Jacob Chalat to
Trades Meet to
Step Up Tempo of Address Service
Group of AJC
AJC Campaign

(Continued from Page 1)
The Architects Section held a
meeting on March 28 with their
chairman, Charles M. Agree.
A luncheon meeting of the Hotel
Section took place on March 28.
Emanuel J. Harris is chairman of
the section.
Professional 'Division
Reorganization of the Osteopaths
Section has begun under the di-
rection of Dr. Sydney F. Ellias.
Plans for campaign organization
of the Social Service Section, of
which Miss Clarisse Freud is the
chairman, were made at a lun-
cheon meeting of Captains in the
Hotel Tuller on March 25. Those
present included Celia Shetzer of
the Detroit Department of Public
Welfare, John Kurland of the Ju-
venile Court, Rose Zesser of the
Bureau of Social Aid, Albert Co-
hen of the Jewish Vocational
Service, Selma Sampliner of the
North End Clinic, and Harold Sil-
ver of the Jewish Social Service
Bureau.
Services , Division
Leaders of the Services Division
met Sunday, March 24, at the
Jewish Community Center to plan
for the campaign activities of the
sections comprising the division.
Representatives from the Cleaners
and Dyers, Tailors, Laundry, In-
surance, Finance, Linen Supply,
Barbers and Beauty Parlors at-
tended the meeting.
Food Products Division
A meeting of leaders in the Bev-
erage and Liquor trade to organ-
ize for the campaign was held
Wednesday, March 27, at the Ho-
tel Statler. The meeting was call-
ed by Bud Blum, Harry Cohen,
Perry Feigenson, Ben Grosberg,
Maurice Morse, Morris Newman,
Arbaham H. Weinstein, and. Jo-
seph Zitomer.
A dinner followed by full dis-
cussion of the Poultry Section's
participation in the drive will be
held on Tuesday, April 2, at 6:45
p.m., at the Standard Club of the
Book-Cadillac Hotel. The leaders
in the trade who are calling the
meeting include Sam Goodstein,
Jack Horwitz, Hyman Karp, Her-
man Miller, Max Miller, Herbert
Mitnick, Hyman Mitnick and Sol
Singer.
Max Weiss, Albert Dubin, Albert
Green, Morris Mendelsohn and Al
Silk have formed a steering com-
mittee to organize the Dairy Sec-
tion, and have issued a call for
more workers, fuller participation
and broader understanding In the
industry than in past campaigns.
Leading members of the fish,
trade will meet on Tuesday, April -
2, at 6:30 p.m., in the Book-Cad-
illac's Standard Club for dinner
and a meeting to plan trade or-
ganization for the campaign. The
call for the meeting was Issued by
Irving Bloom, Sol Bloom, Max Da-
vis, Max Halperin, Nathan Metz,
George Rabinowitz, Jack Rabino-
witz, Arthur Salasnek, Charles Sa-
lasnek, Sam Saltzman and Meyer
Tarnpol.

A rally of all people in the dry
goods, men's apparel and mer-
chant tailors trades will take
place Tuesday, Apr. 2, at 8:30 p.m.
in Butzel Hall of the Jewish Com-
munity Center. Jacob Chalat,
noted New York lawyer, will speak
on the plight of the Jews of Eur-
ope and a movie, "Battle for Sur-
vival," will be shown.
Max Osnos, issuing the invita-
tion to the meeting as chairman
of the Mercantile Division of the
Allied Jewish Campaign, pointed
out that with the dissolution of the
War Chest the Jewish community
of Detroit must organize to meet
its responsibility for the survival
of the Jewish people overseas.
Joining with Mr. Osnos in urg-
ing attendance at the meeting
were the Executive Committee of
the Men's Apparel Section: Harry
S. Cohn, Herbert M. Eiges, Ber-
nard E. Pincus, Nathan H. Schol-
nick, Wiliam W. Sharpe and Dan
Winograd.
Morris Shatzen and Morris M.
Jacobs, co-chairmen of the Dry
Goods Group, and Samuel A. Gran-
adier and Jack J. Stark, co-chair-
men of the Merchant Tailors Sec-
tion, urged their members to at-
tend the meeting.

RABBI FRAM TO LECTURE
"The Biggest of the Big Three--
America" will be the subject of
Rabbi Leon Fram's sermun on
the theme, "The Big Three--Can
They Maintain the Peace?" to be
delivered at the Sabbath Eve Serv-
ice of Temple Israel In the Lecture
Hall of the Detroit Institute of
Arts Friday, April 5, at 8:30 p.m.

Treaty Proclaims
Transjordan Free

(Continued from page D
stated. "The independence of
Translordan seems to place final-
ity on the exclusion of the Jews
from that region." He deplored
the fact that under her treaty of
independence Transjordan "would
be deprived of the opportunity of
progressing. The difference be-
tween Transjordan and Palestine
is that between day and night. In
Transjordan there is abysmal pov-
erty, degradation and ignorance as
contrasted with a modern world
of education, sanitation, public
health electricity and everything
else in Palestine."
The Board of Deputies of Bri-
tish Jews adopted a resolution de-
scribing the granting of indepen-
dence to Transjordan as "a uni-
lateral abandonment of the obli-
gations of the Mandatory under
the Mandate, as far as three
quarters of the territory of Pal-
estine is concerned, and a breach
of Article 8 of the UNO charter,"
which provides that until trustee-
ship arrangements are entered in-
to, the existing international in-
struments to which UNO members
may be parties remain unaltered.
The resolution also says that the
Board affirms the Jewish people's
legal claim to the whole of Pal-
estine.
A. L. Eastman, political secre-
tary of the World Jewish Con-
gress, presenting the report of the
Board's Palestine Committee, at-
tacked the failure of the Colonial
Office to reply to the Deputies'
representations on Transjordan as
a "grave discourtesy." He said that
further action on the issue was
planned.

Book Review

(Continued from page 5)

Feuchtwanger needed money and delivered a story to the mm:azine
before the deadline.
The most sensible story of all, in our opinion, is "Armored ('ruts.
Potiemkin." He makes a Prussian go to see the movie of the fa-
mous Russian picture. Being a German cabinet minister and a l'I . us-
sian he resents the lack of discipline among the sailors but drawn qk
by the events pictured in the film at the dramatic moment when ti
mutineers beg their comrades of the other ships "Don't fire," he too
with all his heart prays: "Don't fire."
To go to the opposite, we announce that the stupidest and
dullest of them is a story called "A Wager." A writer finds tha
p eople whose character he pictures in his books share the fate 01
characters. A friend of his did share such a fate, although he bet .
it would not happen.
The hastiness with which the stories were written is indicated Ay
Feuchtwanger's attempt to write a spy story. The whole of it is do-
voted to a psychological study of a steward on a ship who irritated
the author on account of his clumsiness and general stupidity. On Cite
last page it turned out that this stupid fellow had saved him from a
woman spy.
The most pretentious story is one entitled, "The House in the
Shady Lane." In it a German professor named Rapp devoted his life
to research on the origin of Christianity and claimed that there (h ies
not exist any document by a pagan of the first century concerning
the life and work of Jesus.
He comes across a quotation from the stemmate of a certain
Symmachus of Milete containing an unequivocal reference to Jesus.
This passage he hid from everybody. His assistant, a Nazi, wanted it
so he could claim credit for the discovery. The professor died and the
Nazi did not find it.
The author of "The Oppermans," "Success," "Josephus," and
"Power" is not up to his level in these stories. Is it that a noveliat
cannot write short stories? It looks like it. Then, in the name of lit-
erature and in the name of Feuchtwanger, we hope he writes no more
short stories.

The book mentioned in this week's Book Review can he obtained
from the ZION BOOK STORE, 9008 - 12th Street near Clairmount.

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shortage. And only Forest Cleaners in Detroit
bring you this exclusive cleaning process.

MAX LISS, Sec. and Treas.
MAX SCIIIFF, Pres. and Founder
Invited one day to a friend's home for dinner, Max Schiff, owner
and founder of the Packaged Food Products Co., noted the time and
trouble spent in making potato pancakes. That was the start of the
idea which, after hundreds of experiments and formulae, resulted in a
mix which has swept the country.
Grosse Pointe Food Products, sensing the appeal which this mix
exercised, set up a huge display in their retail outlets, of which the
above is a Dicture, and found the response enthusiastic.
Based upon merchandise sold by the Packaged Food Products
Company, it is estimated that about 3,147,560 pancakes have been made
of this mix in the past 9 months.

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Daily

ANNIVERSARY, BIRTHDAY

"'

sit h the University of Detroit
U11.1.01611111' 11M IiIITON, President
ATTE D. 71 1D•MA, Dean
MAISEL It FISHER,
Iiininter
DISTINGUISHED FACUILTI, A1.1. 1111ANCHES (IF IIUS1C, 'MAMA II(
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Latkes Come into Their Own

1 /K9w/welt's

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Friday, March 29, 1946

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

Page Sixteen

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nial objects relating to the Sab-
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vals, has been compiled in book-
let form by the National Jewish
Welfare Board's Jewish Center
Division. The 26-page booklet is
entitled "Jewish Ceremonial Ob-
jects" and includes articles on
Jewish art by Julius Carlebach
and Temima N. Gezari.
"Jewish Ceremonial Objects,"
which can be used in dramatics,
arts and crafts, study groups and
exhibits, is copiously illustrated.
Copies are 40 cents each and may
be obtained by writing to the
Publication Department of the
JWB, 145 E. 32nd St., N.Y.C.

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