Weekly Review of- the News of the World.

(Compiled From Cables of Independent Jewish Press Service)

See Also Page 3

OVERSEAS

Marcel Campam, a Jew, has been appointed
by the Paris Police Prefect Charles Luizet as
advisor on Jewish problems. 6,000 Jews have
so far re-appeared in Paris from their hiding
places.
Arrest of many prominent collaborationists
has been ordered by the French Provisional
government in Paris which accused the French
branch of the Gestapo of murdering more than
1,000 persons. Among the collaborationists
sought under the new order are Jaques Doriot,
a renegade Communist and anti-Semite; Joseph
Darnand, head of the Vichy militia, who was
in charge of the deportation of Jews; Fernand
de Brinon, Vichy's former representative in
Paris, and Marcel Bucard, collaborationist chief
for Paris. All are presumably refugees in
Germany.
Realistically facing the fact that during the
years of Nazi occupation the population of Bel-
gium was exposed to no other information
regarding the Jews except the libels circulated
by the enemy and that a distorted conception
of the Jews may have resulted, the Belgian
press has begun a concerted campaign to en-
lighten the public on Jewish contributions to
the Allied cause. The Voiks Gazette, Flemish
Socialist newspaper published in Antwerp, de-
clares that the Jews have rendered great serv-
ice -to Belgium while "many so called Belgians
collaborated vTith the enemy."
The first anniversary of the escape of several
thousand Danish Jews to Sweden was cele-
brated with impressive ceremonies in several
cities. Many Swedes participated. The famous
city hall of Stockholm was crowded to capacity
for the celebration. Telegrams of greetings
from Danish-Americans were read. The Swed-
ish government. has granted special credits to
the Danish authorities for the support of
Danish refugees in Sweden. Most of the refu-
gees are self-supporting.
Dr. Joseph Rosenberg has been appointed by
the Czechoslovak government as Commissioner
of Jewish Affairs, to work with Reconstruction
Minister Nemec organizing Jewish life in the
areas whose liberation is imminent.
Disagreement over anti-Jewish legislation is
reported to be one of the reasons for the re-
shuffling of the Hungarian- cabinet. The new

Mt. Sinai Group
Maps Plans for
Donor Luncheon

a

Plans for the sixth annual
donor luncheon of the Mount
Sinai Hospital Association were
being made at a meeting in the
home of the general chairman,
Mrs. Bernard Rose of 2505 West
Boston Blvd.
Committees on arrangements
and reservations revealed their
reports on activities.
Committees include the follow-
ing :
Mesdames Jacob Harvith, presi-
dent; Bernard Rose, general
chairman; Charles Gitlin, chair-
man on arrangements; co-chair-
men, Saul Katz, Joshua Karbal,
Charles Brody, Lew Rose, chair-
man of special gifts, Mesdames
Isaac Rosethal and I. A. Lieb-
son; co-chairman, Mesdames Wil-
liam Fisher, Julia and Helen
Ring.
Reservations and finances, Mrs.
Max Schubiner, chairman of key
women, Mrs. Daniel Rachmiel,
assisted by Mesdames Julius J.
Ring, Lew Rose and Max Fertel.
Chairman of organizations,
Mesdames Isaac Rosenthal and
Julius J. Ring. Chairmen of pro-
fessional group, Mrs. David Klig-
er, Mrs. Leon A. Katzin and Mrs.
Joshua Karbal.
Ann Campbell was guest
speaker and gave a stirring talk
on the War Chest Drive, of which
Mount Sinai already has received
a designated zone and workers
assigned.
For information regarding the
luncheon contact Mrs. Max
Schubiner, TR. 1-6044.,

ministers are expected to follow a line of
"moderate anti-Semitism."
Prior to the Soviet liberation of Galatz, Ro-
mania, Iron Guardists launched a pogrom kill-
ing 62 Jews,

AMERICA

A "terrific anti-Semitic complex" drove
Tyler Kent, former code clerk in the United
States embassy in London, now serving a
seven-year prison sentence in England, to give
Germany "exact and complete" knowledge of
England's position in the war from its outbreak
to October, 1940, Joseph P. Kennedy, former
U. S. Ambassador to Great Britain, disclosed
in Hyannis, Mass. Kent was arrested '.in 1940
for relaying 1,500 secret documents in "un-
breakable" U. S. code to Germany.
Young Men's and Young Women's Hebrew
Associations and the community centers of the
country will play a major role in helping re-
turning service men and women resume the
Social and civic life interrupted by the ear,
and these agencies must prepare programs now
to meet postwar expansion, Frank L. Weil,
president of the National Jewish Welfare Board
(JWB) stated at a two-day session of the Jew-
ish Center Division of the Board in New York.

PALESTINE .

A Jewish National Party has been organized
in Bucharest, Romania, Zionist newspapers are
reappearing, and "there is again hope for Jew-
ish pioneer youth to proceed to Palestine," ac-
cording to a cable received by the Jewish
Agency from the former president of the Zion-
ist Federation of Bucharest.
A wool-manufacturing plant for the sorting-
combing and dyeing of wool has been set up
near Petach Tikvah by the Central Hamashir
Ltd. and the Jewish Shepherds Association.
Nearly 60 Keren Hayesod (Palestine Founda-
tion Fund) labor settlements are engaged in
"wool growing."
Yemenite craftsmen and skilled artisans of
Western Europe, recent arrivals in Palestine,
are engaged in reviving ancient Palestinian
handicrafts and synthesizing them with West-
ern tradition in creating new forms expressive
of modern Palestine, according to a report re-
cently released by the Trade and Industry
Department of the Jewish Agency. The De-
partment is maintained out of Keren Hayesod
(Palestine Foundation Fund) monies.,

Two Jewish Girls Win
Research Fellowships

WASHINGTON, (JTA) — Miss
Irena Z. Eiger, a Jewish girl
from Poland, and Miss Browria
Feldman-Muhsam of Jerusalem
are two of the three recipients of
international r e s e a r c h fellow-
ships for 1944-'45 awarded here
by the American section of In-
ternational Federation of Uni-
versity Women. The third re-
cipient was Miss Astrid Ertle, a
Swedish student.
Miss Eiger, 24, will receive a
fellowship of $1,000 plus a travel
grant for secret war research in
organic chemistry at Columbia
Univirsity. She was born in
Warsaw and was graduated from
high school there, then went to
school in England. Miss Feld-
man-Muhsam, 28, received a $1,-
500 fellowship raised by the
Texas State Division of the
American Association of Univer-
sity Women. She has published a
series of important researches on
the Levant house fly. She has
studied in Geneva, Switzerland,
as well as the Hebrew University
in Jerusalem, where she will
make additional experiments,

-

Campaign for Warsaw

NEW YORK (JPS,) — The
Council for Warsaw Jews, meet-
ing here, will launch a campaign
of $1,000,000 for relief for the
Jewish survivors of Warsaw.

Buy War Bonds!

Greetings

Cantor Golden Conducts
Beth Itzchock Services
Congregation Beth Itzchock,
3836 Fischer ave. announces, that
High Holyday services will be
conducted by Cantor David Gold-
en. The sermon will be preached
by Rabbi Jacob Hoberman. Serv-
icemen are welcome; there will
be no admission charge for them.

Carlton W.
GAINES

REAL ESTATE

4864 Beaubien
TE. 1-0759

GREETINGS FOR ROSH HASHANAH

KAMI.L. MANAGEMENT CO.

Commercial Leases—Improved Property Managers

1201 3 Detroit Savings Bank Bldg.

-

Friday,

THE JEWISH NEWS

Page Severriy

RAndolph "1515

6,000 Belgian Jews
Reported Still Alive

PARIS (JPS)-0 n y 6, 000
Jews survive in Belgium, most
of whom are women and children
who owe their lives to the self-
sacrifice of Belgians who hid
them, according to Jacques Al-
bron, a Jewish partisan from
Charleori, Belgium, who has just
arrived here.

He charged that while the Bel-
gians assisted the Jews in cir-
cumventing Nazi persecutions
and evading the Gestapo, the
Flemish population produced a
large proportion of collabora-
tionists who assisted the Gestapo
in hounding down its Jewish vic-
tims.

Greetings

ACME

Leopold and Loeb
Murder Recalled
In Michigan Story

The tragic Leopold-Loeb story
is casually referred to in John
Bartlow Martin's "Call It North
Country: The Story of Upper
Michigan," published by Knopf.
Describing t h e activities of
the pioneers at Copper Harbor,
Mr. Martin relates the story of
Job and Jane Masters and re-
cords the following: "T h e y
moved into a big house that
they rented from a Jew who
had gone through t h e copper
country with a pack on his back,
selling notions to the housewives
at the mining locations; now he
was wealthy and owned a big
stone. in Houghton; later he
would go to Chicago and become
a merchant prince. His name was
Leopold, and one day, in the
1920's, his grandson, Nathan,
with another rich man's s o n,
Richard Loeb, would shock the
nation by murdering a small boy
just to see if they could get
away with it."
Mr. Martin's interesting book,
illustrated with 32 photographs
and with two maps, is a splendid
description of the tough life in
the mining and timber territory
of Michigan, of the old-fashioned
logging, of farming and sports,
of murders and reform move-
ments.
0 n e of upper Michigan's
shames, he writes, is racial prej-
udice which "is deeply rooted
throughout the Upper Peninsula.
Every town has its tales of street
fights between the Swedes and
Finns, the English and Swedes,
the Irish and everybody."
Students of Michigan history

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T5, T-944

JCRA Will Inaugurate
$1,000,000 Building Plan

LOS• ANGELES — A $1,000,000
building program will be
launched by the Jewish Con-
sumptive Relief Association, op-
erating the Los Angeles Sana-
torium at Duarte, Calif., to meet
the war time and immediate
post war challenge presented by
increased tuberculosis, it is an-
nounced by Samuel H. Goiter,
JCRA Executive Director.
Construction of one hospital
building, with priorities already
issued, will begin soon. Other
buildings will go up over a
period of time extending into
the post war period.
Included in the program,
which will enlist the support of
friends of the JCRA in all parts
of America, will be three hos-
pital buildings in all; a motion
picture theater for patients; a
recreation building, a new dining
room; n e w employes' living
quarters a new home for the
Medical Director on the grounds
of the City of Hope, and a two-
story addition to the Warner
Medical Building.

Committee 'A Maverick',
UAHC Organ Charges

CINCINNATI (JPS)—Warning
"against affiliation with either
the Emergency Committee to
Save the Jewish People of Eu-
rope or with the new American
League for a Free Palestine," is
given by Liberal Judaism, organ
of the Union of American He-
brew Congregations, c entr all
body of Reform congregations in
this country.

E

will find "Call It North Coun-
try" indispensable in gathering
data about this state.

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September

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A HAPPY NEW YEAR

We express our heartiest greeting to the Vaad Horabonim,
(Orthodox Rabbinical Council) on the New Year of 5705 •
and wish them that their great and sacred work - for Torah,
Eretz Israel, Kashruth etc. shall be a success in every way.
We greet the local Jewish community, congregations, organ-
izations, Yeshivath Beth Yehudah and Yeshivath Chachmey

Lublin, Talmud Torath, Mizrachi, Agudath Israel, Shoehtim

and all who are active in religious and national Jewish life.
We thank the Kosher butcher's association for their coopera-
tion in keeping up Kashruth and wish that the coming NeW
Year shall bring happinesS for the entire Jewish race.

The Merkaz L'Chizuk Hatorah V'Yahadus

Rabbi I. Stollman, Menahel
M. Fisher, Vice-President

H. Stolsky, President

J. Lachar, Vaad Hakashruth

UNION

INVESTMENT CO.

Abraham Cooper, Pres.

320 Fort St. West of Wayne
CH. 7474
23rd YEAR
9629 Livernois at Grand River

4.4-.4:42:4,4.4640441314k,44444.it4,-

