Leonard N. Simons' Courageous Efforts to Remove Slurs from Dictionaries E JEWISH NE WS. - r A Weekly Review Commentary Page 2 NA I G 1 GA. NI Jewish Events Histadrut's Fortieth Anniversary Wisdom of Hanukah Gift-Giving Editorials Page 4 Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper—Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle Vol. XXXVI I I, No. 14 loginggoilin shop 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd.—VE 8-9364—Detroit 35, December 2, 1960-45.00. Per Year; Single Copy 15c Quota System in U. S. Universities Reported 'Virtually Dead's, Nazis' Crimes to Be Exposed in Textbooks Jewish enrollment at American colleges NEW YORK, (JTA) jumped 8.5 percent this semester, spiraling the demands for Jewish student services on the campus, Bnai Brith was told at its 117th annual meeting at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel by Dr. William Haber, national chairman of Bnai. Brith Hillel Foundation. Dr. Haber forecast an enrollment of 400,000 Jewish under- graduates and graduate students by 1970. This would mean doubling — the number of Jewish collegians in a 15-year period, he said. The enrollment study, conducted by Hillel Foundation operating on 225 campuses in the United States, showed a higher rate of increase for Jewish students than the 5.6 percent rise this year in the general student population. • Dr. Haber, who is professor of economics at the University of Michigan, said the statistics on Jewish enrollments were "somewhat unexpected." Since proportionately twice as many Jewish . high school gradfiates have matriculated in recent years as compared to all high school graduates—a ratio of two-thirds to one-third—"we anticipated a saturation point and a per- centage decline among the Jewish group," he said. The quota system, which at one time restricted the number of Jewish students seeking admission to college, "is today virtually dead," Dr. Haber declared. Moreover, he added, "booming enrollment coupled with the hospitable attitudei to religious identification by university officials have created unparalleled pressures to increase extra-curricular activities on the campus." Publishers of school textbooks have indicated that they are planning to give more detailed, graphic coverage of the Nazi atrocities against Jews in history textbooks for use in New York City schools. The publishers were criticized last month by the Board of Education for their treatment of the Third Reich. The Board had noted that only "a few texts give satisfactory' accounts" of what went on in Nazi concentration camps and crematoria, and that many required "substantial revision" to give the students an adequate picture. Many publishers in -a number of cities are reported regard- ing the Board's criticism as valid and several are planning revisions in accordance with the Board's recommendations. Here Under New Law: Hanukah Spirit, - Under Any Conditions: in spite of his being in traction, at Sinai Hospital, 3-year-old Mark Nesse!, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Nessel, of 20278 Stahlin, is looking forward to celebrating Hanukah at home. He has his Dreidel, his Hanukah decorations with the Nun, Gimel, Hey, Shin, and a paste-up book with Hanukah pictures about which he boasts to nurses and visitors: "It's from my Aunt Anna." Now, Mark is readying to go home, regretting to leave an environment in which he was helped to forget the break in his leg, where the nurses took a deep interest in his pre-Hanukah pre- parations. At Sinai began little Mark's anticipation of the joys of the Feast of Lights. , Twenty years of horror* and pain were ended for Rabbi Mano Herskovits and his family, the first Jewish refugees to arrive in the United States with United Hias Service assistance under the special immigration law which went into effect a few months ago. Rabbi Herskovits was greeted by James P. Rice, executive director of the worldwide migration agency, when he arrived from Austria at Idlewild Airport with his wife Margit and their three children. At the start of World War II, the refugee served in forced labor camps in Hungary and Yugoslavia, followed by a year in the dread concentra- tion camp, Mauthausen, Austria. T he family is resettling in Brooklyn, N.Y., with the help of the New York Association for New Americans. United Hias Service has already obtained assurances for more than 600 Jewish refugees from the Middle East and Eastern Europe, who will be resettled in 21 states under the new refugee law.