IcwisbCranOf The Pacific NorthwestSEATTLE, WASHINGTON, JULY 30, 1926:an CollegiateH-SemitismA Jewish Athletic Staricle has st East-for sev-ominent nd foot-tame as 5 college mber of tougli it im that of pub-,ring thehas rename to ■es that lost fla-encoun-es more e. Thiss new the uni-DITOR.atters of ifess that ,bout the ir about Td which discussed with my ison that lad many tad taken oliege to-. our uniat one time conscientiously say the same thing: “I have the highest regard for Christians; they have always displayed the greatest tolerance.” But I have come to the realization, which most surely must have engulfed many other university Jews, that the relation between Jew and Christian is at the most superficial. Confidences between the two faiths never really go below the surface, touching only the exterior, the inconsequential things of life, things which really never matter.During my first year at college I went out for several of the teams. There were times when I thought that men who ought to have been put in certain places were discriminated against. As it happened, many of those not given the proper credit were Jews. I never linked the two things: Jews and discrimination,believing that it was merely a matter of mis judgment on the part of the coach. I confess when this mis-judgment became too flagrant, I conceived the notion that here was a definite exhibition of what my parents so often talked about as anti-Semitism, but I was not quite sure, never willing to speak about the matter.I could not believe that the coach of the baseball team, for example, aAnnouncementThe Jewish Transcript is happy to anounce that it has secured for its readers the feature column written by Charles H. Joseph, a noted Jewish writer of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. This column, known as Random Thoughts, appears in sixteen Jewish weeklies throughout the country.Without any question, it is the finest column written dealing with Jewish matters. Our readers will find that Mr. Joseph writes about timely news items, that he is a master of the English language, writing-in an extremely easy and interesting manner, and that his column is very instructive and informational.Random Thoughts, in our opinion, is to the Jewish weeklies what Brisbane’s “Today” is to the Hearst newspapers.— THE EDITOR.By Charles H. JosephThe other day I wanted to know who is Bernhard Baron and was it real money that he gave to Zionism when it was announced that fivemillion dollars had been constrib-lt;i