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August 17, 1945 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1945-08-17

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Page SeVeif

TH.E 'JEWISH NEWS

Friday, August. 17, 1945

v-.1 Day Observed by Detroit Jewry With
Special Services in All Local Synagogues

Broder, Center President
Is Called by Death at 47

Dr. Glazer Arranges Solemn Service at Temple Beth El; Statements Issued • by ,National
Leaders; 1,500,000 Jews Serve in Armed Forces of United Nations; More
Than 9,000 Detroit Jews in Service

Community Leader Was Active in Many Local Affairs,
Including Federation and Allied Campaign Budget
Committee; Was President of Cook Coffee Co.

Detroit Jewry was a sotemn
participant in the celebration
that marked news of the end of
the war and the ;total victory for
the democracies.
In advance of the final an-
nouncement of the Japanese sur-
render, local synagogues arrang-
ed for special services in observ-
ance of the end of the bloodshed.
Tributes were paid to the
memory of those who gave their
lives on battlefields, On the sea
and in the air, and there were
prayers for the welfare • of • the
more than 500,000 Jews who are
serving in the armed forces.
Beth El Services
At Temple Beth' El, services
were planned for 8 p. m. on V-J
Day, with Dr. B. Benedict Glazer
in . charge:
Ariangements for similar serv-
ices were made in other syna-
gogues.
A V-J Day statement was is
sued by Rabbi Leon Fram, who
expressed the view that "we
must establish .a world society M.
which all men are treated as
equal . . We who have been
proven great • in war—we pray
that we may not be found too
little for peace."
Henry - Monsky, national presi-
dent of Bnai Brith, in a V-J Day
statement, declared: "American
Jewry, which m
_ obilized all its re-
sources and manpower in the
years of war and made a proud

4 Jews Given
Cabinet Posts

contribution to victory,. has the
additional post-war responsibility
of helping restore the shattered
Jewish communities of Europe. It
must help them back to health
and vitality,. It must give them
a chance for normal living and
hope for the future."
Jews in Armed Forces
A statement 'issued by Rabbi
Herbert S. Goldstein, president

.

Announcement is made by the
board of trustees of Temple Beth
El, through Julian G. Wolfner,
chairman of the choir committee,
of the appointment -of Jason IL
Tickton to the post of music„ di-
rector and organist.
.Mr. Tickton has .been affiliat-
ed•with the Temple for the past
12 years, first serving as assist-
ant organist and since 1940 as
organist of the Temple. For the
past several years he- was also
in charge of the Music Depart -
ment of the Religions* School.
Mr. Tickton, a young man of
great talent in the field of syna-
gogue and secular music, possess-
es a fine Jewish background. He
is at present serving , on. the fa-
tuity of Wayne University as
assistant professor of music.

Palestine Arabs Form
Unified Representative Body - -
JRRUSALEM, (JTA)—A su-
preme representative body of
Palestine Arabs has been formed
at a conference of Arab leaders
in Amman with Emr Abdullah
of Transjordan, it was announced
here. This marks the first time
since, before the war .that the
conflicting groups within the
Arab community of Palestine
have bten able to unite in a
single' body.

The Jewish community of Detroit sits in mourning over

the death of one of its most distinguished leaders—H.

Broder—who died on Aug. 9, of a heart attack._
Mr. Broder, who was 47, was president of the Jewish
Community Center and was one of the most prominent of
the younger leaders in the community.

President of the. Cook Coff
Co., Mr. Broder was •prominent Pfc. - Harry __Meyers, Nathan
Brewster and
K.eidan;
a - brother, Harry, and a sister,
rs. Nat L. .Aberson of 17400
Fairfield. .
-
Funeral . services were held
Suuday afternoon. Burial wa.k in
lover Hill Park Cemetery._ Dr.
. M. Hershman and Cantor d. H.
Sonenklar officiated.

op Anti-Semitic
azis Face Trial

LATE H. C. BRODER

.

—International Photo

MAX- GRASSLI, charge d'af-
faires ad interim of Switzerland,
who acted for his government as
go-between in the Japanese sur-
render offer. Hee is shown at his
desk. in Washington.

Named Asst. Director, Bnai Open House Highlights
12th St. Center Day Camp.
Brith Vocational Service

LONDON, (JTA)—The new
British Cabinet includes four
Jewish members: They are:
Emanuel Shinwell, Minister of
Fuel and Power; Lewis Silkin,
Minister for Town and Country
Planning; LOrd Nathan, parlia-
mentary under-Secretary of War,
and G. • A. Strauss, parliamentary
secretary of War Transport.
Zionist leaders here, expressed'
their iatisfaction with the fact
that in addition, to appointing
George Henry Hall• to the post
of Colonial Sedetary, the new
Labor Cabinet appointed also
Czech Jones as under-Secretary
for Colonies. Roth are imown
to have expressed : their opposi-!
tion to the British White Paper
under which the doors of Pales-
tine are now cloSed to Jewish
immigration.

Tickton Appointed
By Beth El as Music
Director, Organist

of the Synagogue Council ; of
America, declares: "V-J D a y
should be a day of great out-
pouring of charity I earnestly
appeal to my people to abide by
the Jewish tradition of forbear-
ance and restraint, to receive 'the
news of victory in solemn humil-
ity, in dignity and in dedication
to the greater service of God and
the common zeal of mankind."
Figures gathered by the Na-
tional Jewish Board show that
more than 500,000 American
Jews—more than 10 per cent of
our numbers in the population—
are serving in• the . armed fdrees
of the United States. An addi-
tional million Jews are serving
in armed forces of the United
Nations.
DetroiterS In Service
In Detroit, out of a total JeW-
ish population of approximately
85,000, 8,548 names of service
men and women have -already
been recorded and it is believed
that at least 1,000 More Detroit
Jews are serving in the - armed
forces' but have not -registered
their names with the Jewish Wel-
fare Board. Of the 598 reported
casualtieS „of Detroit Jews, 167
were killed .in action.
Of interest in connection with'.
V-J Day is the fact that although
there are less than 2,000 Jews - in
all of Japan, the Japanese fol-
lowed the Nazi line and propa-
galed anti-Semitism.

— Robert Shosteck, former chief
of the coding section of the Na-
tional Roster of Scientific and
Specialized Personnel of the War
Manpower Commission,_ who has
been appointed assistant national
director of the- Bnai Brith Voca-
tional Service Bureau.

Highlighting the program of
t h e Twelfth Street Council
Center Day Camp was the open
ouse held Aug. 9, at the Council
Center. Parents and friends of
the- children, ' as well as many
members of the Detroit Section,
National _Council of Jewish
Women, attended.
The entertainment opened with
the pledge of allegiance and in-
-eluded tap dances by Evelyn
Klepper, Naoini Sherman, and
Rita Weinberger; piano selec-
tions by Rachel Blinder, and ,
group singing by all the children
Arthur Fink was the announcer.
While the children were being
served refreshments, the adults
heard brief talks _by Manuel S.
Simon, director of the day camp;
Mrs. H. V. Kreger, president of
e Detroit ,Section, National
Council of Jewish Women; Mrs.
Robert N. Janeway, chairman of
the Couneil Center; Mrs. Barney'
Israel, chairman of volunteer
workers.
The Day Camp was ari eight-
week summer project of the
Twelfth' St. Council Center, spon-
sored jointly by the Jewish Com-
munity Center, and the Detroit
Section, National Council 'of
Jewish,Women.

in the business life of Detroit,
Cleveland and Toledo.
His Many Activities
Before being' elected president
of the Jewish Community Cen-
ter, in -1944, he was active in
many Community fields. He was
-chairman of a sub-cpmmittee of
the budget committee, of the
Allied Jewish Campaign of the
Jewish Welfare Federation; was
co-chairman of the War Chest
food division; was - vice-president
of the Jewish Community Cen-
ter and served on .the board of
the Center foi: many years.
He was a member of the board
of governors of the Jewish Wel-
fare Federation, served on the
board of the Midwest Region of
the National JeWiSh Welfare
. Board, was a member of the
board of the Jewish Vocational
SerViceu- and of the board of
Clove _ r Hill Park Cemetery.- He
was a member of Congregation
Shairey Zedek, Pisgah Lodge of
Bnai Brith and of the Masonic
order.
Wed to Celia Meyers ip 1924
-= Born in New York, he was
brought to Detroit by his par-
ents when he was one year old.
He was - a graduate of Central
High School.
He was married in 1924 to
Celia Meyers.
,
- The Broder .residence is at
2285 Lawrence.
;
The Survivors
Mr. Broder is surVived, be-
sides his wife, by three sons,

LONDON (JPS) — Germany's
most vicious anti-Semites are in-
cluded among the 10 top Nazi
leaders who have 'been listed as
the first defendents in the open-
ing international war crimes
trial, to be held in Nuremberg
next month, DreW Middleton,
New York Times correspondent,
reports in a dispatch from Frank-
" fort-on-Main. The 10 Nazis in-
clude:
Hermann Goering, former head
of the Luftwaffe and Reichsmar-
shal.
Julius Streicher, G e r many's
number one Jew-hater, publisher
of h e' obscene, anti7Semitic
"Sturmer," and gaiileiter for
Franconia. _
Alfred Rosenberg, one of Hit-
ler's arch-Jew-baiters, who did
vast research for anti-Semitic ar-
ticles which appeared in Goeb-
bels' Voelkischer Boebachter,
which he edited.
Dr. Robert _Ley,. head of the
-
Nazi labor front.
Karl Hermann Frank, Nazi
commissioner i n Poland a n d-
Czechoslovakia, -responsible -- for
setting up Nazi death campS
where millions of -Jews were -
murdered.

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