piEvErRorrIEwisnifiRomaz and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE e m I sioner for Refugees, who stated on the eve EtE 91 11"T I EW151191"L ' I of his departure from New York for Eu- Our Film Folk Ontario's New Minister of Labor BY-THE-WAY rope that "only in Palestine is it possible to numbersf refugees." By HELEN ZIGMOND Weekly by Ilse Jewish Cheenkle Publishing Ca., Published Tidbits and News But the present German-Jewish crisis . Entered • Second-class matter 111.e ■ I. I9111, at the Post IB7g. j 18 not the only reason for the official change HOLLYWOOD.—Our idea of .. office • t Detroit, Mich., under the Act of Marsh By DAVID SCHWARTZ Meteoric Rise to High Office of 34-Year-Old Jewish Mayor of The height of absurdity is film ' in attitude towards Zion and Zionists On General Offices and Publication Building ing "Four Walls" (a thoroughly (Copyright. 1934, J. T. A.) Windsor — Like an Horatio Alger Hero, He Began His the part of Reform rabbis. The fact must 'Jewish story) with a cast corn 525 Woodward Avenue Career as a Newsboy be recognized that for many years Reform HERZL'S YAHRZEIT prising only Gentiles ... and then telephone: Cadillac 1040 Cable Address: Chronicle London orate On July 3, Zionists observed the rabbis have served as propagandists for calling in two rabbis as technical 14 Stratford Place, London, W. 1, England thirtieth yahrzeit of Theodor Palestine; that in addition to Dr. Stephen advisors. By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Herz!. A real pessimist is Irving Pichel $3.00 Per Year S. Wise, Dr. Abba Hillel Silver, Rabbi Subscription, in Advance If Herz' had only lived the nor- . . . he labelled one of his son ' mal span of years, he might still ttoPiright, MI, Jewish Telegraphic Agent y 1. re (Deur t publication, all correspondence and news matter James G. Heller and a score of other ar- Pichel Pichel ... figuring, possibly, , be living today—and his would ▪ t reach this office by Tuesday evening of each week. that if the offspring were lost and only. dent Zionists, men like Dr. Samuel Schul- forgot his last name, he'd have the When mailing notices, kindly use one side of the paper have been the privilege of seeing man have of late come very close to the other to fall back on. his great vision entering fulfill- O LONGER shall it be said, when a story prepared to sponsor a law which will make for a The Den oft Jewish Chronicle Invites correepondenta on Dubs ment. Setts of I nternt to the Jewish people, but disclaims responsi- Being "in a spit" was David movement. Furthermore, the younger is related that a man has risen from news- free life; and he is the champion of the cause was for an indorsement of the views gip rrrrr d by the writers A year. before his death, he Selznick's situation . . he was boy and bootblack to a ministerial post, rabbis are Zionists almost en bloc. of the oppressed and the poverty,stricicen, said: sick abed .. . and couldn't , corn- Sabbath Readings of the Law that it is pure Horatio Alger fiction. whether in time of prosperity or depression. "Release for Jewry is not a Will the words uttered by the Reform plain ... 'cause he lost his voice. Pe itateuehal portion—Num. 25:10-30:11 • * distant thing. if we do not go Hon. David Arnold Croll's rise to political Ile was elected Mayor of Windsor in 1930 be- Prophetical portion--Jer. 1:1-2:3 rabbis at their convention be translated there (to Palestine) with black shout Kent heights proves that what may sound as fiction Rosh Chodech Readings of the Law, Friday, July 13 cause he had very decided ideas on how to run into action, in an effort to secure increased TaP rtinelf,vitas P ointers beards, we surely will with gray r n Num. 28 :1-15 can also become reality. a city of 60,000 people. And he missed not a beards." support for the Palestinian projects and Iowa . . move °ton tahe L7'Tityin Brought to Canada by his parents at the age single opportunity to tell the voters what his He was right. The black-bearded Tamuz 23, 5694 experiments from their congregations. (Nashua) at the age of seven ... July 6 , 1934 of his day have turned gray and of six, Croll was in turn newsboy, shoe-shiner, views were. When he became Mayor, Windsor to high school in Waterloo, Herein lies the test of the true value of the went are seeing Zion. Iowa. At school his burning am- errand boy in Windsor. At 25 he was called to suffered from the tremendous burden of caring But unto Herz] himself—like rabbis' pro-Palestine sentiments. bition was to be an actor, but his the Bar. At 30 he was elected Mayor of Wind- The Trouble in Germany. for the unemployed. About 10,000 who had pre- Moses—was given only the vision pals often greeted his attempts sor, receiving an overwhelming vote in spite of While Nazi rulers of Germany are exe- viously commuted to Detroit were barred by of the Promised Land front the with howls of derision. After The President's Great Speech distant mountain peak. whispering campaigns about his Jewishness. He United States laws from retaining their positions. cuting their former friends in an effort to g a ra( ,, lu la n ti d o o n w-h tr eim be nc , .e ar n:e asuccrebsispipvienlg y • • • President Roosevelt's address to the was re-elected as Mayor by another fine demon- Tax collections were declining, but the cost of stifle every appearance of a revolt, Jews Once contemplating death, Ilerzl clerk, a cement hauler, a gas ten- American people on June 28 was perhaps stration of loyalty on the part of his constituents. running the government was mounting. continue to sit on top of a volcano. The said: "If I die, it will be the duty r trbiinn . a,tinlur tsinaannd botftefracit,cryi an Now, at the age of 34, he emerges the victor in Croll managed to save his city. Not only did of the chairman of the Congress lot of our people in the Reich is not an en- our Chief Executive's greatest triumph. Ile the Ontario Parliamentary elections—and on top he solve the various problems which suppressead to make note of it and then call ov'ed to Hollywood, ntni,; viable one, no matter how welcome inner came closer to the American people than ily moved for the next business." of it is assured of selection by Premier - elect lured him, but fear of his government when he assumed the reins, but ever before. Speaking frankly, personally, Inovies It was a modest way of putting strife among Nazis may be. deterred hint. Seen around Mitchell F. Hepburn to be the Minister of Labor he made of Windsor a model of good govern- it, and yet there was no hypo- he lots as a salesman, he attracted At the time when cabled dispatches heart-to-heart, he succeeded in dispelling the and Municipal Affairs in his cabinet. ment, now being copied by mayors throughout critical modesty about it. lierzl many 'doubts anti misunderstandings. some attention but no offers. One brought the news of the death of radical 'An uncompromising liberal, Mayor Croll has Ontario. It is no wonder, therefore, that he was was not assuming the affecting Of particular interest is his denial that day a supervisor asked him, as a Nazi leaders, at the hands of their more t f e n:tor t , o ttor " sotuatn inne"tr f oar a s i ledn t built up one of the strongest followings boasted re - elected by the largest clear majority in the his- grace of the violet. It was merely his policies are aimed at anything but prat- that lierzl felt that he had conservative comrades, there were also a of by any political leader in Canada. Seeking tory of the city—a majority of 6,780 in a field launched the movement and that Why en the studio ccaefrsa sae; number of sad stories wirelessed to this tical achievements and a simple approach vice. election to the Ontario provincial Parliament of three. the movement took precedence ,,h h o im e o n"shots" unreeled, they called of the problem. His denial that the goy_ t in the Windsor-Walkerville district, he received over personalities. country about the Jews of Germany. A most spectacular incident marks the career inafft or r waarvdoicbeantLsdt .bi . and Though there was an absence 9,828 votes against the combined vote of 8,691 The German Jews had dared to state, ernment is leaning to extremes, the charges . of Mayor Croll. Ile visited the land settlers in of all bluster and pretense about those long-term tickets. Zi-on-noe, for the three candidates who opposed him. Northern Ontario in the spring of 1933. lie on the eve of the anniversary of the Ver- including Fascism and Communism, is of of him, Iierzl well knew his worth. folks, all success stories aren't in visited the homes of settlers from Windsor in A Zionist and Jewish Leader Ile admitted as much when he sailles Treaty, that the principle that right particular interest: books. A few timid people, who fear progress, will • • said that he had undertaken Zion- Mayor Croll was born in Moscow, Russia, on the course of a motor tour and discovered lack cis not might should also apply to the posi- try to give you new and strange names for ism because he felt he had the ."-comin March 12, 1900, the first-born son of Hillel and of attention by the government, inadequate sup- tion of Jewry in Germany. It was inter- what we are doing. Sometimes they will call "' . ' a" • • • " g force to put across the idea. An juvenile lead . . . is ono who Minnie Croll. His father was a cattle dealer who plies of food and equipment, an oppressed feel- if "Fascism," sometimes "Communism," some' enormous force he must have felt preted as anti-Nazi sentiment, and the con- can confess, "Ivri onochl." times "Regimentation," sometimes "Socialism." , found life unbearable in Russia and left to settle ing of discontent. His published findings rocked within him and seemingly every- • • • servative Jewish Centralverein Zeitung But, in so doing they are trying to make very the province and secured considerable relief for one who came in contact with him in Canada, in 1904. Two years later he brought Another gent set with gold-win: which published the statement was confis- complex and thedretical something that is' They were holding an important was charged with it as one would the sufferers. It is an interest in the welfare his family to this continent. Only a handful of really very simple and very practical. be charged by contact with a great cated. conference among the writers. Jews lived in Windsor at that time. This city of of the people, as manifested by this incident, that In his frank and simple manner our moral battery. Sam himself was gaddress . g s. At the same time, a Jewish cemetery in won for Mayor Croll the affection of tens of thou- 60,000, of whom only 1,000 are Jews, was then The first comment always made "Now, boys," he inmstruth cte- Hamburg was desecrated, 19 tombstones President succeeded in dspelling whatever group. sands of Canadan citizens. a village compared with the beautiful city of about him had some referent... to ed, "I must have a story about being overthrown ; Julius Streicher's daily doubts there may have existed that our . Russia this regal quality in him. Kings R uei today. It was a hard struggle for the Crolls- o our on 87. r s y tar ab 0. ...and .tnaondd A High Editorial Tribute and Sultans and Czarist prime Frank ische Tageszeitung rejoiced over the government is not leanin g toward Fascism. don't f o r get but the future Mayor and the minister-of-labor- On the day of Mayor Croll's elevation to a ministers felt it. Kaiser Wilhelm, ern Russia is complete without to-be found the hardships to be a school of ex- display throughout Nuremberg of signs And he has accomplished even more than mention seat in the Ontario Parliament, and with the the great posturer who strove so of their secret police ... this, by instilling a sense of confidence and perience. reading "Jews not wanted here ;" "Unad- promise of a ministerial post, the Border Cities hard to appear regal, even going the G. 0. P.! " • • • continually to the point of bring- Star of .Windsor paid him a high editorial tribute. mittance to Jews" is the placard displayed security in the hearts of his American lis- ' Hillel Croll remained in the cattle business, ing God into royal partnership Did you notice that Nat Fer- Calling his election one of the outstanding feat- but it was not sufficiently lucrative to educate on all houses in Karlburg, Franconian vil- teners. Every one of his hearers must with him in his references to "ich bet's "On. Happy Jew" is dedi- have felt as if our Chief Executive were ures of the provincial contests and labeling the five sons—David, Leo, Sam, Maurice and Cecil— and Gott" felt this quality in lage. c•ted to Sam and Mildred Jaffe record of his life a thrilling one, the Border and a daughter, Evelyn. The boys had to ply Herz', when at Mikveh Israel, he In reporting the spread of anti-Jewish speaking to him personally, especially a t n h i r c sim A r m d .S .11 u I bFeerrgi,, wife of stopped his horse and as one king when the President, referring to his vaca- Cities Star concluded the two-column editorial for themselves, and David set out to sell news- Farber feeling, Streicher's newspaper adds insult to another, beckoned to Herzl. by stating: scenarist . . . and some of his papers. With Jacob Geller, now the head of • • to injury by stating that although Jews are tion, urged vacations for all, and stated: best friends a re--movie people. Before I close, I want to tell you of the the Windsor News Co., Dave acquired a news- "Why did Dave Croll win two mayoralty elec - • • • American historians have • informed that they are not wanted they interest and pleasure with which I look for- ' stand. He graduated from Patterson Collegiate proneness to use a similar adjec- tions and the Provincial contest today? Because , Rex Weber, the comedian, is in continue to visit the places which bar them, ward to the trip on which I hope to start in a tive of praise when they speak in 1918, secured a place for himself in the office the people know an able man, a fighter. a true Sinematown . . . and likely to be few days. It is a good thing for everyone who and the omment is that the Jews thereby of Daniel Webster. Daniel, the tticio contracted any day. His specialty of the late Frank D. Davis, K. C., and became son of democracy when they see one. The gen- can possibly do so to get away at least once Majectic , story is told that is singing in a truly beautiful so- proyjde 1 evidence of the lack of character eral Liberal sweep helped Mr. Croll, of course, a law student. It was at Collegiate that he met a year for a change of scene. I do not want when Omar on' one occasion prano voice through closed lips of this ra and their reliance on the long to get into the position of not being able to h his wife—Sarah Levin of Detroit, University of but even it was not enough to roll up the ma- o pay some nondescript bill, while his assistant simulates the see the forest because of the thickness of the e waved his hand and majestic- patience of the German people." This is Michigan graduate, mother of his three daugh- jority he secured. That was a tribute to his mouth contortions. Weber was a trees. ally proclaimed, with the solem- said about Nuremberg, where Jews dare comic of George White's ters, the youngest born only a month ago. personal popularity, as well as a condemnation Thus speaks a great man. Too many of featured nity and pomp of a royal ukase: "Scandals" and the Schubert of the tactics of his principal opponent. In 1921 the future minister enrolled in Os- not speak to each other, and husband and us, for too long a time, have failed to see shows. "Let it be paid." • • geode Hall Law School in Toronto. Ile served , • • • wife fear even the privacy of their homes the proverbial forest because we were "At Toronto, Mayor Croll will give the people There was a difference be as a student with Mr. Justice Hughes, now of tween the types of "regalnese" A "Poobah" of a major coin- for an expression of opinion. the same sterling representation he has given blinded by the thickness of trees. Our party that Webster and Herz' personi- the Supreme Court of Canada. lie graduated in resigned the other day . . them as chief magistrate of this city. Ile can For the sake of allaying public senti- President is on the road to leading us out fied. It was something personal and someone phoned in to find out ment outside of Germany, Nazis will go of this blinding thickness. May he be en- what that made the second man 1925, was called to the Bar in May, married in be depended upon 24 hours of the day to battle with Webster. In the case of June. Then began the law career and the eventual for the rights of his riding and of humanity Herz!, however, that royal ecto- to extremes. The German Olympic Com- dowed with health and spared many years in charge. "It makes him worried," entrance in politics. A 32nd degree Mason and plasm appeared the effusion of a generally. His many friends welcome the oppor- mittee, for instance, fearing the result of of life, so that he may carry his program was the reply. • • • a Shriner, a member of I. 0. 0. F., the Mecca . tunity that DOW comes to him to serve in a larger • sanctified ideal. It was as though an American investigation, is conducting a to fruition. •the Schechina of a people has be - Joan Blondell is said to like bees and the Grotto, David Croll never forgot field. They know he will make good there just come incarnate in him. fishing very much . but she rapid round-up of Jewish athletes for par- his own people. Always a Zionist, a member of as he has made good here. The interests of his Debunking historians point to never catches • fish. Reason is ticipation in the 1936 games scheduled to B'nai B'rith, a devotee of Hebrew education, it The Phoenix Club's Troubles retainers accepted by Webster riding, his Province and his country will always she removes the hook from the take place in Berlin. But the New York while in the Senate from corpora- is easy to see why he should have befriended Financial troubles threaten to cause the line and lets the line dangle in be nearest to his heart. And especially will he tions interested in legislation Times aptly makes the following editorial dissolution of Detroit's only exclusive Jew- the water. She just can't "bear every Jew in Windsor, without an exception. be working for the poor and the sick and the I coming before the Senate. De- the idea of killing any fish." comment about this brazenness: "German ish clubhouse—the Phoenix Club. An Uncomprising Liberal helpless and the oppressed. Dave Croll is no bunking historians can find noth- 'S • new kind of fish story to us. Talk to any Windsorite, however, and he will • • • . authorities are skirmishing around for ing of that in Ilerzl—who when mere politician looking for votes. He is a true This is news which must meet with deep Among the "Intention to Wed" Sell you that David Croll has many friends be- friend of the people and as Minister of Labor !approached by Major Pond of the Jewish athletes for the Olympics. The regret from every element in the commu- I American lecture bureau with an ideal combination they have in mind is nity. While it is true that it was the club- notices the other evening was one, cause he is consistent in his politics. He makes and Municipal Affairs there will be no doubt , offer of $30,000 for a lecture tour no compromises in his liberalism. Ile is always where he stands." (Turn is Next Page) said to be a good Jew who is a poor ath- house of the wealthy, it is equally as true I - (Turn to Next Page. lete." that for many years it practically served as The trouble in Germany is a welcome the center of Jewish communal activity in JUDAISM AS A sign, but things are far from rosy for the Detroit. Important decisions affecting CIVILIZATION Jews. There will be much suffering be- Jewish community problems were reached Dr. Mordecai Kaplan Out- Daughter of Famous American Historians, Charles and fore we see the end of the present era of at meetings held in this clubhouse. Cam- ' Mary Beard, and the Wife of an Exiled German lines a Program for hate. The warning must be sounded, there- paign plans were laid at the Phoenix Club, Professor, VieWs Bigotry of Get-man Women Creative Judaism fore, that there should be no let-up in all campaign meetings and dinners were held Br sum,sN /fa 416 efforts for relief. And even after the end there and the Jewish Welfare Federation u* 17ATIoN Tit By MIRIAM BEARD mr:F . ITHa climax about to he, tain. But the significant thing is' 15 A 1,1• A liFit:0NnT104:Th of the Hitler episode of brutality, Jews practically made it its headquarters. nY reached in the political and that no nation has come out defin- r A SPIRIT hostile to women is must never forget the lessons of this sad If it is finally dissolved, the Phoenix Club economic crisis engulfing Germany, • itely in support of Hitler's policies. appalling than any ever seen he- 1 ork 5555. rising in the world. It has I fore ' for it must prepare for the chapter in our history. will mark the end of an important era of a marked change in Hitler's pol- Before Hitler came into power, Dr. Mordecai M. Kaplan's already checked her advance in I guerre absolve, the Total War, Russia, Bulgaria, Austria and may be expected. prosperity. And the end of every era must icies long-awaited discussion of the both hemispheres: the most privi- which demands a Totalitarian ' Reports received in Weshington Hungary were definitely support-, re Asia, At stt the ap p of Reform Rabbis on Palestine n- State to seize upon and mobilize also mark. the beginning of a new one. indicate that the Hitler govern- ing Germany's policies. The atti- American-Jewish problem has e leste d and : o The freest women virnti ntur-: errverey n adult, fmele or female, ev- To the credit of the Central Conference Perhaps this clubhouse may yet be reor- ment is in a poor position to fol- tude of Great Britain, Italy, Tur- made its appearance at last, and I. rope, German, the are its ms of American Rabbis it should be recorded ganized to function in accordance with low a course of retaliatory action • key, Finland and Greece was un- 1 for a long time to come it prom- The reaction is spreading: it lifts acre oreineedlo foirndtubsetry ,af mil every other nations. Despite all e•ertain. ices to remain an authoritative its head in England and America. ' gles of the future, wtiag:duonstz- that the rabid Jewish theologian anti- present conditions, thereby again being in against • . • talk of barring imports and inten English-speaking women could in the air and under the sea. This sifying the nationalistic ttndenciee, Zionists / have learned the error of their position to serve the community. General opinion in government volume dealing with Jewish is- until last year look abroad re- is Hitler's avowed purpose in the the fact remains that Germany circles here is that Dr. Hans Lu-1 sues. ways, and are now wholeheartedly on the voicing, in the splendid bands of unexpurgated original of his book, cannot divorce herself from the In 600 pages, Rabbi Kaplan progressive thcr, German ambassador to the I women of other lands :" rNelepianreKaam Palestinian band-wagon. Stop Causing Rifts! depqr.,': blames rest of the world. covers • • • the panorama of Jewish international co-operation and fel- Imperial Germany for a United States, now in GermanyH It is of more than passing interest that Official withdrawal from the Vaad failure ator , iaonti races. ip rat r r i n o uo of life and the effects upon it of r adequately, recalled to lend his talents to' Was yb , estrain oweo v. While busire•es and industrial the Reform rabbis, at their recent conven- Leumi, the Jewish National Council of us confid en ce . ery nerve toward victory, to crush environment. lie deals with our env csnelitions in practically all Euro- bringing about a solution to the aand in thlsr pedvireriyt artrbeency rothal t , could possibly tion, should have adopted a resolution in Palestine, serves to widen the rift that pean countries are making gains ture . atowi; the Reich's grave problems. Dr. Lu- the factors of disintegration within i nu r fu twelvemonth, which the following references are made exists in the ranks of the "Jewish commu- and indicate a more hopeful out- ther is one of the outstanding fin and conservation; with the eco- changed. We are isolated; we are mil s Kamer,. Germany • rtary victory. p e H ltle look, Germany finds herself in an anctal experts in Germany, rank- mr condemns nity of Bretz Israel. to Palestine: nomic, political and cultural menaced. Unsettled state. for wasting ing in this respect with Dr. The reasons given for Mizrachi's action "We express profound joy and sat- aspects of the problem; with What does this reaction mean? time in Museums and concert halls Reports received in Washington Schacht, president of the Reich,. .,et s u not nt pie ld thf- to t e so t Hitt , and in cultural pursuits, that isfaction at the economic, cultural and :ere that the Assefath Hanivcharim failed from Department of Commerce bank. He formerly was chancellor the current versions of Jude- sion that we face merely a return might have been profitably em- representatives in Germany reveal of the Reich and president of the social progress of the new Palestine. to bring all parts of the Yishub into the that to old-fashioned domesticity, to e :Sepo; d h on the drill-ground. 715 for the first months of this He : i N sm eolOrR th eo fd o o rm x;ist e WitC h ot n h se ers ea fft i c y t e s , the cozy sentiments and ideals of pr We rejoice to note that Palestine i s Palestine community and that the Histad- year Germany imported goods Reichshank. to make no such mix- In his conferences with high takes: g t h oeV of Zionism and Palestine on i f c otroerv amounting to 1,925,4110,900 marks ia e r n . ATgeb.oseTh procl a ims s proving a haven for many of our peo- rilth. Jewish Federation of Labor of Pales- ) Officials, Dr. Luther prob- Reich gone and exported goods totaling 1,- idartalasgeanid his goal to be the mobilization of ably will be in a unique position. Jewish life. A great portion of tine, is controlling the Vaad Leumi. ple and we urge the mandatory power, r German down to "the tint ae n ti r r m e r rna 747,000,000 marks. This repre- p t acre d product p ro rpe o t f e e o v ery been this volume is devoted Co He has in the United States a dis- s Fair•minded Jews must condemn Miz- sents an adverse balance of 177,- for some tiny and far enough an in these days of stress and crisis for until the whole nation . cussion of Dr. Kaplan's own such as the world never saw be- with one mouth, bre marks against a favorable, Israel, to facilitate in every way the rach's action and will not be convinced by I 900,000 a thes the from German to gain an ex- ' burning one of 263,000,000 marks a year away attitudes, his proposed versions fore and may never see again. In prayer: "Lord, bless our I he two arguments advanced for the action ago. A major factor contributing cellent perspective of the world settlement of an increasing number of of Judaism as a civilization and this hour of universal economic battlesl"ub attitude toward littler policies. In Jews in Palestine in accordance with of the Orthodox Zionists. If unity is to be to the unfavorable trade balance is this respect he should be able to as • way of life. I crisis and impending universal Subjection of Women e boycott against German goods war, we cannot hope to reinstate the program of the Jewish authori- acquired, and if all groups are to be in- th to the discussions. AUTHOR'S PROGRAM As women have, or are supposed by other countries hecause of Hil- contribute much . • • !those ideals. We cannot all hope cluded in the community, this unity will 1 ler's policies of anti-Semitism and tie The conclusion to "Judaism to re-turn to homes, in an age when to have, a natural antipathy to Representative Sol Bloom of society h as not ulesa arnlied how seer, their subjection is regarded Fo • those who doubt the significance of not be achieved by a division in the ranks, persecutions. • • • New York is an authority on Wash- as a Civilization" is a chapter ts ine c ie make t s h ome ot )f. e se t r resolution there is added proof of a but rather by solidifying then, and by as- as a first step in the new type of this Now the Ilitler government is ington and Lincoln and has been of 12 pages in which the author echange in attitude on the part of the Cen- suring the participation of all elements in engaged in some deep thought. Up- so recognized by Lincoln Memorial sets forth his program for a Return to Barbarism preparedness by the Fascists in I•niversity et Cumberland Gap, 'Germany, Italy and Japan. A leaders , permost in the rinds of S'V'e face return to barbarism. tral Conference toward Zionist effort in Jewry's official council. The second argu- creative Judaism. After point - i c a la ,s t aic edxprbession of this view is the problem of finding ways and Tenn. ,, It is to barbarism that Fascists was the resolution which greets Menachem ment is even less impressive. It would re- means of meeting the threat of ere- Re•egnizing Representative Sol ing out that in the shirt time :mild reduce us. They would e professor of Ussis kin on his 70th birthday. It is one main unconvincing if conditions were re- nowt. paralysis. rhe Reich is in Bloom s devotion to the memory of that the Jews have lived in the Berlinma lleniver asitNaziP reor b f ensiso r have Al- critical financial condition and a W ashington and Lincoln, the uni- erindern world many Jewish con- :Z:evrsiinnctntet‘.Ohrttswereign, feed Baeumler, Yfo thing to approve of the reconstruction of versed and the Mizrachi were in control of ■ way e out mart he found. From all versity recently conferred on the plause. In his "Mannerbu n gd u4P ncl- Palestine. But when the birthday of an the situation, with the Histadruth quitting indicatioss the Hitler government New Yorker the honorary degree ceptions have become unintelli• .tb.ruatrsalolf sa p v r e ' . t ng nr e !sign. 21"01 " , Wiesenschaft" he d e n n u n c e s outstanding leader is trade the subject the Jewish community cold because it can• will have to de some relenting and o f doctor of laws. In conferring the gible to them. Dr. Kaplan de- wriglltd, g reim cItuhrnavle p an:7111. , asofsirTe en us toseneirking to o m a k e e onvem,nriint only the legael w degree, Chancellor John Wesley marked changes in policies clan's that "the only adequate of congratulations by the entire conference not dominate. This is not the way of de- !enforce rabmtroddeurs n imer. i ems and ht fore other m o ons will aid in ear- Hill made the followipg citation: substitute for other-worldly Md. to divert their minds a l but the respect in m of Reform rabbis, it gives the appearance mocracy, which calla for rule by majority. ' legalise situation "In recognition of his pre-em- dmiirr1 fe e n:itni t i t', r inter- sh Zees. ,.• • ,rri . would- t; d .re. .• inence in law, history and political ration which formerly motivated the minority cannot be tolerant, it becomes acceptance If a of including the Zionists in r t..u' theater, ideals that were eqtetssnacsh '''' lt i r t6et 'a the loyalty of the Jew to his so- muli I The German government's view. science, his epochal eervicee as di- n ease a menace. in cthe family lutist is not definitely rector of ,the United States George and supported by cial heritage is • creative Ju- of Zion. w ti rch i feisa too t n o d a srt nit "eniie knightl nig, t b ho. i t n h bf tar Mizrachi must reconsider its action, lest any of the important European Washington Bicentennial Coinmis- y chivalry arra s toshll t by Is the GermannIewish situation respon- out- e some Measure the bursuti to al and boys; he would suo sti re the influence Zionist proven. Such countries as Russia, sion, his influence and distinguish- deism." Ile proceeds sible for this change in attitude on the part its withdraWal should so line what, in his opinion, Jews might of warriors. And we should "Mannerbund," the league of men I', land, Turkey, Yugoslavia, Czech, ed leadership as member of Con. of the Reform rabbis? If it is, it is a justi- thought that the rift it is causing will oslasskia, Rumania, Belgium and gress from the State of New York. must do to render Judaism ere- then be back juet where we start- which unites males young and old and will jeop, Finland are siding with Franee. his contribution to social and eco- in intimate association. An enor ed. in the Old Stone Age. alive: fied motivation ; at least, if we are to be- spread outside of Palestine ”...„3, mi ous somber of Natis openly pro- ardize the Zionist program In the Diaspora The attitude of Great li•itain, nomic progress, his parentage of nn I. They must "rediscover Ju- lieve the statement made by James G. Mc- Italy, Austria, Hungary arid Bul- higher education and his adherence c aim one between men and boys FaT s chis i st is id i slede dedicated fo d r ic ecast. to mill- '" 1 garia toward Germany is uncer- ■ to the ideals of Abraham Lincoln.' • ( Tarn to Next Page I Dona 'd, League of Nations High Commis- as well as in Bretz Israel. tarism• This militarism is more. (Tara to Next Pars) a nd THE LEGAL CHRONICLE - : N t , , . Feminist Reaction to Nazism GHIA AC01 FRI WW .4111 ■ III NI'W G