Lucette Finas, French novel- ist, has turned her newest work "The Faithful Shepherd" her first to appear in this country in an English translation—into a partially Jewish theme. In this novel, published by Pantheon Books (22 E. 51st St., NY22), the hero Armand Navi- eel, at the very outset—it is recorded on the first page of the story — becomes disturbed because his wife, Gilberte, hap- pened casually to say that she didn't really "care for Jews." Armand's whole system is dis- turbed thereby. It becomes his mission in life to alter her prej- udice, to prove to her that she is wrong, to defend the Jews. And so at every move Arm- and thinks of his mission. He goes so far as to have a young girl pose as a Jewess and to say that her father, a martyr in the last war, had rescued Arm- and's life. When at the Navicel home for dinner, she repeats, as advised, statements from David Rousset's "The Other Kingdom" to show that she has a memory about the Nazi hor- rors, without, of course, indi- cating the source. At that point Gilberte asks her husband what had happened to their Rousset book. It seemed to her that she had read the young girl's state- ments in that book. And the girl unconsciously says that she has that book. That ended that at- tempt at introducing the Jewish theme. It doesn't seem logical, and Armand appears a bit queer, somewhat mixed up, in all his dealings, in his invitations for dinner to Jewish employees in the government office where he has a high post. Even when he has a love af- fair with a young girl he is tu- toring in Latin, he tries to in- duce her to be friendly to Jews. His end is that of a mixed up man, his wife having left for her mother's home when Arm- and hesitated completely to give up his extra-marital game, even when Gilberte said she would give , up hers that had been made by arrangement between them. Yet, when Armand invited the Jewish members of his staff to dinner, he tried to induce his wife not to serve with fish knives: his guests might not know how to use them! The theme - became under- standable upon reading the dedicatory quotation from Hon- ore d'urfe's "L'Astree": "Once again, believe me, withdraw, 0 Shepherd, from this perilous labryinth and shun so ruinous a design. I know myself better than yOu do; it is idle to sup- pose that you will change my nature in the end. I will break rather than bend." That's Armand: unbending, insisting upon his theme, hold- ing fast to a desire to prove that Jews suffered more than others and must not be disliked. Lucette Finas writes excel- lently and the translation of "The Faithful Shepherd" from the French by Ralph Manheim is well done. Jewish Philanthropic Aid Cited as Example for Moroccan Moslems CASABLANCA, (JTA) — A Casablanca municipal official in- dicated to the Jewish Commit- tee of Casablanca that he felt the effectiveness of Jewish charitable institutions in Moroc- co could serve as an example for the benefit of Morroccan Moslems. A. Dikhissi, the Casablanca director of administrative and social affairs, made this known in asking the Jewish committee to give him a review on the Jewish philanthropic institu- tions in Morocco. ageries of prejudice? Is it an educational effort, hopefully de- signed to eradicate prejudice at its roots? Or does the better course lie in an indignant re- jection of those believed to har- bor prejudice in their hearts? Papers examined at the Ameri- can Jewish Archives on the Cincinnati campus of the He- brew Union College-Jewish In- stitute of Religion suggest that these questions were at the core of a sharp disagreement nearly a half-century ago between two very notable Americans associ- ated with the Jewish Chautau- qua Society. Henry Berkowitz, a. native of Pittsburgh, was in 1883 a mem- ber of the Hebrew Union Col- lege's first graduating class and one of the very first rabbis to be ordained in the United States. After serving pulpits in Mobile, Ala., and Kansas City, Mo., Rabbi Berkowitz moved to Philadelphia's Rodeph Sholem Congregation in 1892 and re- mained in that post until his retirement in 1922, two years before his death. Berkowitz was a man of many accomplishments, but his estab- lishment of the Jewish Chautau- qua Society in 1893 undoubt- edly ranks as his foremost con- tribution to American Jewish life. From the society's begin- _ ring, he served as its chan- cellor. . Among the highly distin- guished personalities who serv- ed on the society's board of directors was Jacob Henry Schiff. German-born Schiff, head of the banking firm of Kuhn, Loeb and Company, was up to his death in 1920 one of Ameri- can Jewry's leading figures. A major supporter of both the Jewish Theological Seminary of America and the Hebrew Union College, a founder of the American Jewish Committee, a worker for the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, a benefactor of the Jewish Publi- cation Society of America—to name but a few of the many causes to which he devoted his time, energy, and money — Schiff achieved a formidable and all but peerless record of philanthropic activity. On Feb. 25, 1918, Schiff asked the Jewish Chautauqua Society to accept his resigna- tion from the society's board of directors. The reason he offered was his "advancing age," but other letters in the Schiff correspondence at the American Jewish Archives gives rise to a suspicion that loss of confidence in the so- ciety's philosophy had as much to do with Schiff's res- ignation as "advancing age." These letters reflect the bit- ter feelings aroused in Ameri- can Jews by the tragic Leo M. Frank case of 1913.1915. In August, 1915, a mob ab- ducted Frank from his place of detention at Milledgeville, Ga., and hanged him at Marietta, 150 miles away. Accused of murdering a young girl in his employ, Frank had been con- demned to death, but in June, 1915, Governor John M. Slaton had commuted the sentence to life imprisonment. Slaton was not convinced that Frank's guilt had been established "beyond a reason- able doubt." He knew that the case reeked with anti-Semitic aspersions and that Frank had been convicted on evidence of the flimsiest sort. Slaton's courageous act in commuting the death penalty spelled the end of his political career in Georgia, although two of the men most responsible for Frank's conviction and subse- quent lynching—Hugh Dorsey, the prosecutor in the case, and Thomas E. Watson, editor of Dorsey was elected Governor, and Watson went on to the United States Senate. Two years after the lynch- ing, the Jewish Chautauqua Society proposed to send a lecturer to the University of Georgia. Jacob Schiff was outraged. "I am strongly of the opinion," he wrote Berko- witz on Dec. 24, 1917, "that the Chautauqua Society should have nothing to do with the University of Georgia, be it only as a protest against the outrageous conduct of a con- siderable number of the peo- ple of Georgia, and especially of Atlanta, in the Frank case, and in electing the man (Dor- sey) who hounded poor Frank to death, as Governor of their State." Berkowitz felt quite other- wise and answered on Dec. 28, that a favorable response to the university's request for a Jew- ish Chautauqua lecturer would create "the opportunity for thousands who never come into touch with Jewish teachers to secure clear and accurate infor- mation by direct, personal in- uiries after the lectures. By these means misunderstanding, misinformation, perverted ideas and prejudices are being clear- ed away," and it was on these grounds that the society's board of directors had "considered favorably the proposal to in- vade the hot-bed of ignOrance concerning the Jew and preju- dice against him, as revealed by the unspeakable horrors committed in the State of Geor- methods of education can a fairer attitude of mind and a better condition of affairs be created . • The members of our Board . . . seemed to think that we could do a helpful serv- ice by sending a good man into that section (Georgia) to carry some light into the benighted minds of the people." Schiff was not at all molli- fied and three days later urged on Berkowitz that "it will be more self-respecting if the Jew- ish Chautauqua Society does for the present not get into touch with the University of Georgia, as it is apparently de- sired to do (by the university)." Shortly thereafter, Schiff re- signed membership on the Jew- ish Chautauqua Society's board of directors. LONDON, (JTA)—The Egyp- tian government has announced plans for the construction of a new nuclear reactor costing some 12,000,000 pounds sterling ($33,600,000), it was reported here from Cairo. The Daily Ex- press, meanwhile, reported that since 1945, aid to Egypt from the United States exceeded 300,000,000 p o u n d s sterling ($840,000,000) while Soviet aid to Egypt since 1955 totaled three times that sum. 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JOSEPH, MICHIGAN 9 - TH E DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, July 5, 1963 Jews' Defense , Disclose Infamous frank Lynching Created Egypt to Build Becomes French Controversy AMOng Chatanqua Leaders $33,600,000 What is the most honorable the rabble-rousing Jeffersonian gia . We feel that only by Novelist's Theme and effective response to the sav- —reaped rich political rewards. the slow but thorough going Nuclear Reactor