• ffiRONICIL4 and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE OUR FILM FOLK (Continued from Preceding Page) lumbia University forcibly re- quested his departure because he wrote something they didn't like in the campus mag. . . . Today this same university's board of trustees proffers him the Pulitzer Prize on a silver platter .. for co-authoring "Of Thee I Sing," New York musical show. Did you know that Jack Demi,. sey has • strain of the Yehuda in his blood? It's reported that some time in the dim past he had a Levy ancestor. He's been buzz. ing around the studios lately just in case . . . but fight pictures aren't so popular. • • It's a fact: AI Jolson, Eddie Cantor, Weber and Fields, and Fanny Brice all got their start in burlesque. • • A Pittsburgh reader writes to inquire whether Norma Shearer, Clark Gable, Bebe Daniels and Conrad Nagel are Jewish. Our genealogical research department catalogues no suspicions of Jew- ishness concerning Clark Gable or Conrad Nagel . . Bebe may look it, but she's said to be Spanish and a Catholic. As for Norma, she adopted Judaism on becoming the wife of Irving Thalberg ... the tie was welded by a rabbi. Buster was adopted by his step- father, William Collier, Sr. • • • Slightly exag—maybe a little stretched—but a typical Marx Brothers' story: In the early days of their vaude- ville career, they received the bountiful salary of $50 a week for the four. They were all un- der 17, so Mama Marx was their manager and traveled with them. It took split-fraction arithmetic to pay all expenses, including rail- road fares, for five out of that 60. To make ends meet the boys wore knee-length trousers and talked falsetto so they could travel half-fare. It worked, but the mother never forgot the sar- castic tone of one conductor who came to inform her that one of her "children" was puffing a cigar in the smoker and another was shaving in the washroom! • • • Another day . . . another col- umn. SCHOLARSHIP MEDALS AWARDED AT BETH EL HIGH SCHOOL HYDE ADDRESSES ZIONIST MEETING Erwin Ellman, valedictorian (left) ; Jean I,eipziger, with 13 years' perfect attendance; Nettie Go d- hol and Jack Art, winners of scholarship medals, were among those honored Sunday at the graduation exercises of the Temple Beth El High School. Dr. Leo M. Franklin (center) presented the scholar- Secretary of Agriculture Arthur ship awards. M. Hyde, one of the leading fig- ures in the Hoover Administration OUR LETTER BOX and a member of the recently formed American Palestine Com- (Continued from Preceding Page.) mittee, was the principal speaker The Wayne County Association at the meeting launching the Pal- India, go in search for Jews, and the Order of Eastern Star, com- estine fund-raising effort in Phil- when you find some, please send of prising a membership of 60 0. E. adelphia on May 18. me a post card telling me so." S. chapters in Wayne County, on The visit of Secretary Hyde to How I wanted to relate a few May 9, honored Mrs. Ann Wein Little Orphan Annie, the news- paper cartoon, will be picturized Philadelphia is expected to give a incidents that Dave told me about. substantial impetus to the success But I didn't want to waste time, . Mitzi Green to be Annie. • • • Singing Society to Celebrate of the American Palestine Cam- as there were some excellent That accident of Chico Marx paign there. Judge Leopold Glass speakers. As I do not know Rabbi Concert's Success at happened when he was driving is chairman and Dr. Cyrus Adler, Fram personally I ask The Detroit Banquet May 28. down Wilshire boulevard, study- honorary chairman. Robert 51. Jewish Chronicle to print this in ing both sides of the street for a Bernstein is chairman of organiza- order to relieve Rabbi Fram's an- Before an enthusiastic audience shoe store . . . Well, it relieved tion of teams. Miss Hortense Levy xiety. w hich tilled the large auditorium him of buying new shoes for a is chairman of the women's di- My brother, Dave Racoossin, re- of the Detroit Institute of Arts to vision. while. lated to me that the first week he • The launching of the campaign went to a movie. Being tired he capacity, the Detroit Halevy-lia- zomir Singing Society, in the tra- 'Pon my word ... Jesse Lasky, in Philadelphia conincided with the dozed off—the movies being silent ditional manner, made its seventh well-known picture exec., was once function tendered to Felix M. War- at the time. Of a sudden he was brug in Chicago on the same day. awakened by a voice which spoke annual appearance on Sunday eve- • cornetist. ning, May 16, under the direction Mr. Warburg consented to the din- in Yiddish: "Mame, kook oifen of Prof. E. Zaludkowski, accom- Oh, yes . . . about Buster Col- ner, inasmuch as the proceeds go tzwilling." ("Mama, look at the panied by Samuel Shpargel at the lier, Jr. . . . His father's name to the American Palestine Cam- twins.). Ile looked around and piano. The concert was free to was Charles Funkenstein Gall. paign. The dinner was a $100 per- saw a mother and daughter con- the public. His parents were divorced and reservation. event. versing in Yiddish. The program of the concert was Another incident Dave tells a varied one and embodied several about was when a big bronzed In- aspects of Jewish music. Between dian walked into his office dressed the inspiring "Motto," which in Indian garb and said: "Mr. Ra- opened the program, and the fra- coosin, I'll have to stay out next ternal "All for One," the closing week." "Why," asked Dave. The signature of the choir, the audi- Indian explained that ehe will have Under Management of W. D. Sanders MRS. ANN WEINBECK ence enjoyed the compositions of to celebrate his New Year. "You such well-known Jewish men of just celebrated your New Year beck by electing her as president. not long ago," Dave protested. This is the highest honor ever be- music as L. Low, M. Posner, Z. Zilberts, M. Gelbart, L. Lewan- "Yes, but this is the Jewish New stowed on a Jewess in Eastern dowsky and others, as well as sev- Rates $2.00 up—Free Parking Year," the Indian explained, and Star circles in Wayne county. eral piano solos by the well-known Dave felt that he was standing Purity Chapter No. 359 of East- next to a brother in far-off India. ern Star, of which Mrs. Weinbeck Mr. Shpargel. MICHIGAN AT PITCHER PHONE 4131 The concert was the climax of Do you see there are Jews every- is a past matron, is one of the 50 KALAMAZOO, MICH. where, with synagogues and chapters affiliated with the Wayne the year's musical activity of the rabbis. County 0. E. S. Association and is choir, numbering over 100 singing Your Sincerely, the only Jewish chapter in the members. Although this appear- MRS. ANNA LOPATE. group. Purity Chapter is now in ance brought out the best efforts oft the chorus, and consequently twenty-fifth year. Editor's Note: A series of ar- its Mrs. Weinbeck, besides being proved an event of greatest inter- ticles in The Detroit Jewish Chron- past matron of Purity Chapter, is est to the organization and its fol- icle two years ago presented an a past mother advisor of Purity lowers, Detroit Jewry has had sev- interesting picture of Jewish com- Rainbow for Girls and is the pres- eral other opportunities to hear munities in India. ent most excellent chief of Great- the choir during the past year, the Bombay has a well-organized er Detroit Temple No. 52 of latest being a half-hour radio con- cert over station WMBC in behalf community and support's a Jewish Pythian Sisters. monthly magazine, printed in Eng- of the Allied Jewish Campaign, Mrs. Weinbeck was the recipi- Wednesday, May 11. lish, "The Jewish Advocate," which is a monthly visitor to the office ent of many beautiful baskets of The climax of the organization's of The Detroit Jewish Chronicle. flowers in honor of this occasion, social season will be reached in an In a recent issue, we congratulated both from various branches of this elaborate banquet and dance which the Advocate editorially on its fraternal organization as well as is being arranged for Saturday from her own chapter. first anniversary. Mrs. Weinbeck was an untiring evening, May 28, celebrating the worker in the Allied Jewish Cam- seventh anniversary of the organ- ization's existence. Advocates Study of Hebrew paign. T'igillFEesCgIg.Tv7E1)14E.EIK HALEVY-HAZOMIR 7TH APPEARANCE PROVES TRIUMPH • Park-American Hotel 200 Rooms—Fireproof MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE CO. in High Schools. Urge your out-of-state Relatives and Friends t o VACATION IN MICHIGAN Tell them of the splendid vacation advantages offered by our state ... the Great Lakes and their miles of beaches ... 5000 inland lakes and streams ... progres- sive towns with modern stores, botels,thcaters and news- papers ... unexcelled highways ... ideal camping spots. The millions of dollars spent each year by Michigan's thousands of visitors add to the prosperity of the state. Let us also spend our own vacations in Michigan this year, thereby contributing still further to its prosperity. And wherever you go, dispel worry by telephoning home and office frequently. Call friends to tell them when you will arrive. Tele- phone ahead for hotel accommodations. Long Distance rates are low. :-,-= CAN YOU SPARE TWO MINUTES? • Just let us give you a two-minute demonstra. Lion and you will be convinced that the NEW FORD is the greatest value ever offered in auto- mobile history. DELIVERIES NOW BEING MADE GINSBERG ==- - - Motor Sales = Sales Service We lays • selection of gwarsusteed used ears for sale. We Will Accept Amy Make of Car In Trade 1253543 GRATIOF AVENUE Two Minutes' Drive Last of City Airport. PINGREE 6400 OPEN SUNDAYS 211111111111111111111111111111 1 I11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111h7 Editor, Detroit Jewish Chronicle: We hear no many suggestions of ZIONIST CONCLAVE late in regard to cultivating good- SET FOR JULY 3-4 will between Jew and Gentile and yet not one of these has presented (Continued from Page One.) the idea of making the Hebrew language accessible to the Gen- Palestine, the Jews outside of Pal- tile. I am of strong conviction estine face the common world that an introduction of the He- crisi s , ha u nd bt e h ee n support y rferductehids brew lanieguage in our colleges wor k will crystallize into a sympathetic Palestine Jews are giving a good understanding and appreciation of account of themselves. It remains Judaism, and Jews. for the Jews outside of Palestine We are very often confronted to fulfill their obligations as ade- with the argument that Hebrew is quately. This matter of financing a dead language, and that a study the continuance of our work is one of it will nt reap any satisfactory of the most important to come results. To those who argue before the convention at Phila- thus I safely say that they are delphia." ignorant of the Hebrew language, Among other matters that must its vast storehouses of modern literature, and its constant use as be taken up by the convention is a living otngue. Peretz Smolens- a reconsideration of the functions kin, Shalom Abramovitch, Judah and relations of the parent Zionist Leib Gordon, Abraham Maim are Organization of America and its only a selected few who serve as affiliated bodies. A committee is now working on this problem and exemplars. Jews have also produced mod- will report to the convention. ern poets—Tchernowitz and Bia- lik being among the foremost. To study the Hebrew language and will find ourselves only following merely read these poets would be what has long been accepted in worth while. In these two crea- larger colleges and universities tive towers we can look for the such as the University of Chicago, emotions and feelings of the Jews Columbia, Pennsylvania, to men- who have spent 2,000 years in a tion only a few. But what is even despicable and contemptible dias- more revealing, some of the high pore. Who can read such poetry schools of this country have and hate Jewry, who can taste already accepted it as part of the such work and fail to be impressed curriculum. with its genius? But there is another important Yes, Hebrew is alive, very much reason for initiating a study of BO. I need but refer to its fre- Hebrew at the City College. It is quent use in some of our smaller high time we began to take stock communities of this country, not of ourselves. Let us begin with a to speak of the larger ones—New personal inventory and see how York, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, De- many of us, as Jews, know He- troit and others. brew. It will be a surprisingly But this argument gets us no- small number. With Hebrew in where. We are not particularly the college we will find many Jew- interested whether or not Hebrew ish students enrolling in the course is spoken in this country or others. for credit. To prove this conten- The fact remains that it is • living tion I might mention only a few language in constant use. The facts which will substantiate my only angle we are interested in is: view. The United Hebrew Schools Will its study create an under- have a great number of its stu- standing of the Jewish people, its dents at the college interested in spiritual creativeness and self-ex- taking advanced Hebrew work. pressioin? One cannot but answer The Temple Beth El has two adult in the affirmative. How can one classes in which Hebrew is taught. read Ached Ha-Am and fail to Being one of the instructors I sense the Jewish spirit? Who can might, in passing, mention the pro- read Shalom Aleichem and miss found interest which is manifest- his unique humor? Who can delve ed in the study of this language. intelligently into the Midrash and Young Israel of this city has or- Talmud and not grasp the depth of ganized Hebrew classes while the emotion as expressed by the Y. W. H. A. has done likewise. 1 rabbis? This is all genuine Jude- am, however, assured that even ism and to my mind will help re- without the registration of these move anti-Semitism and synthetize students two or three classes could into a better appreciation of Jew- easily be formed of those Jews ish life, customs and Institutions. who attend the college at present. In a city like Detroit, with a How long will apathy and In- population approximating 1,500,- difference predominate? I sug- 000, including 80,000-odd Jews, geld that all those interested in I deem it • transgresaion not to prolonging the life of the Jew and have the Hebrew language in its perpetuatine his spirit write the elementary and advanced form Board of Education. not asking taught at the City College of De- that Hebrew be Introduced but trek. With an introduction of demanding its immediate intro- Hebrew we have an opportunity duction. Thanking you in anticipation of to educate the Gentile in Judaism and dissipate unfounded preju- seeing this letter in print in your next issue. I are. dices. WALTER FARBER. With the initiation of Hebrew at 2047 Hazelwood, Detroit. the City College of Detroit we Strange Case of Lesser Ury. (Continued from Preceding Page.) ODORLESS there were piles of paintings, etches and drawings, all of great value. In short, it was plain that Leaser Ury had not died in poverty. The tragedy of Lesser Ury was a greater one than that. Slowly it dawned on his friends that Ury in the latter years of his life had be-' come the victim of a monomania. i To the few visitors he received he always complained of hard times' and distress. But he never ac- cepted help or comfort. Once In a while he stood on the Nollendorf Plats in his threadbare and patched clothing watching the limousines and taxis flit by. Hun- dreds of Berlin Jews driving by and recognizing the forlorn and bedraggled figure invited him into their cars, but he always indig- nantly refused. He complained that he could not pay street-car fare. Yet the marks lay piled up in his studio. Ile was frequently takers for a beggar, but in his wardrobe was found a splendid fur coat and a collection of lounge suits, dress coats, beach apparel, and virtually new clothes for every occasion. There were neat piles of underwear. All of it unused! Feared Poverty. Everyone knew him by sight In the neighborhood of his studio. But nobody knew his famous name. Nobody realized in the populous quarter where ho dwelt that this individual in his paint- smeared smock was the greatest living impressionist, the founder the Sezession movement. lie told the shopkeepers in the neigh- borhood that his name was Leh- mann and they took him for one of the pathetic social wrecks who abound in post-war Germany. Rather ostentatiously he walked from the grocery shop with a chunk of bread and a piece of sausage under his arm, but on the other hand he had the scrub-wo- man occasionally go and fetch the finest and most expensive dishes in the renowned llahnen restau- rant The tragedy of Ury was that he was simply overwhelmed with a tremendous unreasoning fear of poverty. It Is said that Charles Chaplin once seemed to be heading for perdition impelled by • similar fixed idea. A month before Ury's death he visited the home of a Berlin collector who had just pur- chased one of his paintings. The chased collector had agreed to pay his 10,000 marks, but while writing out the check he reminded Ury of the days when they were both penniless young students, who (re. quented a certain Bohemian ar- tists' hangout in Unter den Lin- den: Upon hearing the reference to his penurious past, Herr Ury flew into a violent rage. Ile in- sulted his friend with the reproach that he reminded him of his past with the sole object of hurting him and threw the check back in his face after having spat upon it. Subsequently there was a fight when Ury tried to slash his own painting in the millionaire's home. Persecution Mania. With the fear of poverty came a persecution mania. He always felt that he and his work were dies criminated against. On the other hand, he never recognized the mer- its of another artist, nor had he MOTHPROOF a PERFECT FURNITURE RUGS CARPETS DRAPERIES 5 5 GUARANTEE YEAR YEAR We make a specialty of cleaning and mothprofing all furnishings —one article or complete home— CALL US FOR FREE INSPECTION—NO OBLIGATION IFOCEST `,.LVEIrs' 533.547 FOREST AVE E . COlumbia 4200 -4 ever a generous word for fellow painters. Ills monumental paint- ings were praised by the critics, but few had ever seen the painter. Once he charged that requests for an exposition of his works was prompted by his enemies, who wanted an opportunity to make fun of his art. Ile did not re- ceive the title of professor and was not elected to membership of the Academy of Art. Ury's latter years were embit- tered by the knowledge that his rival, Lieberman, another Jewish painter, wan loaded with honors and received the acclaim of so- ciety. The rivalry and bitterness was mutual, however. When somebody wrote of Lieberman's paintings once that in reality they were made by Ury, Liebermann replied: "It is better that people say this of me than that they should say that I made those worthless things of Ury." Ury's tragedy still deepens when we know that artistic Berlin in- tended to honor him on a truly grandiose scale. A monumental exposition of his work was to have taken place in November. He was scheduled to become professor and his election to the Academy was assured. Thousands of admirers, among them several of the pon- tiffs of art in Germany and other European countries, had grouped themselves to make the occasion of his seventieth birthday a mem- orable one. They were deter- mined to show their admiration for the master so conclusively that he would never again feel that he was neglected or unrecognized. Only Ury never saw the day that might have brought back the light to him. He died in bitter- ness against the world and him- self, in fearful dread of poverty alone, almost an outcast. A "Son- derling," the German papers call him. True, but a "Sender- ling" of genius. ORDER SHAKE-UP IN COMZET WORK Dismias Government Officials for Discouraging Kahn. indorf Conditions. MOSCOW.—(J. T. A.)—Charged with the effort to abolish Kalinin- dorf, as a specific Jewish region, two high government officials of the region were dismissed. The dis- missal of these officials came as a result of the decision by the Ukrain- ian Communist Party and the Cen- tral Comet to carry out a complete shakeup in the Kalinindorf regional Soviet. The suggestion that the region be converted into a non- Jewish section is particular de- nounced. A serious situation, it is shown officially has developed in Kalinin- dorf, where the Jewish occupants have dwindled down to 360 fami- lies, where'1,916 prveiously existed. In this connection, the All-Ukraln- ian Comzet is charged with failure In affording the colonists proper supervision. Henceforth the All- Ukrainian Comzet will not be per- mitted to work indepednently. It will be placed under strict control of • Central Comzet in Moscow. The Ukrainian Comzet in con- junction with the Moscow Comzet has appealed to the Central Gov- ernment to dispatch immediately to Kalinindorf, 600 horses and 15 tractors. A request is also made that the Zik appoint a new regional Soviet and that a special Commis- sion of investigation be sent down in order to determine how to bring back there that have left the colony. In order to assist in catching up with the spring sowing the Com- munist party has ordered demobili- zation of the Communist youth for some intensive field work. A Servant Every Home Can Easily Afford! f H OUSECLEANING time takes Now is a good time to engage the oceans of hot water. Summer services of this most remarkable laundry needs, too, are heavier. Warm servant. At best, a water-heating coil weather will soon make the tub or in the furnace wastes one out of shower still more important and five shovelsful of coal or coke, and enjoyable. 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