
Jews during these recent years
should shock the Christian world
into an awareness of Christian
responsibility for Jewish national
homelessness," the Council said.
The telegram was signed by Dr.
Henry A. Atkinson, chairman;
Prof. Reinhold Niebuhr, treasur-
er, and Dr. Carl Hermann VOS3,
executive secretary.

Annual Congress
Dinner Features
Dr. Tartakower

Dr. Arieh Tartakower, chair-
man of the Department for Re-
lief and Rehabilitation of the
World Jewish Congress, will be
the guest speaker at the annual
dinner of the American Jewish
Congress to be held Wednesday,
April 24, at 7:00 p. m., at Huyler's
in the Fisher Bldg.
Dr. Tartakower is a member of
the Actions Commmittee of the
World Zionist Organization. and
of the Executive Commithee of
the World Jewish Congress. He is
also Professor of Sociology and
Social Work and has been invited
to take over the chair of Jewish
Sociology at the Hebrew Univer-
sity in Jerusalem. He intends to
take up his duties there by thi
end of this year. His topic will
be, "The Postwar Situation of the
Jews."
This affair is being sponsored
by all three groups of the Detroit
American Jewish Congress, the
Women's Division, the Business
and Professional Group and the
Detroit Section of the American
Jewish Congress as the highlight
of a season's Congress activities.
Members of all three groups and
their friends are invited to at-
tend. Reservations can be ob-
tained before April 22 from Mrs.
L. Rosenzweig, TO. 8-8669.

The volume of legislative and
judicial law existent in the United
States today far exceeds that of
any other country. Since 1906
alone, approximately 40,000 federal,
42,000 state and 2,700,000 munici-

pal statutes have been enacted.

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contain everything that I have
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tion about four weeks ago. These
statements were made voluntarily

by me, uninfluenced by force.
threats or promises, and were
writtten in my own handwriting.

SS Unterscharfuehrer
January 23, 1946.

When You Think of Catering . .
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I actually heard no formal order
to take no prisoners, and that I
would say so in case I had heard
a formal order, "in spite of my
fear."
5. It further occurs to me that
in the camp at ZUFENHAUSEN,
the word was circulated that
Standartenfuehrer PEIPER w a s
there too, and that he had the
following words passed on: that
we should say that POETSCHKE
gave the order to shoot the Amer-
icans before ENGELSDORF, for
POETSCHKE was dead anyhow.
I no longer know how this mes-
sage came to us. It is possible
that the men who fetched the
food brought it.
I swear before God that these
statements of mine contain the
pure and whole truth and noth-
ing but the truth, and that they

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(Continued from Page 2)

I do not know any more wheth-
er these were the exact words,
but in any case, this was the
sense of the words, and this dec-
laration is characteristic of the
attitude of our regiment. Fur-
thermo•e, in our cell in ZUPFEN-
HAUSEN, in which ten of us
were, it was generally said that
he who makes a statement
against his superior, is certain to
be punished for that one day by
PEIPER and to disappear. That
is what I meant when I said that

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Passover Greetings!

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Yiddish Culture Series to Close on
May 4; Features Gutman, Chajes

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