THE JEWISH NEWS Page Shriven Friday, June 4, 1943 What's Happening in Detroit PONFERENCE elections, Confirmations, Con- k./ secrations and graduations and the observance of Shovuoth monopolize interest in the Jewish community. Of interest to all is the campaign now being conducted to enlist women in the war effort. The national drive seeks to enlist women in the SPARS and WAVES. It is imperative that those interested should apply to local recruiting offices at once. The call to all interested women is: ACT NOW! In the meantime, an item of considerable in- terest in the fight to defend democratic institu- tions is reported by Jack B. Burke, Field representative of the President's Committee on Fair Employment Practice. President Creates Powerful Committee Mr. Burke announced on Tuesday that Presi- dent Roosevelt has created a new and stronger Committee on Fair Employment Practice, headed by Msgr. Francis J. Haas and responsible directly to himself, with broad powers to prevent job discrimination because of race, creed, color or national origin. The former committee had been attacked as impotent after the President subordinated it to the War Manpower Commission last year • and several of its more prominent members resigned. Msgr. Haas is dean of the School of Social Sciences at Catholic University, and has been high in the labor councils of the administration since the early days of the New Deal. He has helped settle more than 1,500 labor disputes. . . An Executive order made public this week and released by Mr. Burke said: Coming Events June 4—Temple Israel High School graduation. June 6—Confirmation services at Temple Beth . El. June 6—Consecration services at Congregation Shaarey. Zedek. June 6—United Hebrew Schools Elementary school graduation, at Rose Sittig Cohen Bldg. Rine 8—Confirmation services at Temple Israel. June 13—Beth El Memorial" Park third anniver-, sary exercises, at 3 p. m. June 13—United Hebrew SchoOls , High school graduation, at Rose Sittig Cohen Bldg. June 15—Detroit electoral convention for selec- tion of delegates to American Jewish Conference. at Temple Beth El. June 20—Farband Folk School graduation. June 22—Annual meeting of Jewish Community Council of Detroit. "I do hereby reaffirm the policy of the United States that there shall be no discrimination in the employment of any person in war industries or in government by reason of race, creed, color or national origin, and I do hereby declare that it is the duty of all employers, including the fed- eral departments and agencies, and all labor or- ganizations, to eliminate discrimination in regard to hire, tenure, terms or conditions of employment or union membership." Have Power to Hold Hearings Here Msgr. Haas will have six committee members under him, to be appointed soon by the President, The group will have power to hold hearings, make findings of fact, advise the War Manpower Com- mission, insert appropriate clauses in negotiated government contracts, accept the help of state and local authorities and volunteer workers, and make its own regulations. Following investigation of charges that some of the biggest war plants in the New York area have been checking on the race, creed and color of applicants for employment through private in- vestigating firms, the Office of the Provost Mar- shal-General has inserted in war contracts, at the request of the President's Committee on Fair Em- ployment Practice, a clause forbidding any in- quiries into or report of the race, creed or color of any investigated person, except with the per- mission of the FEPC, it was also announced this week. It was charged that through a number of pri- vate investigating firms the plants were able to check on the race and religion of job seekers in direct violation of the provisions of the President's Executive Order 8802, which outlaws any con- sideration of a person's race, creed, color or national origin as a factor in giving war industry employment. In making these facts known, Mr. Burke again strongly urged that all evidences of discriMination in war plants be reported at once, in order that action may be taken without delay. Information is being taken by Mr. Burke at 424 Boulevard Bldg., as well as by the Jewish Community Coun- cil, 803 Washington Blvd. Bldg. - Select All-Inclusive Delegation to Conference, Rabbis Appeal to the Jewish Community Important Statement on Forthcoming Elec- tions Issued to Detroit Jewry by Nine Members of Rabbinate The coming American Jewish Conference of- fers American Jewry an opportunity and a chal- lenge. It presents us with the opportunity to achieve that concerted deliberation and activity of the various elements and groups within American Jewry, which Mournful necessity makes so urgent. The global catastrophe which has overwhelmed our people in our day is one with which no part of Jewry is alone capable of coping. The enormous tasks ahead, the failure of the Jew to .receive. assurances as to the possi- bility . of decent rehabilitation in the post-war world, both in Eretz Yisroel and the Diaspora, the enormous . Work of reconstruction----all these require the resources which only a united Jew- ish community can muster. . The American Jewish 'Conference provides us with the opportunity to achieve_ this unity. It presents siMultaneously -a historic challenge to American Jewry. Will we in this dark hour be able to rise . above our differences, to set aside our prerogatives and to see our problems and responsibilities under the aspect of "K'lal Yisroel."? . As Rabbis in Israel we therefore earnestly . appeal to our fellow Jews in Detroit to approach the forthcoming election of delegates to the Atherican Jewish Conference with consecrated and solemn responsibility. We urge that Detroit Jewry unite to select a delegation that will rep- resent our whole community with its various groups and trends, and that the nine delegates to be chosen by Detroit Jewry be men of large and bold vision, who will place their loyalty to Israel above party or group. We trust that the organizations within our community will send to the local election conference to be held on June 15, representatives who will vote intern- gently and out of a high sense of duty, and will have no other purpose than to select a complete slate of delegates who shall be men:- of tried faithfulness 'and who shall be truly representa- tive of our community. Much depends upon our interest and wisdom. May we make the most of the opportunity for unity which is ours. May God bless the work of our hands. RABBI MORRIS ADLER RABBI MOSES FISCHER RABBI LEON FRAM RABBI LEO M. FRANKLIN RABBI B. BENEDICT GLAZER RABBI A, M. HERSHMAN RABBI JOSHUA SPERKA RABBI ISAAC STOLLMAN RABBI JOSEPH THUMIM Detroit Leaders Discuss Aims of Conference Type of Delegates and Their defeated. Adequate representa- tion, therefore, must be given to Obligations Considered minority opinions and interests. At Meetings Here The Conference will then truly What are the objectives of the American Jewish Conference? What are the obligations of dele- gates who will be selected to rep- resent American Jewry at the important sessions to be held be- ginning on July 1? What type of delegates should be selected? • These were the questions that were considered at meetings of various Detroit organizations this week. At the meeting of the Jewish Community Council on Wednes- day, several opinions were voiced by spokesmen for various groups in the city. That evening also, a meeting of the American Jewish Congress Detroit Chapter was held at which the Congress plat- form, published on Page 5 in this issue, was analyzed. At the Jewish Community Council meeting, the following attitude were expressed: DR.. B. BENEDICT GLAZER, Rabbi •of Temple Beth El: "Since it is the expressed 'ob- jective of the American Jewish Conference to achieve: the status of an organization that will rep= resent all shades of opinion in the- American Jewish Community-i . express the earnest hope that this. spirit will be made manifest in the Detroit elections. If all of the nine representatives from Detroit .give, expreSsion. ..only..one: type. of Opinion on 'Jewish qUe-StionS; the announced .alins*Of the Aineri..- can- Jewish Conference' will" be live as a national unit; to develop their economic and cultural life as they see fit, in harmony with their neighbors, and that . the represent a cross-section of Amer- barriers against immigration and ican Jewry. restrictions on the procurement "The larger cause which unites of land should be abolished." us all is the desire to serve and LEON FRAM, - Rabbi of Temple to save the suffering and home- Israel: less Jews of Europe. This is not "Of the 500 delegates to the the hour then for exclusive .pre- occupation with the claims of Conference, 125 were assigned as partisanship. Let us then take representatives of various na- seriously the announced inten- tional organizations. "On the other hand, 375 dele- tion . of the American Jewish Con- ference to concentrate the entire gates are to be elected from the strength and influence of the various local communities. It is from these 375 that the Prevalent . Jewish Community be- hind every effort to solve the viewpoint will emerge. There- problems - of our stricken and suf- fore, if the American Jewish fering brethren in other parts of Conference is to decide that the Jewish delegation to the Interna- the world." JOSEPH BERNSTEIN, 1 o c a 1 tional Peace Conference shall be leader of the Jewish Labor Com- instructed to ask for a Jewish commonwealth in Palestine in mittee: accordance with the famous Bilt- "The American Jewish Confer- more resolutions, it will be be- and ence must live up to its ri.--aroc cause the communities in electing become the mouthpiece of Amer- th@ ,375 delegp-4-.Lsa choose, in over- ican Jewry. whelming m a j t y, delegates "It must deal .with equal zeal who press for that :yliewpo in all problems which will con- seems to me, therefore, tha front Jews in every country dur- the duty of every elector ing the post-war period. troit, in casting his vote, to "We must assume that Hitler's in mind the purpose which diabolical plan to .exterminate would like to see prevail at tl, every Jew under his domination American Jewish Conference. will not succeed and it is there- "The question is solely and, ex fore our task to demand from the clusively 'What nine men most victorious United Nations that truly represent the hopes, con- economically, politically and so- victions and the will of the Jew- cially the Jews should be re- ish community of Detroit.' " stored as equals, as integral parts M. J. WOHLGELERNT. ER, of. -the countries... in which they Rabbi 'a -Congregation ' Beth live. • • • "We must Support the - dspira- Tefilo Emanuel: 7 libn of the PaleStinian Jews • to COnfere.nce will be the second attempt at parliamen- tary expression by the pr(!sent -generation of American Jews. The last quarter of a century witnessed the • stabilized growth of our population and the crys- talization of its thinking. New or revitalized trends of thought came to the fore, among which one may point to English-speak-- ing religious orthodoxy. Behind the realization of a common re- sponsibility for the solution of Jewish post-war problems in chutz learetz, Palestine and which has .served as the motive force for bringing all factions to- gether, there is the deeper reali- zation of our unity as a people despite the many differences of opinion which cannot and need not be submerged. Historical forces, stronger than the largest or most articulate groups among us, are coming into play and, bid us subject ourselves to the dem- ocratic discipline as we assume our rightful place in the society of tomorrow." A. MEYEROWITZ, Chairman f City COmmitte Fleri ► and (tikes inLD -'.ovement peace ent of Palestine ewish. 'commonwealth with full civil : rights for the Arab population.. as "2. An international Bill of Rights for,. Jews.- everywhere . as individual's . and- as members of their national groups. "3. Fullest possible relief and' reconstruction measures for Jews in the post-war period. "4. Establishment of a public- ity recogniied world Jewish:rep- resentation to co-operate with international bodies in matters affecting the rights of Jews.". MORRIS ADLER, Rabbi of Congregation Shaarey Zedek: "The coming American Jewish Conference offers American Jew- ry an opportunity and a chal- lenge. It places -before the larg- est free Jewish community in the world the opportunity to achieve that unity of program and activity which mournful ne- cessity makes so urgent. "It makes it possible for us to fortify our demands touching the Jew in the post-war world, both in Eretz Yisroel and in the Galuth, with the endorsement of a whole people—a people broken and tortured whose in- calculable suffering gives tragic poignancy and power to these just demands. - "The American . Jewish Con- -,Terence simultaneously confronts uM , with a historic challenge. Wiry we in this dark . hour be able o rise above our partisan log es and -.differences? Will have the .vision. and the character to banish our animosi- ties, set aside our Prerogatives and view our problems, and our responsibilities solely under the aspect of Klal •Yisroel? • "Much depends upcin our wis- doin and::Understand.ing. May we meet the challenge and make the most of tbe ciptiqrtnnity: Tor . united action WhiChL,ii i-OurS,"