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October 27, 1944 - Image 26

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1944-10-27

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

▪ ▪

Page Twenty-Six

Friday, erchar;er 27, 114

- THE JEWISH NEWS

Cpl. J. R. Tulcensky
Returns to N. M. Post

Weekly Review of the News of the World

(Compiled From Cables of Independent Jewish Press Service)

AMERICA

See Also Page 3

Dr. Hermann Rauschning, former president
of the Free City of Danzig and its Nazi leader
for many years, testified as a surprise witness
for the government at the mass sedition trial
here, and declared that Adolf Hitler, told him
in 1933 that "the most important method to
destroy the national unity of America and to
prepare it for a racial social order _ would be
anti-Semitism," and that he would "use the
racial cleavages—the Negroes, the Mexicans
and the Jews—and play on them to disunite
the country."
The Committee on International Economic
Policy, headed by Winthrop W. Aldrich, warn-
ed the United Nations that it was too late_ to
set up an international organization to handle
return of industrial properties stolen by the
Germans, to. their rightful owners. Now, the
report said, "national rather than international
action. must be relied upon."

PALESTINE

- Combat against the terrorists responsible for
recent acts of violence in Palestine was threat-
ened by Eliahu Golomb, labor leader, at a press
conference in Tel Aviv on his return from
London. He said that "if Jewish Palestine is
compelled to combat the perpetrators of these
crazy and injurious deeds, it will be a fight of
entire Jewish Palestine against a.small band of
lunatics." He said tha
t the "acts of terror-
ism seriously jeopardize Zionism, prejudice our
-efforts, and endanger our achievements." •
The Vulcan Foundaries in Haifa, taken over
and operated for the past four years by the
Solel Boneh, contracting cooperative of the
Histadruth, Jewish Palestine's Federation of
Labor, are engaged in the forging of cauldrons,
boilers and heavy machinery, and in the pro-
cessing of copper, nickel, aluminum, and other
metals, in addition to forging small articles, up
to four millimeters in diameter, and large cast-
ir)gs up to seven tons in weight.
Palestine will play a leading role in the sup-
ply of plastics 'to the Middle East once imports
of machinery and raw materials become avail-
able and present war-time . restrictions are
modified, it is asserted in industrial circles,
Apart from household' articles such as cups,
saucers, egg-cups, plates and. a variety of others
ranging from buttons to flutes, many technical
and electro-technical articles are manufactured,
including switches, .batteries,- etc.
Kfar Hanoar Hadati, village of Religious
Youth established by Mizrachi, has just marked
the graduation • of 35 youths who completed
their agricultural training there and are ready
for settlement on the land. They include a num-
ber of the Polish refugee children who came
to Palestine via Teheran, and children from
Germany, Yugoslavia and Hungary.
A $5,000 scholarship known as the Joseph
David Feldman Scholarship has been establish-
ed at the Hebrew University by -the parents

Membership Drive
Started by Temple
Israel Sisterhood

Rabbi Fram Will Address
Group, Nov. 13, at

Art Institute

. Under the chairmanship of Mrs.
David Ruby, vice-president in
charge of membership, with the
assistance of Mrs. Barney Green-
berg- and Mrs. Earl Freshman,
vice-chairmen, and the member-
ship committee, an extensive
drive for members in the Sister-
hood of Temple Israel has begun.
Reports were submitted at a
meeting of the executive board
held Oct. 19 at the home of Mrs.
Samuel .3. Danto, Sisterhood
president.
It was announced that lunch-
eon meeting will be held Fri-
day, Nov. 10,- at 1 p. m., at Mrs.
Danto's home, with Mrs. Danto
and the membership committee
as hostesses. Awards will be
made to the two women bringing
in the most members.
The regular Sisterhood meet-
ing will be held at 1:30 p. m.
Monday, Nov. 13, in the Detroit
Institute Lecture Hall. Rabbi
Leon Fram will review Lillian
Smith's "Strange Fruit." All
Sisterhood members are urged to
bring new members to this meet-
inging. A social hour preceding
the meeting will be held under
the chairmansl)p of Mrs. Samuel
Mitchell, with a group of East
Side members serving as host-
esses.
Miss Anna Oxenhandler will
be hostess to the Sisterhood board
at 11 a. m. on Nov. 13, at her
1
home.

CARD OF THANKS
Mrs. Fred _Klein and daughter,
Lois, wish to thank their rela-
tives and friends for the kind-
nesses shown them in their recent
bereavement.

Additional Servicemen's News
On Pages 25, 2......



and family of Lt. Joseph David Feldman of
New York, who was killed in action on • the
Burma Road. The sums of $10,000 were be-
queathed to the Hebrew University by Philip
Maslansky, the son of the late Zionist leader,
Zvi Hirsh Maslansky, and by the estate of the
late Julius Schwarz, both of New York.

OVERSEAS

Of the 8,300,000 Jews "in the. countries and
regions where the fascists held temporary
sway," 3,300,000 Jews were known to have
survived by the end of 1943 when large-scale
liberation of occupied areas began, in addition
to 2,000,000 previously evacuated into the Eas-
tern areas of the Soviet Union, according to
Vyacheslav Volgin, vice-president of the Aca-
demy of Sciences of the U.S.S.R.
. The extreme assimilationist wing of French
Jewry will be barred from the first Jewish
conference in liberated France to be held in
Paris at the end of October, the Independent
Jewish Press Service correspondent has learn-
ed. Members of this particular wing, negligible
in numbers but of considerable influence be-
fore the war, are purported - to have collabor-
ated with the Vichy regime. The term "assim-
ilationist" is not used rashly to connote non-
Zionists or even- anti-Zionists, as these groups
co-operated with the Zionists in maintaining
an undergroUnd and Jewish partisan group's ..
All German radio- commentators have broad-
cast blasts against American Jewish dough-
boys whose observance of Yom Kippur on
German soil has 'been widely reported by . Al-
lied news agencies. The German radio re-.
porters describe it as blasphemy and as an in-
dication of "a Jewish-bolshevist conspiracy to
Judeaize Germany, which has succeeded in
scourging herself of Jewish influence and
rule."
Anti-Semitism among internees at the
French Vittel internment camp was charged
by some of them as American troops liberated
361 American citizens and 1,700 of other na-
tionalities held by the Nazis since 1942. The
charge was countered by allegations that some
of _the Jews at the camp were conducting a
"black market" with tobacco given 'them by
the Red CroSs. Other internees report, that
Germans methodically separated Polish-Jewish
family groups at Vittel and sent them to con-
centration camps in Germany and Poland.
Among the 361 American citizens released
from Vittel are the following: Mildred Schen-
ker, Rachel Semel, Helen Spielmann, Eli Iska-
nazy, Annie Herzog, Camile Guttin and Martha
Cahn.
In a dramatic Hebrew broadcast on the eve-
ning Of Sept. 23, the Bulgarian government
officially announced the abolition of all anti-
Jewish legislation in Bulgaria and its endorse=
meet of a Jewish Commonwealth and an open
door to Jewish immigration into Palestine. The
same broadcast was heard in Bulgarian and
English.

Cpl. Jospeh R. Tulcensky has
returned to his post after spend-
ing a six-day furlough with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Shindel
of 2489 West
Grand Ave. The
26-year-old serv-
iceman is sta-
tioned at Carls-
bad, N. M.,
where he does
finance work
with the Air
Corps.
A graduate of
Commerce High
School, he at-
Cpl. Tulcensky t e n d e d the
Walsh institute and was employ-
ed at the Robinson Furniture Co.
until his induction „into the Army
in March 1943. He is a former
student of the United Hebrew
Schools.
He was married to the former
SylVia Gutman on Dec. 6, 1941.
His wife, who makes her home
with him in New Mexico, is an
office worker at the air base.

N. Canvasser Earned
DFC; Is Now Home
On 21-Day Furlough

HaVing completed 32 missions,
T/Sgt. Nathanial .CaAVasser, 29,
has well earned the furlough
which he is now enjoying. with
his parents, Mr: and Mrs: Edward
I Canvasser of • .'"••••
2752 Bosto . n;.:
Blvd. Home for
21 days, he will
then proceed to
Miami Beach,
Fla., for a rest
period.
A flight en-
gineer with the
8th air force, he
has been award- . .
ed the D. F. C., N. Canvasser
the Air Medal and three 'Oak
Leaf ClusterS. -
T/Sgt. Canvasser, a graduate of
Central High School, owned and
operated . the Detroiter Garage
before his •induction into the
army in August of 1942. Hav-
ing been stationed at several
camps throughout the country,
he was sent overseas in April,
Amputees Are Given 1944, and remained in England
until returned to the States for
Battle Creek Party
his furlough.
His brother, Pvt. Norman, has
Patients at the Percy Jones
General and Convalescent Hos- been granted a furlough to visit
pital, a majority of them ampu- with T/Sgt. Canvasser:
tees, enjoyed a special dinner
and dance at the West Michigan Michigan Council of Bnai Brith
USO Club in Battle Creek. It War Service, whose chairman is
was the first affair of its kind Morton Davis of Battle Creek.
held outside of hospital confines Assisting in the preparation and
and set a precedent in USO Club serving of the turkey dinner
activities throughout the coun- were members of Meyer J.
try. For some of the patients Franklin Bnai Brith Lodge of
who attended, this was the first Battle Creek. Jules Danowitz,
time they had the opportunity to Morton Davis, Henry Gibson,
attend a social event outside of Bernard Preis and David Solko.
the hospital since they had re- - Transportation was arranged
turned from overseas.
by the Red Cross Motor Corps
One soldier, who had his limb which worked closely with the
only four days, danced for the USO staff.
entire evening and stated that
It is planned to arrange a se-
he was not a bit tired.
ries of such parties during the
A group of trained hostesses fall and winter seasons.
helped the soldiers to become
Active in organization of the
accustomed to the dance floor dinner and dance was the Na-
and also joined in party games. tionel Jewish Welfare Board in
A feature of the evening was Battle Creek which is under the
a turkey dinner provided by the,. direction of Samuel Kurzon.

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