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Friday, March 14, I947
THE JEWISH NEWS
Page Twenty-four
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Baratz, Dr. Heller Guests
Of Histadrut on March 23
Palestine and American Zionist Leaders to Address Closing
Festival; Emma Schaver to Be Featured with Choir
of 75 and Orchestra in DP Camp Songs
Two world famous Zionist leaders—Yosef Baratz of Pal-
estine and Dr. James G. Heller of Cincinnati—will be the
guest speakers at the closing festival of the annual Histadrut
(Gewserkshaften) campaign on Sunday evening, March 23, at
Music Hall, Harry-Schumer, 1947 campaign chairman, an-
nounced this week.
A sensational musical program
will feature the event. It will con-
sist of a choir and symphony
orchestra of 75 people. under the
direction of George Sebastian of
New York, one of the outstanding
of the country's young conductors,
with Emma L. Schaver as vocalist.
The singers and orchestra will
present a program of ghetto and
concentration camp songs which
have been brought to this country
by Mrs. Schaver from DP camps.
Songs of Faith. Hope
"These songs," Mrs. Schaver
said, "are so powerful, people
will be stirred to their very
depths, as I was, upon hearing
them. These people had faith
and hope that redemption would
come for them—redemption and
salvation in their own home-
land, Palestine."
Members of the orchestra will
be selected from the Detroit Sym-
phony.
Yosef Baratz was the leader of
16,000 Histadrut members of the
Jewish Brigade during the war.
He was the special Welfare Of-
ficer of the Jewish Agency for
Palestine to the armed force dur-
ing World War II and visited on
the battle fronts in the Middle
East, North Africa and Europe.
He was in close contact with men
of the underground who, after
the war, were responsible for the
movement of survivors into Pales-
tine.
Founder of Dagania
Baratz came to Palestine as a
pioneer 40 years ago and rose to
leadership in the Yishuv. Coming
to Eretz Israel in 1906 as a Halutz,
he helped drain the marshes that
preceded the founding of Hedera,
was one of the founders of Da-
gania—which became known as
the "Mother of Kvutzot"—in the
Jordan Valley, setting the pattern
for collective colonization; and he
became the leader of Agricul-
tural Workers' Union. He is a
member of the board of Kupat
Holim, the workers' sick fund,
and has served on the World
Zionist Acitons Committee. His
Brodys Give
$10,000 to AJC
The first large gift to the
Allied Jewish Campaign of
Detroit for 1947 was announced
by Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
Brody.
Their contribution, in the
amount of $10,000, was made
at the meeting of national
leaders at Hollywood Beach
Hotel, Miami Beach, Fla.
More than 300 persons,
representing c o m m u n i t ies
throughout the land, attended
the luncheon meeting.
Council's Survey
Reveals Variation
In Prices of Meat
Wide variations in prices
charged by Kosher butchers are
revealed by the current survey
of the Jewish Community Coun-
cil.
Stores in the 12th St., Linwood,
Dexter and McNichols Rd. areas
are being checked to determine
whether Kosher meat prices are
actually excessive, as recent com-
plaints to the Council have in-
dicated. .
Variations in meat prices from
five to 30 cents per pound have
been discovered in the survey.
Most butchers label the meat in
their showcases, and some even
place price tags on it, the in-
vestigators report further. The
Kosher Butchers' Association has
promised the Council that all
Members will price-tag all meats.
The Internal Relations Com-
mittee of the Council, under
whose auspices the investigation
DR. JAMES G. HELLER
is being made, plans to meet with
visit here on March 23 will be representatives of the Associa-
tion, to discuss_ further ramifica-
the first since 1939.
Dr. Heller, former chairman of tions of the price differential.
the national administrative com-
mittee of the Zionist Organization and delegates at the workers'
of America, is one of the ablest rally at the Rose Sittig Cohen
orators in the movement. He is Bldg., .next Thursday evening.
an outstanding author, musician Baruch Zuckerman, who just re-
and lecturer and his presentation turned from Palestine, will be
of the Zionist case on a Town Hall guest speaker.
program remains to this day one
Schumer has issued an ur-
of the finest evaluations of Zion- gent call to workers to cover
ism ever heard over the radio.
their prospects' slips and to con-
Ca!1 to Action
tributors to make their contribu-
J. L. Wolock of the Histadrut tions as rapidly as possible in
organizations committee an- order to speed the work of re-
JDC Project May Employ
32,000 Jews in DP Camps
Dr. Joseph Schwartz, Back From Europe, Reports on DetaiI
for Large-Scale Activities in American Zone
of Occupation in Germany
of the Jewish DPs, JDC is ap-
propriating funds for the pur-
chase of tools, raw materials and
machinery, and will help organ-
ize plants and factories to manu-
facture clothing and other goods.
The DPs employed in the projects
will be paid in goods, rather thap
in German marks, according to
a system of points based on the
hours of work and productivity.
Dr. Schwartz emphasized that
participation in work projects
will be entirely on a voluntary
basis. Those who stay away from
work will not be penalized eithe
by the JDC or by the army au
thorities.
The Army has already indi-
cated its willingness to see that
surplus manufactured goods are
exported and sold abroad, so as
to increase the funds available
for the project. The Jewish Agen-
cy has agreed to absorb in Pales-
Funds to Buy Tools
tine some of the manufactured
In accordance with the wishes goods for which there is a de-
mand there.
NEW YORK (JTA)—The re-
ported plans for the establish-
1
ment of a large-scale work proj-
ect for displaced Jews in the
American zone of Germany were
elaborated upon by Dr. Joseph
Schwartz, European director of
the Joint Distribution Committee,
who has just returned to this
country.
At a UJA press conference Dr.
Schwartz stated that 32,000 Jew-
ish men and women are expected
to find employment in the proj-
ects. The program is being un-
dertaken by the JDC in cooper-
ation with the Central Jewish
Committee, the Jewish Agency,
UNRRA and the U. S. Army.
Final details of the program
await approval by the Army, he
said, adding that at present about
30,000 Jews are employed at serv-
ice, repair and maintenance tasks
in the camps.
Windsor Center
Plans Under Way
After Conference
Plans for a community center
in Windsor will get under way
shortly, as d result of the week-
long community planning confer-
ence sponsored Feb. 23 to March
2 by the Windsor Jewish Com-
munity Council.
At the final session of the con-
ference, the community approved
the project and appointed a rep-
resentative committee of 100 to
begin work on it. Heading the
coordinating committee are Harry
M. Cherniak, Community Council
president, and M. M. Sumner.
The most striking result of the Rabbis Glazer, Adle
community conference, according Address Civic Group
Dr. B. Benedict Glazer
to Cherniak, was the indication
of an awareness, on the part of Temple Beth El, will
all community groups, of the sented by the Detroit Ro
need for submerging individual
differences in the common effort
to evolve a total plan.
Also emerging from the ses-
sions were structural patterns de-
signed to advance the commun-
nounce that admission cards to demption in Palestine and the ity's programs in Jewish educa-
the' closing festival will be dis- admission of as many more Jews tion, religiofis life, community
relations and other services.
tributed to contributors, workers as possible.
.
Birthrate Tops Quota
If the Palestine immigration
rate remains at the present 18,00G
a year the birthrate in camps...-
about 1,000 per month—woulc
make the quota barely sufficient
to absorb the natural increase
of the camp population, Dr.
Schwartz declared. Other pros-
pects for emigration are equally
dim, he stated.
The influx of Jewish refugees
from Poland has subsided some-
what, reaching a low of 1,000
during January, he asserted. HE
attributed this to a relative stabi
lization of the situation in Poland
to a decrease in number am
scope of anti-Jewish incid
there.
•
of Catholics, Jews and
ants in a brotherhood ad
fore the Central Detroit
Club, Monday, March 16.
Rabbi Morris Adler of S
Zedek will be presented b
Round Table in a bro
address before the, Uptown
Club, Thursdr,--Mitek