Friday, March 1, 1946 THE Annual Federation Meeting To Hear UJA Drive Plans Judge Friedman, Isidore Sobeloff, Heads of Affiliated Agencies to Give Reports; Rabbi Adler to Speak; $2,000,000 Campaign Objectives to Be Reviewed Rabbi Morris Adler of Congregation Shaarey Zedek, who has just returned from service as a Chaplain in the U. S. Army in the Pacific, his last post having been in Japan, will be the principal speaker at the annual meeting of the Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit, at 8:15 p. m. on Mon- day, March 11, at Hotel Statler. Judge William Friedman, president of the Federation, will preside and will submit his annual report. Reports of affiliated agencies of the Federation will be submitted by: , Harry Jacobson, president of the Fresh. Air Society; Benjamin Jaffe, president of the Jewish Social Service Bureau; David Wilkus, president of North End Clinic; Fred M. Butzel, president of Resettlement Sei:vice; Harvey Gold- man, president of Jewish Vocational Service. The central theme running through the reports and dis.cussions at this important meeting will be the ques- tion "How Can the Local Community Help the United Jewish Appeal?" Community leaders will discuss the plans that are be- ing made to assure the success of the $2,000,000 Detroit Allied Jewish Campaign. Isidore Sobeloff, executive director of the Federa- tion, in his resume of the year's activities, will outline the plans for the unprecedented $2,000,000 drive. Mrs. Joseph H. Ehrlich, is chairman of the Federation's nominating committee which includes Irving W. Blumberg, Sidney Alexander, Joseph M. Welt and Joseph Bernstein. The contributing public in invited to submit suggestions for nomination to the Federation Board of governors to this committee. Invite Recommendations For Nominees to Board Of Welfare Federation Mrs. Joseph H. Ehrlich has been named chairman of the nominating committee of the Jewish Welfare Federation. Other members of the com- mittee include IrVing W. Blum- berg, Sidney Alexander, Joseph M. Welt and Joseph Bernstein. This committee will submit its report at the annual Fed- eration meeting at Hotel Stat- ler on Monday evenin g, March 11. In line with the recom- mendations made at . last year's meeting of the Federa- tion, the contributing public is invited to submit recommend- ations for membership on the Federation board of governors to this committee by com- municating with Mrs. Ehrlich, at her home or at the office of the Federation, 51 W. War- ren, CO. 1600. Page Three Weekly Review of the News of the World (Compiled from Cables of Independent Jewish Press Service) AMERICA A new orientation program for U. S. Army replacements arriving in Germany has been inaugurated as a result of a recent street fight between Jewish DPs and Germans in Lampertheim, Germany, during which Jews were slapped, abused and threatened by a U. S. Army officer and ten armed soldiers, Homer Bigart, New York Herald Tribune cor- respondent, reports from Lampertheim. Three hundred and fifty residents of Sunnyside, Queens, New York, in a letter to Mayor O'Dwyer, demanded a police investiga- tion of anti-Semitic vandals who defaced a neighborhood Russian Relief Depot. Windows of the depot were painted with the word "Jude" (German' for Jew), and smeared with a Star of David and a swastika. The letter charged that local police were indifferent. The Jewish War Veterans of the United States, in a letter to British Ambassador Lord Halifax, vigorously protested against the re- turn to Palestine of Jamal el Husseini, cousin and aide of the pro-Nazi ex-Mufti of Jerusalem now under indictment as an Axis criminal. Haj Amin el Husseini, ex-Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, will shortly "escape" from forced residence 1Ln France and will turn up in some Middle East country, Alexander Uhl, PM foreign editor, reports from Washington. Mr. Uhl, who bases his information on "trust- worthy sources," states that negotiations for the flight of the Mufti have been going on for some months in certain British and French quarters which consider his escape a power- ful appeasement move to keep the Arab world out of the Soviet sphere. There are no in- dications however, that the British or French Governments are involved in these negotia- tions, Mr. Uhl says. King Haakon VII of Norway expressed deep concern for the problems of the Jewish people resulting from the catastrophe in Europe and "warm understanding of the Jew- ish case" in a lengthy audience given to Rabbi Marcus Nurock of Riga, Latvia, a mem- ber of the executive committee of the World Jewish Congress, the Congress reports. OVERSEAS The Allied Military Government has bar- red soldiers from private Vienna homes pend- ing an investigation of their original owner- ship, following the arrest of several United States and British soldiers who billeted them- selves in Aryanized Jewish homes and thus prevented restoration of the homes to the Jewish owners. A batch of intercepted clandestine letters from American citizens in all parts of the U. S. to German friends in the U. S. occupation zone, reveals that some Americans are prob- ably more Nazi-minded than the Germans they write to, American military authorities disclosed in Frankfurt. The Soviet prosecutors at the Nuremburg trial of 21 top Nazi war criminals, presented to the international War Crimes Tribunal evidence purporting to show that defendant, Hans Frank, Hitler's governor general of Poland, was directly responsible for the mas- sacre of 3,000,0000 Jews in Nazi death camps in Poland, According to the evidence, Frank wrote in his personal diary that "there would not be enough forest in Poland" to supply paper for the lists of Jews he had slaughtered. Nearly $40,000 has been subscribed by British Jews in a drive to raise $200,000 to plant a forest of 150,000 trees in Palestine, com- memorating the gallantry of British Jewish soldiers in World War II. The project, to be known as "Forest of Freedom," will be planted on Keren Kayemeth (Jewish National Fund) land in upper Galilee. Brigadier Benjamin, Commander of the Jewish Brigade, has sub- - scribed for a garden, to be laid out in the mid- dle of the forest, in the name of, the men of the Jewish Brigade. Leading British . Jews and non-Jews, in- cluding members of Parliament, attended a farewell dinner in London for Dr. Chaim Weiz- man, president of the Jewish Agency for Pal- estine and the World Zionist Organization, on the eve of his departure for Palestine. (See also Page 18) ■ 11111111M1111 ■ 1 Have ou ever seen a Brave Man Cry? IT HAPPENED somewhere in the Pacific. The boys of the 5th Air Force were "occupying" a God - forsaken jungle island which had been taken from the Japs. The heat, and the bugs, and the dirt were unbearable. The loneliness was almost beyond belief. Then—on a sweltering airstrip one morning a plane came down out of the sky. And out of it stepped two Red Cross girls, American girls. "Hi there, Soldiers!" Their voices were like magic. American girls, like the sisters and sweethearts they hadn't seen for so many long months—greeting them as they'd been greeted so often in the old, happy days at home. Yes, tears filled the eyes of more than one of those fighting men. Brave men they were, crying unashamed ! * * * Many thousands of our men are still overseas. They're lonely. They're homesick. They need your Red Cross now. And Red Cross men and women are at their side. But only you can keep them there. Through your con- tributions you make it possible for the Red Cross to see them through. Give today! Mrs. Roosevelt Sees Palestine Sole Ht•pe For Surviving Jews NEW YORK, (JPS) — The remnants of European Jewry want to go to Palestine and "the sooner these people can be where . they can become citizens and feel they are building a new life, the better it will be for the whole world," Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, U. S. delegate to the UNO As- sembly, told 2,000 women at a rally here launching the 1946 campaign of the women's di- vision of the United Jewish Appeal of Greater New York. Mrs. Roosevelt, in the past not regarded as a friend- of the Zionist cause, asserted that Pal- estine "represents some roots" for the "spiritually uprooted" Jews whom she found in dis- placed persons camps in Europe. She pictured the "complete and utter misery" of the homeless and stateless Jews. "It gave me the most com- pletely miserable sense of what people can suffer and how the suffering can numb them and sap their strength," she said. It is up to the United States, Mrs. Roose- velt declared, to provide, not only money for food, but spiritual and moral leadership for these people. JEWISH NEWS YOUR Red Cross MUST CARRY ON . . . This Advertisement Sponsored by the Following Firms: Maurice Shop Lestra Knitters Glamour Girl Distinctive Fashions "Your Knit Shop" Apparel Shop 116 I 6 Dexter 10236 Dexter 11630 Dexter Mathew Furniture Co. Kasle Steel Corp Keystone Oil Refining 7760 Harper 6782 Goldsmith 12800 Northampton Arthur Murray Simons-Michelson Co. Gross Inc. 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