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Vol. 51, No. 27
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Thursday, July 28, 1949
eN'`'
COn firm Nazis 'lid
nitre
NEW YORK—(Special)—A United Press dispatch on July IS
corroborated reports in "The Nation" that many hun;.!‘eds of former
Nazi officers and soldiers were serving wilh Arab armies. The
Nation" reports were vehementl ■ denied at the time by Egypt and
Britain,
file UP dispatch said that "many of Hitler's one-time top mili-
tary lerders and about 100,000 of his diehard troops are serving with
units in Russia, Egypt, French North Africa, Indonesia and various
Arab nations. - High-ranking former German staff officers were the
Per Year authorities quoted.
Buildlng o f ,,,° , ,tple Israel Starts
•
•
Structure
of Beauty
Visioned
fr
Members of the building committee and the building fund campaign committee gather around the bulldozer leveling the ground for the
building of Temple Israel. At the wheel of the bulldozer is Louis II. Schostak, chairman of the building committee. Enjoying the ride
is Rabbi Leon Fram and hailing the start of building operations are left to right, Sol It. Colton, chairman of the building fund campaign;
Jacob A. Citrin, co-chairman; and George M. Stutz and Ed Rose, co-chairmen of the building committee.
Charges Soviet
Uproots Jews
LAKE SUCCESS—(Special)-
Washington and Berlin sources
confirmed reports that Russia has
been shifting border populations
considered potentially subversive
far into the interior of the Soviet
Union.
South Haven Awaits Immigration,
Zionists This Weekend Inflation Ebb
Rabbi Leon Fram and James I.
Ellmann, past-president of the
Zionist Organization of Detroit,
will join Celia Adler, first lady
of the American Jewish theater,
and others in the proceedings at
the South, Haven weekend con-
ference of the Michigan Zionist
The American Jewish League Region, Saturday and Sunday.
Rabbi Fram and Ellman will
Against Communism charged in a
letter to the UN that thousands participate in a symposium on
"The Future of American Jewish
of Russian Jews were being up-
Youth," which will be on Sunday
rooted from the Ukraine and afternoon in the outdoors at Oak-
White Russia in "brutal and sud- land Park in South Haven.
den deportations" to clear border
areas in preparation for a poss- YOUTH FESTIVAL SET
Ellmann will be chairman of
ible war.
the youth festival in the after-
'MOVED TO SIBERIA'
noon, which will include Hebrew
In a letter to Trygve Lie, secre- and Israeli singing and dancing
tary general of the UN, Rabbi by the chorus from Camp Sharon
Benjamin Schultz, executive di- in Buchanan, Mich. Other parti-
rector of the league, declared that cipants in the symposium will be
the Russian government had been Prof. Julius Stu 'berg, director of
dispatching police squads into the the department of music at West-
border zones to round up "anti- ern Michigan College, Kalama-
totalitarian Jews and ship them zoo, and Prof. Samuel M. Levin,
off in railroad cars to forced la- head of the economics depart-
bor camps in Archangel and Si- ment at Wayne University.
beria.
Celia Adler, who will be the
Schultz estimated that 400,000 star of Saturday night's opening
Jews had been transferred in the rally at Central High School in
move. He charged that Stalin was South Haven, will give an hour-
shifting the Jews because he did long performance including ren-
not trust their loyalty to his ditions of works by such famous
"tyrannical regime."
Jewish artists as Chaim Nach-
man Bialik, Sholem Asch, Sholem
HATELERS 'APPEASED'
Rabbi Schultz charged that Aleichem and I. L. Peretz.
through the deportations, the MARKS TO SPEAK
Kremlin was appeasing anti-Sem-
Morris M. Jacobs will be chair-
ites in an area "where anti-Sem- man of the Saturday night ses-
itism has always been strong."
sion, which will also feature an
Drew Middleton, N. Y. Times address by Dr. Sidney Marks,
correspondent, confirmed from executive director of the Zionist
Berlin that large scale deporta- Organization of America, on "The
tions were taking place but he Economic Blueprint for the Jew-
did not specifically mention Jews.
ish State."
The Sunday morning session,
which will be held at the First
Hebrew Congregation of South
Haven, will include discussions
on Zionist and Hebrew education
and programing, led by H. B.
Shaine, regional vice-president
and president of the Grand Rap-
ids Zionist District.
Membership discussions will be
led by Abe Riskin, president of
the Flint District and regional
vice-president. There will also
be a discussion on problems in-
volving fund raising for Israel,
led by David J. Ross, president of
the Berrien County District and
regional vice-president.
Tickets for the Saturday night
affair at $1 each are available at
the Zionist office and all South
Haven resorts.
Kay Greeted,
Names Aides
Leon Kay, new president of
the Zionist Organization of De-
troit. was welcomed by the board
of directors at its first meeting
last week. Kay was in Israel at
time of his election two months
ago.
Plans were announced for large
mass meetings in the coming sea-
son. for study groups in coopera-
tion with Hadassah and leader-
ship training courses.
Kay announced the following
chairmen: Zionist House, Walter
Field; publicity, Aaron Kurland;
public relations, Rabbi Morris
(Continued on Page 10)
Active construction work has
started on the building of Temple
Israel at Manderson and Morton
avenues near Palmer Park.
The firm of Lerner-Linden Con-
struction Co. was awarded the
contract for the construction of
the sanctuary of the congregation.
Completion of the building is ex-
pected within a year's time. The
architect is William E. Kapp.
Sol R. Colton, chairman of the
building fund campaign, has
mobilized his workers to visit
every member of the congrega-
tion to secure the funds necessary
to meet the cost of the structure
within the year of building oper-
ations. Serving as co-chairmen
are Jacob A. Citrin. Maxwell H.
Emmer, Arthur J. Hass, Jack 0.
Lefton and Rabbi Leon Fram, ex-
officio.
SCIIOSTAK STATEMENT
Louis H. Schostak, chairman of
the building committee, makes
the following statement:
"The design of the sanctuary
of Temple Israel will make it one
of the most beautiful places of
worship in America. The audi-
torium of worship will be a circu-
lar building, flanked by an oblong
structure which will contain the
administrative offices, the youth
center hall, and other rooms for
the social and educational and
communal purposes of the con-
gregation.
"The completion of the build-
ing is bound to inaugurate a re-
vival of interest in Jewish wor-
ship and culture."
Serving with Schostak are his
co-chairmen, Edward Rose and
George M. Stutz, and Charles H.
Alter, Edward Bernstein, Samuel
Burtman, Jacob A. Citrin, Sol R.
Colton, Nathaniel H. Goldstick,
David Goldberg. Arthur J. Hass,
Benjamin E. Jaffe, Harry C. Le-
Vine, Max Osnos, George D. Soy-
burn and Ellis M. Thal.
DREAM REALIZED
"The completion of the build-
ing of Temple Israel," said Rabbi
Frain, "will be the fulfillment of
a cherished dream. It has been
my aspiration to demonstrate to
the Jewish youth of Detroit the
beauty of Jewish worship, the
glory of Jewish music and the
wealth of Jewish literature, This
new Temple for liberal Judaism
will serve as the physical instru-
ment to accomplish this spiritual
purpose."
Cooperating with Rabbi Fram
in Temple Israel services of wor-
ship are Cantor Robert S. Tul-
man, Organist Karl W. Haas and
Julius Chajes who will direct the
music of the High Holy Day serv-
ices to be held this fall in the
auditorium of the Detroit Insti-
tute of Arts.
TEL AVIV— (Special) —With
evidence that the number of im-
migrants to Israel now equals the
number being absorbed, the prob-
lem of Israeli immigration has
passed the stage of crisis and one
of the new State's chief worries
is reported waning.
At the same time, David Horo-
witz, director general of the fi-
nance ministry, announced that
Israel's economic expansion has
kept pace with the growth of
population and "our inflationary
problems are being solved."
80 PCT. HAVE JOBS
Dr. Israel Goldstein, treasurer
of the Jewish Agency, revealed
that 80 percent of the immigrants
had been given either full-time
or part-time jobs.
Nevertheless, 400 immigrants
and discharged soldiers clashed
with police before the Knesset
Monday demonstrating for ''bread
and work."
From Lake Success • came an
announcement that Israel would
ask UN restrictions on the ship-
ment of arms to the Near East
in the face of Cairo reports that
France was arming Syria and
Lebanon and Britain, Egypt and
Transjordan.
TEL AVIV—(Special)—Israel's
With Israel and Syria having
area is now 7.700 square miles as
• (Continued on Page 10)
against 5,500 square miles fol-
lowing the end of the mandate.
David Lubin Centenary This makes the Jewish State as
as New Jersey.
Marked in Rome Rites large
The added 2,200 square miles
ROME—(Special)—Solemn cere- came through conquests in the
monies commemorated the 100th Arab war and armistice agree-
anniversary of the birth of the ments with Transjordan, Syria,
Jewish-American founder of the Lebanon and Egypt.
International Institute of Agricul-
There were 10,000 square miles
ture, David Lubin. The institute in pre-Israel Palestine. Michi-
had its first seat in Rome.
gan's area is 58,000 square miles.
Israel Is as Large
as New Jersey