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December 04, 1931 - Image 1

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1931-12-04

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

A merica' Pwisk Perlallcal Carter

CLIFTON AMUR CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

11- EbETROIT LWISII !MAIM,

All Jewish News
All Jewish Views
WITHOUT BIAS

TELEPHONE

CADILL
1-0-4-0

THE ONLY ANGLO-JEWISH NEWSPAPER PRINTED IS MICHIGAN

VOL. XXXIII. NO. 2

ALL-SEMITE UNION
PROJECT REJECTED
BY ARABIAN PRESS

DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1931

Lehman Renews

Wider Scope Gift

NUMEROUS AFFAIRS.
FOR CHANUKAH ON
1PROGRAM FOR WEEK

CANDLES OF HOPE

A Chanukah Poem

By PHILIP M. RASKIN

Per Year, $3.00; Per Copy, 10 Cenl

MUSEUM OF JEWISH
CEREMONIAL WORKS
OFFICIALLY OPENED

ASK INTERVENTIO1
OF U, S. AGAINST
RIOTS IN POLAND

National Leader
Detroit Visitor

State Diversity of Cultural,
Economic Interests is
Involved.

Hebrew Schools, Young Ju-
daea Join in Celebration
on Dec. 13.

Established i n Connection
With Jewish Theological
Seminary Library.

SOKOLOW WILL NOT BE
AT MOSLEM CONGRESS

EVENTS PLANNED BY
ALL LOCAL SCHOOLS

Capacity Throng at Ne
York Meeting Condemns
Outrages.

ADDItESSES DELIVERED
BY ADLER, ROSENBACH

Declares He Would Welcome
Round Table Conference
of Jews and Arabs.

; Cantors' Association, Center,
Kvutzah lvrith to Have
Celebrations.

PLANS ARE MADE FOR
PROTEST IN DETROIT

Origin and Development of
Collection Outlined by
Speakers.

Jewish Organizations Unite
to Hold Massmeeting
on Dec. 13.

NEW YORK.—The formal open-

"The Jewish community of De-
troit was stirred by the massacres
and anti-Semitic boycott in Po-
land, and will cry out most vigor-
ously its protest against the recent
disturbances, which are as yet un-
abated," according to a resolutio n
adopted at a conference of Jewis h
organizations formed Wednesday,
Nov. 25, upon the initiative of the
Lomza Benevolent Society.
The following officers were
elected at the initial meeting of
the conference held at the center
of the Jewish Workmen's Circle,
527 Holbrook avenue: S. Lieber.
man, of the Berditchever Aid So--
city, chairman; Louis Gillary,
Lomza Society, vice-chairman; M.
Arotsky Michigan Home Protec-
tive Association, recording secre-
tary. The executive committee
consists of Joshua Joyrich, of the
Radomer Aid Society, chairman;
Sam Newman, Galician Farband;
H. Cohen, Jewish Socialist party;
M. Geliebter, Independent Work-
ers' Circle, Branch 51; Osher
Goldberg, Jewish National Work-
ers' Alliance; Louis Aronson an
Tygel, Russian-Polish Aid So -
Eminent Layman Another Si,
ciety; Louis Gillary, Leo Fried,
Speaker; Chanukah Ora- who is a member of the Farband
torio Included in Service. of the Polish Jews in America.
The press committee is com-
On Sunday morning there will posed of Joshua Joyrich, I. Finkel.
be an exchange of pulpits at Tem- stein and A. H. Jaffin.
The executive committee an-
peals to all organizations, societies ,
lodges,/ clubs and congregation
not represented at the first two
meetings of the conference to send
delegates to the next meeting to
be held Wednesday, Dec. 9, at 527
Holbrook ave., and urge that they
should come en masse to the pro -
test mass meeting which will be
held at the Arena Gardens on
Sunday, Dec. 13, at 2 p. m.

The eight-day Chanukah festi-
val, also referred to as the Feast
of Lights or the Feast of the Mac-
cabees, ushered in with the light-
ing of the fat candle on Friday
evening, will be observed by many
organizations, and all the syna-
The majority of the Arab paper
gogues and schools ill the city.
declared that the inclusion of the
The feature event observing the
Jews in such a Federation is im
holiday will take place at 3 p. m.
possible. They hold that the diver
on Sunday, Dec. 13 at the Phila.
HON. HERBERT LEHMAN
city of the economic and cultura
delphia-Byran Talmud Torah. All
interests of the Jews militate
CINCINNATI. — Precisely be- Cw. Young Judaea groups of the
against a union with the Arabs
city, together with the United He-
'
cause
of
the
depression,
and
not
Jewish assimilation with the Arabs
brew Schools, will participate in
is frankly discarded. The papers in spite of it, lion Ilerbert II, Leh- a special program which will be
state further that even should n man, lieutenant-governor of the featured by the staging of playlets
union be attempted, the Jews wool( state of New York, hai! renewed in English and Hebrew, mass sing-
leave the Arabs as seam as they felt his contribution to the B'nai B'rith ing tableaux and other events.
their own position sufficiently con- Wider Scope.
Samuel N. Heyman, president of
Lieutenant-Governor Lehman is Young Judaea, and Bernard
solidated.
Racial superiority and
national pride, too, are factors that one of the most ardent endorsers Isaacs, superintendent of the
of the B'nai B'rith Ilillel Founda- United Hebrew Schools, are in
render unity impractical.
tions, one of the Wider Scope ac- charge of arrangements. There
Mufti Attacks Zionists.
Repudiated by his own followers tivities conducted in the universi- will be no charge for admission to
his projected pan-Islamic Congress ties of Illinois, Michigan, Wiscon- this event, but tickets will have to
denounced ley the leading Moslems sin, Ohio, West Virginia, Texas be secured from Young Judaea
of Palestine, the Grand Mufti of California, and Cornell.
clubs or offices of the schools.
Jerusalem still clings to his ancient
Events at Schools.
tatics of blaming the Zionists for
individual parties are being ar-
everything.
ranged gy all classes in the He-
The Caliphate revival, originally
brew schools. Every class at the
scheduled to be discussed at the'
Philadelphia-Byron school will
Congress, which created a strom of
have a party.
•opposition among Moslems in Pales-
An elaborate program has been
tine and Syria and elicited a formal
arranged by the Talmud-llolmur
protest from the Turkish Embassy,
School for Tuesday evening, Dec.
is now repudiated by the Mufti in
8, at 7:30 o'clock, in the B'nai
an official statement in which he
Moshe auditorium on Dexter and
labels it as a pure invention on the
Lawrence. Interesting Chanukah
part of the Zionists for the pur-
features were arranged by Miss
pose of sowing discord between the
Gertrude Rosenthal, teacher of
j
Rabbi Le, n Franc will deliver the kindergarten class A; Miss Freda
Moslems.
This brazen statement is offered ' third address in the series of lec- Guile of Kindergarten class B;
in the form of a proclamation, at tures arranged by the Zionist Edu- Mrs. Yonina Mathis, who has pre-
cational Council pared several tableaux • J. V. Ari I
the tinne when a number of those
of Det rent, on whose pupils will appear in a Bib-
invited to the Congress were in-
Wednesday, Dec. lical playet; J. Ilaggai, whose pu-
formed by the Mufti's headquarters
9,
at 8 p. m., at pils will stage the Biblical playlet
that the Caliphate question would
he discussed by the Congress, even
Northern High "Gideon." The program will be
;chord, Woo d- supervised by S. Kasdan, principal
though the discussion would be
ward and Owen. of the sahool. Canter A. A. Re.'
-..eistsaigissAiweoret teal. - The Congress
Dr. David Fau.I senfeld of the B'nai Moshe will
will be asked to vote whether or
man, president sing, several solos. There will be
not it considers the Caliphate es-
,f the co•eeil no admission charge and the pub-
sential. Should the answer be in the
and chairman of I ic is invited.
affirmative, the Congress will
the educational
adopt a resolution in this sense and
Other Celebrations.
nimmittee of the
publish it throughout the Islamic
The Ferry School, at Ferry and
Zionist District Antoine, formerly at the Kirby
world, without mentioning any
name or referring to any particular
Rabbi Fram of Detroit, will Center, will have its program on
preside.
T h e Thursday evening, Dec. 10, at 5:30
candidate for the office of Caliph.
public
is welccen•.
Admission is o'clock. M. Plafkin, Mrs. Fay
Congress Agenda Demanded.
Th n Palestin e government de- free.
Calvani and 11. Goldberg are in
Rabbi F111111 will speak on "Polit- charge,
manded assurance from the Grand
Mufti of Jerusalem that the Moslem ical. Cultural and Religious As-
The Oakland School. Westmin-
Congress en Dee. 7 will not deal pects of Zionism," and will present'
with questions likely to affect other a survey and estimate of the funds- (Turn to Page Opposite Editorial)
governments with which Great lief. erneutal cultural, political, philoso-
Phu and religious concepts of Jew-
tain has treaty relations.

JERUSALEM.—(J. T. A.)—The
proposal of a leading Arab person-
ality that a Semitic Federation be
formed, including the Jews, is
causing wide comment in the Arab
press in Palestine.

FRAM TO DISCUSS

Will Deliver Third Lecture
in Zionist Series on
Wednesday.

The government's demand. which
(Teirn to Last Page)
was the first official communication
by the government called for and
received and answer before noon.
The communication, the Jewish
Telegraphic Agency learns, was re-
ceived with astonishment by the
Mufti. Replying, Amin el Ilusseini
declared that the Congress will con-
fine itself to a discussion of the es-
tablishment of a Moslem University
Demonstrates That Young
in Palestine, the protection of the
holy places, the Iledjaz Railway
Children Enjoy Head-

BEN SIMONS ELECTED
KNOLLWOD PRESIDENT

Ben Simons was elected presi-
dent of the Knollwood Country
Club at the meeting held at the
buns of Maurice Aronsson last
Tuesday.
Ira Copeland was elected vice-
president; Sidney Stone, treas-
urer; Charles Agree, secretary.
On the board of directors are
niceAronsson, Ira Copeland,
liv rag W. Blumberg, Charles ,
ing the Bible.
-kg. ye, Sidney Stone, Joe Magid.
sohn Barney Smith, Mark Jacob-
Addressing the religious school so n and Myron Keys.
The first event planned by the
teachers of the three states of
new administration is a New
Michigan, Ohio and Indiana and Year's Eve
party at the Knollwood
in the presence of the leading Country Club.
Jewish educators of America,

ADDRESS BY FRAM
AROUSES TEACHERS

(Turn to Last Page.)

To Broadcast Talks

At Weizmann Dinner

Dr. Chaim Weizmann, for-
mer president of the World
Zionist Organization and of
the Jewish Agency; Lord Read-
ing, former viceroy of India
and secretary of state for for-
eign affairs of Great Britain
and former secretary of the
colonies, will speak over a
coast-to-coast network of the
Columbia Broadcasting System
Monday, Dec. 7. These speeches
will be re-broadcast from a din-
ner to be given in honor of Dr.
Chaim Weizmann on that day
in London by the English Zion-
ist Federation, at which Lord
Reading will be toastmaster.
The program will begin at 4:30
P. m. Easte-n Standard time
and will last for three-quarters
of an hour. This program was
arranged through the Zionist
Organization of America and by
courtesy of the Columbia
(Broadcasting System.

Flicker, candle, flicker
Glitter, gleam and spark ;
While the mist grows thicker
And the sky more dark. -

Wintry winds and showers
Have the sky unstarred ;
Blinded all the towers,
All the highways barred.

Cleaved the clouds asunder
With your wonder-light ;
Thousand years I wander
In a pie swept night.

Address by Dr. Adler.

Thousand years I wander
In a vale of fright ;
Hale and gale and thunder—
And no dawn in sight.

Dimmer, ever dimmer
Earth and heaven seem;
Once a year you glimmer
Lighting up it dream.

While the mist grows thicker
And the dawn is far—
Flicker, candle, flicker,
Be my guiding star.

"Baron de Hirsch---Man
and Legend"

By JOSEPH LEFTWICH

Editor's Note: The centenary of the birth of Baron Mo.
ritz von Hirsch, internationally famed Jewish philanthropist.
occurs on Dec. 9. The following article gives a comprehensive
review of the work and life of the great Jewish benefactor as
well as an interesting analysis of his personality.

, still remembered as vividly a
A centenary is itself a proof of when they were alive Great Jews

survival to which few men can are honored in their lifetime, their
look forward. To be reniembered names are recalled on the day of
a century after by one's own de-, their death, and then they are for

scendants is rare. To be remeni- gotten.
The humbler of us scarcely ex-
hered gratefully by millions of
pect the tombstones over our graves
people all over the world is some-
to be tended with any remembrance
thing that is given to very few., of the men we were, by the
And when the remembrance is
coupled with an assurance. that the !inn' a century has passed since
se began our life. In London, and
man will be. sin il I
b
I
ar y remem tree I suppose in every city of the world,
many centuries hence, it is proof !
there are monuments in the streets,
that he has attained the greatest erected 20 or 30 years ago to men
thing mortal man may have--ins- whose
, names at the time they died
mortality. Ile has risen to be a
were household words, and people
legend, part of the history of man- today stare and wonder who they
kind
were, and what their statue's were
Out of the mists of the last bun. put up for, and in many cases their
drat years that have rolled by 1, removal is demanded because they
there are less than a dozen names
that stand out in Jewish history (Turn to Page Opposite Editorial)

Rabbi Leon Frani tilde a stirring

appeal for the restoration of the
Bible itself in the classroom of the
Jewish religious .school. Be de-
viewed the exclusive use of the
"Bible history"- or Bible reader,"
which are interesting enough in
themselves, but which he main-
tained do not lead the child to a
love of the Bible itself.
In view of the fact, Rabbi Fram
argued, that in the. religious
schools of most Reform temples.
Hebrew is not being taught, and in
4
view of the fact that even where 4
This is the sixth All-Jewish All-
it is taught children have not the
opportunity to learn enough of it 1 American Football learn picked for
to develop a love for the Hebrew ;the edification, enjoyment and an-
Bible, the teachers in the Reform I noyance of the readers of the
temples ought at least to implant I American Jewish press. Some at-
a love for the English Bible. This ' tempt has been made to represent
can be done only by getting the all sections of the country but no
children of as early an age as nine one was chosen for the team solely
to read the Bible stories of Abra- because of his college affiliations.
The blame for the team is not en-
(Turn to Last Page)
tirely mine, an I was aided and

Mayor Murphy Defends His Relief
Program In Address at Temple Club

ing of the Museum of Jewish
Ceremonial Objects, established in
connection with the library of the
Jewish Theological Seminary of
America, took place on Tuesday
evening, Nov. 24, before an in-
vited group of about 125 Jewish
scholars and laymen.
Brief addresses were delivered
by Dr. Cyrus Adler, president of
the seminary, who outlined the MRS. ESTELLE STERNBERGER
origin and development of the col-
Mrs. Estelle Sternberger of
lection, and by Dr. A. S. W. Ro-
senbach, president of the Ameri- New York, national executive sec-
can Jewish llistorical Society, who retary of the Council of Jewish
formally opened the museum room Women, will be a guest in Detroit
of the society, which adjoins the this Monday to address the annual
seminary exhibit. Both rooms meeting of the Detroit section of
are on the ground floor of the new the organization, at Temple Beth
library building of the Seminary, El, on "Deflations and Deflec-
at the northeast corner of Broad- tions."
way and One Ilundred Twenty-
second street. The exhibits will
be open to the public every day,
except Friday and Saturday, from
10 a. m. to 5 p. in., and will be in
charge of Rabbi Isidore S. Meyer.

Dr. Adler's address follows in
part:
"There are three great educe-
: tional factors in the world for
teaching purposes—the school, the
library, and the museum. I have
always envisaged these three as
going together. I have at one
time or another in my life taken
part in all three; as teacher in
school and university, as librarian,
and as curator in a museum. And
it is a source of great happiness to
use that in what I fear is the eve-
ning of life, I have been able to
get these three factors together in
our Seminary building.
"There are two kinds of mu-
seums, the one is the very big mu-
eum and one the very small. I
I grew up in a very big museum-
, the United States National Mu-

BRICKNER TO SPEAK
AT TEMPLE SUNDAY



New York Protest.
NEW YORK.—(J. T. A.)—The
was asked
to head the appeal to responsible
leaders in Poland to crush. that
forces of bigotry and hostility who
by their physical attacks upon the
Jews and the boycott of Jewish

seum at Washington, but I have
since become a partisan of the
small museum. I think, other
things being equal, persons can
learn more in the smaller museums
than one can in the big museum
of Paris or New York. I am not
going to boast of this collection.
I ant not going to say it is the

American government

endeavors, are unoermining the

best, but I think it a very good

one.

The Benguiat Collection.

"This collection has as its back-
bone what is called the Benguiat
collection. I have not studied the
istory of the Benguiat family, I
h
RABBI BARNET R. BRICKNER
ave the inipression that they were
ha Jewish family from Damascus
pie Beth El between Dr. Leo M.
who came west to Gibraltar and Franklin and Rabbi Barnet R.
t hence scattered to England,
(Turn to Page Opposite Editorial)
(Turn to Last Page.)

ANNUAL ZIONIST
MEETING DEC. 17

DEDICATE SHAAREY
ZEDEK ON JAN, 10

Simon Shetzer, president of the
Zionist District of Detroit, announ-
ces that the annual Zionist meet-
ing will be held on Thursday eve-
ning, Dec. 17, at the Philadelphia-
Byron Talmud Torah. Officers are
to be elected fur the ensuing year, ,
Congregation Shaarey Zedek,
and a report is to be submitted by oldest Conservative synagogue in
delegates to the recent Zionist con- 1 Detroit, will formally dedicate its
vention held in Atlantic Cit y.
magnificent new edifice at Chicaga
and Lawton avenues on Sunday,
Jan. 10. The dedication exercises
will take place Sunday afternoon
and will be followed by a dinner
for members and contributors and
their families. A special Sabbath
morning service will be held on
the Saturday preceding the dedi-
cation exercises, with a visiting
rabbi delivering the sermon.
Judge Charlene Rubiner is gen-
eral chairman of arrangements,
with Mrs. Herbert Warner as

Judge Charles Rubiner Is
General Chairman of Ar-
rangements Committee.

All-Jewish, All-American Football Team for 1931

Samuels and Newman of Michigan and Eliowitz of Michigan State on First Team Selected for The

Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Jewish Telegraphic Agency; Sports Editor
Aided in Choice by Coaches and Writers.

abetted by a number of football
coaches, players and writers.

The first team lineup if ever

By GEORGE JOEL

FIRST TEAM
Hirschberg, Pittsburgh

Samuels, Michigan
Myerson, Harvard
Horwitz, Chicago
Rosenberg, U. So. Calif

Firstenberg, N. Y. U
Stoneberg, Syracuse
Newman, Michigan
Schwartz. Notre Dame .
Eliowitz, Michigan State
Grossman, Rutgers

ALTERNATE TEAM

L K
.L. T
L G

C
R C
R. T
It. E
.Q. B
.L. H
R. H
F. B

Gilman, Ohio State
_Rotenberg, Oregon Aggies
Arnstein, N. Y. U.
Slomovitz, Western Reserve
Weinstock, Columbia
Kopans, Harvard

Wein, Chicago

llootstein, Boston U
Poppelman, Maryland

ilandelman, Cornell
Fishel, Syracuse

REPLACEMENTS

Backs—Grossman, N. Y. U.; Goldenberg 'Wisconsin; Gt : eenberfr

from the twenty either good hacks

on his team speaks volumes. Elio-

wit; one of the high scorers in the
game, was 90 per cent of the
Michigan State offensive while
Grossman was at least 99 per cent

vice-chairman. Details of all ar-
rangements are being worked out
by a number of sub-committees.
Congregation Shaarey Zedek is
the recipient of widespread con-
graduations, not clone from the
Detroit Jewish community, but
from Jews of other communities,
upon the courageous prosecution
of its project to a successful con-
clusion. Its new synagogue, dig-
nified in its simplicity, is pro-
nounced one of the finest syna-

of the Rutgers backfield. Both
boys would have shown to better
&vantage had their lines been a
trifle more capable. The alternate gogue structures in the Middle
backfield consisting of Hootstein, West.

Poppelman, Randleman and Fishel

would make a strong combination.

prestige of Poland in the eyes of
the world, at a mass meeting held
in Carnegie Hall under the aus-
pices of the American Jewish
Congress.
A throng which filled Carnegie
Hall to capacity heard distin•
guished representatives of Ameri.
can and Jewish life condemn the
anti-Semitic excesses in Poland
and the forecast made that the
ultimate results will be far worse
to the Poles than to the Jews.
Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, honor-
ary president of the American
Jewish Congress, presided. The
principal speakers were George
Gordon Battle, prominent member
of the bar; Dr. Harry A. Takin-
son, general secretary of the
American Committee on the Rights
of Religious Minorities; Hon.
Charles S. Tuttle, Bernard S.

(Turn to Page Ten.)

Golden Book Honors
For Justice Brandeis

On the occasion of his seven-
ty-fifth birthday, Justice Louis
I). Brandeis will be honored by
Detroit Jews with inscriptions
in the Golden Book at Jeru-
salem.
An honor roll of Detroit Jews
who wish to be among those to
honor the noted Zionist and lib-
eral by perpetuating his name

in the Golden Book !Lilies]
Jewish National Fund is now
being compiled by Mrs. Philip

Slomovitz, in behalf of the De-
troit Jewish National Fund
Council.
Those who are to be included
in the Brandeis Honor Roll are
asked to make voluntary contri-
butions to the Jewish National
Fund, and the roll will be an-
nounced in an early issue of
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle.
Contributions are to be mailed
to Mrs. 1', Slomovitz, 3272
Monterey.

. .
Alexander Motssi, Noted Actor, Indicts
Christian World for Persecutin g Jews

called upon to play a benefit game Ohio State.
Not any one of these players stands
for the unemployed would draw
inuttie::ircigirtvt
I.inesmen—Frankel, North Carolina; Jacobson, U. C. L. A. K.; n
enough fans through the turnstiles
el leyPC r a f rn
sZl y t uit s ,
Greenberg Nebraska; Rabenstein, Ohio State; Greenberg, Minnesota;
to keep the soup tureen filled all
Itrowitz, N. 1'. U.; Mazloff, Franklin & M.; Goldsmith, Georgia Tech; strong, well oiled offensive.
winter. A pair of ends like Hirsch.
The
All-Jewish
teams are a mix.
Rosenbloom, Drake; Landwirth, Washington University.
Beth El Men's Club Reorganized With Sidney M. Fecheimer berg, who captained the Pitt team
lure of experience, brawn brain
;
this season, and Stoneberg playing and Rosenberg are a handy pair to been assured of the center gall.
and speed. E ach quality blending
. Non-Jewish Dramatist Pays Off Old Score Against Anti-
as President ; Dr. L. M. Franklin, Norval A. Hawkins,
i
his third year of varsity football have around when • hack needs a
The All-Jewish backfield is par- nicely so that the finished product is .
Semites; States Jew-Baiter Robbed of All
I. Himelhoch Other Speakers at Meeting.
for Syracuse, would give the safety hole to pick up a few yards. Both ticularly good and suffers only from a team that few colleges in the
Semblance of Humanity and Justice.
man little chance to run back boys will receive mention for All- lack of capable substitutes. This country could hold to a low score.
The Men's Club of Temple Beth committee. Singing at this meet- kicks. Both of these boys are big, Sectional honors. The alternate year for some reason there was an
As long as Jewish boys of the
RI, at • meeting held on Tuesday ing was under the leadership of rangy and fast, and ■ are not only team guards ■ are not quite up to abundance of line material. If the
VIENNA.—(J.
T. A.)—At a ' chosen to pay off an old score
evening, reorganized and elected Eddie McGrath. Smokes and re-' goof defensive ends but also able standard set by Myerson and Ro- first and alternate backfields could calibre of our members of these ' time when anti-Semitism us gain- against the anti-Semites in pene-
All-Jewish teams continue to
freshments were served.
to Hock for their hacks. The alter- senberg but would more than suf- last through a full
the following officers:
enter
'
lag
ascendancy
in
virtually every trating fashion.
game the coach our colleges we need have little fear
"Doles" System Argued.
nate ends are no less capable, espe- fice to fill in. At center on my first would have nothing to worry about.
Sidney M. Fecheimer, president;
Traces hi s Family Tres.
that the charge against Jews con- field of th e cultural and economic
Unexpectedly, and without pre- cially Gilman, who was the main- team I
Joe Magidsohn, vice-president:
life of Germany and Austria, the! The press in the Germanic couq-
have placed Horowitz. Nor. Newman, although not quite as ef- cerning
their lack of college spiritlunawaited counter.attack upon the tries has in recent ytars conducted
Leonard Lewis, secretary; John A. arrangement, the program at the stay of the Ohio State line. Sam- mally a guard, the captain of the fective as he was last year, will get will be taken
too
seriously.
meeting turned into a discussion uels, Firstenberg, Rottenberg and Chicago team can play equally well
ll by AleeosunsclerGMerom
um
Heavenrich, treasurer; and the
the call on either the first or second
iss i, a vigorous campaign against Maissi
Every year alter pick/ g as All- internationally
following trustees; Edwin Wolf. of the so-called "dole" system. Kopans ■ are four tackles that • any place in the line. He has ex- Conference All Star Team. The
German on the assumption that he is a
Norval A. Hawkins former sales coach would welcome with open perience
Leo 1. Franklin, Dr. Charles A.
and is a good passer. He boy is • fine all-around signal caller, Jewish team my mail a omaticallylactor who recently achieved die.: Jew, or at least of Jewish de-
Smith. Ralph Mayer, William B. manager for the Ford Motor Co.,, arms. Samuels and Firstenberg are is • cool, smart player who knows an unusually fine passer and knows increases. Invariably th complaint 1 tinction as • dramatist with hie I went, and because of his friendly
is registered
lengthy address attacked the veterans, wise in diagnosing plays, where a play is going to break and
that I h ve omitted' play "Napoleon." has created I attitude toward the Jews. In the
Isenberg, Joseph Alexander and in a
Mayor Frank Murphy, deft in splitting the interference manages to get there first. On • how to use his head. About somebody's favorite f the line- something of a sensation, the
system.
II• J. L. Frank.
re - I face of this avalanche of abuse,
Schwartz little need to he said. He
who came during the closing re- and good pass catchers. Rottenberg
of which have not yet )(nisei persistently maintained si-
over
better team he would have been • it • certain All-American choice. cp. This year I ha e decided to verberatio ns
The meeting was presided
heard
save all letters for • oath and at died out.
and Kopans are sophomores about certain "conference" choice. Stoma-
by I. Ilimelhoch, president of marks of Mr. Hawkins and
: fence. Recently, how.ver, his p a-
Playing his last year of college the end of
of his remarks from the ante- whom you will hear • lot more be- vitz is another
at ti e print the
.
At this period when the records tienee carne to as end and in an
Temple Beth El, and Harry R. part
player suffering be- feotball he was the outstanding
team as it appe a fn
room, defended his relief schemes. o
f r ethey
th
a concensus were replete with acts of physical article which appeared simultane-
en d t h• respective foot- /suee of ■ some team. flccould
Solomon presented the report of
Nick on the Notre Dare team. The of these letters .
ball careers. The guards, Myerson bare picked his own college and mere fact that he
violence against the Jews and more ously in several German paper',
the nominating and organization (Tara to Page Opposite tditorial
was recognizable
(Copyri.Lt. 1131, 2. T. A.)
subtle form of torture. Molssi
-
has . ( Turn to Fa g, piev se. 1.11.1

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