Pugs Two, .

DETROIT JEWISH. CHRONICLE:

Crisis at Yeshivah;
Rabbis Rally Support

Recognizing a crisis at the
Yeshivah, the Council of Ortho-
dox Rabbis has declared the first
day of Passover, April 14, as
"Beth Yehudah Day" in all Syn-
agogues in Detroit. Its purpose,
according to the president, Rabbi
Joseph Thumin, is to call to the
attention of Detroit Jewry the
desperate burden of debt which
threatens the existence of the
Yeshivah and to appeal for sup-
port.
"The need for $100,000 before
September," according to the
Yeshivah president, Rabbi Max J.
Wohlgelernter, "is the result of
the remarkable success of the
Beth Yehudah Schools. In the
past few years the student popu-
lation of the Yeshivah has in-
creased 400 percent. It now has
the largest faculty of any such
school in the 'middle west and is
the only school of its kind in
Michigan."
This rapid growth has caused
the Yeshivah to engage a large
staff to serve, the students now
enrolled, almost 600 of them. It
is the faculty of the school which
has borne the burden of the phe-
nomenal growth, Rabbi Wohle-
gelernter said, citing the fact that
many have not been paid for
three months.
"We must thank the Rabbis and
teachers," he added, "for their
unflagging devotion. It is only

Beth Aaron Group
to Stage Seminar

The Beth Aaron Sunday School
adult study group will hold a
special Passover. seminar Sunday
at the Shultze Assembly. The
purpose of the seminar is to co-
ordinate school and home holiday
activity and to acquaint the par-
ents with the religious and cere-
monial ,aspects of the holiday as
practiced in the Jewish home.
All parents of the far north-
west Jewish community are in-
vited, Bernard Panush, director
of the Sunday School who will
direct the seminar, said.

MANISCHEWITZ

MEW YORK STATE

ahet

•

NEW YORIi — Arrangements
for the observance of Passover
by Jewish personnel stationed
with the U.S. armed forces in
Europe, Asia, Alaska and the
West Indies and at some 400 mili-
tary • installations and Veterans
Administration hospitals through-
out the United States have been
completed by the National Jew-
ish Welfare Board (JWB).
Supplies of Matzos, Hagadahs,
wine, holiday leaflets and Pass-
over food supplies have been
shipped by JWB to every point
where Jewish military personnel
are stationed, including a num-
ber of army transports which
will be at sea during Passover.
Arrangements for Seders at
camps, air and naval bases and
in VA hospitals have been made
by JWB through the corps of 191
full and part-time chaplains, 20
JWB armed services field work-
ers and 29 USO-JWB directors.
The army has arranged to fly
Rabbis assigned by JWB to Ber-
muda and Alaska to conduct
Passover services for Jewish per-
sonnel there.
The 282 local JWB armed ser-
vices committees are engaged in
setting up community Seders or
on-post Seders for men unable to
obtain leave.

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Three Yemenite Jews, among the hundreds now being transferred
to Israel via "Operation Magic Carpet," shown studying the Pass-
over Ilagadah at the Ilashid Jewish Refugee Camp in the British
Crown Colony of Aden shortly before they were moved to the
Jewish State. Their transfer to Israel by airplane was made poss-
ible through American Jewry's United Jewish Appeal.

Bakers Given
Pesach Rules

Jewish bakers have been asked
by the Council of Orthodox Rab-
bis to close their shops no later
than 9:30 a.m., Wednesday, April
13 and to keep closed until 8 p.m.,
Thursday, April 21 in observance
of Passover.

The bakers are reminded that
by religious law, they are not
to start baking bread until 8 p.m.,
April 21 and that they are re-
quired to make all preparations
to resume baking before the holi-
day starts.
The Rabbinate has also asked
the shopkeepers to avoid baking
macaroons and other Passover
confections close to the holiday
so as to leave the impression that
they are Kosher for Passover.

to Fight Liberty for Nazis

Mobilization of 'all forces in
the city was undertaken this
week by the Detroit Division of
the American Jewish Congress
to urge the United States Senate
to conduct a public investigation
of the policies of the military
government in the United States
Zone of Germany.
Among organizations that have
promised to cooperate with the
AJC is the Council of Orthodox
Rabbis in Detroit as well as lead-
ing conservative and reform re-
ligious leaders who will devote
a sermon during Passover to this
topic.
TRIALS HALTED
The Congress has expressed
alarm at the virtual halt of the
denazification hearings and war
crime trials and the commuta-
tion of sentences for such notor-
ious criminals as Ilse Koch, and
the release • of such figures as
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Fritz Kuhn and Franz von Papen.
In a resolution passed by the
Executive Board of the Congress,
they proclaimed:
"The failure of the denazifi-
cation program is reflected in the
growth of anti-Semitic and anti-
democratic trends in the U. S.
Zone. Such pro-fascist, national-
ist trends constitute a threat to
world peace.
"We urge that the Senate allow
recognized public organizations
to present their evidence on the
breakdown of the denazification
program and recommendations
for dealing with the problem."

PETITIONS READY

Thousands of petitions will be
forwarded to the Senate foreign
relations committee and the Sen-
ate armed service committee.
Petitions are available to, all
groups and individuals and can
be obtained by writing. to Sam
Brown, executive director, at the
Congress office, 9124 Linwood
avenue. •
Albert Silber is regional head
of the Congress and Mrs. Samuel
A. Green heads the Women's
Division.

N. Y. Judge Quits
College Bias Quiz

.

NEW YORK—(WNS)—A dem-
onstration by City College stu-
dents was threatened in the wake
of the resignation of domestic
relations court Justice Hubert T.
Delaney as chairman of a special
Alumni Association committee to
investigate discrimination charges
against two faculty members.
In a memorandum accompany-
ing Justice Delaney's letter of
resignation to Prof. Nelson P.
Mead, president of the associa-
tion, he charged that the ad-
ministration had failed to take
an aggressive enough stand in
the cases of Prof. William Knick-
erbocker, accused of ahti-Semit-
ism, and Prof. William C. Davis,
economics instructor, charged
with discrimination against
Negro students.
Following a threat of demon-
stration, President Harry N.
NEW YORK —(Special)— The
Wright called in campus news-
paper editors for a meeting at Hon. Harold Davies, a leading
Labor member of the British
which he disputed the facts set
Parliament who is here on a four-
forth by Justice Delaney.
week speaking tour under the
sponsorship of the Zionist Or-
U.S. Bill Would Bar
ganization of America, called for
the establishment of friendly re-
Hate Propaganda
WASHINGTON—(WNS)—Rep. lations between Britain and Is-
Harry J. Davenport, of Pennsyl- rael as "imperative to world
vania, has introduced a bill in peace." Plans are being made to
Congress making it a criminal of- bring Davies to Detroit.
"A strong, friendly Jdewish na-
fense to distribute anti-Jewish
tion with its technical, scientific
and anti-Negro propaganda.
and strategic acumen," Davies
emphasized, "will give the Brit-
ish Commonwealth a greater
guarantee of peace and stability."
He added:
"For centuries the Jew and
Arab have lived side by side,
without the benefits of modern
technology. If Br' in will now
try to forget the nYstakes of the
past and sincerely cooperate with
Israel, then peace and prosperity
will be established in the Middle
East."
Asserting that "Foreign Minis-
ter Ernest Bevin's approach to
DAVID GROBMAN, 38, who Palestine 'has endangered the
was left for dead by the Nazis peace not only in Palestine tut in
on a Dachau pile of cadavers the entire world," Davies em-
and who was rescued by an phasized, however, that "the per-
American medical corps man, sonal power heretofore wielded
has arrived in the United States by Bevin has been considerably
with his wife and their 22- curbed."
month-old twin daughters, with
the aid of BIAS.

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Yiddish Daily Gets
New Owner, Editor

INSURED

SAVINGS
ACCOUNTS

NEW YORK—(WNS)—Morris
Cohen, philanthropist and com-
munal worker, is the new owner
of the Jewish Morning Journal,
Yiddish daily. Dr. 1. D. Bergman,
Rabbi, scholar and leader in or-
thodox Jewry, has been chosen
editor.

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Israel Agrees to Trade
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TEL AVIV • (Palcor) — A
spokesman broadcasting over the
Transjordan controlled Rama] I ah
radio admitted that the problem
of Arab refugees from the Pales.
tine hostilities was one of reset-
tlement, not return to Israel.
The radio spokesman' Said it
was "foolish" to demand that Is-
rael permit the Arab refugees to
return because "only one in 10
wishes to return."
Commenting on the ',refugee
problem, the Israeli nesvoaper
Davar notes that Israel Is ready
tq discuss the question on the
principle of population exchange
for which there is ample prece-
dent in the Greek-Turkish pop-
ulation' exchange after - Woi Id
War I.
The Arab refugee problem, Da-
var says, is becoming another
propaganda tool for the anti-Is-
rael circles in London. 'The
Arabs must seek a • solution for
their problems, not in London
but by an agreement with Israel
under the auspices of some in-
ternational authority," Davar
says.
Commenting
the House of
Lords debate last week on the
Arab refugee problem, Haboker
notes that "the noble Lords ex-
pressed not a word of concern for
the fate of Jews in the Arab
states during their expatiation on
the plight of Palestine Arabs."
In connection with the perse-
cution of Jews in Arab countries
Haboker notes that not a single
state has so far ratified the unan-
imously approved anti-genocide
convention of the UN.

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AJ Congress Rallying City

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horkkW sad Wel by Os 5ON5101 SIR CORPAR INC.
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Arab Refugee
Problem Eyed

Seders Set Up
at Army Posts

PASSOVER
ITEMS

//,§ sweeter, too

Yemenite Passover

because they are.so sincerely and
deeply concerned with perpetu-
ating the tradition of Judaism
that they have gone on with their
character-molding work."
An appeal for emergency aid
has been made to the Jewish
Welfare Federation which con-
tributes $22,750 to the support of
the Yeshivah in its current bud-
get.

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Friday, April S. l91$

TEL AVIV — (WNS) —Barter
agreements providing for the ex-
change of goods valued at $600,-
000 have been concluded by the
Israeli government with Switzer-
land, Denmark, South Africa and
other countries.
Israeli goods for export under
those arrangements include chem-
ical products and textiles.

