'OCT: • „71 DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE Page Sixteen 4 Dr. Philipson's Birthday Hailed (Continued from page 3) Philipson had become a posses- sion of the city." • • • SUCCESSOR OF WISE THIS WAS WRITTEN for the daily press but for our own eyes it should be added that by the leadership of Dr. Philipson, Cincinnati Jewry, which he has served almost 60 years, came to high esteem. He and his predecessor, Dr. Isaac M. Wise, put the stamp of their own char- acters on this Jewry. Dr. Philipson taught that the good Jewish life must be built here. It must not be separated from the general life; Jews must march with all men of goodwill toward a more just and lovely order.in the world. Until the recent evil, preju- dices felt confounded in the presence of a community of Jews who were making fine contribu- tions to the life of the city. Anti- Semitism had to do with vague social boundaries only. 28 Hungarian.jews Given Honor Medals BUDAPEST (JTA) — Znitan Tildy, president of Hungary, awarded the Medal of Hungatian Liberty to three leading officers of the Budapest Jewish Com- munity, including President Lasz- lo Stoekler, and to 25 other Jews, for outstanding services in con- nection with saving Jews of the Budapest ghetto during the Nazi occupation. Zager Lodge to . Show 2 Films on Palestine "Look Homeward, Wanderers," a documentary film on Palestine life, will be presented at the first open meeting of the Rabbi Man- del M. Zager Lodge, Brii Brith, at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Rose Sittig Cohen Bldg. A second film, "A Day in Da- gania," a sound-color production describing life in a cooperative Palestine colony, will also be shown. LIKE CALIFORNIA A GRADUATE STUDENT now studying chemical engineering at Ohio State University under the sponsorship of the Jewish Agency (Continued from page 3) for Palestine has asked the de- and to various commercial nur- partment to help him work out a series. plan to spend some time working • • • at their citrus products laboratory in Winter Haven, Fla. He is PLANTS INSPECTED THE CHIEF GARDENER of especially interested in studying the high commissioner of Pales- the concentration of orange juice. tine at Jerusalem has recently in- A number of other Palestinian spected citrus fruit and peanut experts are in universities and processing plants in New York working on farms and ranches in and New Jersey. A trip is being California—where the soil and planned for him which will prob- climate are almost identical with ably take him to many areas in that of the Holy Land. An inter- the South and Southwest where esting feature of their work is the those products are grown. study of poultry and egg pro- A representative from the Mish- duction in California for similar mar Haemek agricultural settle- development in Palestine. mr as been doing hybrid corn th and studying mulch cul- DIVING EXHIBITION ture and cover-cropping (a form of crop-rotation) at the Univer- Barney Ciprani, National AAU sity of Minnesota. swimming champion, was feat- From the Ashdoth Yaakov set- ured in a diving exhibition last tlement another expert has come Thursday at the Jewish Com- to study landscape gardening, rose culture, citrus growing, date munity Center. He was assisted culture, soil erosion prevention by Kenneth Applebaum in a and reforestation. demonstration of comic diving. Yishuv Experts Studying in U.S. Tommy Murphy was incredu• lous. "G'wan, how can there be sapphires in our basement?" be demanded. "Where are they, anyhow?" "Right in this little black box, son," grinned the Edison man, tapping the Murphys' meter. "In there you'll find tiny sapphire-jeweled bearings, made with the same skill and precision that go into your dad's watch." THE DETROIT The careful workmanship in your meter is reflected in its absolute accuracy, whether it be in your basement or outside your home. And the man who checks that meter is so well-trained that he reads its figures as quickly and accurately as you tell time. This emphasis on accuracy is part of the Edison ray of doing business ... it contributes to the uniformity and the year-round reliability of your electrical service. EDISON - COMP.ANY 7,\ Friday, August 29, 1941 Yeshivah . Classes to Start for 600 Thirty-five classes of Yeshivath Beth Yehudah will inaugurate the fall term Wednesday as more than 600 boys and girls of kin- dergarten through high school age resume their Hebrew and academic studies in Detroit's 30- year old center for religious education. Preparations have been made for the admission of new pupils in beginner's groups in the pri- mary grades of the ,Day School, which combines religious train- ing with the required secular public school program, and of the separate boys and girls classes in the afternoon which supplement public school attend- ance. Parents wishing to enroll their children should contact the school immediately for further information. The YeshivahAnt- fice at 12301 Dexter boulelie li will be open Sunday and Motictiy from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and Tues- day from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.