Decemb2-671-973-15 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS A man cannot leave a bet- ter legacy to the world than a well-educated family. For Custom Drapery Cleaning, Call DRAPERY CLEANERS "All That The Name Implies" WE DO ALL THE WORK REMOVE AND INSTALL 891-1818 Suburban Coll Colic. • Reverse Charges Trade Member American Society of Interior Designers (A.S.I.D.) . . . . . . Douglas Showed Interest in :Jews. also carved out something of a new American pattern. Douglas grew up in a lit- tle town, Walla Walla, Washington. He was a poor boy. In his autobiog- raphy, which was pub- lished a year or so 'ago, he recalls working as a boy for a Jewish storekeeper of the town, a man he found very sympathetic and sen- sitive to the finer things. Later he came to New York to attend Columbia University. Oddly enough he became interested in an- other Jew — a peddler of fruit who operated in the vicinity of the campus. The humble peddler was not de- void of ideas. Later on, Douglas was to be identified with Justice Brandeis. It was the latter, on his retirement, who sug- gested to Franklin Roosevelt that Douglas be named as his successor. There is no doubt that Brandeis exerted a strong influence on his own legal outlook and phi- losophy. Brandeis had brought a more. humanistic approach to the law and Douglas ap- parently shared the Bran- deis philosophy of the dan- gers of big industry — the development of a state of things where a few big cor- porations dominated every- thing and the mass of people were clerks. Douglas was also at- BY DAVID SCHWARTZ (Copyright 1975, JTA, Inc.) The saying, some of my best friends are Jews, usually is meaningless and provokes a laugh, but in the case of Justice Douglas it has real meaning. Jews have played an important part in his career and he has shown strong interest in Jewish things. Douglas has been, of course, a very controversial figure. John Quincy Adams said that if his father, Presi- dent John Adams had done nothing else but appoint John Marshall to the Su- preme Court, his adminis- tration would have been jus- tified. Marshall on the bench influenced the whole course of American history and it may be said of Douglas that he will be remembered not only because he served longer on the Supreme Court than any other judge but because his decisions ....... . . St EDITiON BOOK SHOPPE Imported From Israel New & Exciting Game Rummilitib® Israel May Probe Nazareth Election COMPLETE SELECTION OF BOOKS JERUSALEM (JTA) — Shmuel Toledano, the pre- mier's adviser on Arab af- fairs, may ask that an in- quiry commission be named to find out whether the Communist victory in Naza- reth was due to the failure of the government's policy toward Israeli Arabs or the fault of the Labor Party. Tewfik Ziad, the pro-Mos- cow Rakah Communist- backed candidate, was elected mayor of the Arab city and his slate captured 11 of the 17 city council seats. Toledano noted that the growing Arab national feel- ing among Israel's 500,000 Arabs will continue as long as the Arab-Israeli conflict remains unsettled. Free Wrapping and Mailing in the Continental U.S.A. With Book Purchase 6671 Orchard Lake Road at Maple West Bloomfield, Michigan 48033 626-2939 626-3085 Old Orchard Center S S S S S S Grand Openin SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICES ON ALL I QUALITY AUTO PARTS AND ACCESSORIES S Civilian Patrols Resume in N.Y. couk* S S S S S I S 545-8100 S S NEW YORK — Rabbi Shlomo Thaler, vice presi- dent of the radical Confer- ence of Presidents of Major American Jewish Activist Organizations, said that armed civilians will resume patrols in the Borough Park section of Brooklyn follow- ing a series of muggings, bombings and extortion of merchants. Thaler said 16 cars carry- ing four men each will pa- trol the area, helped on the Sabbath by Italian residents of the Jewish-Italian-Puerto Rican section. Thaler accused the police and city officials of being lax, and said that similar patrols helped quiet the area in the past. tracted to Felix Frank- furter, who ensconced in the privacy of the Harvard Law School emerged into public prominence by his vigorous taking up the cudgels for the defense in the Sacco-Vanzetti case. Passions ran high in that case and Douglas was to experience similarly heated temperatures when, as a member of the Supreme Court, he deferred the exe- cution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg in the atomic bomb case. But Douglas liked to climb mountains. He faced a mountain of opposition in his civil rights decisions and the capital punishment deci- sions — and the mountains fought back. 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