March 13, 1942 DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle 8 Revise Curriculum Of Yeshiva College I COMFORT TO THE NAZIS: DISCRIMINATION IN DEFENSE JOBS] To meet current national needs, a revised curriculum for the sec- ond semester, beginning Feb. 2, has been instituted at Talmudical Academy, preparatory department of Yeshiva College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. BELL AIRCRAFT CORPORATION 5050 CIMWbO0 AVCNUC WHIM" IL F. moor It also COLGATE-LARSEN AIRCRAFT COMPANY Amityville, L I. YOU MUST ANSWER EMPLOYMENT APPLICATION EACH QUESTION FULLY AND whit 014, IN THE ROUGH ACCURATELY. you 0. , 11 ∎td for MANY TIMES IMITATED - NEVER DUPLICATED includinci GOBS Of SHOESTRING From To - Nome Ind Add... of Imoloior Posthoo .1.211 1 a r POTATOES, JUG of HONEY, and HOT BUTTERED ROLLS. I 4 s - CARRY OUT g RESERVATION... oto.us. PAT. OFF. PARKSIDE RECREATION Or what mhos or Or mutat.. me Dito of litrlih roar STEWARTS FAMOUS GRILLE EAST WARRENat DIOKERSON.LE.6747 ...WI'S? Siam... STEWART S !ARAMS GRILLE EMPLOYMENT APPUCATION COMPANY mit GLENN L ,10 MARTIN 11 L AIARYLAP4O WAGS UVERNOIS qua 1.1 oft D UN:51909 1111.111 ■ Firo polio. Ion 1. SECURITY ACCOUNT No The Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League has charged before the President's Committee on Fair Employment Practices that these forms for applicants for jobs in defense industries show discrimination against Negroes, Italians and Jews, by going in MID-WEEK to ease WEEK-END congestion Wartime conditions tend to crowd transportation facilities on week-ends when soldiers and war workers travel. You can aid by going places during the mid-week when possible. Going by Grey- hound, you'll be saving your car and tires, saving materials America needs. One-Way Rd.-Trio ;3.05 6.15 10.50 3.15 2.80 GRAND RAPIDS TRAVERSE CITY CALUMET KALAMAZOO FT. CUSTER SOUTH HAVEN 4.05 $5.50 11.10 18.90 5.70 5.05 7.30 Greyhound also offers convenient low-cost suburban service In the Detroit metropolitan area GREYHOUND TERMINAL Washington Blvd. at Grand Riser GREYHOUNII LINES - — HENRY MONTOR GUEST SPEAKER Falashas Jubilant Pioneer Women Aid in Defense Over Arrival of AT JEWISH WELFARE CONFERENCE Jewish Soldiers Pioneer Women's clubs through- Representatives of Detroit and Six Other out the country are actively par- LONDON.—The Falasha Jews ticipating in home defense and Cities Will Discuss "Youth In a World civilian defense activities through have greeted with great enthu- siasm Jewish soldiers serving At War" on March 14 and 15 councils in their local communi- ties, according to reports reach- ing the national office daily. The action of the clubs followed a call to the entire membership issued by the national executive and national secretariat, Sara Feder and Dvora Rothbard. The Detroit clubs took action imme- diately upon outbreak of the war. Invest With Uncle Sam—Buy Bonds! • 38th Annual Spring Dance • GIVEN BY Bicur Cholem ors. • at GENERAL MOTORS BALLROOM SUNDAY FEATURING March 22 I 942 MIKE FALK And His Orchestra Admission 75c Tax included — • Dancing 9 P. M. till 7 with the British Forces, on their arrival in Ethiopia, according to reports reaching this city. Finding among the British troops brethren of their own faith, the Falashas were jubilant. They welcomed the white Jewish soldiers into their homes and synagogues. Synagogues shut and demolished by the Italian invad- ers were rededicated by British soldiers of the Jewish faith. In the towns a villages in- habited by the Balashas there has been an upsurge of Jewish religious practice, and the Fala- sha youth is rapidly acquiring additional Hebrew knowledge from Jewish soldiers who are versed in Jewish lore. Rep. Weiss Offers Services to Navy WASHINGTON (JPS) — "I don't want a bullet-proof job," Representative Samuel A. Weiss of Pennsylvania declared in offer- ing his services to the United States Navy. "I want to go on a battleship or do some work like that," he added. A member of the National De- fense Committee of Bnai Brith, Congressman Weiss, married and the father of two children, was elected to the House of Represen- tatives in 1940. Asks Aid for Abyssinian Falashas NEW YORK (JPS) — The dark-skinned Falashas of Abys- sinia, who are classified as Negro Jews, have won the support of the American Jewish Committee, that body declared here. The American Jewish Commit- tee has requested that the British Board of Jewish Deputies make repesentations to the British gov- ernment for the improvement of the position of the Falashas of Abyssinia. Henry Montor, executive vice- chairman of the United Jewish Appeal, will be the guest speaker Sunday, March 15, at the lunch- eon meeting of the Youth Con- ference sponsored by the Jewish Welfare Board, on Saturday and Sunday, March 14 and 15. In addition to his position as executive vice-chairman of the United Jewish Appeal, Mr. Mon- tor also occupies the post of executive director of the United Palestine Appeal. He is a gradu- ate of the University of Cincin- nati. A well known writer and critic, Mr. Montor has for many years been a contributor to var- ious periodicals and newspapers. He was also the founder of the Palcor News Agency covering news of Palestine and Near and Middle East. "Youth in a World at War" is the theme of the Conference. Six cities in addition to Detroit will be represented. This is the third such annual conference of youth groups sponsored by the Jewish Welfare Board. Rabbi Jehudah Cohen, director of the Hillel Foundation of Ann LITERARY BUSINESS If it isn't our old friends, Houghton Mifflin Co., again. They proudly announce that their three-year contract with Reynal & Hitchcock has now expired and that, hereafter, the privilege is yours of paying $1.89 for "Mein Kampf" as issued by Houghton Mifflin itself. Isn't it swell news that Reynal & Hitchcock sold a quarter of a million copies of Hitler's offal! Houghton Mifflin hopes to do even better. It seems so long ago when the American Jewish Committee was repri- manded for urging the Boston publishers not to issue even an expurgated edition. Freedom of the press, my eye! . . . Best of luck to the new concern, L. B. Fischer Publishing Corp., headed Arbor, will open the conference on Saturday night. Round table discussions will be held on Sun- day morning at 10:30 on "Youth in Defense", led by Donald M. D. Thurber; "Palestine", Donald B. Butler, of Pittsburg; and "Youth Organizations in Communal Ac- tivities", Hannah G. Ferman. Following the luncheon meet- ing, round tables on "Economic and Social Adjustments" will be led by Samuel Jacobs and "Re- construction—Economic and Po- litical" by Jacob Weissman. A summary session at 4:30 Sunday afternoon will conclude the conference. Members of the League of De- troit Jewish Youth are the hosts, with Henry Fagin and Albert L. Lieberman as general co-chair- men. Committees planning the conference are: the Social Com- mittee, headed by Helen Good- man; Housing Committee, Ruth Rabinowitz; and the Publications Committee, Shirley Gotlieb and Goldie Levinstein. The confer- ence secretary is Diana Rosen- blatt. by G. B. Fischer and F. 11. Landshoff, the men whom Hitler drove out of Germany. They brought to Europe such writers as Feuchtwanger, Hemingway, Sinclair Lewis, Thomas Mann, Roosevelt, Shaw, Whitman and others like them. If they'll only do as much for American letters as they did for Europe they'll be a welcome addition to pub- lisher's row . . . Good wishes, too, to William B. Ziff and B. G. Davis of Chicago, who just opened new modernistic offices in the Windy City. Ziff, publisher of numerous aviation and radio magazines, puts out the 30-vol- ume Little Technical Library. He was the fellow who wrote "The Rape of Palestine".