OKI AGIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle Peg. Four Detroit Jewish Chronicle Friday, December 6, 1946. LET ER9 Box And the LEGAL CHRONICLE Published Weekly by Jewish Chronicle Publishing Co., Inc., 525 Woodward Ave., Detroit 26, Mich., CA 1040 SUBSCRIPTION: 33.00 Per Year, Single Copies, 10c; Foreign, $5.00 Per Year ntered as Second-clan matter March 3, 1916. at the Post office at Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March CY AARON, Publisher CHARLES TAUB, Advertising Manager Vol. 48, No. 49 GEORGE WEISWASSER, Editor•in-Chief NATHAN J. KAUFMAN, Managing Editor FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1946 (Kislev 13, 5707) Sanatorium Merits Support The Los Angeles Sanatorium is in the midst of a campaign to raise $100,000 in Detroit as a contribution to the proposed $2,100,000 medical center and college which will supplement the institution's present facilities for tubercular patients. The fame of the sanatorium is wide- spread. It has brought peace of mind to many a patient and a cure to many others, among them Detroiters. Its project of establishing a non-sectarian center to study and heal other ills of mankind is one that should evoke a swift and hearty response from Detroit organizations and individuals who want to see their con- tributions bring results in the form of tranquil minds and mended bodies. While we must concede that, at this time, our despoiled and bleeding breth- ren in Europe and Palestine have first call on our generosity, we cannot overlook the fact that local and national institu- tions must not be allowed to vegetate or decline because our sympathies are chan- neled elsewhere. A medical development like that near Los Angeles certainly deserves our sup- port because it too has a humanitarian objective, and broken bodies are just as painful in California as in the DP camps. There is another reason why this sanatorium undertaking should stir a response. The proposal envisages the establishment of a first-class, non-de- nominational medical school under Jew- ish auspices. At a time when the na- tion's universities are tightening their restrictions on Jews, Negroes, Italians and others who wish to enter their medical colleges, it is good to know that Jews are planning the erection of a school \i that will discriminate against no one because of the color of his sk:n, the origin of his forebears or the in- dividuality of his religious beliefs. Such an institution will vitiate the schemes Of the selfish and prejudiced schools which would like to keep Jewish physicians at a minimum in the land, and at the same time will bring blessings upon a people who can be tolerant and open- handed in a sphere where little tolerance is vouchsafed them. Certainly such an organization merits all the moral and financial backing we can give it. Look to the Rebels The unanimous vote of confidence'given the British Labor government in support of Bevin's foreign policy was a hollow victory. The Conservatives simply absent- ed themselves en masse and several score Laborites abstained from voting in cogent protest at Bevin's bungling. Among the latter were some very ar- ticulate critics of Britain's Palestine pol- icy including Richard H. S. Crossman, disillusioned member of the Anglo-U. S. inquiry commission, and Michael Foot, brilliant young parliamentarian mentioned as a possible future prime minister. If there is to be any reversal in Brit- ish policy, it may have to come at the instigation of the anti-Bevin faction. Just now, with the exaggerated spectre of Rus- sian domination frightening most Labor- ites into submissive approval of the for- eign secretary's program, much of which is a negation of socialistic principle and a betrayal of pre-election promises, Bevin remains in the ascendent. But let that spectre fade, and the young socialists, chafing at their leaders' arbitrariness, will revive their rebellion and force a change that may bring a new British attitude to the issue of the Jewish State. The Homeland was definitely a so- cialist pledge, and the young Laborites, not yet impregnated with colonial office casuistry and double-dealing, will demand fulfillment of that pledge. Perhaps that day is much nearer than we have hoped. 1, 1879 Detroit 26, Mich. A Job to Be Done The adoption of a $170,000,000 quota for 1947 by the United Jewish Appeal needs no expatiation. There is a job to be done for the Jews of Europe and Pal- estine and only the American-Jewish community can do it. The sum is vast, but so is the prob- lem that the subscriptions will seek to mitigate. When you stop to consider the enormity of Israel's woe today—a year and a half after the war—the sum seems piddling. If every American Jew ' contributed $35, it could be raised over- night. For $35, each one of us can bring life to a weary brother. We hold power in our hands usually attributed to the Al- mighty alone. We can give life. Surely every one of us will contribute $35 so that we can perform a godly act. Detroit will soon know what its quota is. A united, democratic front made up of all Detroit Jewry is the next essential. None must fail its call. The Visiting Editor Great American Sucker When will the Great American Sucker get wise to himself? Or does the G. A. S. love a phony, so much he's willing to pay for it, not only with his own money but with the security of his country, and the blood of his countrymen? The questions are motivated by the news that, at last, there will be an in- vestigation by the Senate War Investi- gating Committee into charges against Senator Bilbo of Mississippi, to discover whether there was "any improper con- duct" between the Senator and certain war contractors. "Improper conduct" can in this case mean but one thing, graft and bribery. Until the committee brings in a report, we shall withhold our own judgment con- cerning Bilbo's financial urges. But of his phony political-racial philosophy destined, if it prevail, to divide the nation, there is no doubt. The Great American Sucker who fol- lows political prevaricators like Bilbo, and Rankin, and G. K. L. Smith (who so far hasn't had a chance at the public treas- ury), should be interested in the outcome of this Senate Investigation Committee. He should be interested to know whether Bilbo actually used the influence of his office to profit illegally from war con- tracts or not. He should look back a few months at the records of the Nurenberg trials and see for himself that there was not one of the Nazi criminals indicted and convicted who did not clean up huge ill-gotten, bloodstained fortune-money and jewels stained with the blood of even their own dupes, the Great German Sucker. He should look back to the history of the Ku Klux Klan right after World War I, at which time the Klansmen's dues and contributions were turned to the personal enrichment of a few of their leaders. And every time he listens to some blab- ber-mouth mountebank camouflaged in alleged religious or patriotic robes, who tells him, he is the "salt of the earth," superior to any dark skinned or Jewish, or Catholic neighbor, he should ask him- self: "What am I letting myself in for? What am I letting my country in for?" Then in the quiet of his room let him read and re-read the history of the past decade and more in Germany. THE MESSENGER, Los Angeles, Calif. Dear Editor: The struggle over statehood and the plethora of publicity that the Zionist organizations have put out to achieve it have buried the fig- ures embraced in the practical problem of refuge. The political aims have ob- scured the human problem. By putting statehood first and refuge last the Zionists, in my judgment, have jeopardized both. It is time to reverse that process. It is un- fair to carry on this political con- troversy at the expense of the miserable tenants of the DP camps. Nor will the philosophical and political ideal of Jewish statehood die by reason of delay if it de- serves to live; but refugees will die if humanity too long delays their rescue. The refugee problem is upper- most in the minds of all of us these days, but I would not wish to have the impression go forth that it is solely because of the fate of Jewish refugees that I sm opposed to political Zionism. CITES 'COERCION' I dislike the coercive methods of zionists who, in this country, have not hesitated to use economic neans to silence persons who have different views. I object to their attempts at character assa:ssina- `on of those who do not agree with them. I take issue with the manner in which they have fo- cused the attention of the world ipon the question of the Jewish -efugee instead of using their ;mat moral strength to plead the cause of all displaced persons. Plans to move Jews to Pales- tine should be but part of larg- er plans to empty these camps which, no matter how well con- ducted, are an offense to the dignity of man. We in the United States shoul open our doors to persons of a faiths and creeds. France seek new citizens and they are at he door clamoring for entry. Englan( historic refuge for oppressed ns tionals, can take its share. Admitting that the Jews of Et rope have suffered beyond expres sion, why in God's name shout the fate of all these unhappy peo plc be subordinated to the sing' cry of statehood? BROTHERS ALL To the really enlightened ma( there is no claim of kinship close than the claim of all human so ciety, in which all men are broth ers. It was in the service of thi larger community that they spen their time rind talents, and wha they achieved in improving th, lot of all their countrymen inevl tably improved the lot of thosi who shared with them the same religious faith. These men were citizens of m single geographical area — the were, in the most enlightenec sense, citizens of the world. Then was in their world eitizenshil nothing incompatible with thei Jewish faith or their America: nationality. There need be no such incom patibility of interest or devotim today on the part of those whi aspire to the best kind of work citizenship. ARTHUR HAYS SULZBERGER New York Times, New York, N.Y. Make Chanukah Dramatic to Child (Continued from Page 3) use of customs and practices in his own home. The child is essentially gullible... he can be taught any religion. But the gullible child will have deeper memories and lasting experience when education and home observ- ance are combined. He will be con- fused when education runs coun- ter to home practice. You may ask why I would con- cern myself, in these columns, with religion. I am concerned because I know theoretically and in demonstration over the years, that religion is essential to sound living. It places the individual in a arm perspective with his universe. [t helps him evaluate his daily living with the world around him. And I am firm in my belief that -very home must insist upon a religious education for its chil- dren, the religion of the home. Else it has failed in its task. • • MAKE HOLIDAY VIVID THE MEANING OF RELIGION is taught by customs, practices, festivities, observances in which children are active participants. • Color, beauty, music, joy .. , many other sects have found • • make the hbliday vivid. Long at ter the words are forgotten, till "seeable" impressions remain. Who has been responsible for eliminating joy and pleasure, enthusiasm from Jewish religious practice today? Find that per- son or persons and you will find a perverted group. Give me more holiday celebra tions where tradition is sur rounded with beauty, enthusiasm color and reality and I will gilt, you children with a firm knowl edge of their religion. Books for Parents Burning Lights, by Bella Cho gall; The Jewish Festivals by Ha yim Schauss; The Chanukah Bool by Emily Solls-Cohen; The Core monies of Judaism by Idelsohn. For Children Jewish Holidays and Festivals b Eidden; Hallibl and You by A. C Silverman; Adventures of K'Toi Ton by Wellerstein; Far Over th Sea by Hayim N. Bialik; Joe, Meets His People by Kruchman Happy Chanukah by Jane Bear man. Let's Get Together for the Real Fight