• Page Three DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE Friday, March 19, 1948 Strictly Confidential Quiz of Ugly Rumors on Relief Work Urged Bigotry must pay big dividends. It seenrs that Gerald Winrod, the notorious hatemonger, received a Federal income tax refund of over $8,000. Tax experts estimate that Winrod must have paid income tax in excess of $30,000 to receive so big, a refund. Egon Erwin Kisch, the gifted German writer, has finally left Mexico and is back in Prague . . . On March 14, Albert Einstein entered his 70th year—he is 69 now .. . Recordings from sermons by Monsignor Fulton J. Sheen were presented to the National Conference of Christians and Jews on the occasion of Brotherhood Week .. 7 Why? • • • DIMITRO DONTZOV, who recently came to the United States from London, is a well-known Ukrain- ian anti-Semite . Dontzov is violently anti-Soviet ; and attacks the Stalin regime as a "Judeo-Bolshevik'' set- up. By PIIINEAS J. BIRON UGLY RUMORS are circulating about the European offices of our relief agencies, the Joint, the ORT and IIIAS. And not every- thing reaching our desk is just rumor. For instance, it is a fact that !HAS closed its Paris office because of too much private profiteering en the part of the personnel. And there are other European offices of our relief agencies that have ac- quired a very bad smell. r. J. 'ikon An investigation is in order, just because relief work, honest relief work is now more essential than • • • ever. ERALD L. K. SMITII Is sick , . Nothing trivial. tope. Personal Problems B.B. Group Reaffirms Faith in Jewish Youth Display Joy and Zest.in Observance of Purim; Learn to Evaluate Problems By W. A. GOLDBERG, Ph. D. LAST NIGHT 20 boys and girls reaffirmed my faith in Jewish youth. They said to me: Goldberg, don't worry about Jewish youth. They are doing all right. They have a deep sense of their Jew- ishness. They are carrying on Jewish tradition. They know what It means to be Jews. Last night, these young people the zest these Bnai Brith young put on a "show" for their elders men put into their songs. I liked being able to feel that in Bnai Brith. We merely pro- vided the space and the occasion. in an American heritage and en- vironment, Jewishness is not I served as chairman. They forgotten. And foremost because the words came from Jewish chose the sub- jects, the top- young men. • * • ics; they work- ed, sang and FORTIFIED BY TRAINING played. ' AND THE SKIT, written by The young ' the local BBY director, the men sang Yid- story of the first application for dish and Ile- brew songs. a job by a Jewish boy. The in- evitable question of: Are you a Their rendition Dr. Goldberg Jew? and the answer given . . . od "Sholem Aleichern" brought back mem- The flashback to this young man's ories. Unfortunately, our own early training and how it forti- home had none of the Zmires fied him to have the proper well-known to other Jewish answer. homes, even those of relatives. I liked that evening no less Somewhere in the process, because these youths dwelt on Jewish music was squeezed out Jewish topics, no less because of our backgrounds. But we they volunteered their time, no made up for it, in a small less because of their enthusiasm. measure, in Chicago, where or their leadership in present- friends sang these songs inform- ing their cause to older people. In that demonstration I saw ally. • • •• a firm foundation for Judaism, a saving quality to American life JOY IN OUR OWN A ND. TILE BOYS sang of Pur- so often termed materialistic. • • • " im, repeating an earlier per- formance. A gain came memories WARM FEELING Of the dignity and joy which A DIDN'T MIND getting out a we had in the home, in the sick bed, I didn't mind fore- Synagogue, every-day prepara- going staying home with my tions at the Purim season. . . . shoes off, I didn't mind going No "Purim trees," no alien cul- out into the cold night. tures, no out-Gentiling the Gen- And when their program was tile—just beauty and pleasure over, these 20 young people dug in our own customs and observ- into the refreshments with the enthusiasm of hungry young ances. Can you picture the joy of people . . . again, an enjoyable m g Avram when his father sight. Even though I came there ve him his Gragar to batter Haman at the noisy Megillah rather late that night, these reading? Can you see his ecstatic youngsters gave me a warmth look as he smelled the special which has remained with me foods and sensed the gaiety? . • . I want more of this con- Much more than the words of firmation of the soundness of any song was the lilting Melody Jewish youth in America. e Rabbi Fischer Hails Volume by Stollman By RABBI MOSES FISCIIER W E EXTEND our most sincere congratulations to Rabbi Isaac Stollman of Congregation Mish- kan Israel on the occasion of the publication of the third vol- ume of his notable book "Min- chas Itzchok." The fact that Rabbi Stollman succeeded within a short span of time to publish three volumes of his collected essays bears by it- self eloquent testimony as well to the rare productivity and fer- tility of Rabbi Stollman as an author as to the general approval and enthusiasm with which the book was received by the learned circle to which the book was first addressed. And don't quote from the "Ohio Pioneer," which poses as a patriotic sheet, but actually is financed by anti-democratic organizations co=operating with Gerald L. K. Smith. • • • F. B. IRA, our personal sleuth, reports to us: "Don't be surprised if Fritz Kuhn, the Nazi from the U.S.A., turns up in Palestine with the tacit approval of the Bevin boys . . • It seems that Fritz has been recaptured by the British and is being trained by them for a sensattnal escape to Syria." • a • TI1E BROOKLYN Jewish Examiner and the Chi- cago Sentinel deserve accolades for their issues of two weeks ago. The Examiner did a beautiful jour- nalistic job on the Bnai Brith leadership for its sab- otaging of the Jewish Conference-Assembly. (Continued on Page 4) Plain Talk Jews of Cincinnati Beam Over Glueck Hometown Proud of Ability to Rear Leaders Like HUC's New President By ALFRED SEGAL • IN OUR TOWN this week there were big festal Jewish doings. A home-born-and-bred scholar and Rabbi is being inaugurated as president of the Hebrew Union Collage. A lot of the citizens know I resident Nelson Glueck from the time he was a schoolboy here. lie came out of our public schools, our university and our Hebrew Union College and during the prophets around here, toiling to- last decade has been a romnantic ward the abundance of Jewish figure who, as life. We are all kinds and, in- arch acologist, deed, you could find some play- was consorting ing gin rummy in homes and with Bible clubs next Saturday night when times in the as a community we are celebrat- soil of Pales- ing Nelson Glueck and the lo- tine. Ile had cal Jewish life in the Ilall of STYLE IS LUCID dug up Bible Mirrors. There is hardly a single fea- towns. • • • ture in the traditional homiletic So the Jew- WISE AN ISOLATIONIST literature in the standard histor- ish people of 4 IF WE ARE ABUNDANT, it's ic "Darshonoth": Great versatil- our town, ity, transparent crystal style, a which, as you due to the fact that, early in Al Segal resourceful, at times brilliant in- have already guessed, is Cincin- our life, we had among us a terpretation of Biblical and Tal- nati, can feel that their com- prophet to show us the way. He mudical passages which would munity has come of age, in that was Rabbi Isaac M. Wise, who not find the classic expression in from its own Jewish being it came here in the 50's to preach the opus of Rabbi Stollman. could produce this spiritual and a way of Jewish life that was Each sermon arranged in the intellectual leader of interna- not altogether within the walls order of the weekly Sidrahs of tional renown. Its Jewish life ap- of the Synagogue. He has been called the foun- (Continued on Page 14) pears to have become self-sup- porting. The home-town boy had der of Reform Judaism in the made greatly good from the fa- U. S. His way of Jewish life cilities of our own Jewish life. had to do with America and the • • • Jew's obligation in it as a citi- zen. The Jew must apply his The Actors' Company of De- ABUNDANT LIFE idealism to the matters of the troit will present a special two WE JEWS AREN'T so many general community—his city, his weekends' run of Sophocles' "Oed- in our town, compared with nation. He must be no ghetto ipus Rex" and Oscar Wilde's big-town Jewish communities man. "The Importance of Being Ear- elsewhere. We count our Jewish Nationally Dr. Wise was nest" in repertory starting Fri- population as between 18,000 and American and could tolerate no day, March 19, at the Michigan 20,000. Jews began to settle hei-e other national identity for a Jew Showmen's Association. about 100 years ago, not an old in America. The schedule calls for perform- age at all for a segment of Jew- Dr. Wise looked beyond the ances of "Oedipus" March 19, 20 ish life. time when he would no longer and 26 and "Earnest" March 21, The few tombstones that still be around; there must be young 27 and 28. stand in our first Jewish ceme- American men to be Rabbis who Prominent Detroit radio actors, tery—no bigger than a city lot would carry his torch all over including Harry Goldstein, Clem on Chestnut street— bear dates the country. In the 1870's he Fowler, Mary Dell Roberts, Jo- of the 1840's. founded the Hebrew Union Col- seph Angelic) and Erwin Immer- In these festivities we are, in lege to train young men for man, will appear in the shows. a way of speaking, celebrating such a Rabbinate. Thus, early in its life, the Lloyd Richards and Rubin Weiss the abundance of our own Jew- are the directors. ish life, amassed in the 100 years Jewish community of our town . Reservations are being taken as well as the achievement of began to take its character as a spiritual and scholarly center. at the theater office, 3153 Cass the Hebrew Union College. Maybe you will get the im- From all around the country avenue, TE. 2-0957. Tickets are (Continued on Page 4) pression that we are all Jewish also on sale at Grinnell's. ' J J Actors'. Company - Plans 2 Shows Yishuv to Proclaim State April 1, Even by Revolt By NATHAN ZIPRIN THE NEXT FEW WEEKS will be a time of grave tension. Will the UN Palestine Commis- sion proclaim the Jewish State by April 1, as provided for in the General Assembly's resolu- tion? Will the commission yield to suggestions of the Security Coun- cil and decide on a postpone- ment? In this case the Jews of Palestine will take "revolution- ary" action and themselves pro- claim the government. It would be a most unusual kind of "revolution." The Jews would merely try to implement a siderations: (1) The Arabs have greater nuisance value than the Jews in Palestine; (2) The Jews in the U.S. are powerless and will never be able to affect Brit- ish relations with the United States in any essential direction. As soon as the British suc- ceeded in finally winning Wash- ington over to point 1, point 2 sprang automatically into force. Because of the British victory we can expect nothing but trouble from the Security Council . . . • • • FIVE COLUMNS ago we pre- policy. From the very outset British dicted that a "conciliation" policy was based on two con- bomb would be thrown into the decision taken by more than two- thirds of all United Nations members. They would merely be doing what the Palestine Com- mission has been authorized to do. • • OF COURSE, there would be many and obvious advantages if the UN Commission fulfilled its task. Ilowver, there is some doubt—and I am afraid, justifi- able doubt—whether they will. The main source of all the new difficulties is Truman's reversal • proceedings of the Security Council when it meets to con- sider the UN Commission's re- port. We predicted the Arabs would confuse the UN with an an- nouncement of willingness to stop the fighting temporarily. We said the domestic and foreign anti- partition plotters would seek to upset the time schedule by claiming "a new development." We charged the plotters would seek to postpone international ac- tion until after the elections in the hope that they could then muster enough votes at the next General Assembly meeting to re- verse the partition decision. Those disheartening predic- tions were as painful to us as to the many readers who wrote say- ing they doubted the U.S. would lend itself to such scandalous maneuvers. Unfortunately sub- sequent events showed the source of our information was correct on every point. • • • THE "CONCILIATION" bomb has been dropped, and by none other than the U.S. government which championed partition be- fore the Assembly. A "new de- velopment" has been brought to (Continued on Page 4)