Antericam 7cutish Periodical Carter

CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

Fr iday, October 18, 1946

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

For Tolerance

THE AUTUMN SOCIAL WHIRL Band will take the helm as presi.
is beginning to spin. Organiza- dent.
• ions are letting loose their dor-
ant energy and throwing morn-
The way to a man's heart is
rship socials. Here's a few to by way of his stomach and the
-J.I up your calendar for the next Robert Rafelson Auxiliary has
`' few weeks
been serving refreshments at
the Post's last few meetings ...
The ferns of Junior Hadassah
They surprised the ladies last
are lining up their dates for a
week with a big feed at their
gala hayride on the 19th. The
impressive installation.
new Youth group of the North-
• • •
west Congregation spring into
ANY
TIME
YOU'RE around
action with an open dance Sun- Mary Dee's beautiful
new hair
day afternoon, Oct.27 with Edith styling shop on Dexter boulevard
Operman, president, welcoming during the morning hours ... drop
all the strangers.
in for a cup of java . . . it's on
0. JOHN ROGGE
The YPS of Congregation Shna- the house!
There's always some form of
rey Zedek takes over the social
hall on Wednesday evening, Oct. music coming from Kal Brusses
30 and brings in Ben Katzman's Planet and Sound Studio on Dex-
band to provide the sweet and low ter . .. he rigged up an outside
strains for the boys and girls. mike so the people in the store
These events are open and FREE, and in the street can hear his
selection.
so, be there.
• • •
• • •
THRU THE EYES OF THE
SCIIOOLSCOPES . . . Walter Ro-
senberg, Warren Witus, Harvey snooper . . . the Phi Alphas looked
Snider, Bernard Zemol, Herb Sill_ mighty sharp as they attended en
man, Sanford Rosen, Morris Brown masse to see Henry V . . . Sybil
and Gerry Gordon are on the Goldfarb was escorted by MGM
S.A.M. rushing roster in Ann Ar- script writer Dexter Fox of Holly-
wood during his visit. Spotted Bet-
bor.
0. John Rogge, special assis-
ty Schlain with Leonard Limberg, tant to the U. S. Attorney General
More news from the out of Windsor's Jack Adelman and Bet- and prosecutor at the trial of the
town campus . . . Sam Israel, ty Mamlin, Evelyn Berg and Hy 29 alleged seditlonists, exposed
Frieda Frazer and Seymour Dorfman, Eugene Galan and Jack- the activities of subversive ele-
Grossfield are carrying their lyn Puskin, Margie Klein and
school books at MSC. Olivet Chester Shaw, Sally Eagle and ments who use anti-Semitism as
a booby trap to undermine de-
College is the new home of Vir- Herb Cooper.
mocracy, at a meeting" of the New
• • •
ginia Barnett and Betty Soss...
York Council of the Joint Defense
More of this for youse next week.
Judy Jacobs departs for Colum-
bia to finish up some social
work.

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at

• • •

U•S. Official
Blasts Bigots

Attorney General's
Aide Parley Speaker

lo

Biron Warns
of Play's Bias

Mary Wilkus and Suzanne Gins-
burg will boast 'bout U. of Colo-
rado. Mt. Clemens' Herb Alpern
checks in at Washington U., Lois
Goldman hits the books at U. of
(Continued from page 3)
Illinois.
new friends with his full page ad-
• • •
vertisement In the N. Y. Post, pro-
DESPITE THE RUMORED testing against the Schacht and
diamond shortage, engage men t Von Papen acquittals . • .
* • •
rings continue to make the news.
New names in our col'm this Issue BRITISH OUTWITTED
are . .
TRUE THRILLER: Tel Aviv
Elaine Weinstein will take A was under a curfew. All in-
on the MrS. , title on the 23rd from
habitants had to be indoors at 6
' Sy Greenbaum . . . Hotel St. Mor- p.m. British soldiers came parad-
itz in N. Y. will be their hideout. ing through the streets on the
The printer is preparing the lookout for Stern gang members.
wedding invites for the Al Letvin-- Suddenly a detachment of 50 Brit-
Esther Cash merger on Nov. 10 ish M.P.'s stopped in front of a
and Mary Gray Is wearing that group of houses, took 10 young
tell-tale sparkler from Windsor's men into custody, and marched
Joe Schwartz . . . A fast romance them off under the protection of
for Sylvia Levenberg and Dave the English soldiers.
Weisberg.
These 10 prisoners were mem-
Newlyweds Laurence Epsteins bers of the Stern group and so
(Mae Sweetwine) now living In were their captors, who had donned
Miami Beach.
British uniforms to save them .. .
• • •
George Cassidy, correspondent
NAMES, NAMES, NAMES ..
for the N. Y. Post, reports that
Jack Fine's new tune, "Texas In Ilaifa they're telling about
and Pacific," Is being plugged by guy with his ear in a bandage... a
ork leader Louis Jordan from When asked why, he explains
N.Y.'s exclusive 400 Club... Watch that he's had a tooth extracted...
for some big doings on it soon.
"You don't mean to tell me that
the dentist took a tooth out
Bobbie Stein edits the monthly
through your ear?" . . . "Of
newspaper of the ZOA Chapter I
course," punchlines the guy, "In
and does a fine job. Cute Mir-
Palestine It's too dangerous to
iam Baker of the Phi Sigma
open your mouth." We remem-
Sigma clan was elected to the
ber when they located that kind
Soph Senator board of the U. of
of joke in Berlin.
Illinois.
• • •
Schoolteacher Sol Dovitz nabbed WAR PAINTINGS
a 50 buck prize from the Chev-
OT POURI: David Lax, a com-
rolet Motor Company for giving
bat veteran whose paintings
a bright answer to a dealer prob- are in the National War Museum,
lem on their radio program . • • is offering three courses in art un-
Elaine Koblin's smiling face greets der the City College adult educa-
You at the info desk at the Vets tion program ... Dave, incidental-
Center in the Union Guardian ly, is doing an important series
Bldg. . . Millie Schultz is off to on the war, which will arouse hot
Hollywood
for a reported screen controversy . . . Watch for it in
test.
about a year . . . Frances Adlei's
• • •
book on Jacob P. Adler, her father,
BABY FEATHERS . • •
is ready for publication after 10
Baby boys to Drs. Jack Forman years of writing and rewriting...
and Jack Kutnick. Mazel Tov to Publishers should grab it . . . It's
the Herb Zamler's on their baby an epic . . .
boy, Leonard.
Peter Bergson, chairman of fhe
The Albert Davises boast 'bout Hebrew Committee for National
a new addition, a boy, and the Liberation, until recently in dan-
Saul Blooms' new entry is a son, ger of being deported to Pales-
(Richard Mark.
•
tine, has squared his case with
• • •
Washington . . .
'TUFF AND THINGS.
There are two new Anglo-
be ''Crisis in the Middle East" will Jewish monthlies, both named
discussed at the opening meet- "Jewish Life" . . . One is pub-
of the Youth Group of Tem- lished by the Union of Orthodox
Israel on Sunday afternoon, Jewish Organizations of Amer-
J Oct. H 27 at 611 Boulevard Bldg . • • ica . . . The other by the Com-
mburger was elected presi-
Joel Ha amburger
munist Freiheit . . . A case of
the Stu dent Council for the right hand not knowing
Temple of Beth El
High School . • what the left Is doing .. .
Jerome Bronson takes over the
The Anti-Defamation League re.
vice presidency and \ the secretary ports that Eddie Rickenbacker,
Jot? goes to Constance Davis.
the noted airline magnate, is
Birthday congrats to Ave Lupo- financing the anti-Semitic com-
vitch.
Th e first 7313YM group, Rex Chap- mentator Upton Close . . .
You would do well to read
te
will be installed Sunday "Shadow Over the Land" by
afternoon, Oct. 20 at Temple Beth Charles Dwoskin, a novel about
El. public is invited ... Marty "patriotic hate mongers . . .

P

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£1,

Age Thirteen

Appeal, recently at the Hotel
Commodore, New York City.

Rogge made a special visit from
Washington, D. C., to address the
Council—comprising business exe-
cutives, political, civic and Jewish
communal leaders — which gives
leadership to the Joint Defense
Appeal in its $5,000,000 effort for
funds in combatting religious big-
otry and un-American activities.

Rabbi Fram to Review
Sholom Aleichem Book

Rabbi Leon Fram has an-
nounced that the second in his se-
ries of sermons on recent books
of Jewish interest will be a trans-
lation of stories by Sholom Alei-
chem. It will be delivered at the
Sabbath
eve services of Temple
Rogge has been in the forefront
among American officials openly Israel in the Lecture Hall of the
attacking persons accused of pre- Detroit Institute of Arts Friday,
Oct. 25, at 8:30 p. m.
war Nazi links.

He is finishing a 20,000-word re-
port for Atty. Gen. Thomas Clark
on the results of his recent mis-
sion to Germany to investigate
the Nazi subsidization of Amerl.
can sympathizers, some of whom
are said to be proininent in busi-
ness and political circles.

At this service, William Arkin
will celebrate his Bar Mitzvah.
The congregation will be the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Morris
Arkin at a reception.

During the following week, Rab-
bi Fram will attend the conven-
tion of the Zionist Organization of
America.

Alfange Accuses British of Arming
Arabs While Weakening the Jews

NEW YORK — Charging that Ish officers and 'security police
British policy in Palestine was un- were not only aiding the illegal
dertaking a campaign to disarm arms traffic, but were actually at
Jews, while supplying Arab mili- the head of it.
tary cliques with weapons, Dean
The New York political leader
Alfange, chairman of the Ameri- indicated that It was now an open
can Christian Palestine Commit- secret in the Middle East that
tee of Greater New York, called Arab military organizations in'Pal.
upon the United States to "avert estine were approaching the peak
the impending wholesale massacre of their recruitment.
of defenseless Jews for which the
"These military groups, loyal to
British have cunningly prepared the Mufti and his Axis-loving dis-
as part of their policy of divide ciples, are preparing to launch a
and conquer."
series of pogroms upon a Jewish
Alfange accused the British ad- community rendered defenseless
ministration in Palestine of "clos. by the Brith,
is those ve ry
mg its eyes to a widespread traf- arms that th e British seized from
ficking in arms" carried o u t the Jews on the grounds that they
among Arab nationalists. He said constituted a menace to the
that, in a number of cases, Brit- peace," he charged.

•

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eves•••

lighting is
M carefully schoolroom
plenned to provide the

ODERN

best possible aid to study. Every effort
is made to keep that lighting at top
efficiency, because educators know that
good marks and good eyesight depend
on it.

But lighting at home is not always so
easy on young eyes. A light may glare
because the bulb is too large or because
it's improperly shaded. Your child may
not complain, because he's grown ac-
customed to it—but that deceptive glare
can tire his eyes and brain, give him
B's where he should get A's. It may even
cause headaches or harmful eyestrain.

There's no difference between the elec-
tricity in your son's school and that in
his home. No difference in the quantity
used. As far as the quality of lighting
goes—well, that's up to you. And the
safest way to really know that your
youngster's homework is easy on the
eyes is to arrange for an Edison Home
Service Advisor to call on you and
check your lamps and fixtures. She can
do this in a very few minutes if
necessary, show how you can bring

your lighting up to schoolroom stand-
ards. There's no charge for her visit—
no obligation to you. And it's a real
"ounce of protection" for your family's
eyesight!

FOUR WAYS TO GET THE MOST FROM
YOUR LIGHTS

Dust steals light. Keep
/ (lector
bulbs, shades and ro-
bowls

clean.

2-N2 Replace

dark colored
shades with light shades

-

with white lining. Flat-
Ing sides are better than

• straight-sided ones.

3

Use correct•sized lamp so As

bulbs and shades. Too
large a size may cause fa- a
tiguing glare. An Edison
Lamp Exchange Serviceman fi
will be glad to replace your 0
burned-our bulbs

Have your lamps and
fixtures scientifically
tested for quantity and
quality of illumination.
Your Home Service Advisor
does this with a light-meter.

The DETROIT EDISON Co.

