THE JEWISH NEWS

Friday, June 22, 1945

Page Nine

NHS to Hold Symposium Center Motion U . S. Abolishes War-Time
On Education Next Monday Picture Nights immigration Regulations

Reports on Educational Progress of United Hebrew Schools
to Be Given at Annual Meeting; Elect Officers,
Directors; Will Honor Rudolph Zuieback

Reports on the educational
progress during the past year
and the financial status of the
schools will be given on Mon-
day evening at 8:30, at the an-
nual meeting of the United He-
brew Schools, at the Rose Sittig
Cohen Bldg., 13226 Lawton.
The meeting will be featured
by a symposium on the subject
"The Next Decade in Jewish
Education." Isidore Sobeloff, ex-
ecutive director of the Jewish
Welfare Federation, will be the
moderator and the speakers—
three graduates of the schools—
and their topics will be:
Theodore Baruch, "The He-
brew School and the Commun-
ity."
Joseph Colten, "The Hebrew
School and the Position of the
Jew in the World."
Jack Kellman, "The Hebrew
School in a Changing World."
Zuieback Honored
Concluding the program, a
farewell tea will be given un-
der the supervision of the Wo-
men's Auxiliary of the schools in
honor of the retiring president,
Rudolph Zuieback, in apprecia-
tion of his loyal services, on the
eve of his departure for Califor-
nia with Mrs. Zuieback.
In addition to new directors,
the president, vice-presidents,
treasurer and secretary of the
schools will be elected at Mon-
day's meeting. The nominating
committee consists of Louis La-
Med, chairman, Philip Gilbert,
Harry Cohen, Louis Stoll and
Joseph Colten.
Committee Chairmen
The following are the chair-

men of various Committees of
the United Hebrew Schools:

Board of Education, Maurice
H. Zackhiern and Maurice Lan-
dau; finance and budget, Mr.

Start Tuesday

A summer series of Motion
Picture Nights will start at the
Jewish Community Center, Wood-
ward at Holbrook next Tuesday
and will continue regularly bn
Tuesday nights through July and
August. The scheduled films
deal with activities on the war
front and home fronts.
Featured film for June 26 is
"Air Pattern of the Pacific"
which depicts the birth and grow-
th of the 13th Air Force in the
Pacific Theater. A companion
feature, "Kids Must Eat", shows
the Quiz Kids, Joel Kupperman,
Ruth Duskin, David Davis and
Pat Conlon, in a typical quiz ses-
sion, entirely unrehearsed, just
as they appear each Sunday eve-
ning in broadcasts over the Blue
N twork
Movie programs will be held
in the Outdoor Court of the
Center, starting at 9:15 p. m.
There will be no admission .
charge. All are welcome.

RUDOLPH ZUIEBACK

Landau and Abe Kasle; educa-
tion month, Philip Slomovitz and
Charles Rubiner; real estate,
Louis Stoll and Julius Berman;
scholarship, Harry Cohen and
Gus D. Newman; alumni, Joseph
Colten; administrative, Louis
Robinson; public relations, Law-
rence W. Crohn, Louis LaMed,
A. J. Lachover; membership,
Morris Fishman, Julius Berman,
Louis Berry; synagogue and
house, Nathan Yaffa, Morris
Fishman and Isaac Rosenthal.

Two AJC Leaders I Britain OK's Entry
Children
Report on UNCIO Of 1000
Nazi Camps

From

Judge Proskauer - Blaustein
Describe Pleas for Human
Rights and Palestine

NEW YORK, (JTA)—The in-
side story of Jewish activities at
the United Nations Conference
at San Francisco was told by
Judge Joseph M. Proskauer and
Jacob Blaustein, president and
chairman of the executive com-
mittee, of the American Jewish
Committee, to a large audience
of Jewish leaders at Hunter Col-
lege.
The two leaders, who served
as consultants to the U. S. dele-
gation at San Francisco, praised
Secretary of State Stettinius for
the support he gave to the pro-
posal for a Commission on Hu-
man Rights.
"However much we believe
that Palestine, to the extent of
its capacities, furnishes a haven
for those who are persecuted, we
nonetheless maintain the right of
the Jew to abide in peace and
in honor in his own land if he
so wills," Judge Proskauer said.
Right to Homeland
•
"We shall subscribe to no theory
of enforbed exodus or enforced
international ghetto. The doors
of Palestine should reasonably
be open to those who wish to go
there. But the human rights pro-
posals inserted in the Charter are
a bulwark for our stricken bre-
thern of Europe against internal
persecution that will force them
to live lives they do not wish to
Live."
Mr. Blaustein said that there
was no difference on major ques-
tions among the various Jewish
groups which had official repre-
sentatives at San Francisco. He
revealed that the American Jew-
ish Committee and the American
Jewish Conference worked to-
gether on various problems af-
fecting their co-religionists all
over the world.
Problem of Trusteeship
Declaring that the problem of
trusteeship caused great discus-
sion in San Francisco and many
conflicting views were express =
ed, Mr. Blaustein said: "We had
to watch out that the trusteeship
system that came out of San
Francisco should not be con-

Buchenwald Poem
To LaMed Will Be
Printed in. Zukunft

Louis LaMed, fOunder of the
LaMed Foundation for the Ad-
vancement of Hebrew and Yid-
dish Literature, informs The
Jewish News that the letter he
had received from M. Sztrigler
from the Buckenwald concentra-
tion camp, together with a poet-
ic work "The -Last Jew," des-
cribing his personal experiences
in Poland, has made a deep
pression nationally.
Mr. LaMed reports that H.
Leivick, noted poet, and S. Nig-
ger, eminent journalist, were so
deeply moved with the message
that they arranged to have the
poem, "The Last Jew", publish-
ed in the next issue of the Zuk-
unft.
In the meantime, a fund, rais-
ed by Mr. LaMed, was cabled to
Mr. Sztrigler to enable him to
carry on until future -arrange-
ments can be made for him and
his written works.

WASHINGTON, (JTA)—The U. S. Government this
week announced that prewar immigration regulations are
again in effect, and disclosed that the Inter-Departmental
Visa Committee—which was composed of representatives
of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, FBI, Army
and Navy Intelligence—will be abolished as of June 30.
The Board of Visa Appeals, set up in conjunction with
the Inter-Departmental Visa Committee, also will be :dis-
solved on June 30, the announcement, issued jointly by
the Department of Justice and by the State Department,
declared.
Aliens seeking to enter the U. S. after that date will
be required to apply directly to U. S. diplomatic and
consular officials abroad for visas as in prewar days.

Isidor Coons and Henry Montor,
executive vice-chairmen, was the
first plea since the reconstruc-
tion of the UJA as the combined
nation-wide fund-raising agency
for the JD-C, UPA and NRS,
whose estimated needs for the
NEW YOR K—Sounding a current year exceed $80,000,000.
relief
warning that inadequate ,
and reconstruction measures or
delayed development of Palestine 1,300 Internees On Mauritius
in behalf of the surviving Jews To Be Admitted to Palestine
of Europe may shatter their
JERUSALEM, (JTA) Eli ahu
hopes for a life of security in Dobkin, head of the immigration
the post-war world, the United department of the Jewish Agen-
Jewish Appeal summoned 4,600 cy, announced that the 1,300 Jews
Jewish communities in every sec- who were sent by British auth-
tion of the country to give their orities from Palestine to the is-
suport for large-scale relief over- land of Mauritius because- they
seas and for the settlement in were illegal immigrants are ex-
the -Jewish homeland -- in Pales- pected to return to Palestine next
tine of many thousands of up- month under an arrangement
rooted men and women.
between the Jewish Agency and
The appeal, made public by the Palestine Government.

UJA Makes First
Fund Appeal Since
Its Reconstitution

111111111•11111k

New Factory-Built

CHEVROLET

ENGINES FOR SALE

LONDON, (JTA) — The Brit-
ish government has granted per-
mission to the Committee for
Jewish Refugees here to bring
to Britain 1,000 Jewish children
from the concentration camps in
Germany, it was announced by Youth Education League
Otto Schiff, chairman of the or-
Exceeds Bond Quota,
ganization.

The children will be placed
under the supervision of Jewish
organizations and will be main-
tained by Jewish relief funds
collected in Britain.
Sweden has agreed to admit
for permanent settlement 10,000
refugees who cannot return to
their countries of origin, the
newspaper People reports from
Stockholm, it was learned here.
The paper says that in the last
two months Sweden has ad-
mitted 20,000 persons liberated
from German camps.

Strives for $300,000

With the original quota of

$65,000 set by the Youth Edu-

cation League for the 7th War
Loan Drive far surpassed, the
league is now striving for a goal
of $300,000 by the end of June.
So far, members have sold
$283,000 worth.
The war bond committee is
headed by Mrs. Eli Gross, aided
by mesdames Harry Goodman,
James Aftel, Philip 'Kollin, Hy-
man Gordon, Ben Cohen, Avery
B. Chereten and Philip Olander.
The League's dramatic group
Jews In Mexico Raise
recently took the play "Amazons
Funds for J.D.C.
on Broadway", directed by Mrs.
Mexican Jewry is conducting Jesse Rosen, to Battle Creek and
its first united fund-raising cam- performed before the veterans
paign for the relief of destitute at Percy Jones Hospital.
Jews in Europe and has allocat-
ed a 'substantial sum to the Am-
erican Jewish Joint Distribution
Committee, Dr. Joseph C. Hyman,
executive vice-chairman of the
J.D.C., has announced.

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An is4oric

structed in such a way as to im-
pair the rights of the Jewish com-
munity in Palestine or the rights
of the Jews to immigrate to
Palestine. We have secured the
assurance of the American dele-
gation that nothing will be done
in San Francisco which will in the
slightest degree endanger the ex-
isting rights of Jews with re-
gard to Palestine."
Establishment of the- Commis-
sion on Human Rights, Mr. Blau-
stein pointed out, is a great
achievement. "It gives us as
well as other oppressed peoples
of the world a forum to which
we can appeal in case of viola-
tions of our fundamental free-
doms. For the first time in his-
tory, the question of human rights
and the treatment of individuals
was officially recognized as be-
ing of vital international con-
cern."

essaue

by one of America's Foremost War Corr espondents

QUENTIN REYN LDS

Radio Commentator, Correspondent, Lecturer

.

Will address a report meeting of
the Civic-Protective Campaign of the

Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit

Tuesday Evening .

June 26 ... 8:15 P. M.

Hotel Stoller Ballroom

For Admission Cards Please Can CO. 7600, Line 148

