Friday, July 11, 1947 DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE Fage Fear Detroit Jewish Chronicle 1 Letters to the Editor Published Weekly by Jewish Chronicle Publishing Co., Inc., 525 Woodward Ave., Detroit 26, Mich., CA 1040 and modern, self-styled liberals attend Temple on Sunday. • • I I note that in your issue of June 27 you have an editorial So first generation reformers on "Buckley Bill Disunity" in which you take the American like Mr. Segal still have "nostal- Jewish Congress and other gic memories of the warmth of groups to task for their opposi- old Synagogues" and find it a tion to the Buckley Bill and bit cool in the modern Temples their failure to cooperate with with their "chill of mausoleums" the Jewish Labor Council in And now, in order to work amending the measure. May I point out that the up a little life—a bissel lebben- American Jewish Congress, as a reform Rabbi is sending out well as all other responsible na- "First Aid Packets" to unlock tional Jewish agencies, consider the silent mouths of the "deaf the Buckley Bill so faulty and inadequate that they could not and dumb". Ess vet zay helfen regard it even as a starting vee a tayten bankehs unless you point for discussion or as amend- send along a surgeon who pas able. In fact, we consider the a miracle drug able to defiost bill to be potentially very harm- the frozen hearts of these lost ful to the cause of group libel Jewish souls. legislation which the American • • • Jewish Congress Heartily favors. Have you ever. Mr. Segal, vis- Opponents of group libel legis- lation use such badly drawn and ited a modern, model synagogue untenable proposals us an effect- service (orthodox of course) on ive argument against any legis- a Shabbos morning as conducted by any one of the Young Israel lation at all. branches throughout the coun- • a • The bill came to the attention try? There are about 35 of these of the national Jewish agencies in the New York City area only after it had already been alone, and about 30 branches introduced into Congress. I am in various other 'cities through- not aware of the fact that the out the country. You'll find Jewish Labor Council is con- there a spiritual haven that sidered particularly authoritative even you will find worthy of or technically competent in the praise. Not only do the congreganta field of law and legislation. recite the Sh'ma bekol rom, but If they 'had been in earnest a large portion of the service about securing sound technical consists -of congr,egational sing- guidance, they could easily have ing of the sort that your Rabbi conferred, long befote the bill Schwartz and his commission on was introduced, with the na- synagogue activities will never tional agencies who maintain in a thousand years attain. Why? specialized professional staffs for They simply lack the "hisla- such purposes. They might then ayes." have discovered that the Amer- SAM H. BONCHEK, ican Jewish Congress,' for ex- President, Young Israel ample, had been at work for of Cleveland months on municipal, state and Federal measures with regard to group libel. BETH SHMUEL THANKS DAVID PETEGORSKY. Dear Editor: Executive Director In behalf of the Ladies Auxil- iary of Congregation Beth Shmuel, A NOTE TO SEGAL I take this opportunity to extend Dear Editor: our sincere thanks for your help Ile's done it again! Seldom in making our Fifth Donor Lun- does a week pass by that Mr. cheon a success. Al Segal doesn't stick his neck Articles appearing in your pa- out on one subject or another. tier from time to time, prior to If it isn't anent the Jewish all- our affair, were a constant re- day school. on which he takes a minder and inspiration to our stand opposed to anything that friends and followers. smacks of Yiddishkeit, it's to "badoyerr" the super-decorous services" in the temples. So the old time orthodox Shill was too noisy—so Mr. Segal couldn't stand it, nebuch, and now his reform temple is too quiet—ken ehr dus vidder nisht WILDWOOD, N.J. — The new lyden. national marbles champion is 12-, Poor Mr. Segal (and all his year-old Benjamin (Buddy) Sklar ilk) he's really having a time of Pittsburgh, who won the na- of it, finding a spiritual haven, tional tournament here. isn't he? Have you tried the Benjamin led his league from Unitarian Church yet, Mr. S.? the first day's play and displayed Or the Seventh Day Adventist? rare form as he defeated 13-year- But, of course not the latter, old Ralph Brunty of Huntington, they have services on Saturday, W. Va., in the finals. SUBSCRIPTION: $3.00 Per Year, Single Copies, 10c; Foreign, $3.00 Per Year BUCKLEY BILL Entered as Second-class matter March 3, 1916, at the Post Office at Detroit, Mich., under tlie Act of March 3, 1879 Dear Editor: CY AARON, Publisher CHARLES TAUB, Business Manager Vol 49, No. 28 GEORGE WEISWASSER, Editor-in-Chief NATHAN J. KAUFMAN, Managing Editor FRIDAY, JULY 11, 1947 (Tamus 24, 5707) DETROIT 26, MICH. major contribution will have been made to the stability of the world". Despite our criticism of the quibbling res- Collier's lets the chips fly where they olutions by the Central Conference of may. "The double-leading and double-cros- American Rabbis on the mixed marriage sing which Great Britain, and laterally our issue, we must confess that our hats are own government, have given the Jews with off to the reform Rabbis and their conserv- regard to their ancient homeland have been ative colleagues for taking such courageous scandalous," the editorial asknowledges, and unequivocal stands on several social and confounding those who would lay the blame political questions at their recent conven- on petty Jewish-Arab differences ex- tions. clusively. At Montreal, the Rabbis minced no words It is this kind of thinking that will help in pointing to the dangers inherent in the bring peace to a tormented land and a tor- Truman doctrine and deploring the passage mented world. of the Taft-Hartley labor legislation. They expressed opposition to compulsory military training, advocated FEPC and anti-lynching JNF Elects Schlussel measures, the extension of rent control and In electing Irving W. Schlussel to the "the reconstitution of price controls along presidency, the Jewish National Fund the lines of the OPA unless the President's Council of Detroit has chosen one of the plea for the reduction in prices is heeded or city's most earnest and devoted young Zion- the general level of wages materially in- ist leaders. His selection augurs well for the creases." advancemnt of the council's efforts on be- In New York, the conser4ative Rabbinate half of the Yishuv. deplored the decline of liberalism implicit in the passage of the Taft-Hartley bill "which Schlussel has been president of Detroit put labor back into the weak position from Mizrachi for several years and has been one which it emerged after years of effort". of the chief stimuli of the resurgence of the When you consider that the reverend religious Ziogist movement here in recent gentlemen head Synagogues and Temples years. many of whose members hold violently con- He is innately modest but his straight- trary views, the honesty of their resolutions forwardness and industry make him a is unchallengeable. leader in any cause he espouses. He believes in the greater participation of young peo- ple and we are sure he will open the door of the council wide to them. Personal Contact Social-Minded Rabbis Appeals are being sent out by mail to all Detroit Jews who have thus far not con- tributed to the Allied Jewish Campaign for $5,335,000. Gifts total approximately $4,- 000,000. These last-minute pleas by mail are an- other example of the weak planning and poor administration which have marked the drive throughout. Altogether too much solicitation has been done by mail and particularly by telephone. While both media have their value, there is nothing to compare 'with personal solici- tation. To this day, hundreds of potential con- tributors have not been visited personally and as a result they have made no offering at all or promised meagre ones as a result of a tepid telephone contact. We realize that many of the solicitors have fallen down on their jobs, but we are certain that all the confusion and ,derelic- tion could have been avoided by more sens- ible planning. It is up to the Federation moguls to see that the missed calls are made and that the procedure in future 'years be mapped with broader vision and more efficient lead- ersh f;). "Tormented Palestine" After the many thousands of empty words that have been written about the United Nations Palestine inquiry, Collier's in its issue of July 12, summarizes the issue in a tiny editorial, "Tormented Palestine", that is a model of cogency and pithiness. It covers the situation in a nutshell. "If the UN falls down on the job," says Collier's, "our feeling is: Heaven help the UN." In this way, the editorial epitomizes the hopes of the peoples of the earth that the new international organizations can act wisely and resolutely to settle a world question. For is it a world question. "Can't we matt one fast, mighty effort to get this prolgem settled somehow, and thereby get it o the .front pages and out of the main arena of:piople's emotions and prejudices?" writes Collier's. "If that can be achieved, a Under his regime, too, we hope that the petty annoyances and evidences of favorit- ism which marred the previous administra- tion's relations with the Jewish Chronicle will be erased for the good of Detroit Zionism. The Visiting Editor The Hospital Merger Quietly, without publicity, and without the usual fanfare accompanying similar events in Jewish communal life, two of the leading, wholly philanthropic institutions supported by the-Jewish community of Los Angeles, have just about completed all an- gles of a pierger of their properties, their functions, and their services. The 'Los Angeles Sanatorium which for the past several decades has been concen- trating its service on tuberculous patients, and the Mt. Sinai Hospital and Clinic which for almost as long a time has had an equal- ly fine history of health service to the indi- gent, will soon be one insttution. There will be mutual benefits to both institutions in this merger, because of eco- nomy of budgeting,. staffing, and fund rais- ing expenses. And there will be a great number of visible and invisible benefits to the community as well. Buddy Sklar Is '47 National Marbles Champ TtiER AN11111Nq /4" MATTER • The friendly, but intense rivalry between these institutions in fund raising efforts did not help toward the creation of unity in the community. Their demands on the news- papers were sometimes exasperating. There will be a lessening of solicitations for advertising in souvenir programs and whatnots, which too, had reached an exas- perating state in the community. With the great national medical center as the objective of the Sanatorium, and now made part of the Mt. Sinai's objective as well, we look for a greater maturity, a more scientific methodology in the raising of funds, and a greater institutional self-re- spect and dignity in its public relations.. . BNAI BRITH MESSENGER ; Los Angeles ••m. •••• ■ •••1160•• • •■•• SI•a•el