Detroit Attorney Samuel W. Leib Heads Bnai Brith Grand Lodge Six THE JEWISH NEWS-5 Friday, July 22, 1949 Jewish Reds . Stir Up Trouble in Argentina SAMUEL W. LEIB (left) , Detroit attorney, is congratu- lated by FRANK GOLDMAN, national president of Bnai Brith, on the former's election as president of Bnai.. Brith District Grand Lodge No. Six. Looking on is 13R. IRWIN A. EPSTEIN of St. Paul, retiring district president. • Detroit attorney Samuel W. Leib was elected District Six President of Bnai Brith at the region's annual meeting in Win- nipeg, Canada. Other officers named include Bernard D. Roman of Chicago, vice president; Gottfried D. Bernstein, treasurer, and Ben Z. Glass, executive secretary. Highlights of the convention, the district lodge's 81st, were the keynote address by Frank Gold- man, national Bnai Brith pres- ident, and talks by Benjamin Samuels of Chicago, national vice president and chairman of the Bnai Brith Henry Monsky Foundation; Phillip M. Klutz- nick of Chicago, national vice president, and Maurice, Bisgyer of Washington, D. C., national secretary. Dr. Irwin A. Epstein of St. Paul, retiring president, report- ed on the area's work in the several Bnai Brith projects. More than 1500 delegates and friends, representing 50,000 members in eight midwestern states and four Canadian pro- vinces were present at the -par- ley. Hitler's Paris Envoy, Otto Abet; Indicted in Major War Crimes Trial Knochen, supported h i s ex- chief's defense of Abetz. During the course of Col. Knochen's testimony, the defendant broke in to remark -that a statement related by the witness about threats to execute people had been made "jokingly." Abetz was immediately reproved by t h e presiding trial judge who said, "Jokes about shooting people may b-ecome dangerous." Col. Knochen also revealed that - all orders dealing with anti-Jewish actions came di- rectly from Berlin and that Nazi authorities- had sent a Capt. Dancker to Paris- to • eliminate Jews from French government service. Col Knochen also spoke of bombing of synagogues dur- ing which some German soldiers OTTO ABETZ were killed, but disclaimed per- 000 Jews from France to the sonal knowledge - of • these acts Oswiecim extermination camp when he was accused of having in Poland and with responsibility organized them. for looting Jewish property in Paris during the Nazi occupa- Jewish Anti-Red Group tion of France. The trial, which is considered Accuses Paul Robeson one of the major "war crime trials," is expected to last about two weeks. The charges against Abetz include the looting of Jewish art collections and fuT- niture; which resulted in the stealing of 22,000 works of art from 203 Jewish collections; advocating the mass arrests and deportation of Jews from France; suggesting that Leon Blum and Georges Mandel, two leading French Jewish states- men, be shot. Three former French premiers —Edouard Daladier, Paul Rey- —International Photo naud and Pierre - Flandin-\---are expected to testify at the trial. RABBI BENJAMIN SCHULTZ, Six French Army officers were director of the American Jew- chosen as jurors, while six oth- ish League Against Commu- nism, Inc., charges singer. Paul ers were appointed alternates. Meanwhile the trial of 39 for- Robeson with deliberate .Com- mer officials of the Vichy Com- munist conspiracy, claiming missariat of Jewish Affairs, Robeson tries to p r o v o k e which opened last week, con- American Negroes in favor of tinued with the beginning of Russia. Rabbi Schultz is shown direct testimony. making his accusations before SS General Karl Albrecht the House un-American activi- Oberg who, during his reign ties committee h e a ring in over Paris, earned the appella- Washington. He told the com- tion "Butcher of Paris"' sought to clear Abetz of all responsi- mittee that Soviet leaders are bility. The general already has now arousing anti-Semitism in been sentenced to death by a Russia in order to transfer the British military court for war hatred of the Russian people crimes. Former Nazi police from the Soviet regime to the chief in Paris, Col. Helmuth Jews. PARIS (JTA) — TI•xe trial of Otto Abetz, Hitler's ambassador to Paris, started here in a heavily-guarded military court with two officers reading an 84- page indictment charging him, among. other things, with com- plicity in the deportation of 40,- BUENOS AIRES (JTA) — As- sertions in the Argentine Yid- dish Communist daily, "Haint," that the Israeli Government is "torturing Arabs" and "beating up hungry Jewish immigrants" were condemned in a statement issued by the central committee for the United Israeli Campaign and Ayuda. Simon Mirelman, UIC presi- dent, told a press conference that leaders of the campaign reached the conclusion that "there *is no possibility of co- aperatiat with the Jewish Com- munists, because "they are only nterested in obstructing a n y work in behalf of Israel." Mordecai K o'i f m a n, Labor Zionist leader in this country, said "an impossible situaton" has arisen in which the Jewish Communists slander Israel and the Jewsh people, and sabotage the United Israeli Campaign, while at the same time they pretend to be engaged in Jewish communal activities. "The Jew- ish. State," organ of the Gen- eral Zionist party here, in its current issue Carries an edtoral calling for the expulsion of Corn- munists from Jewish institu- tions. Professors to Air Youth Problems For State Zionists ist Organization of America, can be purchased at the'Zionist office, 1031 Penobscot Bldg., and at South Haven resorts. Prof. Samuel M. Levin of Wayne University and Prof. Julius Stulberg, director of the department of music at Western Michigan College, Kalamazoo, will participate in the symposi- um on Jewish youth problems, which will conclude the week- end conference of the Michigan Zionist Region in South Haven, July- 29-31. The symposium will be includ- ed in the youth festival to be held outdoors Sunday, July 31, in Oakland Park. It will include a chorus- of 10 singers and dancers from Camp Sharon, Buchanan i • Mich., directed by Julius Schwart-stein. Chapter One choral group of the Zionist Organization of De- troit will also participate in the youth festival. It will be pre- ceded by discussions in the morning at the First Hebrew Congregation of South Haven, where members of the Michigan Zionist Region Districts will make plans for coming events. Tickets for the opening rally on Saturday night, featuring a performance by - Celia Adler, and an address by Dr. Sidney Marks, executive director of the Zion- * 14°4 ti 1- 6 III 98 r,„„ tly reoslainig iss -itex talfere rtment What is the TRUTH about the furniture situation? Recurrent questions by people entering the Robin- son Furniture Company's store indicate that the public is more than a little confused by conflicting stories about furniture prices and values today. Will 1 get my money's worth at today's ,prices? How does quality compare with pre-war products? Will prices be lower in the near future? Should" buy now--or wait? Knowing our 38-year reputation for dependability and honest service, people come to us for the answers. If your family has been thinking of buying new furni- ture for the home, here are a few facts that will help you decide. Furniture quality is again at its peak. The post-war transition to better quality was rapid in the furniture industr'y and, today, you will get the greatest dollar- for-dollar value the industry has .ever offered! As Detroit's largest store devoted exclusively to furniture and home furnishings, we are in constant touch with leading manuacturers. No one can be sure whether prices will go higher or drop—but we do give you this assurance . . Everything in Robinson's 38th Annual August Sale will be offered at definitely worthwhile savings—sav- ings up to 40 % on today's regular prices ! • You can buy with confidence at Robinson's. This is no idle statement. Ask friends who know from experience. Our 38 years' business is based on quality furniture at lowest possible prices—and you as a satis- fied customer. ROBINSON'S 38th Annual Store-Wide August Sale Begins Monday, July 25th