DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and 4 Detroit Jewish Chronicle and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE Published,Weekly by The Jewish Chronicle Publishing Co., Inc. President JACOB H. SCHAKNE Entered as Seccnd-class matter March 3, 1916, at the Post. office et Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March 3, 1879. General Offices and Publication Bldg., 525 Woodward Ave. Cable Address: Chronicle Telephone: Cadillac 1040 Subscription in Advance JACOB MARGOLIS PHILIP SLOMOVITZ MAURICE M. SAFIR $3.00 Per Year Publisher Editor Advertising Manager To insure publication, all correspondence and news matter .nust reach this office by Tuesday evening of each week. When mailing notices, kindly use one side of the paper only. The Detroit Jewish Chronicle invites correspondence on sub- !acts of interest to the Jewish people, but disclaims responsi. bility for an endorsement of views expressed by the writers. Sabbath Scriptural Selections Pentateuchal portion—Ex. 30:11-34:35. Prophetical portion—I Kings 18:1 (or 20))-39. MACH 14, 1941 ADAR 15, 5701 The United Appeal Leaders of the three major fund-raising agencies—the Joint Distribution Commit- tee, the United Palestine Appeal and the National Refugee Service—last week - re- stored unity in Jewish ranks and reached an agreement for a joint campaign to be conducted nationally. This decision will be greeted with satis- faction and with enthusiasm in Jewish ranks throughout the country. The new agreement will eliminate strife and will make it possible for Jews to work harmoniously in fund-raising ef- forts. In time of crisis and distress, such unity is the only step permissible for Jewish leaders who direct the destinies of Jew- ish communal groups. Unity should never have been broken, and the agreement arrived at, with an evident recognition of Palestine's position and the necessity of giving efforts for colonization in the Jewish National Home a just share of the funds gathered among Jews in this country, proves that the rift that existed for three months or more was unnecessary. Since the break in unity was, in a sense, an untimely act motivated more by anger than Jpy seasoned consideration of Jewish needs,' the new agreement should serve as a warning to the leaders who play with the sentiments of their followers not to repeat the error that has just been cor- rected. Me, who speak for democracy, and in the name of democracy, should strive also to put into effect democratic principles in the direction of Jewish affairs. If the individual communities were given a chance to speak their minds, the bitter- ness that was engendered in the discus- sions could have been avoided by popular action. Let the experience we just had on the mooted question of unity stand us in good stead in the years to come. United community effort was, of course, never in doubt in Detroit, but the latest action taken by spokesmen for the three leading fund-raising agencies will help create that spirit of friendship among workers which is so vitally necessary for the collection of rarge funds for relief and reconstruction. March 14, 1941 the Legal Chronicle standing between Jews and Christians, as well as by their efforts for the building of a finer Americanism in the field of good will and tolerance. One of the most important Hillel units is at present located at Brooklyn College, where Dr. Isaac Rabinowitz, former direc- tor of the Hillel Foundation of the Uni- versity of Michigan, is the directing head. It is the only college whose president took the intiative to invite the formation of a Hillel Foundation. In his explanation to the taxpayers of the New York for the existence of Hillel, Dr. Harry D. Gide- onse, president of Brooklyn College, made some interesting observations. He stated in part: It has been often pointed out that New York City contains the largest Jewish com- munity that the world has ever known. To this community, within recent years, has fallen the religious, cultural and philanthro- pic leadership of the Jewish people. The burden of these responsibilities taxes the Jewish community with the necessity to pro- duce a quality of leadership capable of carry- ing it; and the brunt 'of this c hallenge must be borne by the community's most gifted cons and daughters. The training of such leadership, of course, is beyond the scope of Brooklyn College; but it is to be hoped that, with the collaboration of the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation, g raduates of the college may find themselves well equipped to take up such responsibilities. In welcoming the Foundation to the cam- pus, we are not merely fostering an endeavor worthwhil e in itself, but pointing the way to a richer efflorescence of the common culture cf the borough and of our immediate con- stituency at the college. We know that har- monious intercourse between cultures fructi- fies each individuality and fortifies the ele- ments held in common. With the Founda- tion on the campus, we shall perhaps be able to see, in concrete form, how a single group makes its own distinctive contribution to a larger entity, while the latter shows and adapts older habit-patterns and ideas into new forms and directions. The establishment of the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation at Brooklyn is not only a step toward the solution of one of the greatest weaknesses in public education; it also en- riches our college with the services of three- full-time professional specialists in personnel and guidance work, as an expression of the depth of conviction with which private groups regard the urgency of our needs in this re- spect. More power to the Hillel Foundations! They deserve wider support and more intense interest on the part of students and their parents. A far greater number of students should be urged to participate in Hillel activities and to help advance this movement's important program. If more parents will take an interest in this work, it is reasonable to believe that the number of participating students will also increase. U. S. Does Not Goose-Step Another anxious period is over. The overwhelming Senate vote in favor of the aid-to-Britain bill definitely establishes American policy in this war. The debate in the Senate was marked by some nasty moments. Some of the sen- timents injected in the discussion tended to incite to prejudice and to hatred. But this is over. The Nazi-Fascist pow- ers now know that the United States does not goose-step. Now we enter upon a period of na- tional coordination in defense of democ- racy and against totalitarianism. The adoption of the American policy for aid to Britain is the signal for greater courage among those who are in the thick •The Hillel Foundations of battle. It was, in a sense, the greatest The establishment of a counselorship of victory for the democracies scored off the the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundations at the battlefield in the present war. University of Washington, Seattle, Wash., is of particular interest for Michigan Senator Wheeler residents, since Rabbi Arthur Zuckerman, formerly of Lansing, has been chosen to George Gordon Battle of the Council serve as director of this new Foundation. Against Intolerance in America has ad- This week came the additional inter- dressed a deserved rebuke to Senator esting information of the creation of the Burt K. Wheeler. first Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation in Also, Senator Wheeler has been con- Canada—at Queen's University, Kingston, demned for his recent utterances by the Ontario, bringing the total number of Anti-Nazi League. Foundations to 55. Additional units are The leader of the opposition to the being opened at universities in New Eng- aid-to-Britain measure in the United land, and the entire country is being States Senate, by using the language of dotted with these Foundations. With the the Nazis and of Coughlin in singling addition of the Canadian branch, the out Jewish names when speaking of "in- work is assuming the significance of a ternational bankers" has shown his true movement that must soon embrace an colors. • entire continent. The former liberal Senator has chosen Bnai Brith's Hillel Foundations have his friends in the ranks of inciters to acquired a position of great merit by their racial and religious hatred. In one address contributions towards the advancement of he has erased all the gloiy that was pre- Jewish culture and the mutual under- viously attached to his name. CONFIDENTIAL • • STRICTLY Tidbits from Everywhere By PHINEAS J. BIRON ings in a search for hidden evi- dence of the espionage activities Europeans accustomed to read of which they suspected the gen- storm signals believe that the time tleman. Nazi soldiers recently invaded is coming 50051 when Swiss neu- the famous Montmartre Ceme- trality will be a thing of the tery of Paris and destroyed the past . . . Perhaps tomb of the famous German Jew- Goering, Goebbels that's et al, why are re- ported to be conveying their spare ish poet Henrich Heine. While cash to South American banks Heine's "Lorelei" is so famous in Germany now, while Hitler's little pal Pierre and the beloved Nazis couldn't kill it that even off, it's Laval is said to be establishing now listed as the work of an un- quite a balance in a New York known author in the Nazi-spon- bank. Nazi capital is said to be buying sored collections of immortal Ger- up quite a lot of hotel properties man poems. in New York. Washington is keeping a weath- E PRIZE OFFER CLOSES er eye on the United States of Well, we've about given up hope Brazil, which is showing an in- as regards that third reader who'll clination to flirt with the Axis, send in the correct answer to our in order to be on the safe side question anent the most common just in case. masculine first name in the world Since, in accordance with nor- . . . Of course, if we get a third mal business custom, the Nazi correct answer before this appears government won't get its bill for we'll send the erudite one his copy those free radiograms of advice of Dr. Emanuel Lasker's "The till sonic time this summer, there's Community of the Future" . • a possibility—if world events move But the moment this appears in fast enough—that RCA will • be print our prize contest is off .. . left holding the bag for this par- The answer, as two of our hun- ticular piece of business . . . Is dreds of thousands of readers cor- that why it was RCA, the only rectly stated, is: MOHAMMED major communications company . . By way of consolation for headed by a Jew, which was those who guessed wrong: It chosen by the Nazis as the only wasn't one of those things you company through which those mes- could guess . . . The prize-win- sages could be sent? ners didn't guess—they had read it somewhere, and remembered. ❑ EcoNomic FIELD WAR NEWS Why is so little attention being ❑ THIS AND THAT paid to Dr. Mordecai Ezekiel's New York, we hear, has 303 plan to provide jobs for every- body in the industrial depression new business enterprises founded that will follow this war unless by refugees, with employees total- some preventive measures are ing over 3,000. taken quickly? . . And why is Scripta Mathematica, Yeshiva equally little attention being given College's mathematical quarterly to Samuel C. Lzunport's proposal for laymen, has issued a most in- to set aside five million bales of teresting catalogue of 85 books government-owned cotton now, to and portfolios that would make be used when our cotton mills be- a most valuable addition to any- gin to feel the effects of that de- body's library . . . The collection pression? . . . You'll be interested stresses the philosophical, literary, to know, incidentally, that Lam- artistic and recreational aspects port's daughter, Felicia, is quite of mathematics, is chess player, and the other eve- March 17, which this year as ning, at a simultaneous chess ex- every year marks not only St. Pat- hibition, won a game against the rick's Day, but also Dr. Stephen combined strength of Frank Mar- S. WiFe's birthday, will this year shall and Ulvstead. —as we believe we told you some time ago—be the eve of Jacob ❑ FROM FETTERED FRANCE Fishman's 20th anniversary as Georges Duhamel, famed French the Jewish Morning Journal's fea- poet and dramatist, did his best tured columnist . . . He promises to appease the Nazi conquerors of an extra good column for the his country in his new book, and occasion—March 18—and we're even proclaimed, on the jacket, sure he'd appreciate comments that "this is a book which even from his readers. the German authorities would not Lillian Taiz, who died last week ban" . . . The Nazis, however, (she was the wife of Sam Jaffe, proved that their tactics toward the noted actor), was not only appeasers haven't changed . . . a very talented singer and actress They've burned the entire first who was slated to become one of edition of the book-55,000 copies the stars of the Metropolitan . . . This reminds us of the ex- Opera Company, but was one of perience of an American in Paris, the most gifted parodists of opera who thought he might just as well singing in the country . . . Kaet- play ball with the bosses . . . So zele, as Sam always called her, he spent a lot of time and money was a most charming hostess, a on parties for Nazi officers . . . devoted friend and, above all, a With the result that the Nazis, genuine person who never was finding it impossible to believe interested in money at the ex- that an American could actually pense of art . . . She was only like them, ruined half his belong- 35 when she passed away. THE "HAMAN" OF TODAY ! by BRESSLER HAMAN, TOO, TRIED THAT SCARE STUFF — BUT IT DIDN'T WORK o t