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July 19, 1946 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1946-07-19

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

Amerkair ffewish Periodical Cotter

CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

Friday, July 19, 1946

DETROIT EWISH CHRONICLE and The L

Chronicle

Rosenberg To Get Probus Check Helps Send Warren
Panama Award Rovetch To European Conference
On 70th Birthday

Weizmann Going Blind

Louis James Rosenberg, Detroit
attorney, will be presented the
decoration of the Order of 13a1.
boa by the gov-
ernment of Pan-
ama on Aug. 3,
he was informed
this week in a
letter from the
Ambassador of
Panama. The dec-
oration will come
as a gift on his
70th birthday
which falls o n
that day.
Rosenoerg was
granted the dec-
oration I n t h e
early part of 1946.
For many years
he has been acting as legal coun-
cil in Michigan for a number of
diplomatic and consular officers
of Washington, New York and
Chicago. He has written and lec-
tured on international relations
and has been connected with
foreign affairs for over 40 years,

Julian A. Grace, Warren Rovetch, John Wise

150 Survivors of
Kielce Pogrom
To Be Evacuated

4

More than 150 Jewish survivors
of the brutal pogrom in Kielce,
Poland, will be evacuated to Lodz
and Lower Silesia, the Joint Dis-
tribution Committee was advised
last week by William Bein, its
director in Poland, who flew to
Kielce by air from Warsaw.
The survivors in Kielce hi- ve
been granted emergency cash,
food and clothing by the J.D.C.,
major American agency aiding
Jewish survivors overseas.
In a cabled message to the New
York offices of the Committee, 270
Madison Avenue, - Mr. Bein dis-
closed that the J.D.C. and the
Central Jewish Committee of Po-
land will cooperate with the gov-
ernment in the evacuation pro-
gram.
Mr. Bein reported he had flown
to the site of the pogrom with
representatives of the Central
Committee. There he found forty.
one Jews murdered and forty
wounded, of whom five are given
little chance to recover. In addi-
tion, his message stated, an esti.
mated thirty Jews were severely
wounded or killed in anti-Semitic
outbreaks on trains and roads in
outlying areas of the Kielce dis.
trict.
Some of the victims have al-
ready been removed on a spe-
cially-guarded hospital train to
the city of Lodz, Mr. Bein stated.
He praised the action of the Pol-
ish government in taking imme-
diate action in behalf of the sur-
vivors.

MOVES OFFICES
Richard Deutsch, attorney and
counsellor-at-law, has removed his
law offices from 1764 Penobscot
Bldg. to 917 Penobscot Bldg., Ran-
dolph 3454.

I.

DR. GREEN, CAMP ADVISOR
Dr. Martin A. Green, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Julius Green, is spend-
ing the summer as medical advisor
In a children's camp at Suffern,
N. Y.

Detroit's representative to the
first International Student Con-
ference to be held in Prague,
Czechoslovakia this summer, left
Detroit Sunday.
A Wayne University junior, 112
is Warren Rovetch, 19, of 2726
Oakman Court, son of Russian im-
migrant parents.
Rovetch completed his financial
arrangements for the trip when
the Probus Club, a group of Jew-
ish professional and business men
pledged themselves to make up
the balance needed for the $1,000
necessary for the three-month
trip.
The check was presented at a
Luncheon held in his honor by
Julian A. Grace, Publicity Director
of the Probus Club and John Wise,
Traffic Court Referee.
In New York this week, he will
meet nine other collegiate repre-

Settlement Cook Book

sentatives and 15 delegates from
national student groups who will
constitute the U. S. delegation
to the student conference. On
July 15, they will sail for London.
A "B" average student, Rovetch
was chosen one of 10 representa-
tives from 400 colleges because of
his wide range of student activi.
ties.
He was student manager of
Wayne University's basketball and
baseball teams this year, a staff
writer on the student publication,
a member of the student council,
executive secretary of the Wayne
University chapter of the U. S.
Student Assembly and Midwest
representative of the assembly.
Rovetch describes the objectives
of the Prague conference as a
meeting of 500 delegates from 64
countries to set up a permanent
international student organiza-
tion.

Disapprove New
German Political
Group In Court

Bochow, Fred Dreger and Eu.
gene Brand, all of New York
City. Eugene Brand runs a shop
in Yorkville, which distributes
pencils embossed with anti-Semi-
tic mottoes, as well as all varie-
ties of anti-Semitic literature, in-
The formation of a political eluding Leon de Aryan's "The
group, Voters' Alliance for Amer- Broom."
icans of German Ancestry, was
disapproved by Justice Ernest E.
L. Hammer of the New York
State Supreme Court on June 15.
The avowed purpose of the pro-
posed membership corporation was
FRANKFURT (JTA)—Two Ger-
political education for Germans mans have been sentenced to jail
seeking, or granted, naturaliza- by a Karlsruhe court for having
set fires to a synagogue during
tion as American citizens.
Justice Hammer, doubting the the wave of anti-Semitic violence
necessity of such an organization. which swept Germany in Nov.,
1938.
stated that,
Otto Wachter, 47, received a
. . . In the present relations
between this nation and Ger- one-year term, while Oskar Sch-
many, when our military forces weizer, 45, was sentenced to three
years imprisonment.
are still in occupation of that bel-
ligerent, with its leaders on trial
as war criminals, and with peace
LENDING
not negotiated or agreed upon in
LIBRARY
treaty, it seems more than inad.
visable to attempt organization
under the name Voters' Alliance
for Americans of German ances-
GIFTS
try . . .
The proposed directors of the
Voters' Alliance were listed as
GREETING
Conrad Crieb, Emil Russ, Otto
CARDS

Germans Sentenced for
Setting Fire to Synagog

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(Continued from page 1)
the love even of an Englishman
for his own country. Perhaps an
adopted child loves the mother
that chose him better than a child
loves its natural mother. Perhaps
the immigrant always loves the
country of his adoption better
than the native born son. At any
rate, Weizmann did.
Englishmen warned him against
this. Lloyd George, Wedgwood and
then Wingate all counselled the
Zionists to be more demanding
and bolder with England. "De-
mand, demand, demand," Lloyd
George hammered at the Zionists.
Bang the doors in the colonial offi-
ce, advised Wingate. These native
sons of England, who were hon.
est, understood England better
than Weizmann. They knew how
greedy, ungrateful, mercenary and
hoggish old imperial John Bull
could be under his veneer of re-
spectability.
The duplicate of this phenom-
enon can be found in the story of
our own American revolution. A
couple of years before the Amer-
ican Revolution, both Washington
and Jefferson said that any talk of
seperation from England was non.
sense. Franklin said much the
same thing, yet as time went on,
Washington, Jefferson and Frank.
lin thought that no cost was too
high, no sacrifice too great, to be
rid of England.
How did this change coma
about? It is easy to understand
this, when one understands the
general outlines of British policy.
British policy is shop keeper pol-
icy. England is a nation of shop
keepers. The shop.- keeper ris in
general a tolerant person. He
does not interfere with you, as
long as you don't interfere with
his gathering of pennies. You can
do what you want. You are at full
liberty to break your neck, if
you want too. This liberty is given
the name of tolerance.
But once the shop keeper Seer;
the chance for making some pen-
nies and you get in his way, woe
to you. This is what happened in
early America and what is now
happening in Palestine. The Brit-
ish policy in early America at
first was no policy. They kept
their hands off, because there
wasn't much to take with them.
As a result, the Americans de-
veloped something of an attach-
ment for old England. But the
American colonies began to grow,
and in 1763 the British passed
their navigation laws designed to
restrain American manufacturers

and monopolize the shipping trade
for England. This was followed
by other acts designed to enable
England to feed on AMerica.
Exactly the same thing has oc.
curred in Palestine. The British
were very profuse with gestures
towards the Jews when Palestine
was a piece of desert that no one
wanted, but as soon as the Jews
showed what could be done with
it, England stepped in. Instead of
a Jewish National Homeland, it is
to be turned into an English Na-
tional Home.

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