Finkel-Hubert Engagement Told MISS DIANNE FINKEL The engagement of Dianne Finkel and Norman Hubert was announced at a recent dinner party. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. David H. Finkel of Fairfield Ave. and Dr. and Mrs. William J. Hubert of Northlawn Ave. Miss Finkel is a graduate of the Liggett School and is now a senior in the School of Educa- tion at the University of Michi- gan. Her fiance is also a senior at the University of Michigan, where he is affiliated with Phi Sigma Delta fraternity. A . June 24 wedding is planned. Catholics' Flight from Nazism Told in Burmetz's Book Accounts of flights from Naz- ism are multiplying. The stories that continue to be related by survivors from the worst scourge in history are told by non-Jews as well as Jews. The newest narrative is by and about a Catholic family. In -"Our Share of Morning," published by Doubleday, Paul Burmetz, a Cath- olic, tells how he had refused to join the Nazis in Vienna, how he and his wife and infant daugh- ter fled from the dangers that threatened them, how they defied the menacing situations that con- fronted them, finally to find haven in Switzerland and then to settle in their present permanent home in this country. In this deeply-moving descrip- tion of the trio's flight, Burmetz tells how he came to France and there received whatever tempo- rary encouragement could be given by the Committee for In- tellectual Refugees. Then began the search for freedom. From 1939 to 1942, it was a constant flight. They were sepa- rated for a time, they continued to seek ways of escaping from the oncoming hordes of Nazis, finally got to Switzerland, only to be de- ported when they were caught by border police, then tried again and succeeded in securing haven. As the persecutions began, Burmetz tells how the Nazis searched for Jews, how he and his wife were under suspicion. Their wanderings became all the more difficult because their infant daughter Mignon was in- valided and had to be carried wherever they went. But with their 'liberation also came a cure for het' and they finally acquired their "share of morning." Bur- metz's story adds to the volumi- nous chronicle of courage display- ed by the escapees from Nazism and at the same time increases the evidence against the criminal Hitlerite hordes who were respon- sible for the extermination of millions of human beings. The report of two English physicians cited cases of nine mentally disturbed patients who habitually got drunk on water. Their intake of up to 35 pints a day so diluted their blood as to cause intoxicative symptoms. Herman Kilik's Posthumous 'Diary Judith Rose Wed of Vilna Ghetto' Adds Testimony to Joel Adelman Exposing Nazi Beasts' Brutalities At last, a vast literature is being collected to describe the holocaust of our time and to expose the Nazi crimes. In this literature will be incorporated also the story of heroism, of resistance by many Jews, of the battle for freedom. It will prove that not all Jews yielded to the Nazi scourge and that many fought for their rights. A valuable addition to this literature is "The Diary of the Vilna Ghetto," by Herman Kruk, published by Yivo Insti- tute for Jewish Research (1948 5th, N. Y. 28), with notes and explanations by Mordecai W. Bernstein. The book is in Yiddish. There is a brief explanatory chapter in English. Herman Kruk, the author of this diary, was the director of the Groser Library in Warsaw. Escaping the second week of the Nazi attack on Warsaw, he went to Vilna, reaching the city after great difficulty, and re- mained there to chronicle the tragic events of the tragedies imposed by the Nazis. He describes, in daily sequence, the panic that struck Vilna Jewry when they learned of the German attack on Rus- sia in 1941. He gives an account of the destruction, of the fright that invaded the ghetto in which Jews were confined, of the revelations of the • Nazi plans for the extermination of the Jewish people. Kruk's diary of '757 pages was dictated to. Mrs. Mendel- sund-Kowarsky, now of New York. She typed it in three copies. One was buried in a tin can in a bunker—a prac- tice Jewish historians re- sorted to during the Nazi horrors in efforts to preserve the facts and the testimony against the murderers. When Vilna was liberated, Abraham Sutskever, the Yiddish poet, went in search for that copy. The can was empty, but pages of the manuscript were strewn throughout the bunker. These pages, numbering 380, were gathered and brought to New York. Part of the missing pages was • completed from a fragment of 130 pages now in the Archives of Jerusalem. The rest missing. What has been re- trieved forms the text of Kruk's posthumous "Diary of the Vilna Ghetto." The diary ended abruptly under date of July 13, 1943. Kruk had been taken to Estonia and died at the age of 47, in DOM Nazi flames on Sept. 18 or 19, 1944. His diary depicts not only tragedy but attempts by the inmates of the Vilna ghetto to create a cultural atmosphere even in the midst of horrors. School, theaters, a library were attempted. These are part of the story. It is a deeply moving document. It is a record of heroism and of dignity — of suffering and de- gradation. In the ghetto deep interest was taken in Jewish life. There- is an episode of the news that reached the interned about the murder in Russia of Henrik Ehrlich and Victor Alter, and of the protests by Jewish workers in New York. These and similar incidents stirred the sufferers as much as their own sufferings. The bestialities shook them. Some escaped. Some resisted and died martyrs' deaths. Kruk's story is not compl but what had been pres is a soul-stirring revelati This book will be am the documents that will e nally point a finger of accusa n at the Nazi beasts. American-Israel Line Carries Cargo Direct from U.S. to East P S NEW YORK, (JT The American-Israeli Shipp Co., United States represe ive of Zim Lines of Isr , an- nounced that a new dir cargo services linking east ports in the United States with Japan, Hong Kong and the Phil- ippines will be started ne week. • The first westbound ng of the new service wi e by the 15,000-ton Israel- • cargo motorship, the Neg which will load at U.S. st coast ports for the far Ea' while its sister ship, M/S Am • loads in the far East for the States. Sailings will be monthly in both directions and the new line creates a globe-girdling network of shipping services for Zim. It was also announced that Zim Lines had taken a three- year lease on Pier 64 on the Hudson River in Manhattan and will move all of its opera- tions from its present privately owned base in Brooklyn. The line will pay an annual rental of $110,000 and a fee of one dollar a long ton of cargo when total cargo at the pier tops 110,000 tons annually. MRS. JOEL ADELMAN Judith Anne Rose was united in marriage with Joel Stefan Adelman Aug. 24 at Adas Shalom Synagogue. Rabbi Segal and Can- tor Fenak • officiated. so en are . and Mrs. E. Rose of Sorrento Ave. and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Adelman of Sussex A The e's ivory p chapel fi gertip was o ory silk illus . • e carried • stepha.;. onfirrnati Zee.' •e na , sister' of the •egroom, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Ellen Burnstein, sister of the bride Evelyn Meral, a Mrs. e ar Best Join F • Ushe ere avi n, Martin o the bride, and David Stein ing a hong Se. York and the New Engl states, the couple will reside i Ann Arbor where the bride- groom will conti e his studies at the if Michigan Law S Urge Polish Property Claimants to File Now All persons eligible to file claims under the Polish Claims- Agreement are advised by the World Jewish Congress to com- plete the requisite froms as soon as possible. The terminal date for filing is Sept. 30, but it is not necessary that claims be fully documented and established at the time of filing. Andrew T. McGuire, gen- eral counsel of the Foreign Claims Settlement Commission of the United States, has ad- vised the World Jewish Con-. gress that documents supporting claims may be submitted even after Sept. 30, if not available at the time of filing. Claimants must use official forms which are available only at the Foreign Claims Settle- ment Commission of the United States, Washington 25, D.C. Persons who may need assist- ance in filing their claims, are advised to consult an attorney. ds bring fast results! S Idon Rott and his CHESTRA 'Musk As You Like It" HOME: OFFICE: 1.1 5-2737 RKE OGRAPHY gs - Bar Mitzvahs als, Candids, 3 D's, Movies For Quality Workmanship Call Mr. Rosen UN 1-9000 your Simcha Bright! and that's Right!! From LO N ENGLAND Zan G BERT tr HIS • HESTRA "The mood for the ght occasion" LL UN 1-3065 The er a one learneth. — Friedrich Nietzsche. 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