A isterialit iewisk Periodical eater

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October 18, 1940

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Hadassah "Take It
Center Forms New
Or Leave It" Rally
Education Commitee
Next Wednesday Under the chairmanship of

Registrations Being Taken
for Center Women's
Health Club

Rabbi Leon Fram, a new educa-
The Detroit Chapter of Hadas- tional committee has been organ-
sah will present a "Take It or ized at the Jewish Community
Leave It" program at its next Center, for the purpose of plan-
rally on Wednesday, Oct. 23, at ning the Center's program of
the Jewish Community Center, at adult education. The committee
12:30 o'clock.
will plan the annual Jewish lec-
Dr. B. B. Welling will act as tune and concert series, the forum
master of ceremonies. The visit- series, the courses and discussion
ing experts will be Mrs. Henry groups for adults, and other pro-
Wineman, Mrs. Sidney Allen, grams of a 5imilar nature.
Mrs. Abraham Srere, Mrs. Mil-
The first meeting of the corn-
ton Maddin, and Mrs. Herman mittee took place on Oct, 8, and
Jacobs.
the next meeting is scheduled for
The music for the program has Tuesday evening, Oct. 22.
been especially arranged by Miss
The following are serving on
Hattie Gittleman and Mrs. Royal this committee: Rabbi Morris Ad-
ler, Mrs. Douglas Brown, Mrs.
Maas.
The meeting will start with a A b r a ham Cooper, Lawrence
luncheonette at 12:30 o'clock and Crohn, Aaron Droock, Morris
will continue with reports from Garvett, Mrs. A. Max Kohn, Mrs.
all captains and workers. Sol Q. Kessler, Louis LaMed,
Mrs. Bayre Levin, Miss Leona
Levin, Walter Poole, E. II. Saul-
GIFTS TO CHILDREN'S HOME son, Mrs. Samuel Schaflander,
Mrs. Nate Shapero, Philip Slomo-
The Jewish Children's Home vitz, Mrs. Joshua S. Sperka, Leo-
acknowledges receipt of dona- nard S. Weiner, Mrs, Mellville S.
tions from the following: Mrs. I. Welt, Mrs. David B. Werbe, Mrs.
Schubiner; Mrs. Harry Srere; Henry Wineman, Herman Wise.
Sam Shevitz, in honor of his Others will be added to this com-
daughter's engagement; Mrs. mittee shortly.
Maurice Aronsson; Congregation
Shaarey Zedek; Mrs. Holtzman;
WAR
Mrs. Charlip, in memory of Is-
rael Charlip; Mrs. Ginsburg; La-
Continued from Page 1
dies Auxiliary of Michigan Ap-
parel Club, in memory of Irving aid to less fortunate Jews who
Leff; Mrs. Blumenthal, in mem- were made homeless by Nazi air
ory of Nathan Stein; Ladies' raids. Hundreds of Jewish fami-
Auxiliary of the Jewish Chil- lies lost all their possessions in
dren's Home; Samuel Zuiebeck; last month's raids which de-
Joseph Staub; A. Malzberg; A. stroyed part of the East Emi
M. Jordan; Mrs. Fish.
district of London.
The deputies voted to hold
their meetings on schedule de-
spite constant Nazi air raids.
UNITY

Registrations are being taken
for the proposed new Women's
Health Club at the Jewish Com-
munity Center, Woodward at
Holbrook. This new service will
begin about Nov. 1.
Membership in this classifica-
tion offers exclusive use of the
modern two-story Health Club
area and includes: a fully-tiled
steam room, therapeutic shower,
electric cabinet, ultha-violet ray
and infra-red lamps, quiet pri-
vate rest room and restful lounge.
The club also contains a special
exercise room for individual
supervised gymnastics and in-
struction which is fully equipped
with exercise tables, rowing ma-
chines, bicycle, walking machine,
vigrator, chest weights and a
ping pong table.
The three massage tables are
under competent and experienced
masseuses, who will also be ca-
pable of administering special
massages,
The member may also obtain
instruction in swimming as a part
of this membership. In addition
she has full privileges in both
gymnasia and may participate in
gymnastic classes, badminton,
fencing and dancing.
Further information may be
obtained by phoning the Center,
MA. 8400.

Don Cossacks to Visit De-
troit Again This Year

For the seventh time in 11
hugely successful American tours,
the Don Cossack Russian Male
Report Jews in Occupied France Chorus is including Detroit on its
concert itinerary. These 34 stal-
to Be Sent to Concentra.
wart singing men will be heard
tion Camps
The possibility that Jews in here on Friday evening, Oct. 25,
Nazi-occupied France would be at the Masonic Auditorium, Their
rounded up and sent off to con-
centration camps was strongly
hinted by L'Oeuvre, a French
newspaper published in the oc-
cupied zone.
The paper said that Nazi offi-
cials in the occupied area con-
sidered Jews in their portion of
France to be "a real danger".
The paper predicted that new
anti-Jewish measures would soon
be adopted.

scripts when he went to Spain be-
cause it was "too dangerous" to
. have them in his possession. He
said, however, that he was able
to save some of his manuscripts.
He told reporters that he intend-
ed to become an American
citizen.
Others in the group fere
Friedrich Stampfer, former ed-
itor of "Vorwaerts," leading So-
cialist paper in Germany and a
member of the Reichstag until
Hitler came into power; Alfred
Polgar and Walther Victor, nov-
elists, and Hermann Budzislawski,
former Berlin newspaper editor. Yugoslav Teachers Protest Decree

Limiting Jewish Students
Carl Schurz Foundation Grants
BELGRADE. (WNS) — High
Aid to German Refugees
school teachers from all parts of
PHILA DEIPHIA. (NV N S1— Yugoslavia protested against the

The Oberlander Trust of the Carl
Schurz Memorial Foundation has
made 112 grants to American
universities and colleges for the
is employment of educators and
scientists exiled for racial and
political reasons from Germany
or Nazi-occuped countries, it was
announced.

is
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New Jersey Grand Jury Indicts 8
Bundists for Promoting
Race Hatred

NEWTON, N. J. ( WNS )—
Eight members of the German-
American Bund, including G. Wil-
helm Kunze, the national fueh-
rer since the imprisonment of
Fritz Kuhn. were indicted by the
Sussex County grand jury for
violation of the 1935 New Jer-
sey statutes, which prohibit the
incitation of racial or religious
hatred by persons making speech-
es or permitting such speeches to
be made.
The arraignment of the eight
bundists was scheduled for Oct.
18. The maximum penalty on
conviction is three years in pris-
on and a $5,000 fine. The indict-
ments were the result of an in-
vestigation of activities at Camp
Nordland, local Nazi camp.
Separate indictments were re-
turned against August Klapprott,
Eastern district leader of the
bund and manager of Camp
Nordland; Matthias Kohler, New
Jersey treasurer of the bund;
Leonard D. Clark, a writer for
Nazi newspapers, and Wilbur V.
Keegan, New Jersey attorney for
the Nazi group.
The
four were accused of
making speeches "promoting and
advocating hatred and hostility
against people of the Jewish re-
ligion" at Camp Nordland. The
indictirents against the others, in-
cluding Kunze, charged that they
permitted Camp Nordland to be
used for anti-Jewish speeches.

Reserv e Thursday, Nov.

13

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle

(Continued from Page 1)

tl

CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

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for Classical Concert featuring

EMMA LAZAROFF SCHAVER
In Scottish Rite Cathedral of
Masonic Temple

recent ruling limiting the num-
ber of Jewish students in mid-
dle and higher schools to the
Jewish proportion of the popula-
tion.
In the first organized protest
against the government's anti-
Jewish decrees, the high school
teachers adopted resolutions con-
demning the numerus clausus for
Jewish students and teachers as
unconstitutional and unfair.
The protest was not permitted
to be published in the Yugoslav
press, which, on the other hand,
continues to charge that Jews
have assumed undue prominence
in Yugoslavia's national, profes-
sional and economic life.

SERGE JAROFF

Jr. Service Group
Will Resume Year's
Activities -,Oct. 27

An interesting program will
mark the opening of the season's
activities of the Detroit Junior
Service Group on Sunday, Oct. 27,
at 2:30 p. m., in the auditorium
of the Jewish Community Center.
The Junior Service Group is
bringing to Detroit, expressly for
this meeting, Lawrence R. Gould
of New York, young writer and
publicist, who represents the Uni-
ted Jewish Appeal for Refugees
and Overseas Needs. He will bring
an exciting and graphic story of
what is being done today with
the money raised during the Al-
lied Jewish Campaign last May.
"We are happy to be able to
present to Detroit Jewish youth
this young man who comes to
us highly recommended as a most
interesting speaker," stated Jacob
L. Keidan, president of the Junior
Service Group.
"We feel that Mr. Gould is
well qualified to answer these
questions. After graduating from
the University of Pittsburgh, Mr.
Gould entered newspaper work
and was engaged for two years as
a Wall Street market writer and
analyst. He has been active in the
book publishing, as well as the
institutional publicity fields and
has many brilliant book reviews
to his credit. A student of Jewish
problems, he brings to the plat-
form a wide knowledge of the
tragedy confronting millions of
Jews throughout the world."
In addition to Mr. Gould's ad-
dress, the program will include a
resume of the past year's activi-
ties and announcements of fu-
ture plans, An advance showing
of the Detroit Community Fund's
1941 films will be supplemented
with a brief talk by Maurice A.
Glasier, former president of the
Detroit Junior Service Group. A
social hour of dancing will close
the meeting.
Young men and women of De-
troit's Jewish community are in-
vited to attend the meetings of
the Junior Service Group, held
on the fourth Sunday of every
month in the auditorium of the
Jewish Community Center, Wood-
ward and Holbrook Ayes.
The Detroit Junior Service
Group was organized in Septem-
ber, 1938, as an outgrowth of the
first participation by Jewish
youth as a separate unit in the
Allied Jewish Campaign. Soon-
wIred by the Detroit Service Group
of the Jewish Welfare Federation.
its purpose is to provide for the
Jewish community a loyal and
efficient body of workers . whose
functions are to obtain funds for
the furtherance of communal ac-
tivities, local, national and over-
seas; and to further the interest
of young people in the community
through a year round educational
program.
Officers for the year 1940-1941
are: Jacob L. Keidan, president;
Ruben Gold, first vice-president;
David J. Levy, Jr., second vice-
president; Miriam Shetzer, cor-
responding secretary; Beatrice
Pizer, recording secretary and
Ray Davis, treasurer.

DEBORAH CHAPTER OF
BNAI BRITH

Deborah Chapter of Junior
Ilnai Brith is planning a fireside
chat to be held Oct. 25, at 8 n.m.,
at the home of Miss Betty
Batchko, 545 Westminster. Girls
between the ages of 18-22 are
invited to attend.
Saturday evening, Oct. 26, a
"draft party" sponsored by the
program committee under the co-
chairmanship of Dorothy Webber
and Sylvia Goldstein is to be held
at the home of Molly Rudnick,
3761 Boston Blvd. Escorts will
be "drafted" to attend by invi-
tations.

PONTIAC NOTES

The holiday services were con-
ducted by Rabbi Eric Friedland,
assister by the choir, consisting
of Mrs. M. Fine, D. Schlyfestone,
Mrs. L. Liebenskind, J. Rosenthal,
Mrs. M. Botwin, Mrs. L. Ittigson,
Mrs. E. Friedland, Mrs. J. Rosen-
thal, director, and Miss E. Zlot-
mick, organist.

The Sisterhood luncheon was
attended by 40 members on Oct.
8, and the guest speaker was
Isaac Franck of the Jewish Com-
munity Center of Detroit. He
discussed "Occupational Redis-
tribution of American Jewry."

The Religious School of the
Temple Beth Jecob formally
opened classes to approximately
60 students, Oct. 6. The school
now has six teachers, and the
Temple building was recently en-
larged to accommodate the addi-
tional students and the broaden
in the curriculum for the school
year.

BARTENDERS

LIKE TO SERVE

m id

"Xlmeide&
&e24"

Bartenders know that if your
taste is pleased you'll come
back again. And most bar-
tenders have found that
SCHMIDT'S is a beer so dif-
ferent ... so full of delicious
goodness, most folks like it
from the very first glassful.
Downtown Theaters SCHMIDT'S is an all-grain
beer with a not bitter, not
MICHIGAN — The Michigan
Theater is going to town on stage sweet natural flavor. It's light,
and screen, with Ken Murray and yet full-bodied . . . a low
his Hollywood Revue, and Russ
Morgan and his radio band and calorie beer that even "weight-
entire show in person. On the watchers" can drink and en-
screen is one of the season's top-
notch films: James Stewart and joy. Ask for SCHMIDT'S
Rosalind Russell in "No Time for
—NO SUGAR,
Comedy," an adaptation of the
S. N. Behrman record-breaking
or GLUCOSE,
play which led the Broadway hit
o r FATTEN-
parade for more than a year.

engagement here last year evoked
from audience and critics alike
the same enthusiastic ovation
that has greted them on the
stages of three continents since
their organization 19 years ago
in a prison camp near Constan-
tinople.
Trained to hair-trigger perfec-
Bulgarian Parliament to Consider tion, under the direction of their
Anti-Jewish Decree on
"half-pint" leader, Serge Jaroff,
Oct. 23
the men still observe the strict
SOFIA, Bulgaria. (Wns) — A military discipline that bound
far-reaching decree, drastically them as a fighting unit with the
curbing the political and eco- Imperial Russian army, and later
nomic rights of Bulgaria's 50,000 with General Wrangel's White
Jews, will be introduced in Par- 'forces.
liament on Oct. 28, it was dis-
Possessed of marvelous sonor-
closed.
Described by its sponsor, Petar ity and rare compass, their voices
Gabrovski, Minister of the In- soar to lyrical tenor heights or
terior, as a law for the protection sink to incredible depths of
of the nation, the decree has been basso profundo. There is a wild
accepted by the Cabinet and now beauty in their singing that be-
awaits final passage by Parlia- longs to no other chorus. Every-
thing about their program is UNITED ARTISTS — Myrna
ment.
A check-up disclosed that at dramatic, including the fierce Loy and Melvyn Douglas in the
present there are no Jews in the yelling and whistling that bursts romantic comedy "Third Finger,
Bulgarian Army. There are no out in certain songs about leg- Left Hand" is at the United Ar-
Jews holding State positions. endary heroes of the Steppes. In tists in the same all-laugh pro-
Meanwhile, Bulgarian Jews look startling contrast is the devo- gram presenting Ann Sothern in
forward with apprehension to the tional fervor with which they the hilarious "Dulcy" with Ian
forthcoming debate. Passage of sing such religious liturgies as Hunter, Roland Young, Reginald
the bill would mean another dip- their first intoned in the Russian Gardiner and Billie Burke.
lomatic triumph for Nazi Ger- Embassy Church in Sofia after
many and another blow at Euro- their release rfom the Turkish
FOX — Boasting eight torrid
songs, a 6,000 mile whirlwind ro-
pean Jewry.
camp for prisoners of war.
Abrogation of the Cremieux
a sensational new star,
Driven into exile by the for- mance,
Law, one of the first acts of the
as well as two of the biggest
tunes
of
war
and
revolution,
they
Third Republic, deprived approxi-
names in movies, the greatest mu-
mately 60,000 Algerian Jews of have ever since been "en voyage," sical extravaganza of all times is
their citizenship and relegated truly men without a country who at the Fox Theater. Don Ameche
them to the position of second- have captured the hearts of lis- and Betty Grable are paired in
teners in every land by the pas- Twentieth Century-Fox's techni-
class citizens.
Henceforth. Algerian Jews will sionate beauty and technical per- color hit "Down Argentine Way,"
not be permitted to vote or to fection of their choral unison.
while the sultry Carmen Miranda
Tickets for the Detroit appear- makes her screen debut, singing
hold public office. Their civil
rights and duties, including mar- ance of the Cossacks may be pur- four of the distinctive songs that
riage and divorce, will be gov- chased at the box office at Grin- have made her famous on two
nell Brothers Music Store.
continents.
erned by French laws.

ING SYRUPS

added.

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