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July 02, 1943 - Image 13

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1943-07-02

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

Friday, July 2, 1943

THE JEWISH NEWS

Christian Council Urges
Allies Open Doors to Jews

Congregational Activities

Shaarey Zedek
Library Open
During Summer

Temple Secretaries
Publish Proceedings

In keeping with the policy of
previous years, Shaarey Zedek's
library will remain open through-
out the summer. The schedule
for July and August will be as
follows:
10 a. m. to 1 p. m.; 6:30 p. m. to
8:30 p. m., on Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday; 9:30
a. m. to 12:30 p. m. on Friday.
Those wishing to use the lib-
rary's facilities at hours other
than these, may arrange with the
librarian through the synagogue
office.
During the summer certain
publications will be circulated to
responsible individuals and or-
ganizations for an extended va-
cation period.
The library has available a
large assortment of books for
summer reading. They include
works on Judaica in fiction, his-
tory, literature, art and music,
religion and philosophy, biogra-
phy, children's books and books
on Palestine and Zionism. The
library also has a fine collection
of magazines and newspapers in
Hebrew, English and Yiddish.
David S. Zemon, chairman of
the library board, urges the en-
tire community to make use of
the facilities of the library.

-

HUC to Confer
Honorary Degrees

Prof. Ginzberg, Roger
Straus, Rabbi Landman to
Be Honored Saturday

CINCINNATI, 0. — Hebrew
Union College will confer honor-
ary doctorates at the commence-
ment exercises this Saturday af-
ternoon, upon the following:
Prof. Louis Ginzberg of Jewish
Theological Seminary for dis-
tinguished achievements as the
outstanding Jewish scholar of
this generation and in honor of
his 70th birthday.
Roger William Straus, New
York City, one of America's out-
standing Jewish laymen; leader
in interfaith movements; past
national president of National
Federation of Temple Brother-
hoods.
Honorary Doctorates of Divin-
ity will be conferred upon the
following four H. U. C. gradu-
ates:
Dr. Nathan Krass (1903), rabbi
emeritus of Temple Emanu-El,
New York.
Rabbi Isaac Landman (1906),
editor of the Universal Jewish
Encyclopedia, New York City.
Rabbi Harold F. Reinhart
(1915), Berkeley Street Syna-
gogue, London.
Rabbi Samuel S. Mayerberg
(1917), Kansas City, Mo., leader
in civic reform in his city.
The 19 graduates are replacing
rabbis who have left their pul-
pits to serve the country as chap-
lains.
The July 3 graduation would
have been held in June, 1944, had
there been no war. It is the Col-
lege's second commencement this
year under the accelerated plan.

Sulzberger in Moscow
On Red Cross Mission

Bnai David Set
To Open Summer
Camp on July 6

Proceedings of the second
biennial convention of the Na-
tional Association of Temple
Secretaries, held in New York
The Bnai David Summer Re-
April 2 to 4, are incorporated ligious Home Catnp will open on
in a 35 - page
Tuesday, July 6, under the gui-
mimeograp h e d
dance of Max Chomsky, educa-
brochure, issued
tional director of the congrega-
this week.
tion, and a staff well versed in
This pamphlet
Jewish education and recreation.
contains the an-
The camp will be housed in
nual report of
the social hall of the synagogue,
the president of
Elmhurst and 14th Sts., and will
the association,
meet every afternoon from Mon-
Irving I. Katz,
day through Thursday ; until Aug.
executive secre-
5. Sessions will last from 1:30
tary of Temple
until 4 p. m.
Beth El, Detroit, I
There will be a story period,
who w a s re-
I. I. Katz
elected president of the national one-half hour of class work,
association at the New York con- games and group activity. On
vention, as well as the texts of the staff will be specialists in
drawing, plaster casting and oth-
the following addresses:
er art and craft work. Each af-
"The Role of the Professional ternoon the sessions will close
Secretary in the Modern Syna- with group Minchah services.
gogue," by Max Feder, executive
The Summer Religious Home
secretary, Temple Rodeph Sho- Camp is a joint project of the
lom, New York; "Administrative Congregation and the Sisterhood
and Financial Problems of a of Bnai David. Registrations are
Large Congregation," by S. D. still being accepted. There is a
Schwartz, executive secretary, $1 fee.
Sinai Congregation, Chicago.

* • '

"Administrative and Financial
Problems of a Small Congrega-
tion," by May Chinkers, secre-
tary, Temple Beth El, Niagara
Falls.

In addition to the report of
proceedings of the convention,
this booklet contains the greeting
to the -convention of Adolph
Rosenberg, chairman of executive
board of Union of American
Hebrew Congregations, simul-
taneously with whose sessions the
secretaries of Reform Temples
held their convention in New
York.

Vatican Radios Bishop's
Protest Against Nazis

LONDON (WNS)—The Vatican
radio this week broadcast in full
the text of the recent protest of
the German Catholic Bishops of
Slovakia against the inhuman
Nazi .persecution of Jews. The
broadcast quoted the Bishops as
saying;

"No one has the right to harin
Jews merely because they are
Jews. Judgments should not be
influenced by language, nation-
ality or race, and the whole
community should not be blamed
for the faults of several mem-
bers of that community."

Navy Chief to Ban
Anti-Semitic Items

WASHINGTON, (JPS) — Sec-
retary of the Navy Knox will
publish in a forthcoming issue
of the Navy Department Bulletin
"an official directive to all ships
and stations ordering all com-
manding officers to pay particu-
lar attention that no subject
matter is used in service publi-
cations that will in any way of-
fend the sensibility of any racial
or religious group."
This official statement, issued
by Capt. Leland P. Lovette, di-
rector of public relations for the
Navy, represents the climax of
a campaign that has been con-
ducted since March 9 by Rep.
Vito Marcantonio to bring about
the abandonment of anti-Seme-
tic references in naval publica-
tions.

Page Thirteen

Resolution Demands That International Leaders Be Sent to
Palestine to Analyze Problems; Asks United Nations
Issue Visas for 310,000 Now

NEW YORK, (JTA)—A resolution demanding that "an
international commission, composed of competent Christian
leaders, be sent to Palestine at an early date to study and
analyze the problems of Jews and ArabS and return with so-
lutions to meet that issue," unanimously was adopted by the
executive committee of the Christian Council for Palestine.

Camp

Habonim

Opens Tuesday

E. Louis Neimand to Direct
Summer Program for Child-
ren at Jewish Center

List Resolutions

Camp Habonim will open this
Tuesday at the Jewish Center.
Announcement has been made
that Shirley Hersh, art student
at Wayne University, will head
the arts and crafts program.
Frances Winokur, senior edu-
cation student at Wayne Uni-
versity, will be in charge of the
youngest campers. She will be
assisted by Selma Fixler and
Rene Wagschal.
The young campers will spend
Fram
most of their time outdoors in
the Center courtyard, and will
have outdoor showers on warm
days .
E. Louis Neimand, director of
Next Friday night, July 9, Rab- Camp Habonim, announces also
bi Leon Fram will begin a series that the camp will have the ex-
of readings from the great re- clusive use of the Northern High
ligious literature of the world. play-ground, which w ill be
These readings will be held at supervised by the camp staff.
Trips away from the Center are
the Sabbath Eve services of Tem-
being planned for Thursday
ple Israel every Friday, at 8:30
morning of each week.
p. m., during the summer. The
Camp Habonim Meets Mondays
summer Sabbath Eve services
will take place at Temple Israel through Fridays from 9 to 3:30
Meeting Room, 14 Boulevard in the Center building. There are
still a few vacancies for each
Bldg., 3076 East Grand Blvd.
The first reading will be from camp period. Parents are urged
the English translation of the to make registration immediately.
Futher information may be ob-
Talmud.
tained by calling Madison 8400.

Rabbi
to Begin
Series of Readings of
Religious Literature

,

83 Jewish Refugees
Arrive in U. S. After
Voyage of 77 Days

NEW YORK (JTA)—Eighty-
three • Jewish immigrants who
left a European seaport, other
than Lisbon, Portugal, 77 days
ago, this week landed at a Un-
ited States harbor after braving
a sea voyage through submarine
combat zones, Hias headquarters
here reported.
The ship, which was met by
Hias representatives, zigzagged
its way through the submarine
infested waters without inci-
dent. It would have taken the
steamer only five days in pre-
war times to cross the Atlantic.

ONLY 5,000 JEWS REMAIN
IN BULGARIAN CAPITOL

GENEVA (JPS) — Only 5,000
Jews now remain in Sofia, it is
reported here. The others were
either deported to Poland or in-
terned in forced labor camps.
Authoritative sources say that
Bulgaria appears to be moving
rapidly toward a military dic-
tatorship and a Nazi regime.

Rev. Zaludkowski
Dies; Was Cantor
At Shaarey Zedek

Nationally Known Composer
And Scholar Succumbs
In Pittsburgh

Rev. Elias Zaludkowski of 5862
Beacon St., Pittsburgh, Pa., who
was cantor of Congregation
Shaarey Zedek, Detroit, prior to
assuming his cantorial post in
Pittsburgh, died on Tuesday
morning.
His survivors include his wife,
Mania, two daughters and a
grandchild.
One of the ablest cantors
in the country, Rev. Zaludkowski
was an outstanding scholar and
composer. He was the author
of a number of books, including
an anthology on world cantors.
In addition, he was an eminent
linguist and was an able Hebrew
scholar.

KOSHER
Restaurant and Dining Room

UNEXCELLED FOOD
Private Dining Room for Parties

12017 DEXTER BLVD.

NOrthlawn 9786

The executive committee also
unanimously voted "to lay em-
phasis" upon the following reso-
lutions:
1—That America take the lead
in helping to save millions of
Jews from the horror created by
the Nazi terror in Europe. We
suggest that our government
consider the possibility of utiliz-
ing the immigration quotas from
all nations fo:. 1943-44 by which
a total of 310,000 visas may be
issued, and that 100,000 of these
be issued to an equal number of
Jews now homeless and stateless
in Europe;
Further to provide refuge in
America by bringing them to this
country in available American
ships on their successive trips
abroad;

Protest Brutality

2—That Christian churches all
over the America protest cease-
lessly against the brutality prac-
ticed upon Jews by the Nazis;
3—That the United Nations
make a solemn pledge. to consid-
er the plight of the Jews as a
paramount issue in the peace set-
tlement, so that this great- people
may be given the right to live
in dignity and self-respect in
whatever place on the face of the
earth they may choose;
4—That provision be written
into the peace treaty to make the
outbreak of political anti-Semit-
ism anywhere prima facie evi-
dence of incitations to crime, and
punishable as such under inter-
national law.

Prof. Cassin to Head
Algiers U. Law Faculty

LONDON (JPS) — Professor
Cassin, Free French Commis-
sioner of Justice and Education,
will become the head of the law
faculty of the University of Al-
giers, it is learned here. He was
instructed b: - Gen. De Gaulle to
liquidate the affairs of his office
in this city and to proceed to
Algiers.

MANUFACTURERS

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• Measuring Irons

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NEW YORK (JPS)—Arthur AL MILLER
Hays Sulzberger, publisher of the
7720 MeNICHOLS ROAD,
New York Times, was reported
Near Santa Barbara
by the Associated Press to have
arrived in Moscow for a three-
Delicatessen, Appetizers and
week stay as part of his activi-
Dairy Products
ties as a director of the American
UNiversity 2-9781
We Deliver
Red Cross. . -

FREDSON'S

The resolution urges that in
the meantime "plans be made
now to place Palestine under an
international mandate of the
United Nations" and that "the
doors of Palestine be opened at
once to admit tens of thousands
more of the persecuted Jewish
people from war torn countries
of Europe."











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