4 :E;TROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle Detroit Jewish Chronicle and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE Published Weekly by Jewish Chronicle Publishing Co., Inc JACOB H. SCHAKNE President Entered as Second-class matter March 3, 1916, at the Post- office at Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March 3, 1879. General Offices and Publication Bldq., 525 Woodward Ave. Telephone: CAdillac 1040 Subscription in Advance Cable Address: Chronicle /3.00 Per Year JACOB MARGOLIS Publisher Editor MAUkICE M. SAFIR....Advertising Manager 1143LIP SLOMOVITZ to insure publication, all correspondence and news matter must reach this office by Tuesday evening of each week. When mailing notices, kindly use one side of paper onl y . The Detroit Jewish Chronicle invites correspondence on sub- jects of interest to the Jewish people, but disclaims respon- sibility for an endorsement of views expressed by its writes s. Sabbath Scriptural Selections Pentateuchal portion—Ex. 13:17-17:16. Prophetical portion—Judges 4:4-5:31. Chamisho Osor b'Shevat (New Year for Trees), Monday, Feb. 2 JANUARY 30, 1942 SHEVAT 12, 5702 Nature Refutes Misery On Feb. 2, 4ws will observe Chamisho Osor b'Shvat, mown also as Rosh Ha- shonah Lellonoth—the New Year for the . Trees. It is the Arbor Day for Palestine. This minor festival has become a day of major importance in Palestine, and for generations it has been an occasion for rejoicing and for the acquisition of hope and courage by Diaspora Jewries. Why does a mere agricultural festival, marking the beginning of the faming sea- son for Palestine, receive such signifi- cance? The answer is simpler than the question may imply. The festival refutes everything that is contrary to faith in Jewish life. In time of storm and stress, it assures Jews that life goes on and warns Israel's enemies that nature triumphs over those elements which stand for the temporary inhumanity of man to man. In a time of a world-wide period of de- spair and fear, Jews in the ancient cradle- land of our people are planting trees, are looking forward to reaping the fruits of their labors. Our people is one with nature on this day, and the brave men and women who are building a new life, and those who are aiding them in this work, defy misery, deny fear, give cred- ence to hope and confidence for the ad- vent of a better day. Because the festival is so significant as a builder of morale, it should be observed by expanding the Jewish possessions in Palestine, by the planting of more trees in Eretz Israel, by increasing the food- producing power of the land—for the sake of Jewry's future and in order to strengthen the position of the democ- racies in the Near and Middle East. May the spirit of Chamisho Osor pre- vail for all time! Journalistic Revival Louis Lipsky, brilliant Zionist leader and publicist, is the trustee for the Day, 26-year-old Yiddish daily which has gone through a crisis during the past year. Associated with him are: Morris Mar- gulies, former secretary of the Zionist Organization of America, as manager of the paper, and Dr. Samuel Margoshes, who remains in the editorial post. This, briefly, is the saga of Jewish jour- nalistic revival which augurs well for the coming of a new day in Jewish com- munity organization. A sense of re- sponsibility for handling Jewish news and for interpreting Jewish conditions is in- corporated in the assumption of the post of trustee of the Day by Louis Lipsky. The new set-up will be watched with a great deal of interest. It will also call forth congratulations and good wishes to the Day's new management. The Times and Zionism The New York Times, America's best newspaper and one of the few owned by Jews, has seen fit to take a fling at the idea of a Jewish army, and instead of discussing that issue objectively it has viciously hurt Jewish aspirations. In an editorial entitled "A Zionist Army?" the Times goes back 50 years in its reasoning of the position of the Jew. It rehashes the old, and exploded, argu- ents in behalf of emancipation, and uses the proposals for the establishment of a Jewish army in Palestine as a basis for an attack on efforts to establish a "Zionist state in Palestine." The reasoning in this editorial is amazing. The Times, apparently echoing sentiments of those whom Dr. Abba Hil- lel Silver branded as suffering from a "Jerome Frank Complex," fails to take into consideration Jewish aspirations, de- votions to an ancient hope by millions of Jews who have been driven from pillar to post and who are denied havens throughout the world—except in little Palestine. Palestine's redemption as the Jewish commonwealth ought to be looked upon as a great and important act in the drama of world reconstruction consonant with American ideals of witnessing the rehabil- itation of small peoples after the war. But the "Jerome Frank Complex" thinks otherwise. An ancient hatred -- against national Jewish aspirations is revived in the Times editorial. It does not lend credit to the otherwise great American newspaper. On the contrary—it justifies the charge that the "Zionist Army" editorial (note that the Times does not speak of a Jew- ish army, or a Jewish state, but resorts to Mufti tactics in reducing "Jewish aspir- ations" to "Zionist politics") was a stab in the back. It is justification of the con- demnation that the editorial was an "anti- Zionist Pearl Harbor." Pelley Gets His Due William Dudley Pelley has been sen- tenced to serve from two to three years in a North Carolina State Prison for vio- lating terms of his suspended sentence and for publishing false and libelous state- ments, particularly about the President of the United States. The truth catches up with these fellows, and they always get their due. Others of his ilk are sure to pay the price for de- stroying the morale of the land. The pity of it all is that many people in responsible positions fail to realize that those who spread anti-Semitism are mere- ly paving the way for un-American sub- versive activities. Therefore the statement by Rep. Martin Dies that all these ele- ments are anti-Semitic ought to arouse the country to a realization that the Pel- leys and their associates should be dealt with as enemies of America and humanity. Our Veterans The Jewish War Veterans of the United States have gained the recognition that is justly due them, and they now occupy a position of first rank in Jewish life. It is not only because we are at war that the veterans become symbols of an age of conflict and of striving for the bet- ter things in behalf of freedom for all peoples. It is because the veterans are spokesmen for courage, for greater morale in the community, for faith and for the eradication of every manifestation of de- spair or hopelessness. The endorsement given the Jewish War Veterans by Mr. James I. Ellmann, the president of the Jewish Community Council of Detroit, is symbolic of the bet- ter relationship established between all existing organizations and those who rep- resent the fighting force of the last World War. The veterans will have the good wishes of all Detroiters in their sponsorship of the patriotic ball on Feb. 14. The fact that part of the proceeds will be used to augment a fund for the presentation of pursuit planes to the United States gov- ernment is important. Our sincere good wishes to the Jewish war veterans. • • • January 30, 1942 earl in the Lobbies.'. By DAVID DEUTSCH BEHIND THE HEADLINES There's a whisper that the wily British chuckled when the United Palestine Appeal confer- ence at Cleveland appealed to America to arm a Jewish Army in Palestine. Seems that's just what our English cousins have been hoping for: that the State Department would politely but firmly turn down the demand and then the British would be freed of all guilt. A combine headed by Louis Lipsky, veteran editor, has ac- quired The Day, most literate of the Yiddish dailies. It's reported that the American Jewish Con- gress will get the financial back- ing. Hard to believe, since the Congress can't even support it- self. The untimely death of Solo- mon Loewenstein, executive head of the New York Jewish Federa- tion, has provoked an internal war in that outfit, with Joseph Witten, fund-raising guide of Federation, and Dr. Maurice Hex- ter, formerly of Boston social service and the Palestine Execu- tive and lately assistant to Low- enstein, vying for the job. How do those Chicago bigwigs square it with their conscience to give less this year to their wel- fare fund drive? Is it because they've heard a few New York Jewish big shots are planning. to do the same? One man's $50,000 cut last year was reported to have snowballed into at least $1,000,000 by the end of the sea- son. Somebody ought to arrange a celebration for the Warner Brothers, who have just finished their 3,000th picture. It's called "Shadow of their Wings." Their first was "My Four Years in Germany," appearing in 1918. From 1st to 3,000th, the Warners have rendered service to the en- tertainment, the culture and the defense of America. wealthy non-Zionists . . . Gang- ling Prof. William F. Albright of Johns Hopkins University regis- tered a hit with his confession of having accepted political Zion- ism. But there was a queer si- lence in the conference room when he said he still was opposed to fascism, including that of the Re- visionists. LITE RATI Watch out for more criticism of Franz Werfel, when the nov- elist's latest tale of a Catholic character appears on the book- shelves and screen. Werfel, now helping Hollywood prepare the script for the legend of St. Ber- nadette, which is being made up as one of the big pictures of 1942, has on previous occasions been scored for religious mysti- cism. But Werfel insists that his chronicle of the holy maid of Lourdes and her miracles doesn't have anything to do with his Jewishness. If you can't get hold of Mar- vin Lowenthal for lectures these days, it's because his publishers insisted they would stop his ad- vances if he didn't stick to . his work and finish his opus on Hen- rietta Szold, due for the spring list. The volume's made up of the Hadassah founder's letters and writings, intended to show her rich personality and broad Jew- ish background. As soon as the last page is typed on this, Marvin will start in earnest on his biog- raphy of Victor Hugo. That visit to Mexico City by Prof. Irwin Edman of Columbia University is at the request of the State Department, which wanted the professor and writer to talk at the National University of Mexico. It will take the refugee, Stefan Zweig, to explain to America how it got its name. The book on which he is now working is called "Amerigo: a comedy of errors in history," in which he does a lot of detective work to show CONFERENCE TALES how the man who never claimed At the United Palestine Ap- he discovered America neverthe- peal conference in Cleveland Ma- less got the honor. jority Leader Senator Barkley revealed that he had been ad- SOUND WAVES dressing so many Jewish meetings If Bette Davis is making a hit lately that a few days previ- on the air these days, give proper ously Vice-President Wallace, in credit--as she does—to that giving the Senator the floor, had undersized, thick-lensed fellow who said: "Yes, Rabbi Barkley." The accompanies her without a hat Senator felt the Conference was and coat, Arch Oboler. Arch is so important that in order to one of radio's most sought-after speak on Sunday night he asked boys, having introduced more new the President to postpone a meet- techniques than any fellow yet, ing. from Monday to Tuesday except for his confrere, Norman that Barkley might reach Wash- Corwin. Now NBC is to run ington. The President agreed. The a long series of patriotic plays by story goes that American Zion- Oboler dedicated to the civilian ists are making it so unpleasant morale of the Americas under the for David ben Gurion that he is title of "This Precious Freedom." planning to return to Palestine Wonder what Spinoza thinks soon by way of the Atlantic, in- now that his writings have be- stead of retaining planned head- come the subject of a radio sym- quarters at Washington. . . . The posium. The 17th century Jewish Revisionists are experiencing a heretic and lens-maker of Hol- new birth of life, with the old- land was the topic of last week's line Zionists whispering tales of "Invitation to Learning." broad- their prowess at Washington. cast—with Bertrand Russell, who There are rumors that the Zion- has himself known excommuni- ists have seen Litvinoff and that cation, among the three analysts Churchill was interviewed during of the "Ethics". Strange how his stay in the U. S. A. The Re- Columbia Broadcasting finds it visionists, however, long ago end- OK to resurrect a Jewish radical ed the clays of "secret diplomacy," of 1667 but turns thumbs down which used to be frequent targets on some of our Jewish radicals of f the Zionists when they attacked 1942. Dr. Aronstam Reaches 70 Dr. Noah E. Aronstam will have the good wishes of the Jewish community and of the medical profession when he observes his 70th birthday on Feb. 18. An idealist, a good physician and an expert in the dermatological field, a good writer, a devoted Zionist, he has made his mark in the community. His literary con- tributions have been genuine gifts to Jew- ish culture. We congratttlate Dr. Aronstam on this occasion and wish him many more years of fruitful efforts in behalf of his profes- sion and his people's causes. 0 The National Jelilsh Monthl), MODERNIZING THE BIBLE "He lighted on that place and tarried there, because the sun had set." (Gen. 28:11) It'rith