lactiave Ztovi•es Pa 41 471t4 ■ • ih• sita 0/ Friday. November 8, 1946 • THE JEWISH NEWS _Pelee Twenty from The Isibta !e55' I IHE HEBREWS CHARGE DOWN THE MOUNTAIN BEFORE DAWN • ■ • THE V/OMAIJ apes WHO *WED ISRAEL mom TH. ROOK OP JUDOIES APTERS POUR FIVE MD ) CH BY MULFORD t CAMERCW (Itio)fwir /sy., to' me caostr3) S sE ch FLED ••- AND BARAK WENT AFTER HIM .. vou DON'T GET AWAY SISERA! WE'LL CATCH HIM!- ILL PURSUE HIM IN ONE OF HIS OWN CHARIOTS! COOT A IVAN ESCAPE FRC AL THE HE B R EVOSD BUT SISERA-- BUT WAS THE CRUELEST AND MOST DANGEROUS OF THEM ALL""' BARAK IS HOT ON stSERA's TRAIL, WHEN SDOCIEnLY THAT CHARIOT'S RIGHT BEHIND ME - -NO TIME TO CUT THIS DEAD HORSE LOOSE? To THE HILLS OR REFUGE, SISERA SEEKS THE TENT OF HEBER, WHO IS AT PEACE WITH 14M— I CAN RUN NO MORE— STAND GUARD OUTSIDE. LIKE.A SOLDIER, WOMAN, WHILE I SLEEP—I'LL GET AWAY RAISE ANEW ARAM AND KILL ALL HEBREW REBELS! OAEL SPEAKS WITH A SERVANT••? THAT IS THE MIGHTY SISERA! . SISERA!.-WHEN HE LEARNS WE ARE KIN OF MOSES HE WILL SURELY KILL US! OR, IF 1 WERE A MAIN, A SOLDIER! THEN I COULD STRIKE A BLOW FOR ISRAEL. AND FOR GOD!•-BUT I AM ON►V A WOMAN. AND t HAVE NO wEAPONS! HE WILL KILL ME - OUGHT KILL HIM? GUARD LIKE A SOLDIER' THAT,S IT!- BUT A SOLDIER OF THE GOD'.-IF ONLY 1 HAD A WEAPON! pierrmercvearArtior....melotl LAS Auxiliary to Inaugurate Drive at Dinner Here on Dec. 1 Wayne's Inter-Faith Program Includes ITtvo Jewish Groups Testimonial Banquet to Be Given in Honor of Nathan Epstein, President of Detroit Chapter; Will Open Campaign for $100,000 for Sanatorium Projects Morris L. Fruman, chairman of the committee on arranue- ments for the testimonial banquet to be given on Sunday c.iening. Dec. 1, at Hotel Fort Wayne. in honor of Nathan R. Epstein, on behalf of the Los Angeles Sanatorium, announced thi, week that a hearty response is being given by Detroiters to the call for reservations. Thig -15-a-nq'uet will serve the double purpose of inaugu- r AttnE; the $100,000 Detroit drive for -the National Medical C.mtei of the Los Angeles Sana- and to honor Mr. Epstein finance chairman: David I. Zide tot hi, services as president of and Samuel B. Kemoner, investi- i gating committee: 141. Arotzky, A. Eckshtat. H. Friedman, J. Gare- , lick. J. Gladstone. H. Glicksman, : H. Goldenberg. J. Schwartz and N. Wins. board of directors. Purposes Outlined Outlining the purposes of the testimonial dinner for Mr. Ep- stein. Mr. Fruman said: "The esteem and affection in which he is held throughout the community is testimony to a warm personality and a capacity "Through interdenominational rejagious activities our students learn not only to tolerate but to understand students of different religious affiliations," states Jo- seph P. Selden, Wayne 'Univers- ity counselor in religious activi- ties, in explaining the work of the Inter-Faith Council, an alli- ance of nine different denomina- tional groups on campus. Another aim of the Council is to provide opportunities 'for col- l•ge students to retain their re- ligious affiliations. according to Prof. Selden. The effect of this attitude is demonstrated by the fact that over 2,000 Wayne students are affiliated with nine different de- nominational groups represented in the Council. Three member groups in the Council have their own buildings and full-time re- ligious leaders. who aid the stu- dents with their problems. They are: the Bnai Brith Hillel Founda- tion, with Rabbi Milton Aron as advisor; the Wesley Fellowship. a Methodist students' organiza- tion, headed by the Rev. Rudolph Boyce; and the Newman Club for Catholic students. directed by the Rev. Fr. James Maguire. Wayne's chapter of the Inter- collegiate Zionist Federation of America also works in coopera- tion with the Inter-Faith Council. British View Exposed to Light: Adler Berates Churchill's Son For Confusion on Zionism Innumerable protests received world for trying to 'dump those from many quarters against the Jews on the poor Arabs in Pales- remarks of Randolph Churchill. tine.' Advocate Dispersion son of Winston Churchill, at the Detroit Town Hall in the Fisher "Forgetting that the Treaty of Bldg. Oct. 30, received a strong Sevres. in compliance with the ally in the person of Philip A. Balfour Declaration and with the Adler, eminent Detroit News idea of Zionism, sought Jewish writer, who took Mr. Churchill concentration in Palestine, young a to task for his attitude on India Zionist Churchill advocated and Palestine, and for his con- further dispersion of the displaced fusion of thought "typical of that Jews of Europe all over the greater confusion which governs world." a considerable portion of the Thus thanks to excellent re- British Empire." porting by Mr. Adler, Winston After pointing out the incon- Churchill's son is exposed for sistency of the speaker on the what he really is: an pologist for issues affecting India, Mr. Adler an idea that says "gland can reported upon his address as fol - do no wrong" while she continues lows: All Major Diseases MORRIS L. FRUMAN for making friends. He has been an active worker in all communal causes and it is fitting that in honoring him we are utilizing the occasion to manifest our support to an institution which is dear to his heart and has been for many years. "The Los Angeles Sanatorium has been in the forefront of the national fight against tuberculosis for the past third of a century. geant-at-arms; Dr. S. Kleinman. It is now embarking: on a new "A national medical center to treat all major diseases. an in- tensification of the fight against tuberculosis, a medical school with a non-discriminatory admis- sion policy for students of high scholastic standard, • a training school for nurses and medical technicians is a program which will enrich Jewish and non- Jewish life in America." Mr. Epstein pointed out, in a talk to LAS Auxiliary workers, that scores of Detroiters have been sent to the Los Angeles Sanatorium and Ex - Patients Dome for treatment and that many lives thus have been saved. He pointed out that in addition to the major campaign conducted by a special fund-raising commit- tee, local organizations are co- operating in the drive, and he expressed the hope that the entire goal .of $100,00• will be reached medical advisor; Joseph Snitman, and ambitious expansion program in the shorteat , pessible time. to break pledges and to force "The sight of the Holy Land in Jews who are on the road to a state of siege filled Churchill's Palestine "as of right and not on heart with even greater sadness. sufferance" (quoting Winston because he himself has always Churchill) into the type of con- been a Zionist, he told the audi- centration camps the democratic world fought to destroy. ence. which will enlist the support of every element of Jewry in the United States. NATHAN R. EPSTEIN the Detroit Auxiliary of the Sanatorium. Arrangements Committee Assisting Mr. Fruman on the arrangements committee are: Wil- liam Fisher, vice - chairman; Ii- wm I. Cohen, David Goldberg, Albert Schiller and Harry Victor, a.isociate chairmen; Nathan P. Rossen. secretary; Sol Schayo- w itz, treasurer. A large commit- tee, representing a cross-section of community leaders, is assisting the officers. Jack W. Epstein and Eugene J. Epstein are co-chair- men of the committee which is arranging entertainment for the banquet. Mr. Epstein's co-officers in the Detroit LAS Auxiliary are: J. Garelick and John Sodos, vice-presidents; James J. Simon, financial secretary; S. Means, recording secretary; Morris Tor- go•v, treasurer; Sam Bassin, ser- 1 Stresses `Homeland' Theory "Zionism," he explained. "does not aim at a Jewish state, but at the foundation of the Jewish na- tional homeland, such as up to the time of the publication of Chamberlain s notorious White Paper, every British government had sustained. "Following the line of logic pursued by the governments of Chamberlain, Winston Churchill and Attlee, the speaker went on to show that the creation of such a homeland implied the protec- tion of the Arabs who constituted the majority of Palestine's pop- Baratz, Palestine Pioneer, in U.S. Joseph Baratz, famed founder of the first collective settlement in Palestine, whose 40 years of pioneering were climaxed during the war by his appointment as Chief Liaison Officer of the Jew- ish Agency in contact with Pal- estinian troops throughout the Middle East, arrived in New•York as the official delegate of the Hi- stadrut to the American Jewish ulation. British Keep Mandate community. "Proof of British sincerity in Mr. Baratz, who was born in Palestine was to be seen in the Russia in 1890 and went as a fact that Winston Churchill, both Chalutz to Palestine at the age of as prime minister and as leader 16, is identified with Degania, of the opposition, threatened to flourishing Jordan Valley settle- return the mandate over Pales- ment which laid the pattern for tine to proper authorities. The scores of collective settlements of fact that Winston Churchill never Histadrut. carried out that threat and the Mr. Baratz will address a num- recent declaration of Attlee's government that it has no inten- ber of Histadrut functions: tion of ever returning the Pales- throughout the United States -un- tine mandate was left unnoticed der the auspices of the National Committee for Labor Palestine, by the son. "After shedding tears over the which is seeking to raise $5,000,. fate of the hundreds of thousands 000 for Labor activities in the. of displaced Jews still in con- Jewish National Home. He was centration camps as `the most dis- a member of the first Histadrut graceful and contemptible - phe- delegation to be sent to Ainerica nomenon in our civilization,' in 1921. He will address tom young Churchill fired a barrage Histadrut at the 23rd annual cooes On the civilized nations of the vention in New York Nov. 28. `