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March 22, 1946 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1946-03-22

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Page Sixteen

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

City Wide Rally Hears Council Fights
.
.
Lookstein, Sobel Speak Against Discrimination
Discrimination
(Continued from Page 1)

I allowed would be considered as
r , paid annual leave time. This was and of the plant, it was decided
that all questions in the employ-
to become a permanent policy.
ment form relating to religion or
(Continued from Page 13(
Miss A answered by telephone a nationality would be removed.
and head of the Rarnaz Academy, he was not suited for the type of
want ad appearing in a Detroit
the first progressive Jewish paro- work to which he was assigned. newspaper. The party who talked
Membership of the Committee
chial school in the United States. The management, however, ac- with her after reviewing her qual-
IN'ith the writer as chairman
He is national vice-president of knowledged that the fact that he ifications asked Miss A what her and Benjamin Wilk as co-chair-
the Mizracy Organization of Am- was let go directly after taking religion was. Miss A replied that man, the other members of the
erica and is editor of the "Jewish time off for a Jewish holiday ap- she was Jewish and she was then committee are: Henry M. Abramo-
Outlook."
peared to he more than coineiden. told that her application could not vitz, David I. Bends, Albert Co-
Louis H. Sobel, assistant seer:- tal. lie was reinstated and assign- be accepted because the employer hen, Jack Edelstein, Jack Ellsteln,
tarY of the Joint Distribution ed to duties for which he w ts "preferred" to hire Gentiles. The Dr. Clarissa Fineman, Rabbi Leon
Committee recently returned from believed to he suited. employer, when apprised of the Fram, Lewis C. Frank, Jr., Morris
a ten months' stay in South Am-
Miss Y and. Miss Z were cm- facts by the Community Council, Garvett, Dr. B. Benedict Glazer,
erica during which he visited ten ployed in a railroad office. When was emphatic in stating that this Mrs. Maxwell E. Katzen, Nathan
they
told their supervisor that
countries and consulted with the
was not his policy. He discharged J. Kaufman, Professor S. M. Lev-
leaders of 20 Jewish communities. they intended to take time off for the employee who had made the in, Isaac Litwak, Harry T. Madi-
For the last few months of 1912 an important Jewish holiday they statement to Miss A entirely on son, Miss Eve Neidelman, Dr. T.
W. Ruskin, Lawrence Seltzer,Har-
and the early part of 1913, Mr. were told that they would not be her own responsibility.
granted the time and would be
old Silver, and Harry Yudkoff.
Sobel was stationed in Lisbon,
Mr. B applied for employment
J. D. C.'s European headquarters. discharged if they stayed away, at a chemical plant. The matter The committee meets approximate-
During this time he arranged for The girls complained to the Corn- of his religion came up during ly once a month or on call if the
the rescue of several thousand munity Council and the matter the application interview and it situation warrants. In the interim
period between meetings, mem-
French Jews, whom J.
D. C. help- was taken up with the officials if was indicated to him that his be-
ed to escape from the continent. the railroad. It was agreed that ing Jewish might disqualify him bers of the committee consult with
Mr. Sobel is a recognized au- they would be allowed the time for employment. M a consequence the JCC staff on problems that
thority on group work, commun- off without prejudice to their em- of a conference between represen- arise. They participate likewise in
yment status and that the time l tatives of the Community Council the contacts that are made with
employers throughout the commu-
- ----- ------ -----
nity.
B
The committee regards its work
(Continued from Page 5)
as of the utmost importance to
his story, "Hunter Gracchus." It is a story of a dead man who never
the Jewish community. Discrimin-
arrives
to
open. "There." He wanders over the earth waiting for the heavens ation exists. While one instance
At the same time Kafka is not dreaming. He transcribes by means does not make a general pattern
it must be dealt with and may
of his imagination the realities of the world which tells him, "NO!"
prove to be the wedge with which
In "The Marvel of China," Kafka shows the Emperor of China
the Jewish Community Council
Isolated
from
his
subjects.
He
is
alone.
And
again,
"Nobody
will
help
me" is the left motif.
can attacic a bad or potentially
His heroes are never revolutionists but men in quest of authority bad situation. Through similar ef-
that has disappeared. In the "Castle" the Judge is inaccessible. Kafka forts and as a consequence of
must have disagreed with his father, the successful business man for, proper study the Committee be-
In his works, he Is forever looking for. authority. But it is not the lieves it can also attack those
traditional conflict of a bourgeois father and the artist son. On the broader situations where a pat-
tern of discrimination is found to
contrary, it is Kafka who is looking for order, for justice. Kafka is exist.
more interested in justice than in love.

Friday, March 22, 19

100 TABLETS 35(
WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER AT

Vomm iviVocmANN ■

MOSS

KOSHER CATERING CC
5028 Joy Road
near Grand River
TYler 4.922t

■SNICSO MMSAVOCNVUMI

OOK REVIEW

It will be necessary to make over the human body when justice
will be engraved in the flesh as with the machine of torture which
Kafka describes in his "Punitive Colony."
If vie follow him to the end, Kafka would lead us far through
novels and stories full of imagination and full of unhappiness which
besets man since his creation.

LOUIS SOBEL

Kafka is not to be taken for a symbolist presenting the world to
the seeks
readers through his impressions and moods. Kafka has an idea.
he
and justice; he has an aim, to rid the world of dis-
order and order
injustice.

Ity organization, personnel admin-
istration and vocational guidance.
He wants
to free man from the shackles not through anarchy but
H: has lectured on these subjects through
justice.
at Wayne University, Detroit, and
He presents his ideas in panoramas to impress and horrify and
at New York University where he
was an instructor. He is also thus to teach. To die at the age when his creative powers were at
their peak is not unlike the tragedies Kafka pictures in his stories.
known throughout the country as And
the loss is the world's.
consultant on Jewish economic ad
,
justment problems for the Jewish
communities in many large cities
Including Rochester, Detroit, Pitts-
burgh, Baltimore, Philadelphia,
Milwaukee, Minneapolis, and oth-
ers.

SURAIN CELEBRATE
FAMILY REUNION

A family reunion was held last
weekend in the home of Mrs.
Augusta Subar, of Blaine Ave. An
open house was held Sunday eve-
ning in honor of her son, Philip
Subar SK 3/c, recently returned
from spending two years in Ne.v
Guinea. Also home for the week-
end was Eli David Subar, recently
discharged from the Air Forces
and now attending University of
Michigan, and Shirley Subar, di-
rector of Zionist Youth Activities
and in charge of music in the
Jewish Education in

Reliable
Prescription
Service

rllrtth r'3

SUMMER MASTER CLASS PIANO--CARL FRIEDBERG

For Bulletin Address W. 11. B. REES, Registrar

52 PUTNAM AVE.

Detroit, Michigan, Zone 2

tut

Once a single transformer served your home.
That transformer was the transfer point, the
vital connecting link, between the miles
upon miles of power lines and the line that
served you. When it failed the power was
gone.

Engineers of The Detroit Edison Company

conceived and developed the idea of connecting many of these transformers together in
"banks," and now several of them must fail at the same time before you and your
neighbors are deprived of power. That seldom happens.

That is only one ,of many things that have been done to insure the householder, 'the
merchant and the manufacturer an uninterrupted supply of power adequate for all needs
—those of the present and those of the future.

That was a Detroit Edison idea—a Detroit Edison FIRST.

That was an incident in the story of this company's contribution to the community
of today.

It is indicative of some of the things that this company, as a citizen, can be expected to
contribute to the community that is to he.

H

E

DETROIT

Cl tour

Affiliated attI, the University of Detroit
WI1.1.01 GOBI' BOUGHTON, President
ALLE D. ZUIDEMA, Dean
MABEL It. FISHER, Manager
DISTINGUISHED FACULTY, ALI. BRANCHES OF MUSIC, Dlt.t4
A ItT AND DANCING, CERTIFICATES AND DEGREES
EDUCATIONAL BENEFITS UNDER TIIE G. I. BILL---PUBLIG LAW 310

It is but little more dependable than Detroit
Edison service.

T

09

DETROIT INSTITUTE
of MUSICAL ART

THE BEAT - OF YOUR HEART.

That miraculous continuity of service, here
and elsewhere, is clue to endless research
and experiment by engineers and executives
of the electric industry. In that program of
feojr1/ A ILI)
progress, WTI"'
nas continued through the
years, and will continue through the years
to come, The Detroit Edison Company has
been a pioneer.

NW

EDISON

COMPANY

TEMPLE 1•2870

I

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