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Jr. Division Orientation Meetings
To Spur All Area Solicitations
,
Memorial Meeting
On Warsaw Ghetto
Set for March 25
• ..fiz,. .s t, i:iftrti•'-x-, ••
Dividing the city into solicitation areas are Philip Krawitz,
Junior Division, Allied Jewish Campaign, general solicitations
chairman, (second from left) and area chairmen (left to right),
Franklin Sidlow, Walter J. Rubiner, Ivan Scholnick, Sidney
Simon and Estelle Levine.
A series of orientation meet-
ings, which will feature enter-
tainment and refreshments.. in
addition to serious campaign
preparation, for Allied Jewish
Campaign Junior Division
workers is scheduled this week.
Workers in the Oak Park Hunt-
ington Woods area (area one)
and the Palmer Park area (area
two) will meet 8 p.m. Tuesday
at the Young Israel Center in
Oak Park. Area three (near
northwest) workers will meet
8 p.m., Wednesday, at congre-
gation Adas Shalom, and work-
ers in area five (Dexter, Davi-
son) will meet at the Davison
Jewish Center at the same time
and date. Workers in area four
(northwest) will meet 8 p.m.,
Thursday, at the Esther Berman
Branch of the United Hebrew
Schools. Additional workers in
all areas are still welcome.
<,4
Plan Conversion of
Old Dutch Synagogue
Into a Concert Hall
THE HAGUE (JTA) — The
Netherlands Government is
planning to convert the medie-
val Sephardic synagogue in this
city, which has been standing
unused since the Nazi occupa-
tion, into a concert hall.
The authorities have ap-
proached the Sephardic com-
munity for permission to use
the building, which is currently
listed as a state monument. The
synagogue has not been used
since the liberation because the
Nazi destruction of Dutch Jewry
has left a greatly decreased
community.
In Amsterdam, meanwhile,
the authorities have come up
with a plan to build a highway
across the site of an ancient
Jewish cemetery which lies on
the eastern outskirts of the mu-
nicipal cemetery, The Jewish
cemetery has not been used for
some 50 years and recently the
government obtained title to
the land from the Ashkenazi
community.
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Rabbinical Students .
Protest Arrests of
Negroes in Alabama
CINCINNATI (JTA) — Stu-
dents, professors and other per-
sonnel of the Hebrew Union
College—Jewish Institute of Re-
ligion joined in protesting the
arrests of Negroes in the bus
boycott dispute in Montgomery,
Alabama. A declaration, signed
by 100 individuals, declared
"solidarity with our Negro fel-
low citizens, who will be ob-
serving March 28th as a na-
tional 'Deliverance Day of
Prayer'."
Signers included 73 students
and 12 faculty members. The
protest was circulated by rab-
binical students. The statement
lauded the decision to declare
a day of protest against the
Alabama mass arrests. "We be-
lieve these arrests to be an il-
legal attempt to subvert an ef-
fective and praiseworthy en-
deavor by the Negroes of Mont-
gomery to assert their rights as
American citizens," the signers
said.
Gen. Martin Describes
Feud of Arab States
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The Arab states of the Middle
East, far from forming a united
front, are unable to co-exist
even among themselves, accord-
ing to an article by Lt. Gen.
H. G. Martin in Middle Eastern
Affairs.
Gen. Martin, military corres-
pondent of the London Daily
Telegraph, who has travelled
extensively in the Middle East,
lists the chief trouble makers
in that area as Saudi Arabia
and Egypt, with Yemen begin-
ning to run them a close second.
"The Middle East bulks large in
Soviet plans," Gen. Martin
writes, "yet the Middle East
remains heedless of its danger."
"It has been said truly that
the Arabs unite only to destroy;
the over-mastering motive that
they share in common is their
hatred of Israel," Gen. Martin
wri tes.
OPEN SUNDAYS
11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Daily 9 to 9
07
Woodinere
A community-wide commem-
oration meeting, marking the
13th anniversary of the War- r if
saw Ghetto Uprising, will be
held March 25, in the social
hall of Beth Aaron Synagogue.
Dr. Shmarya Kleinman,
chairman of the special com-
mittee planning the observ-
ance, stated that, as in past
years, the program will be a
tribute to the heroic fight which
a small group of Jews staged
against Nazi tanks, planes,
flame-throwers and guns in de-
fending their Ghetto homes.
The meeting also will com-
memorate the loss of 6,000,400
Jewish lives during the Nazi
era. The observance is arranged
by the culture commission of
the Jewish Community Council.
On the committee planning
the event are Rabbis Morris
Adler, Philip Aisner, David
Fayne, Morris Friedman, Mrs.
Nationally Advertised
Sarah Friedman, Movsas Gold-
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Emanuel Mark, I. Pokempner,
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Tickets may he obtained from
any Council-affiliated organiza-
tion or from the Council, 1Q3
Madison, WO. 2-6710.
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U. of D. Law Journal
Dedicates Current Issue
to Ex-Justice Butzel
Chief Justice Henry M. Butzel,
who retired last Dec. 31 from the
Michigan Supreme Court, was
last week honored by the Uni-
versity of Detroit Law Journal,
a quarterly issued by the Uni-
versity' s law school.
The 39-year-old journal dedi-
cated its current issue to Justice
Butzel, and in special ceremo-
nies on Feb. 29, a presentation of
the volume was made to Mr.
Butzel,
Making the presentation was
Norman L. Zemke, editor-in-
chief of the journal who is a
senior law student.
Four dedicatory articles ap-
pear, along with Justice Butzel's
picture. They are written by Ed-
ward M. Sharpe, senior member
of the Michigan Supreme Court;
George E. Bushnell, retired Su-
preme Court Justice; I. Donald
Wade, Justice Butzel's first law
clerk in the Supreme Court; and
Nathan B. Goodnow, a U. of D.
Law School alumnus and now
president of the Detroit Bar As-
sociation,
Justice Butzel, throughout his
26 years of service on the bench,
was active in civic and Jewish
communal affairs.
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Sobeloff to Receive
HUC-JIR Degree
For his "outstanding contri-
butions to our national life,"
Simon E. Sobeloff, Solicitor
General of the United States,
will be awarded an honorary
degree of Doctor of Humane
Letters by Hebrew Union Col-
lege - Jewish Institute of Re-
ligion, it was announced by Dr.
Nelson Glueck, president.
Conferring of the degree will
take place during the 81st
Founders' day program in Cin-
cinnati, March 16-18.
Others to receive honorary
degrees at the oldest Jewish
theological seminary in the
world are Dr. Samuel Hollen-
der of Chicago, Rabbi Frederic
Doppelt of Fort Wayne and
Rabbi Edgar Siskin of Glencoe,
Ill. Mr. Sobeloff will deliver
the principal address at the
Founders' Day Banquet on
March 17.
Josephthal Back in Israel
NEW YORK, (JTA) — Dr.
Giora Josephthal, Jewish Agen-
cy treasurer, left by plane for
Israel. He spent a month tour-
ing the major cities of the
United States on behalf of the
United Jewish Appeal.
Detroit Jewish News-5
Friday, Marcia 9, 1956
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