A rerkalr ,fewish Periodical Carter

CLIFTON AVENUE
'
CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

March 5, 1943

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

COMMUNITIES URGED TO CONSULT WITH
U, J. A. ON WAR CHEST AFFILIATION

Honor Roll

of Congregation Bnai Moshe

6

I

HENRY AUSLANDER
JOSEPH KATZ
LLOYD BECK
AARON KATZMAN
JOSEPH BERGER
ALEX KAUFMAN
MAXWELL BERGER
LESTER KAUFMAN
HARRY BLAU
MORTON KAUFMAN
RAYMOND BLOCH
LEO KEEPS
BERNARD BREYER
WALTER KELLERMAN
FREDERICK BREYER
ERWIN KEPES
ALBERT BROWN
MELVIN KEPES
ARNOLD BROWN
LOUIS KLEIN
MARSTON BUSCH
ALLAN KLINE
ALFRED BUCHSBAUM
EDWARD KORNFIELD
ERNEST BUCHSBAUM
SIDNEY KORNHEISER
JOSEPH BUCHSBAUM
JAMES KOVACS
CHARLES CANVASSER
JEROME KRAUS
PHILIP DENENFELD
PHILIP KUPFERSMIDT
ELMER DEUTELBAUM
SOL LANDAU
ALFRED DEUTSCH
AARON LEBOW
ERNEST DEUTSCH
HARRY LEBOW
RICHARD DEUTSCH
AARON LEBOWITZ
WILLIAM DEUTSCH
DAVID LEBOWITZ
ALBERT DUNN
BERTRAM LEFKO
ORVILLE LEFKO
BERNARD EDELHEIT /
ADOLPH LEVY
MERREL EDELHEIT
JACK LOVINGER
PHILIP EDELHEIT
HAROLD MARKOWITZ
ALEXANDER EHRENPREIS
ERVIN MARKUS
LEONARD EICHNER
EDWARD MENTZEL
EMANUEL EINSTEIN
EUGENE MUMELSTEIN
ALBIN EISLER
HERBERT 'LLER
MARVIN ENGEL
MARSHALL ..TILLER
MEYER FEIGELMAN
LOUIS OPPENHEIM
ARTHUR E. FELDMAN
WILLIAM OSTREICH ER
HAROLD FELDMAN_
FRED POLLAK
MILTON K. FELDMAN
STANLEY POLLAK
BERNARD FINEMAN
HAROLD REISNER
BERNARD FISCHER
HARRY ROSENTHAL
KENNETH FISCHER
SIGMUND ROSENTHAL
MORRIS FRIED
MORRIS ROSMAN
SEYMOUR FRIED
DAVID ROTTENBERG
RALPH FRIEDMAN
WALTER SCHMIER
ALEXANDER FRISCHMAN
SEYMOUR SCHOEN
GABRIEL GLANTZ
HARRY SCHWARTZ
HENRY GLUCK
WALTER F. SCHWARTZ
ALBERT GOLDMAN
SAMUEL SEYBURN
HERBERT GOLDMAN
LAWRENCE SILVERMAN
EUGENE GOODFRIEND
DONALD SIMON
JAMES GOODFRIEND
FREDERICK SIMS
BERNARD GOODMAN
MILTON SIMS
MICHAEL GOODMAN
MELVIN SMITH
NORMAN GOODMAN
EDWARD STEIN
ISAAC GREEN
FREDERICK STEIN
ARNOLD GREENBAUM
EUGENE STEINBERGER
ERVIN GREENBAUM
WILLIAM STEINBERGER
MARVIN C. GREENBAUM
LOUIS STERN
SEYMOUR K. GREENBAUM
ROBERT STERN
MORRIS GREENSPAN
ALLAN TOLMICH
ROBERT GERENSTONE
ARTHUR URBACH
MERVIN GREENWALD
EUGENE WEINBERGER
MILES GREENWALD
MARVIN WEINSTEIN
HERBERT GROSS
ALAN WEISS
WILLIAM GROSS
EUGENE WEISS
CARL GROSSMAN
FRANK WEISS
ANDREW GUNSBERG
HAROLD WEISS
GEORGE GUNSBERG
MILTON WEISS
RICHARD GUNSBERG
SIDNEY WEISS
HAROLD GUNTZLER
EUGENE WHITE
STUART HARTMAN
ARNOLD WISPER
HAROLD HELFMAN
MEYER WISS
MANUEL HELFMAN
NATHAN zWRUBEL
NORMAN HORWITZ
W. A. A. C.
ERNEST ICZKOWITZ
ESTELLE GREENBAUM
BERNARD JACOBY
JOSEPH JACOBY
CANADIAN ARMY
DONALD KATZ
JAMES KATZMAN

may

gIVERY SOLDIER LEAVING FOR

OVERSEAS DUTY RECEIVES ONE
KIT FROM THE RED CROSS

I

geMililiagv.

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I

WHEN PEARL

HARBOR WAS

ATTACKED THE
RED CROSS HAD

00400LoNO:
9ARBLE02
CENTERS...
TODAY THERE

.ATED IN CITIES
NEAR PROCESSING
LABORATORIES!

fil) HELP RELEASE

•

REGULAR NURSES
FOR WAR WORK
54000 RED
CROSS TRAINED

NURSE$ AIDES

-t•

10

9

ARE PREPARED'
TO CONTRIBUTE
ANNUALLY FROM

/SO TO 4000 HOURS

OF SERVICE IN HOSPITALS!

NEW YORK (WNS)—The ex-
ecutive committee of the United
Jewish , Appeal issued a special
statement this week in which
Jewish communities throughout
the country were urged to meet
fully and generously the 1943
needs of the United Jewish Ap-
peal agencies ''regardless of any
decision that may be made with
respect to joining war chests for
1944."
• Emphasizing that the Jews of
America are profoundly concern-
ed with the responsibilities which
the Joint Distribution Committee,
the United Palestine Appeal and
the National Refugee Service
have assumed, the executive com-
mittee expressed the hope that lo-
cal Jewish communities would
consult with the United Jewish
Appeal. as they have done in the
past, "before decisions affecting
the interests of the United Jewish
Appeal are reached." The state-
ment stressed the fact that "Only
in this manner can the great need
of the millions of Jews who are
served by the United Jewish Ap-
peal agencies be fully protected."
The following is the text of the
statement defining the 1943 obli-
gations of Jewish communities in
the United States:
"1. The United Jewish Appeal
has a national goal of $25,000,000.
It has the most pressing obliga-
tion to obtain the funds to finance
the 1943 operations of the Joint
Distribution Committee, the Uni-
ted Palestine Appeal and the Na-
tional Refugee Service. It takes
this means of emphasizing to the
Jewish communities of America:
The needs of the United Jewish
Appeal agencies in 1943 must be
met regardless of any decision
that may be made with respect
to joining War Chests for 1944.
The United Jewish Appeal obli-
gation can be fulfilled only
through regular 1943 Community
campaigns. All discussion which
may be in progress respecting the
relationship of Jewish Welfare
Funds to local War Chests is gen-
erally related to 1944 fund-rais-
ing programs and not to 1943. The
majority of War Chests will con-
duct their drives in the fall of
1943 for the succeeding calendar
year, that is, 1944.
"2. The funds for the United
Jewish Appeal have always been
provided by Jewish communities.
The form in which such funds are
raised for the United Jewish Ap-
peal is always determined by each
community.
'3. Approximately $18,000,000
was raised by the Jews of Amer-
ica for non-local purposes in 1942.
Some $14,300,000 of this amount

was allocated to the United Jew-
ish Appeal. This'indicates the pro-
found concern of the Jews of
America with the responsibilities
which the Joint Distribution Com-
mittee, the United Palestine Ap-
peal and the National Refugee
Service have assumed. It also re-
flects the predominant interest
which the United Jewish Appeal
has in the decisions which are to
be made locally as to the, manner
in which the iunds are' to be
raised. It is the hope of the Uni-
ted Jewish Appeal by the local
Jewish community before decis-
ions affecting the interests of the
United Jewish Appeal arc reach-
ed. Only in this manner can the
great need of the millions of
Jews who are served by the Uni-
ted Jewish Appeal agencies be
fully protected. Whatever the de-
cision for 1944, it is our confident
hope that for 1943 the needs of
the United Jewish Appeal agen-
cies will be fully and generously
met."

Jewish National Fund
To Hold Purim Carnival
Saturday, March 27

Plans for the Jewish National
Fund Purim Carnival to be held
Saturday evening, March 27 at
the B'nai Moshe Synagogue are
rapidly nearing completion. It
will be a unique affair. In addi-
tion to the many booths and
games, the program for the eve-
ning will include an address by
Rabbi Jacob J. Nathan, choir
singing and a Purim play. The
highlight of the evening will be
the crowning of Queen Esther.
Each organization is urged to
select its representative for the
Queen Esther competition as soon
as possible so that it can be
given publicity. Notify Ruthe
Bassin, TO. 8-4745, of your choice.
Chanah Ageanoff is the represen-
tative from Migdal, the young
adult labor Zionist group, and
Barbara LaMed is the choice of
Habonim.
Orders are now being taken for
the planting of trees in the For-
est for Freedom. If you have a
relative in the armed forces of
our country, plant a tree in his
honor by contacting Thelma Jaf-
fin, 1711 Clairmount, Trinty
1-3991.

3

Rabbi Fram's Last
Lecture on "Just and
Enduring Peace" Mar. 12

Rabbi Leon Fram will deliver
the concluding lecture in his se-
ries of interpretations of the
Statement of the American Insti-
tute on 'Judaism and a Just and
Enduring Peace," at the Sabbath
Eve Services of Temple Israel, in
the Lecture Hall of the Detroit
Institute of Arts, Friday night,
March 12, at 8:30. The subject of
the concluding lecture will be
"The Jewish People and a Just
and Enduring Peace."
In this lecture, the Rabbi will
interpret that chapter of the
Statement on Judaism and a Just
and Enduring Peace which is en-
titled "Jewish Post-War Recon-
struction." He will discuss the de-
mands that the Jewish people
ought to make of the United Na-
,tions when they proceed after
'victory to build a peace that shall
endure.
In the course of this lecture,
Rabbi Fram will present the
claims of Zionism and meet the
challenge of the newly organized
so-called "Council for American
Judaism" which aims to divide the
Jewish people on the question of
Zionism and to defeat the Jewish
hope for a Jewish homeland. As
one of the organizers of the
"Council for American Judaism"
is a Detroit Jew, this lecture by
Rabbi Fram will have considerable
controversial interest. The general
public is invited to attend.
The services will be followed by
a social hour. Immediately after
the social hour, the Young Peo-
ple's Club of Temple Israel will
conduct a symposium on the ques-
tions raised by Rabbi Fram in the
course of his lecture.

Sisterhood of Shaarey
Zedek To Hold Red
Cross Brunch March 15

Under the sponsorship of the
Sisterhood of Congregation Shaa-
rey Zedek, a Red Cross brunch
will be held in the Social Hall of
the Synagogue, Monday, March 15
at 10:30 a. m.
A dramatic presentation, ''The
Murder of Lidice" by Edna St.
Vincent Millay will be given by
Miss Shirley Hyman, and movies
of "A Yank in Africa," "News
Cast" and "No Greater Glory"
will be shown. The price of the
brunch will be fifty cents and all
proceeds will go toward materials
for the Red Cross unit. Mrs. Mor-
And these three live no life at ris Krause of TO. 8-7555 is in
all: 'The man who must eat the charge of reservations.
bread of charity, he whose body
is covered with sores and he
Who is rich? He who enjoys
whose wife rules him."
his riches.

That's All It Is --- Just A Piece of Cloth

You can count the threads in it and its no different from
any other piece of cloth.
But then a little breeze comes along, and it stirs and sort
of comes to life and flutters and snaps in the wind, all red '
and white and blue.
And then you realize that no other piece of cloth could
be like it.
It has your whole life wrapped up in it. The meals you're
going to eat. The time you're going to spend with your wife.
The kind of things your boy will learn at school. Those strange
and wonderful thoughts you get, inside a church, on Sunday.
Those stars in if — they make y:.,u feel just as free as the stars
in the wide, deep night. And those stripes—they're bars of
blood to any dictator who'd try to change it.
Just a piece of cloth, that's all it is — until you put your
soul into it, and all that your soul stands for and wants and
aspires to be.
Get that straight—it's' just a piece of cloth. It don't mean
a thing that you don't make it mean.
What do you want to make it mean? A symbol of liberty
and decency and fair-dealing for everyone?
Then snap out of it. The enemy's been getting closer every
day. Don't let his got any closer. Start driving him back new.
NOW?
There aren't enough ships yet. Aren't enough cannon, tanks,
planes.
How are we going to get them? Make them, of course.
But how are we going to make them—force people, the way
they do in Germany?
No, sir. We're going to pay our way. And you've got to help.
Got to help? No, you don't even have to give up your
dough. All you have to do is lend it—at interest. Higher
interest than you can get in almost any other way—in U. S.
War Bonds.

Interest that makes the Bond worth I /3 again as much as
you paid for it, in just ten years—just at the time you'll be
wanting to take that vacation 'or buy that home in a world
that's free and peaceful and swell to live in again.
Ye4, that flag is just a piece of cloth until you breathe life
into it. Until you make it stand for everything you believe in
and want and refuse to live without.
Mister, is it worth pledging 10% of your income for, in
U. S. WAR BONDS?

