Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1936-01-24, page 01 |
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Central Ohio's Only Jewish Newspaper Reaching Erery Home A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR THE JEWISH HOME Devoted to American and Jewish Ideals Voltinie XVII—No, io8 COLUMBUS, OHIO, JANUARY 24, 1936 Per Year $3.00; Per Copy loc StriGlly Confidential Tip-BITS FnOM EVEBYWHERE Br PiiiNKAs I. mtutU Just nctwccn Ub Credit ^t. Maldwin t''crti[; wil,h that little White lldu.w. scciic at which Presi¬ dent. Roascvcli ;ind Dr. .Stcpllcn S. Wise buried the hatchet., .FDR and SSW had • been on (he 0llt.s ever since tlie l.-itter Called Roosevelt to account for Iiis han¬ dling of thc case of Jimiiiy Walker when I'T)R was Kovcrnor.. .FcrtiK, as a good Zionist .and thc tovnicr counsel to.Roose¬ velt, did a swell job as peacemaker..,So much so that shortly after he visited the White House'Wise issued a blast-at Al¬ fred E. Siiiifli... New York's liigb society is up a tree' over thc presence of Prince " Otto yon Hismarck, grandson of the fron Chancellor and a. pal of Hitler... .Under ordinary circumstances the '.'400" would be in a fever over the privilege of'.e'n- tertaining BiSiilarck, biit his Nazi syin- Iiatliies make hini an unwelcome guest .-., His-hostess is the ritzy Mrs. Harri¬ son Williams, whose guest list includes many who are. not kccti-on meeting the Prince...'Thiit accounts: for the care with'which the "400" is scrutinizing the guest lists at parties in Bismarck's hbiior .. ..Father Coughlin is using the legend . that Alexander Hamilton was a Jew in his fight agaiiist the Federal 'Reserve Bank. ..Since Hamilton was the father .- of the idea of a central .bank, Coughlin is spreading, ;tlie story that. Hamilton's ¦ real name was Levine Hitleria -. All JJ,azi denials to tile contrary not¬ withstanding, Hitler is suffering from cancer' of the throat.;! .'ThaCs why he hasn't.made a'public speech in two months ¦. ..His associates are urging biii'i to sub- rait to another operation, but they cart'J find.a first-rate throat .specialist.who is IOO percent Aryan. .Our Amsterdam cor- respondent reports the, publication bt a . book., there called "Hitler, Apostle of ¦Might,.' which reveals that Hitler's real name is Schuecklgruber.... According to ; Rudolf ¦ olden, author of. the book Adolf's, pappy was quite.'a gadabout, hav- '. ing. ibecn .marriijd thrice, i divorced .once :and having: fathered three illegitimate off- -.;- springsi-rGlden-.also .fqiind—that7on6"-0f Hitfir'ii.ih'rDthers, Alois,: served'a = couple of Prison terins ill Austria..: Dial Twister -, Sounds tunny, but Gertrude Berg, au- thpr of the radio sketch- ';The; Rise of the" Goldbergs,", wrote thi; plot for the :. radio versiondt the Ziegfeld Follies .. : Jan Pccrce, the East Side's gift to radio, wiHniake his operatic debut in Italy this sunimer...:The rare distinction of a lay¬ man being quoted'by an important medi- cal publication lias come to Myron Weiss, associate editor of Time Magazine.,,The .ftlll text of a: radio speech he made oil "powerless Doctors and Penniless Pa¬ tients" ,jvas reprinted in. the Canadian Medical Association Jpurnail..;.-Via short .Tvave we hear, that Florence Kahn, ton- don actress and radio, star, has won a role in tjie Gaumont-Brltish film "Se¬ cret Agent",'..In private life she's the wife of Max Beerbohn, the satirist and artist.... Recuperating from her radio program, Molly Picon is phinning a full length talkie of Jewish life fn English... This VThat Mike Jai:obs, the boxing imprcssario, is considering the offer of a milliqnrdol- lar /syndicate to liecome president of a ,10O-iniIe . automobile .face track in Los Angeles,., Bernard ¦ Baruch's ' autobiqg- ,, r-aphy is ready for the printer...There'll be at least two Jews on the .American Qlympic boxing team. ...Jack Benny has ¦ taken the place of the late! Will Rogers as the biggest individual earner among theatrical entertainers,, .Universal Pic- . tures is preparing "By-Exile Express," the first film with an immigration angle . ...Jacob Siiritz; Soviet ambassador to Germany, was conspicuous by his absence at the swanky, opera ball given in Berlip ' by Herman. Goering.., AH the diplomats and Nazi bigwigs were there.,.Only Su- ritz and the American ambassador .were missing... John D. Hertz, millionaire Chicago, traction .magnate, used to be a 'fight nijinagcr,, .Philadelphia credits pub- .: lisher J. D. David Stern and. realtor Al¬ bert Greenfield for grabbing off thc Democratic National Convention,..Ber¬ nard G. Richards, ex-secrctary pf the American Jewish Congress, is making a hit as a .Zionist speaker in Washington, where he is connected with one of the New Deal agencies...Speaking, of the Jewish Congress reminds us that no one has yet beqn named executive secretary lo replacj! Joshua Goldberg... Between Innings . Don't be surprised if Dolly Stark, big league basehall's only Jewish umpire, is . named business manager of thc Brooklyn . Dodgers. ..There's a young lady in . Riclimond, 'Virginia, who has agreed .to honbr and obey Irving Jaffe, the ice- skating star...Friends of Sammy Stein, {Contimied on page 4) Roosevelt Hails University in Exile as Symbol of American Tradition NEW YORK (WNS)—Hailing tlic University in l':.\'ilc as a symbol of the deeply rooted Amci'ican tradition of free¬ dom of scientific inquiry untrammeled by. religious or racial restrictions and voicing hope of a brilliant future for it. President "I'rankiin D. Roosevelt, in a letter addressed to thc dinner marking the Second aimiycrsary of the institu¬ tion which has a faculty comprised al¬ most exclusively of. German refugee sclinlars, declared that it "represents American adherence to the principle of intellectual freedom." Plans for making the institution permanent through a iivc- ycaf financial program involving a cost of :i'^i7ij,000 were outiiiic<I by Ira A. Hirschnian, chairman, of the b.oard- bf trustees. The aims and achievements of the University, which'was founded by Dr. Alvin Johnson, director, of the New School for Social Research, were lauded by Di-. George E. Vincent, former presi¬ dent of the Rockefeller Foundation; Dr. Isaiah Rownian, president of Johns Hop¬ kins' University; and. Hamilton Fish .'Vrni.strong, editor of Foreign Affairs. Professor Felix Frankfurter'of the Har- vai|d Law, .School, who presided, criti¬ cised.the failure of American universi¬ ties, including Harvard, for their failure to absorb niore German refugee scholars. . The text: of President Roosevelt's let¬ ter follows:. : "Public duties, unfortunately prevent my attendance at the dinner to which you iia-ve kindly asked me.' But I should like to congratulate you and :the Grad¬ uate Faculty of Political and Social Sci¬ ence upoii the successful completion of your, first two-year period ahd. to tender you my best.wishes.'fora.brilliant future. The principle which is . symbolized by your (graduate. F'aculty, namely, freedom 'of scientific inquiry untrammeled by re¬ ligion of racial restrictions, is deeply rooted in the American tradition. Ever since the beginning of our Republic, we have welcomed-'many .men and women of ability and character from other ccun- >rics, . who; hid; found their - usefulness cut-; off-by;'conditions-whieh .are-alieri-to the-Americafi system.; Some of our most famous patriots, scHolars' and .scientists came, to this country, in 1848. The whole nation; has -been' enriched, morally and materially,: through the abilities which thcy placed at,our'service. ¦ 'T am particularly gratified to .learii that in your Graduate Faculty tliefe'ari; representatives of the three grclt rer ligious,. Protestant, Catholic, and Jew¬ ish; j t is one of the fundamental prin¬ ciples of trite- Americanism that all re¬ ligions are entitled to equal respect. Free¬ dom for every man to worship, God according to the mandates of his con¬ science implies the' political, social and intellectual .freedom wliich is the very foundation of our' national life, Your Graduate Faculty represents American adherence to the principle of intellectual freedom; .1 wish it every .success in .car¬ rying, as it. .does, the torch: of truth- seeking for the good of mankind." LOUIS DEMBITZ BRANDEIS 20 Tears After His Appointment to the Supreme Court THE JURIST By Florence de Haas THEJEW By Jacob de Haas Dr. Geo. T. Harding to Ad¬ dress Youth Temple Dr. George T. Harding, famed psy¬ chologist and Ijead.bf the Harding Insti¬ tute,'.will address members of.the Youth Temple, at their dinner ineeting tomor¬ row (Sunday) at 6 p. m. at the Bryden Road Temple, His subject will, be, ''Personality Patters of People." Robert Glick, president, was assisted in the preparation of the evening's pro¬ gram by Jack Benjamin, Clarence" Cahen, Paid Callif, Eduard Goodman, Jerome Hofm'ayer, Clifford 'LcvJn, Elinor jane Levin, Arthur Loeb, Jr., and .Rhea Orn¬ stein. The meeting will be open to all yoiing men and women: of university age as lA'cll as upper high school students who are sons or. t^aughters of Congregation members. The price for the dinner wijl be yric. . Election of officers will follow the meeting. Janiiniy ZSUi will be ZO yenrs Bince Preaident Woodrow Wilaoin appointed Louis D. Brandeis to tho Supreme Court, tlic Brst Jew to reach lliat high officer ^ In this iiwat featuro we pre¬ sent an appraisal of Justicci Brandeis the Jurist and the Jew an no en through the perspCct'VO of two decades. Mr. Dc Haas,. Juatlcc Brandeis'' hlographcr and anb ot his closest (ricnda, ia /i veteran ZienBt whose interest in the movement dates from the days Df'l^crzl. MIbs ,Do. Haas, a daughter nf Jacob, Is a brilliant young attorney nssociatcd .with Ihcr Rcconslructiou Fiitdncc Corpn>'ation,.^The Editor. THE JURIST A tall man with ati abundant head of gray hair sits quietly behind the bench. Occasiionany. hc nods, unconsciously re-; assuring coun-sel that he, 'follows their argument. Suddciily he leans forward and a Braiidcisian question is on its way. What¦ type oLquestion will it be? Why does an iij-prepared counsel shrink? The obvious answer lies in the fact thai the inunediate Brandcslsian emphasis is upon the facts—the facts o( the immediate case and the .background of facts of which the case is an instance." No gen¬ eral knowledge 'of. constitiitidnal prin¬ ciples will answer his questions. ... But Brandeis. is no mere encyclopedia of knowledge. There is no member of the bar or beiich who better expresses 'the ideal of! the living law. There is ho judge in any of the EnglLsli-speaking countries who is ..more venerated than Brandeis. His is a- name to conjure with. Since Holmes' death it is ques¬ tionable whether there is' anyone in the leg'al field who has the sanie aurora ex¬ cept, perhaps, Holmes''. successor oh the bench. . -; To trace how, this has come about one must go back to the days of Bratideia at Harvard Law School. Brandeis,', the: student so young that the Board of Tnistees made a special exception so thaf they .might graduate the man who, ,in ati institution i)r6ud of its learning, made a scholastic record .never eqiialled beforcj :then__only gn.cc;,;Since.:,;^Then, one -.mii^ study the. career of the: young Bostpri lawyer, Who would fight causes for the pure joy of fighting for and helping the triumph' of the right. Tlie Brandeis who became known, as, the People's Attorney. Imbued' with a strong sense of social consciousness arid an analytical mind,' which would not: stop until'it saw the full problem, in detail, Brandeis not merely found himself involved in litiga¬ tion involving particularly labor, bank¬ ing, insurance, pubtic utilities and the conservation of natural resoiirces, but as he became interested in each, his par¬ ticular method of: work made-it neces¬ sary fqr him to know all about each of them. This. ,i? the key to^ his, special quality. Once intefested ina problem he does not know how to stop until he has literally exhausted all the available ii>, formation. .Ami his faith and passion for facts.. caused him to invent a new type of brief. Confronted with the problem of per¬ suading the Supreme Court that the con¬ ditions of modern industry , necessitate laws limiting the maximi^m Jiours of labor for women, Brandeis marshalled the facts of industry in the Appendix to a brief which limited the legal argument to three pages while ,it devoted hundreds to its facts. This then was the man. \vho became a member of the bench of the Supreme Court in lOlfi. And if every man'g actions are a re- Rabbi Wohl of Cincinnati to Address HiUel Sunday Rabbi Samuel Woht of the Isaac M. Wise temple of Cincinnati will be the guest speaker at the Sunday Supper Forum of the Hiilel Foundation, this Sunday, Jan. 2<i. Rabbi Wohl will speak on his fCcent trip to Europe and Pales¬ tine. The talk will follow the supper and will begin at 7 p. m. All persons may attend the^ foriim. Dr. Charles C. Stillman, -former Re¬ lief Administrator of Ohio, will be the next speaker at the Sunday supper Forum. He is scheduled for February 9. . Dr. I. M, Rubinow, speaking on "Jews and Jobs" will be at Hillel on February 23. ENTIRE WORfLD JEWRY MOURNS PASSING OF KING GEORGE V Ihmnti .Uis Kciitn Ikilfim- /)a/iim-1home of the Haham Bashi of Jerusalem, tion Was Issued; Visited Palestine asUi-Mn Meyer Panigcl. that the future lio\: Ifnil Mithy Jetvish Ministers;\Kms attended the seder, an experience Royal lurniih' hilimote li-ith . Notcd\^\¦h\ch he described in great.detail in his Jews; Uamuyd by Jeivs on Jubilee. ' | journal in 1882. Thc King never visited Falcsline, again but His name will bc.for- Lkiuis D. Brandeis .ilection of his past experience, certainly 'Brandeis' opinions, not merely reflect, his sncial theories but his specialized khowl- tdgC/ ' - .. ¦ , ' . In One of the articles in Vol. •!.") of the Havviird Law Review commemorating the Justice's 75th Birthdaj', Henry Wolf jBikle traces, the whole development of railroad, regulation, in the fifty odd opin¬ ions the Justice has.written on this sub- ^ject. In the same publication Prdfijssor Felix Frankfurter h'sts and classifies the ¦four hundred fifteen opinions tlie Justice f.had handed down at that date. Tliere is fno use trying, to out-Frankfurter Frank- I'ifiirtcr; ' '\- But it might be of some .use to char¬ acterize his opinions for the'. benefit of the . non-legai reader. His; exhaustive method of study causes him to offer foot¬ notes summarizing all pertinent informa- ^liuii whether cases or articles, with a. 5re- ,fliiehcy far above that of'the! other Jus- ,tice,aV,_This results in opinions which ^re the' joy <if stiidehts who fi^e'qiichtly find them clearer an^ itiore complete than the usual textbooks and law articles. He writes .iri a simple. style—aiming pri- iliariiyat clarity, a factor of special util¬ ity in the, reading, of his many complex tax decisions. For a real measure of the man, it i^ hot, his majority,, but his dissenting opin- , (Continued oit page 2) LONDON (WNS) "The death of His Majesty, King George V has phihgcd the Jews o-f the British F.mpire into uni¬ versal nuiuhiiiig not .only because the late ruler was their beloved sovereign but because hc was known throughout the Jewish world as the king utider whose reign thc Balfour Declaration .was issiicd. Horn in 1SG5, seven years after the re¬ moval of.the civil disabilities of English Jews, when there were only two Jewish inemhers of Parliament, King George was destined to bc identified -with im- portanf chapters in Jewish history. King George was born and.brought up in a liome that had Inany Jewish friends. I-iis father, King Edward Vir, was on terms of intimate friendship while he was Prince of. Wales >vith Lord Roth¬ schild, ¦ Lcopoltl ¦ tie Rothschildi Arthur Sassoon, Reuben Sagsoon and Baron de Hirsch. Edward . was frequently .their guest, attbnded their weddings and shared in their other pleasures, and as long, as his father's frierids lived they continued tn be counted as friends of King Gedrge, who as .Prince of Wales also accepted the lipspitality of Rothschild, and Sassoon "homes.".' '-'¦.-' ¦';¦¦,¦ Wlieii he was 17, King George, then a midshipnian on . H. M. S. Bacchante niade a cruise arounjd the world with his elder . brother , Prince Albert Victor in the course of which they visited Palestine around Passover. And it was in ,thc WILL AGAIN BE HEARD SUNDAY EVENING AT AGIJDATH ACHIM B'nd B'rith Lodge to Hold Important Meeting Next Monday Evening A special business meeting has beeii scheduled by the B'nai B'rith for Monday evening,. ^ o'clock, at the Broad St. Tcmpie auditorium. Ac- -cording to Sam Gurevitz, president of Zion Lodge, matters of utmost -im¬ portance to the.entire B'nai B'rith membership will be brought up and, passed upon. ' Reports by the various standing committees and the appointriient of new-committees for 1,!)R<^ will be made, and riew byTlaw;s will bc presented for adoption at Monday hight'g session. Every Ben" B'rith is urged to be present and participate in the delibera¬ tions of Zion Lodge. Only by the proper interest and co-operation of its membership can Columbus Lodge go forward with still greater accomplish- melits under its new administration. , Men and women of the B'nai B'rith, let's go! ... ' To Interview Cantor Over WAIU iSunday, 4:15 P. M. Anshel Freedman,, formerly of Colum¬ bus, and now a resident of Palestine, who is here ou, a temporary visit, will be in¬ terviewed by Mr. Allan. Tarshish over WAIU radio station at 4;15 p, m. on Sunday, Jan. 2G, The subject oE the in¬ terview will be Mr. Freedman's, impres¬ sions of Palestine. AU-Jewish Program to: Be Pre¬ sented at Schonthal Center An All-Jewish program of music.and vaudeville will be presented Wednesday evening, Jan. 29, at the Schonthal Cen-' ter, 555 E. Rich St. The program will he sponsored by Ester Levinson and Reva'Zuraysky; for the benefit of the Junior, Hadassah Donor Tea. Ampng the talented and well knpwn performers who will take part in this novel presentation are Leo Gallen, Harry Rosen, William Robins, Paul Lipson, Eddie Lepon,, \V'illiain Gomberg, Bess Marks, Ester Levinson, and Reva Zurav¬ sky. The price of admission will be lOc and the show will begin promptly at 8:15 p. m. Tickets may be secured from. Ester Levinson, EVergreen 52C3 .and Reya Zu¬ ravsky, EVei-green 5977, or may. be pur¬ chased af the door. Stone to Speak on Br.andeis at Agudath Achim Operi Forum Friday evening, Jan, (Jl, at 8 o'clock the Open Forum of the Agudath Achim Syn¬ agogue will present Roy J. Stone, local Jewish attorney, who will speak on: "Louis.D. Brandeis, .Champion.of Human Justice." This is an especially timely topic, in view oi the fact that 1936 marks the 80th birthday of Justice. Brandeis. Mr. Stone has always been'a student of the life of this great judge, and outhnes some of the" high spots of his address as follows: The life of Louis Brandeis, his achieve¬ ments and accomplishments; his.-labors as "the people's attorney," in championing such causes as the minimum wage law and the B-hour working day for women; his Liberal attitudes as a practicing attor¬ ney ; the battle over his appointment to the Supreme Court bench in 1910; and his farsightedness and liberal tendencies as ail associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. The Open Forum session will'be fiir¬ ther slipplemented by responsive readings and selections by the Cantor, ' Cantor A- Freedman : This Saturday morning, "at the Agii¬ dath Achim Synagogue, Rev. Anshel Freedman, who for the past few years has made his home in Paiestine, will chant the Services, and will also give a concert Sunday evening, January 2(>, at 8 o'clock, composed of his .cantoriat repertoire, and will include the latest Palestinian songs. Cantor Freedman is knowii as a splen¬ did singer not only in America but many Eui-opcan countries .as well. His con¬ cert will' incltide ^ short talk on his ob¬ servations about Palestine. A large turn-out is anticipated for Sunday evening's concert which will be the last opportunity Columbus ¦ friends and admirers will have to hear Cantor Freedman betore his return to his home in Palestine. . ever identified with that country as a re¬ sult of ihe issuance of the Balfour. Dcc- laratipu in the seventh yoar of his reign. On the eve of the departure of the joint c{3mmi5sion named by the British Goy- crnnicrit and the Zionist Organization to act, a.s a liai.son between the Britishniili- tary authorities in Palestine and'the Jeiv¬ ish population, King, George received Dr. Chaim Wcizhiann, the head of the coni-\ mission, iu private audience. In celebra¬ tion, of' the,'silyer jubilee of his reiga the Jews of Great Britain planted the King George ,V Jubilee. Forest iri Pales-' tiiie oh aiiarca of 1,500 acres. The first tree planted in thc forest, a seven-foot cypress' oriental cedar from Windsor Great Park, was sent by tlje King-him¬ self. The King's name has also been iri-, scribed in the JNF Golden Book, 'the .silver : jubilee of King George's " reign, celebrate<l in Miiy, 1935, was marked with great joy by the Jews of the Brit¬ ish Empire. Messages poured in from . Jewries in the remotest corners of the world. A' special prayer , composed by Chief Rabbi iicrtz was read in aU the . synagog^ies. The loyalty, of-the Jews of. the Empire was, expressed in a inessage presented to His Majesty by Neville Laski, presideijtof the Board of Deputies of-British Jews, an<l Leonard Montefiore, president of, the Anglo-Jewish Associa^ , tion. .in Palestine too .^a special prayer was cpmi>osed in the Kind's honor by the. late: Ch'tei. Rabbi Kook, while.in Tel , Aviv the name of Mount Carmel Street was changed to King, George Road. Chief Rabbi Hertz was ohe of, the official guests invited to the jubilee festivities in Buckirigham. Palace and Harriett . Frecdman,. a young Jewish artist, Was, the designer of- the Jubilee Stamp which was adopted by the British. Post Office after being approved^ by King Georjje and; rQueeri^Mary."."",, "'¦' ¦¦'•'^•'^~-^''^;'--^Cli^ . (Continued on page A)- . :/ Your Cooperation Please Miss Naomi Jfoustadt, 946 Bryd«in Road, has assumed the position bf So-\ ciety Editor of the Ohio Jewish Chronicle, the pi^itioit held for the past nine years by Miss Leah Neus¬ tadt (Mrs. Hersh Rivitz) whose mar¬ riage was an ieivent of January 4th- " Miss Neustadt, a graduate of Ohio • State University, will appreciate thus CQ-6pcratiqn of ;all tjhose in charge of publicity for the vanous organiza- ' tions as Well as those, who have so¬ cial or personal items., She' regrets very much that the Chronicle staff, limited as it is,, cannot take len^hy items over the telephone nor can any¬ thing be accepted after three o'clock on Wednesday of each week. Wonien Pioneer Organization to Meet Wednesday '" The .Board of the Women's Pioneer Organization will hold a meeting at the home, of Mrs. Ei Berman, SOS Lock¬ bourne Ave., Wednesday evening, Jan. 29, at 7:30; AM board jnembera are urged to be present, A business meeting will ensue, during which important' mat¬ ters ¦wil! be discussed, and settletnent for tickets made. Ezras Noshim to Meet The Ez^as Noshim Society will hold a regular business meeting at the Agu¬ dath Achim Synagogue at 2 o'clock this Sunday, Jan. 2(i.. All members are urged to be present. Rabbi Zelizer^s Sermon Rabbi Nathan Zelizer will speak at the Broad St. Temple, Friday, January 31, at 8 p. m- on the theme, "Palestine in Jew¬ ish Life Today,'^. Cantor Grodner will officiate. All are welcome. Bud Hadassah Will Hold Its Annual Dance Sunday Bud Hadassah Hvilj hold its annual dance on Sunday, Jan. 2G, at the Schon¬ thal Center, 555. E. Rich St. Larry. Stembler and hts orchestra will furnish the music froni 9'p. ni. to 1 a. m. There will be a floor show in which Miss, Roxy Pier arid Mr. Herman Silverman %yill participate.^ Misses, Roxy Pier und Faniiye Nitches, ' chairman and. co-chairman^ of the' af¬ fair, have appointed the following: Re¬ freshments—Hisses Rhea Grinker, Jean¬ ette Davis, Fannye Levy and Eva Gare¬ lik; atid Checkropra-^Misses Rosalie Rosenfield, Sylvia Cohen, Rose Soritien-' stein, and Lauretta Wohlman., Co-operating with this group are the following who have "purchased patron tickets: Mr, and Mrs- Abe PPnowitz, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Berman, Mi.ss Anna¬ bel Cohen, Mrs, Max Dworkin, Mr. and, Mrs. E. Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Grin¬ ker, Dr. and Mrs. Max Kanter, Mr. apd Mrs. Sam Levy, Mr; and Mrs. Lqu Levin, Mr. Sariford I-akin, and Mr. and Mrs. Louia Pariah, T. L DUTCH LUNCH-BRIDGE TO BE HELD TUESDAY The Dutch Lunch-Bridge sponsored by the T. I. Sisterhood will be held Tuesday afternoon, Jan. 28th at 1:30 p: m. at the Broad St. Temple. Finance Chairman, Mrs. M. Parish, announced that tliere will be table prizes for the winners. Mrs, J, K, Bornstein, Mrs. B. F. Levin¬ son, Mrs. M. Wider, and their commit¬ tees are in charge of the Bridge Lunch¬ eon, tickets for which there will be a charge of SOc per person. .* Make your ¦ reservations at once by 'calling Mrs. Ed. Pailet. EV. 63G1.
Object Description
Title | Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1936-01-24 |
Subject | Jews -- Ohio -- Periodicals |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Creator | The Chronicle Printing and Publishing Co. |
Collection | Ohio Jewish Chronicle |
Submitting Institution | Columbus Jewish Historical Society |
Rights | This item may have copyright restrictions. Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
File Name | index.cpd |
Image Height | Not Available |
Image Width | Not Available |
Searchable Date | 1936-01-24 |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn78005600 |
Date created | 2016-10-31 |
Description
Title | Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1936-01-24, page 01 |
Subject | Jews -- Ohio -- Periodicals |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Creator | Ohio Jewish Chronicle |
Collection | Ohio Jewish Chronicle |
Submitting Institution | Columbus Jewish Historical Society |
Rights | This item may have copyright restrictions. Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
File Name | Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1936-01-24, page 01.tif |
Image Height | 4907 |
Image Width | 3534 |
File Size | 2457.493 KB |
Searchable Date | 1936-01-24 |
Full Text |
Central Ohio's Only
Jewish Newspaper
Reaching Erery Home
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR THE JEWISH HOME
Devoted to American
and
Jewish Ideals
Voltinie XVII—No, io8
COLUMBUS, OHIO, JANUARY 24, 1936
Per Year $3.00; Per Copy loc
StriGlly Confidential
Tip-BITS FnOM EVEBYWHERE Br PiiiNKAs I. mtutU
Just nctwccn Ub
Credit ^t. Maldwin t''crti[; wil,h that little White lldu.w. scciic at which Presi¬ dent. Roascvcli ;ind Dr. .Stcpllcn S. Wise buried the hatchet., .FDR and SSW had • been on (he 0llt.s ever since tlie l.-itter Called Roosevelt to account for Iiis han¬ dling of thc case of Jimiiiy Walker when I'T)R was Kovcrnor.. .FcrtiK, as a good Zionist .and thc tovnicr counsel to.Roose¬ velt, did a swell job as peacemaker..,So much so that shortly after he visited the White House'Wise issued a blast-at Al¬ fred E. Siiiifli... New York's liigb society is up a tree' over thc presence of Prince " Otto yon Hismarck, grandson of the fron Chancellor and a. pal of Hitler... .Under ordinary circumstances the '.'400" would be in a fever over the privilege of'.e'n- tertaining BiSiilarck, biit his Nazi syin- Iiatliies make hini an unwelcome guest .-., His-hostess is the ritzy Mrs. Harri¬ son Williams, whose guest list includes many who are. not kccti-on meeting the Prince...'Thiit accounts: for the care with'which the "400" is scrutinizing the guest lists at parties in Bismarck's hbiior .. ..Father Coughlin is using the legend . that Alexander Hamilton was a Jew in his fight agaiiist the Federal 'Reserve Bank. ..Since Hamilton was the father .- of the idea of a central .bank, Coughlin is spreading, ;tlie story that. Hamilton's
¦ real name was Levine
Hitleria -. All JJ,azi denials to tile contrary not¬ withstanding, Hitler is suffering from cancer' of the throat.;! .'ThaCs why he hasn't.made a'public speech in two months ¦. ..His associates are urging biii'i to sub- rait to another operation, but they cart'J find.a first-rate throat .specialist.who is IOO percent Aryan. .Our Amsterdam cor- respondent reports the, publication bt a . book., there called "Hitler, Apostle of ¦Might,.' which reveals that Hitler's real name is Schuecklgruber.... According to ; Rudolf ¦ olden, author of. the book Adolf's, pappy was quite.'a gadabout, hav- '. ing. ibecn .marriijd thrice, i divorced .once :and having: fathered three illegitimate off- -.;- springsi-rGlden-.also .fqiind—that7on6"-0f Hitfir'ii.ih'rDthers, Alois,: served'a = couple of Prison terins ill Austria..: Dial Twister -, Sounds tunny, but Gertrude Berg, au- thpr of the radio sketch- ';The; Rise of the" Goldbergs,", wrote thi; plot for the :. radio versiondt the Ziegfeld Follies .. : Jan Pccrce, the East Side's gift to radio, wiHniake his operatic debut in Italy this sunimer...:The rare distinction of a lay¬ man being quoted'by an important medi- cal publication lias come to Myron Weiss, associate editor of Time Magazine.,,The .ftlll text of a: radio speech he made oil "powerless Doctors and Penniless Pa¬ tients" ,jvas reprinted in. the Canadian Medical Association Jpurnail..;.-Via short .Tvave we hear, that Florence Kahn, ton- don actress and radio, star, has won a role in tjie Gaumont-Brltish film "Se¬ cret Agent",'..In private life she's the wife of Max Beerbohn, the satirist and artist.... Recuperating from her radio program, Molly Picon is phinning a full length talkie of Jewish life fn English... This VThat Mike Jai:obs, the boxing imprcssario, is considering the offer of a milliqnrdol- lar /syndicate to liecome president of a ,10O-iniIe . automobile .face track in Los Angeles,., Bernard ¦ Baruch's ' autobiqg- ,, r-aphy is ready for the printer...There'll be at least two Jews on the .American Qlympic boxing team. ...Jack Benny has ¦ taken the place of the late! Will Rogers as the biggest individual earner among theatrical entertainers,, .Universal Pic- . tures is preparing "By-Exile Express," the first film with an immigration angle . ...Jacob Siiritz; Soviet ambassador to Germany, was conspicuous by his absence at the swanky, opera ball given in Berlip ' by Herman. Goering.., AH the diplomats and Nazi bigwigs were there.,.Only Su- ritz and the American ambassador .were missing... John D. Hertz, millionaire Chicago, traction .magnate, used to be a 'fight nijinagcr,, .Philadelphia credits pub- .: lisher J. D. David Stern and. realtor Al¬ bert Greenfield for grabbing off thc Democratic National Convention,..Ber¬ nard G. Richards, ex-secrctary pf the American Jewish Congress, is making a hit as a .Zionist speaker in Washington, where he is connected with one of the New Deal agencies...Speaking, of the Jewish Congress reminds us that no one has yet beqn named executive secretary lo replacj! Joshua Goldberg... Between Innings . Don't be surprised if Dolly Stark, big league basehall's only Jewish umpire, is . named business manager of thc Brooklyn . Dodgers. ..There's a young lady in . Riclimond, 'Virginia, who has agreed .to honbr and obey Irving Jaffe, the ice- skating star...Friends of Sammy Stein, {Contimied on page 4)
Roosevelt Hails University in
Exile as Symbol of
American Tradition
NEW YORK (WNS)—Hailing tlic University in l':.\'ilc as a symbol of the deeply rooted Amci'ican tradition of free¬ dom of scientific inquiry untrammeled by. religious or racial restrictions and voicing hope of a brilliant future for it. President "I'rankiin D. Roosevelt, in a letter addressed to thc dinner marking the Second aimiycrsary of the institu¬ tion which has a faculty comprised al¬ most exclusively of. German refugee sclinlars, declared that it "represents American adherence to the principle of intellectual freedom." Plans for making the institution permanent through a iivc- ycaf financial program involving a cost of :i'^i7ij,000 were outiiiicrics, . who; hid; found their - usefulness cut-; off-by;'conditions-whieh .are-alieri-to the-Americafi system.; Some of our most famous patriots, scHolars' and .scientists came, to this country, in 1848. The whole nation; has -been' enriched, morally and materially,: through the abilities which thcy placed at,our'service. ¦
'T am particularly gratified to .learii that in your Graduate Faculty tliefe'ari; representatives of the three grclt rer ligious,. Protestant, Catholic, and Jew¬ ish; j t is one of the fundamental prin¬ ciples of trite- Americanism that all re¬ ligions are entitled to equal respect. Free¬ dom for every man to worship, God according to the mandates of his con¬ science implies the' political, social and intellectual .freedom wliich is the very foundation of our' national life, Your Graduate Faculty represents American adherence to the principle of intellectual freedom; .1 wish it every .success in .car¬ rying, as it. .does, the torch: of truth- seeking for the good of mankind."
LOUIS DEMBITZ BRANDEIS
20 Tears After His Appointment to the Supreme Court
THE JURIST By Florence de Haas
THEJEW By Jacob de Haas
Dr.
Geo. T. Harding to Ad¬ dress Youth Temple
Dr. George T. Harding, famed psy¬ chologist and Ijead.bf the Harding Insti¬ tute,'.will address members of.the Youth Temple, at their dinner ineeting tomor¬ row (Sunday) at 6 p. m. at the Bryden Road Temple, His subject will, be, ''Personality Patters of People."
Robert Glick, president, was assisted in the preparation of the evening's pro¬ gram by Jack Benjamin, Clarence" Cahen, Paid Callif, Eduard Goodman, Jerome Hofm'ayer, Clifford 'LcvJn, Elinor jane Levin, Arthur Loeb, Jr., and .Rhea Orn¬ stein.
The meeting will be open to all yoiing men and women: of university age as lA'cll as upper high school students who are sons or. t^aughters of Congregation members. The price for the dinner wijl be yric. . Election of officers will follow the meeting.
Janiiniy ZSUi will be ZO yenrs Bince Preaident Woodrow Wilaoin appointed Louis D. Brandeis to tho Supreme Court, tlic Brst Jew to reach lliat high officer ^ In this iiwat featuro we pre¬ sent an appraisal of Justicci Brandeis the Jurist and the Jew an no en through the perspCct'VO of two decades. Mr. Dc Haas,. Juatlcc Brandeis'' hlographcr and anb ot his closest (ricnda, ia /i veteran ZienBt whose interest in the movement dates from the days Df'l^crzl. MIbs ,Do. Haas, a daughter nf Jacob, Is a brilliant young attorney nssociatcd .with Ihcr Rcconslructiou Fiitdncc Corpn>'ation,.^The Editor.
THE JURIST
A tall man with ati abundant head of gray hair sits quietly behind the bench. Occasiionany. hc nods, unconsciously re-; assuring coun-sel that he, 'follows their argument. Suddciily he leans forward and a Braiidcisian question is on its way. What¦ type oLquestion will it be? Why does an iij-prepared counsel shrink? The obvious answer lies in the fact thai the inunediate Brandcslsian emphasis is upon the facts—the facts o( the immediate case and the .background of facts of which the case is an instance." No gen¬ eral knowledge 'of. constitiitidnal prin¬ ciples will answer his questions. ...
But Brandeis. is no mere encyclopedia of knowledge. There is no member of the bar or beiich who better expresses 'the ideal of! the living law. There is ho judge in any of the EnglLsli-speaking countries who is ..more venerated than Brandeis. His is a- name to conjure with. Since Holmes' death it is ques¬ tionable whether there is' anyone in the leg'al field who has the sanie aurora ex¬ cept, perhaps, Holmes''. successor oh the bench. . -;
To trace how, this has come about one must go back to the days of Bratideia at Harvard Law School. Brandeis,', the: student so young that the Board of Tnistees made a special exception so thaf they .might graduate the man who, ,in ati institution i)r6ud of its learning, made a scholastic record .never eqiialled beforcj :then__only gn.cc;,;Since.:,;^Then, one -.mii^ study the. career of the: young Bostpri lawyer, Who would fight causes for the pure joy of fighting for and helping the triumph' of the right. Tlie Brandeis who became known, as, the People's Attorney. Imbued' with a strong sense of social consciousness arid an analytical mind,' which would not: stop until'it saw the full problem, in detail, Brandeis not merely found himself involved in litiga¬ tion involving particularly labor, bank¬ ing, insurance, pubtic utilities and the conservation of natural resoiirces, but as he became interested in each, his par¬ ticular method of: work made-it neces¬ sary fqr him to know all about each of them. This. ,i? the key to^ his, special quality. Once intefested ina problem he does not know how to stop until he has literally exhausted all the available ii>, formation. .Ami his faith and passion for facts.. caused him to invent a new type of brief.
Confronted with the problem of per¬ suading the Supreme Court that the con¬ ditions of modern industry , necessitate laws limiting the maximi^m Jiours of labor for women, Brandeis marshalled the facts of industry in the Appendix to a brief which limited the legal argument to three pages while ,it devoted hundreds to its facts. This then was the man. \vho became a member of the bench of the Supreme Court in lOlfi.
And if every man'g actions are a re-
Rabbi Wohl of Cincinnati to Address HiUel Sunday
Rabbi Samuel Woht of the Isaac M. Wise temple of Cincinnati will be the guest speaker at the Sunday Supper Forum of the Hiilel Foundation, this Sunday, Jan. 2 |
Format | newspapers |
Date created | 2008-08-19 |