DETROIT JEWISH CHRONIO..E end The Legal Chronicle
Page Eight
Judge Paul Krause
Seeks Re-Election
To Recorder's Court
"It is my opinion that a judge
of a criminal court should be
more interested in the possible
rehabilitation of offenders than
with punishment, except in those
cases where for the good of the
general public, people must he
committed," said Judge Paul E.
Krause of Recorder's Court who
is seeking election to the posi-
t.on to which he was appointed
by Gov. Kelly.
"At judge of the Recorder's
Court, I intend to administer the
law fairly, squarely, and regard-
less of the persons, position in
life, color or creed, and in a
humane, decent manner," he as-
serted.
"I believe that first and par-
ticularly young offenders should
be given special guidance. In
many instances, when a person
is placed on probation, there
should be a sponsorship by some
organization such as a church,
'club or union to help the indi-
vidual find security and balance
in life."
Judge Krause, who was born
in Cleveland in 1900, graduated
from the literary college of the
University of Michigan in 1921
and its law school in 1924, en-
tering into a law partnership
with Mayor Jeffries, which con-
tinued until December, 1944.
He was appointed Detroit cor-
poration counsel in 1940 and
was in charge of all legal work
for tilt). city.
In two of his cases brought
before the Public Service Com-
mission, an order was issued for
$8,000,000 to be refunded to
gas customers' by the Consumers
Power Co., and $10,000,000 to
be refunded to customers by the
Detroit Edison Company.
Rankin Again
Attacks Jews
Rabbi Abraham Bender Visiting Here Dr. Brumbaugh
To Speak at
In Interest -of Yeshivah College
Shaarey Zedek
Refugee Camp Chief
To Speak Monday
Main building of Isaac Elchanan Seminary.
occupies a square block in New York City.
Rabbi Abraham Bender of New
Yoak City is in Detroit on behalf
of Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theo-
logical Seminary.
The Yeshivah College is one
of the outstanding Jewish edu-
cational institutions in America.
It has about 1,000 students in
all departments, including nine
from Detroit. It maintains a
high school course and a full
college course leading to the de-
gress of AB and BS, fully rec-
ognized by the regents of the
University of the State of New
York.
Its buildings occupy a square
Purim Program
Planned at Center
With $3,500 to the Leo N,
Levi Hospital in Hot Springs,
Ark., as its first contribution,
Pisgah Lodge War Service cam-
paign continues.
In addition to aiding the Leo
N. Levi Hospitel, substantial con-
tributions are to go to the Percy
Jones Hospital in Battle Creek;
general Bnai Brith war service
activities; packages for service
men; funds for assistance in re-
ormization and adjustment of
returning service men; aiding
wives and families of men and
women •in service, and other sim-
ilar causes.
The Pisgah drive is headed
by Jack Lawson, assisted by
Jack Schneider. This campaign
is the largest fund raising effort
ever undertaken by Pisgah
Lodge.
Pythian Sisters
Party Monday
The Pythian Sisters, Greater
Detroit Temple No. 152, are
sponsoring a benefit card party
to be given at 8 p. m. Monday,
Feb. 19, at the Bnai Moshe
Synagogue, Dexter and Law-
rence.
The proceeds are to be given
to the Ida Hibbard Fund for
artificial limbs for men in serv-
ice.
The Joint Yiddish Culture
Committee of the Jewish Com-
munity Center and the Jewish
Community Council is now work-
ing on the program for the fifth
in this year's series of Yiddish
cultural programs. This will be
a Purim festival which will take
place in the Community Center
auditorium on the evening of
Purim, Tuesday, Feb. 27.
The committee announces that
the Halevy Singing Society will
participate in the program with
an appropriate selection of songs.
Meyer Eisenberg, who directs
the Yiddishe Dramatishe Gesell-
schaft, will appear in a dramati-
zation of a Purim story by the
Yiddish humorist, Sholem Alei-
chem. Miss Rena LaMed and
Miss Dorothy Dombey, students
at the Sholem Aleichem Folk In-
stitute, will appear with Mr.
Eisenberg in this sketch.
The committee is preparing
additional features for the pro-
gram, in order to make it a
full evening of appropriate Pur-
im festivities,
Jewish Juniors Stage
Brotherhood Rally
C o m memorating Brotherhood
Week, Feb. 18-25, the National
Council of Jewish Juniors will
hold a patriotic meeting at 3
p. m. this Sunday at the Jewish
Community Center.
The speaker will be the Rev.
Shigeo Tanabe, minister to Re-
settled Japanese. Refreshment;
will be served.
RETAIN
JUDGE
DAVID C.
YOKES
COMMON PLEAS COURT
Non Partisan
Vote twice
Short term I2 Long Term
PRIMARY FEB. 19
Capable — Experienced
Highly Endorsed
Native Detroiter—Practicing Attorney 15 years
Former Ass't Attorney General
Former Member State Labor Mediation Board
Former General Counsel Michigan Unemployment
Compensation Commission
• Preferred by Detroit Citizen League.
The Yeshivan
block in New York City and in-
clude a fully equipped dormi-
tory and a teachers college.
The Jews of Detroit are famil-
iar with the work being done by
the Yeshivah. They know that
general cooperation of the Jews
of America is essential to extend
the work of the Yeshivah.
Owing to the war an added
duty has fallen to the Yeshivah,
Scholars, rabbis and students
from Europe who have found
their way to America must con-
tinue their work and studies and
the Yeshivah has undertaken_ to
make this possible.
Nazis Massacre
70,000 Lodz Jews
LODZ (WNS). — When the
Red Army broke through to the
Vistula River last August, the
Germans rounded up most of the
70,000 Jews in Lodz and sent
them to the Oswiecim death
camp, where they were all
liquidated.
Even while Red Army tanks
were entering Lodz, Jan. 16 of
this year, he said, the Germans
gathered the last batch of Jews
and machine-gunned them at the
Jewish cemetery after forcing
them to dig their own graves.
Dr. Albert Mazur, a Jewish
eye, ear and nose specialist, said
that 70,000 Jews in Lodz died
of tuberculosis, malnutrition and
mistreatment.
Of the 250,000 Jews whg lived
in Lodz before the outbrkak of
the war and of the tens of thou-
sands who were sent there by
the Germans from all parts of
occupied Europe, only 800 sur-
vived the German occupation.
WASHINGTON (WNS)
A
fist fight between Representatives
Emanuel Geller of New York
and John E. Rankin of Missis-
sippi was narrowly averted in
the House last week when thy ,
two Congressmen clashed over
the news that the American Den-
tal Association had urged that
religious tests be required fo•
entrance into dental colleges.
As Congressman Cellar lashed
out against the action of
dental organization, Rankin Fos,.
to his feet and, shaking his fist
at the New York Congressman,
shouted that he was "tired" of
the frequent raising of the ,Jew-
ish issue on the floor of the
House.
Facing Mr. Cellar with uncon-
trolled anger, Mr. Rankin shout-
ed:
"I am getting tired of the
gentleman from New York
—
The concluding Friday eve-
ning Oneg Shabat of the season
will be held at the Shaarey Ze-
dek Social Hall at 8:30 p. m.
Feb. 23. The speaker will be
Dr. T. T. Brumbaugh of Wayne
University. The program will
stress Brotherhood Week.
Cantor J, H. Sonenklar will
lead in the singing of Sabbath
and Palestinian melodies and re-
freshments will be served by the
Sisterhood.
Pisgah Gives $3,500
To Levi Hospital
•
•
•
•
Friday, February 16, 1945
Joseph H. Smart, director of
the Emergency Refugee Shelter
in Fort Ontario, Oswego, N. Y.,
will address a public meeting at
8:30 Monday, Feb. 19, at the
Rose Sittig Cohen Auditorium,
13226 Lawton. The meeting is
under the auspices of Resettle-
ment Service, with Fred M. But-
zel, president, presiding,
Admission is free and there
will be no appeals for funds.
This will be the first opportunity
for Detroiters to hear a first-.
hand account of how 982 refu-
gees from 19 different countries
are being taken care of at Amer-
ica's first free port,
In addition, a new film, "New
Americans," will be shown, de-
picting the adjustment of refu-
gees in the United States.
raising the Jewish question in
the House and then jumping
on every man who says any-
thing about it. Why attack
the American Dental Associa-
tion? That organization has
done what it had the right to
do. I wonder if the gentle-
man knows that 90 per cent
of the doctors who get on
the Civil Service roll are Jews,
and 60 per cent of the ones
we are compelled to accept in
arc
our veterans' hospitals
Jews.
"Remember that the whit•
Gentiles of this country also
have some rights."
Zedakah Club
Meets Monday
FOX THEATER
On Feb. 5 Zedakah Club held
its meeting at the home of Mrs.
Meyer Waterstone on Fullerton
Ave. The business meeting in-
cluded a report of USO activities
and also planned for a paid-up
membership luncheon to be given
in the home of Mrs. Joseph
Staub. Mrs. Norman Adelman
gave a review of the book, "A
Bell for Adano."
The next meeting will be held
at the home of Mrs. Louis Paul,
2451 Grand, on Monday, Feb. 19.
Temple Israel Men
Plan Fete Sunday
Bnai Moshe Youths
To Hear Methodist
The Bnai Moshe Young Peo-
ple's Society will celebrate Broth-
erhood Week at 2:30 p. tn. Feb.
18. Mrs. Phillip Gentile of the
Central Methodist Church will
be the speaker, representing the
"Round Table of Catholics, Jews
and Protestants," she will bring
several young people from her
church.
The Bnai Moshe Young Peo-
ple's Society will celebrate the
Purim holiday with a masquer-
ade dance (luring the first week
in March. Proceeds will go to
charity.
Columbia Pictures' long await-
ed Technicolor production, "A
Song to Remembey," starring
Paul Muni, Merle Oberon, and
Cornel Wilde, started Friday at
the Fox Theater.
"A song to Remember" tells
the story of the two great influ-
ences on the life of the famous
composer-pianist, Frederic Chopin
(Cornel Wilde). One was Pro-
fessor Joseph Elsner (Paul
Muni), Chopin's faithful music
master; and the other was the
bewitching, pants-wearing novel-
ist, George Sand (Merle Ober-
on).
Filled with the memorable
music of Chopin, "A Song to
Remember," surges with dramatic
and emotional appeal. The indi-
vidual acting performances of
the three principal stars, as well
as of the supporting players,
reaches a new high in superb
acting achievement.
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held at 1 :30 p. m. this Sunday
at the Detroit-Leland Hotel.
T h e entertainment program
for the afternoon will feature
movies and a magician. The
Boy Scout Troop, sponsored by
Music Becomes
the Men's Club, will stage drills.
a Weapon of
Barney Barnett is in charge
arrangements for the Inter-
Liberation
Congregational dinner to be held
The thrilling drama of
in March, sponsored by the Bnai
Frederic Chopin... who
David Men's Club,
Brotherhood Concert
Sunday at Center
Gerald Warburg. noted New
York cellist, will make his De-
troit debut at the Brotherhood
Concert Tuesday evening, Feb.
20, at the Jewish Community
Center. .M.r. Warburg will per-
form compositions by Bruch,
Chajes, Rachmaninoff, Debussy
and Cassado, and will be accom-
paniel by Julius Chajes, com-
poser-pianist. Rose Cooper, De-
troit soprano, will sing.
Also listed on the program are
Rose Delmar, and the St. Mark's
Methodist Choir, under the direc-
tion of Dr. Nellie B. Huger.
HALEVY THANKS CHRONICLE
To the Editor.
On behalf of the Halevy Sing-
ing Society, I wish to thank you
for the cooperation you gave us
in the publicity of our recent
Concert.
Mamie S. Freeman,
Secretary.
fought death so he could
give life to liberty!
r
COLUMBIA
PICTURES
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