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PAGE SIX
04.
Ai
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Forward with Roosevelt!
ELECT
Arthur
Gladstone
Circuit Court
Commissioner
(SHORT TERM)
Friend of the underprivileged
I X I
September 11, 1936
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
Arthur Gladstone
Ask for a
Democratic Ballot
ELECT
RABBI R. SPALTER
IS TO REPRESENT
YESHIVAH SCHOOL
Well - Known Detroiter to
Solicit for Theological
Seminary
Rabbi Raphael Spatter, who is
widely known here for his in-
terest in educational activities and
in important national Jewish
causes, has been appointed Detroit
representative of Yeshivah Col-
lege in the Isaac Elchanan Theolo-
gical Seminary of New York.
Rabbi Spatter, who can be
reached at 3018 Monterey, tele-
phone To. 7-2089, plans to contact
Detroit Jews individually as well
as through their synagogues in
behalf of Yeshivah College, and he
hopes to secure a large sponsoring
group which will help in the sup-
port of the college and Yeshivah.
This being the 50th anniversary
year of the Yeshivah, Rabbi Spat-
ter points out that a special effort
will be made to secure the support
of local Jewry for the Yeshivah
College. In addition to the theolo-
gical school, which is condutced
by the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan
Theological Seminary, its branches
include a high school as well as
the Yeshivah College, which today
has very high rating among col-
leges in this country. The literary,
language and mathematical de-
partments rank especially high
and have from time to time won
acclaim from outstanding educa-
tors in this country. Dr. Albert
Einstein is one of the group of
prominent educators who have
been awarded honorary degrees
by the college.
Leader on Staff of
Hebrew University
At the meeting of the board of
governors of the Hebrew Univer-
sity which was held in Zurich,
Switzerland, recently, particular
Interest centered about the report
presented by Salmann Schocken, a
new and dominant personality on
the administrative staff. Much of
Harry I.
Dingeman
Congressman
15th District—Republican
Wards 10-12-14-10.
Qualified by Public Service,
VOTE FOR
MAY
SALMANN SHOCKEN
Chairman, Executive Council, He-
brew University, Jerusalem
Circuit Court Commissioner
the credit for the administrative
progress mode during the past
year is conceded to Mr. Schocken,
who served the university as
chairman of the executive council
and as honorary treasurer in that
period.
Mr. Schocken's interest in Ileb-
rew University is of long stand-
ing, but it was not until he had
established residence in Palestine
that he was able to participate
actively in its administration. His
services are a valuable acquisition
and the university is fortunate in
being able to command his out-
standingly able and enthusiastic
cooperation.
A deeply-felt Interest in the
cultural and spiritual aspects of
Judaism combined with unusual
administrative ability to make Mr.
Schocken an outstanding and im-
portan tfigure in life of Palestine,
and his contributions both to the
country and to the university in
particular are as varied as they
are valuable.
Previous to his settlement in
Palestine, Mr. Schocken lived in
Germany, where with his brother
Simon he had established the firm
of J. Schocken Sons, some 30
years ago. It became one of the
country's most important depart-
stores and acquired a wide reputa-
tion not only for its financial suc-
cess but for the exceptionally ef-
ficient quality of its administra-
tion.
His business affairs never in-
terfered with Mr. Schocken's wide
Jewish interests and he gave freely
of his time and energy to them.
For many years he served on
financial boards and committees
of the World Zionist Organiza-
tions.
In Rehavia, a Jewish suburb of
Jerusalem, his new home is near-
ing completion. It will contain his
magnificent private library which
includes the best in Hebraic and
Jewish literature as well as the
largest and most valuable private
collection of Hebrew incunabula.
Nearby is the research institute
for Mediaeval Hebrew Poetry
which he established in Berlin in
1931 and subsequently transferred
to Palestine. He had previously
established and endowed also a re-
search institute for Mediaeval
Hebrew Literature.
Other activities of Mr. Schocken
in Palestine include the establish-
ment of a farm for agricultural
and vocational training for both
men and women colonists.
With the energy and ability
which marked his commercial life,
Schocken devotes himself to
the problems of Hebrew Univer-
sity. In Salmann Schocken. Heb-
rew University has found the per-
son it urgently needed for guid-
ance in the many complicated pro-
blems of administration with
which it is constantly confronted.
Upon their euccessful solution will
depend the fulfillment of the
■ iniversity's far-reaching and in-
spiring program.
DEMOCRAT
Years of Experience
3 U. S. Senators Sail for
Paladin.
NEW YORK. (WNS). — Be-
lieving that Palestine's problems of
immigration and relief should be
known at first hand in Washington,
United States Senators Royal S.
Copeland, of New York, Warren
R. Austin, of Vermont, and Daniel
0. Hastings of Delaware have
sailed for the Holy Land. Acting
RS spokesmen for his colleagues,
Senator Copeland said the late
Nathan Straus had invited him to
visit Palestine 18 years ago but
that he had found time to make
the trip only now. Senators Aus-
tin and Hastings have also been
invited, he said.
Mrs. Edward Jacobs, national
president of liadassah, the Wo-
men's Zionist Organization of
America, and Mrs. Moses P. Ep-
stein, national vice-president, will
attend the annual meeting of the
Arctions Committee of the World
Zionist Organization in Zurich,
Switzerland, from Aug. 25 to Sept
2.
An appeal to the Jewish women
of America t ohelp rebuild the
destroyed forests of Palestine,
burned during the necent disturb-
ances, was Issued yesterday to the
50,000 members of Hadassah, the
Women's Zionist Organization of
America, by Mrs. Albert P. School-
man, chairman of the Jewish Na-
tional Fund Council of the or-
ganization.
Agudath Israel Commission to
Study Religious Status is
Russia
PRAGUE. (WNS)—Reversing
its previous attitude of uncom-
promising opposition to the Soviet
Union, the Agudath Israel, ultra-
Orthodox organization, voted to
send a commission to the U. S.
S. R. to investigate the Status of
the Jewish religion under the
Soviet regime. This was decided
at the world congress of the Agu-
dath Israel. In authorizing the
commission the congress expressed
the hope that the new Soviet con-
stitution would make it possible
for Soviet Jewry to open Hebrew
schools and would legalize the ap-
pointment of rabbis. The congress
protested the Arab terror in Pale-
stine, expressed thanks to the Brit-
ish Government for reaffirming its
loyalty to the Balfour Declaration,
voted to co-operate with the Royal
Commission to investigate the
Palestine riots and recommended
increased Jewish emigration to
South America.
DEDICATE B'NAI Sander's Committee
MOSHE LIBRARY Confident He Will
Get the Nomination
Building Committee Tablets Also
to Be Dedicated at Ceremony
This Sunday
The program incidental to the
dedication of the Louis Weiss Me-
morial Library at Congregation
B'nai Moshe, which is is take place
Sunday afternoon, Sept. 13, in
the main auditorium at Dexter
LATE DR. LOUIS WEISS
Blvd. and Lawrence Ave., is an-
nounced as follows:
The library, entrance to which
is on Lawrence Ave., will be open
for public inspection from 2 to
2:30 o'clock, at which time the
program will commence in the
synagogue. Greetings will be ex-
tended by Ben F. Goldman, presi-
dent of the congregation; Irwin
Shaw, principal of the B'nai
Moshe Sunday School, will deliver
the invocation; Rabbi Leon Fram
of Temple Beth El, a friend of
the late Dr. Weiss, will deliver the
memorial address, at the conclu-
sion of which Rabbi Moses Fischer ,
spiritual leader of the congrega-
tion will deliver the dedicatory
address. The key to the library
will be presented by a member of
the Weiss family which donated
the furnishings and books with
which the library commences to
function.
Dr. Louis Weiss, who died in an
automobile accident Aug. 9, 1934,
at the age of 36 years, was a grad-
uate of the Illinois College of
Chiropody, where he obtained the
degree of Doctor of Surgical
Chiropody in 1922. He was twice
honored with the presidency of
the Michigan Association of Chiro-
podists; later he was chosen vice-
president of the National Associa-
tion of Chiropodists; shortly after-
wards he became vice-president of
the Fellows Scientific Association
of Chiropodists Internatioial. In
1933 the governor of Michigan ap-
pointed him a member of the
Board of Examiners in Chiropody.
His professional and scientific
preoccupations notwithstanding,
Dr. Weiss never neglected his re-
ligious, fraternal and social activi-
ties. Ile was an active member of
the B'nai B'rith, Temple Beth El
and Perfection Lodge No. 486, F.
& A.11., of which he was junior
deacon at the time of his passing.
Besides the widow, the former
Viola Henrietta Lewis. to whom
he was married in 1924, he is
survived by three daughters, La-
Verne, Carol Lois and Donna
Marjorie.
A handsome library at the B'nai
B'rith Hine! Foundation at Ann
Arbor has also been established
as a memorial to her late husband
by Mrs. Weiss.
The library at Congregation
B'nai Moshe will be open to the
public and regulations for its use
will be announced later.
Following the dedication of the
library, the congregation will pay
tribute to the builders of the pres-
ent synagogue and its predecessor
which Won vacated 10 years ago
at Garfield and Bcaubien Ayes.
Tablets containing the names of
both building committees and of-
ficers of the congregation in 1917
and 1929, respectively, will be
placed in the main lobby of the
synagogue.
The formal program will be fol-
lowed by tea and refreshments
provided by Mr. and Mrs. Morris
Weiss and their children in the
banquet hall of the congregation.
Irving Winstock in Race for
State Representative
Irving Winstock, an attorney
with offices at 1354 National Bank
Bldg., is a Republican candidate
for state representative in the
First District, which includes all
of Detroit.
Mr. Winstock is a graduate of
Detroit Central High School,
Highland Park Junior College and
Detroit College of Law and is
widely known in Detroit and
Michigan as being very active in
local community affairs. He is a
member of Alpha Beta Kappa law
fraternity.
Minch. Says Olympic Committee
Fired Him for Anti-Nazi Views
NEW ORLEANS. — (WNS) —
Hitting back at the International
Olympic Committee which ousted
him from membership ostensibly
because he had missed more than
two meetings, Ernest Lee Jahncke,
former Assistant Secretary of the
Navy, made public a statement
here in which he charged that he
was dropped "solely because of my
opposition to America's participa-
tion in the Berlin games." In his
statement Mr. Jahncke revealed
that the International Olympic
Committee had eupressed a letter
he wrote to its president, Count
Henri de Baillet-Latour, in which
be explained his refusal to resign
and reiterated his opposition to
American participation in the Ber-
lin Olympics.
Petrie Say. Arabs Need Pro
Jews Bring
LONDON. (WNS - Palcor
Agencq.)—"The civilised progress
of the Jew is essential for the
Arab," Sir William Flinders Pet-
Jews in Holland in the early 18th
rie, renowned archeologist, declares
Century was said to be due to
in a letter published in the Times
their frequent marriage of rela-
"The root of the present question
is the use of land, which has been
tions in order to keep family for-
tunes intact and because they Don't be surprised if Clifford mostly wasted by the Arabs but
didn't want to have anything to Odes, the playwright, and Luise which, if properly cultivated, could
do with the "Todescos"—the Ger- Rainer, screen actress. become Mr. hold four-fold the present populasj
tiers," he further said.
man and Polish Jews. and Mrs. before long.
The decline of the Portuguese
Dingeman States His Con-
gressional Views
Harry I. Dingeman, former
Ways County Drain Commissioner
from 1929 through 1932, who is
now seeking the Republican nom.'
ination to Congress in the 15th
District, gave the following views:
"I stand upon the platform of
my party and presidential candi-
date, as formulated at Cleveland
in June.
The social security legislation
enacted in 1935 is far too compli-
cated and in the long run will
provide for only 53 per cent of
the people who attain the benefit
ace.
'Mountainous reserves are
provided for wholly beyond the
limits of sound insurance and
actuarial principles. Needless
waste in administration of the law
is bound to be entailed under the -
present set-up; whereas bureau-
cracy in this and all other fields
of government must be curbed."
Mr. Dingeman lives at 17566
Stoepel Ave. with his wife and
two sons, and is 41 years old.
After graduation from the Uni-
versity of Detroit in 1917 with
the degree of Bachelor of Arts,
he saw 22 months of military serv-
ice, and then continued to study
for two years in the University's
School of Commerce and Finance
under the late dean, John A. Rus-
sell.
Judge
Sanders,
outstanding
Jewish candidate for the Demo-
cratic nomination of Circuit Court
Commissioner, has been assured
by his campaign committee and
many friends of his success at the
primaries on Tuesday, Sept. 15.
David Gottleib, chairman of Judge
Sanders committee, says he be-
heves that the Jewish voters are
whole-heartedly in favor of Judge
Sanders.
Judge Joseph Sanders has been
a lawyer for 30 years during
which time he has had experience
in building and is recognized as
an expert in real estate law.
Judge Sanders has been en-
dorsed by many "landsmanshaft"
organizations, Democratic leaders,
and political clubs throughout
Wayne County.
His committee reporfi that "the
interest displayed by the Demo-
cratic voters of Wayne County in
behalf of Judge Sanders assures
us of his success at the polls on
Sept. 15. We urge every Jewish
voter to vote and east a vote for
Judge Joseph Sanders. Your bal-
lot is our protection against anti-
Semitism and discrimination. We
again urge you and every Jewish
voter who has the right to vote
on Sept 16, to do so and also to
In Yemen there is a Jewish
place a cross before the name of shrine to Mori Salem Elshabzi
Joseph Sanders."
Taez which is the Mecca annually
for thousands of Jews front the
Our friend Pierre Van Passen Is Orient seeking cures and other
on the barricades in Spain.
miracles.
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-
For a • • •
Continued Progressive
Administration of the
Juvenile Division of the
Probate Court -
•
RE-ELECT
JUDGE
D. J. HEALY,
" THE
JR.
PROBATE COURT
PRIMARIES—SEPT. 15
DEMOCRAT
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--- Chronicle Want Ads Pay ---
WAYNE COUNTY
Needs
Former Undersheriff
HAROLD C.
ROBINSON
as
SHERIFF
• His Record Is Unassailable
• He Is Tolerant to the Backbone
• His Character, Integrity and Sincerity Is Beyond Reproach
• He Is Honest, Courageous, Experienced, Capable, Respected
Ask For a REPUBLICAN Ballot and Vote
for
Harold C. Robinson for Sheriff
This advertisement inserted and paid for by Harold C. Robinson personally.
1