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DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle
September
Detroit Jewish Chronicle
4 1942
not permit men to practice who are not
citizens, nobody could seriously corn-
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
plain, for the license is but for a year,
Published Weekly by Jewish Chronicle Publishing Co., Inc
renewable if the war continues and ex-
JACOB H. SCHAKNE
President
JACOB MARGOLIS
piling six months after the war is over.
Publisher-Editor
MAURICE M. SAFIR....Advertising Manager
Then too, the refugee physician must sat-
by AL SEGAL
isfy the Board of Licensure that, he is a
Stowe' Offices and Publication
1114, 525 Woodward Arc
competent,
qualified
practitioner.
Telephone: CAdillac 1040
Cable Address: Chronicle
iubscription in Advance
This latter requirement is of great im-
$3.00 Per Year
portance
because the medical profession
To insure publication, all correspondence and news matter
in America has sought to give to the
must reach this office by Tuesday evening of each week.
public the best medical care possible and
When mailing notices, kindly use one side of paper only.
it should
ot, except in case of grave
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle invites correspondence on sub-
ve
HIS IS the last week of the credits and debits and
loch of interest to the Jewish people, but disclaims respon• emergency,
ergenc y, n allow the standards to
old year and Mr. Segal always balance in his favor, if strik e z
sibility for an endorsement of views expressed by its writers.
lowered.
is sorry to see an old year go, Mr. Segal was deep 41 he can.
whether it is a year of the con- the big chair in his livin , ,wn i n
The first concern of the Board of loon era or a year of the Jewish His pipe was
g roon ,.
Entered as Second-class matter March 3, 1916, at the Post.
giving out cloud s
office at Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Licensure must be the public welfare and
calendar. A departing year al-
hlsoi o s
I ill is :itt.ni e f e,
in this instance the public welfare can ways horribly reminds him that had come into the u room
Sabbath Reading& of the Law
ten
he
hasn't
so
many
years
left.
h
i
nim
"if
e
o arniu th d t
be best served by utilizing all available
Pentateuehal Portion—Isaiah 55 :6-56 :8
The great part of his time is through many years, that he
medical
ability
without
discriminating
Prophetical Portion—Deut. 29 :9-31 :30.
It's like coming to the last shouldn't snake all
ash tray of
against the refugee but at the same time gone.
p page
o f a story
•
story book that has the rug . . . "I always hav
e to
SEPTEMBER 4, 1942ELUL 22, 5702 safeguarding the rights of the American been rather interesting all the be sweeping after you."
physician.
way. There are about 25 pages
He shrugged this interruption
So many physicians are needed for the left and pretty soon Mr. Segal off. He could tolerate no intru-
The Colonial Problem
must
regretfully
lay
the
book
sion
when he was balancing M
armed forces that a serious shortage of down.
s
hooks.
On the credit side, Mr.
The non violent, non cooperative move- medical service may be an actual condi-
He thumbs the pages back- Segal was thinking that he had
ment in India focuses attention upon the tion and not a theory before long. Action ward. So many pretty pictures in tried at least to be a gentleman
whole problem of Colonial peoples at a should be taken by boards everywhere to the old book. All of them, in the year that was passing.
most inopportune time for the United Na- facilitate the admission of refugee physi- strangely, had to do with Mr. He had always felt distressed
Segal's own life: Mr. Segal fall- by the name-calling in the con-
tions. clans to practice.
ing in love. (This picture shows troversies in Israel •
The people of India, Burma, and Malay
If no enabling legislation is needed to him under a bower of roses with recriminations, the hateful
the bitter
back.
are motivated by an age-old desire for authorize the boards of various states they butterflies.) Mr. Segal getting biting. He himself had called n
independence and consequently do not could well follow the provisions of the married. (A chorus of nightin- one a name in any of his writ- o
and perhaps cannot have the same view Randolf law, and where enabling legisla- gales is singing the nuptials in ings in the year, he had given
of the matter as those who believe that tion is needed the board should encourage this picture.) Mr. Segal wheeling out no hitter utterance, had been
his first-born child in the go- angry with no one except the
the settlement and solution should wait and promote the passage of such laws. cart. (No more romance in this enemies of mankind, had
until the end of the war. These Colonial It will solve a difficult problem and will picture in which Mr. Segal's back written a word in malice. never
is seen bend ing under the yeah-
peoples no doubt feel that it is regrettable be helpful to all.
. Ile thought this was rather to
ties of human existence.)
and unfortunate that the Japanese have
his credit. I seem, he thought,
So it goes. Here is Mr. Segal to have been a gentleman. li e
occupied their countries or may occupy
discovering the first gray hair had never insolently kicked in
them. They want to be free from all Nazis Are Warned
in his bead one morning when the pants, as if to make them
Colonial powers and will not accept the
he is shaving. Mr. Segal linger- inferior outcasts, those who did
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt ing much longer in bed than he not agree with him in the debat-
status of inferiors no matter what the accomplished two things when he warned used to do in the mornings when nig
that is Israel. He did
color of the skin of the masters may be. the Nazis that they would be punished he was young. Mr. Segal looking t riot society
look disdainfully down his
One definite fact emerges from all that for the atrocities they have committed and at h's first grandchild and being nose at people who could not go
has happened in Asia. That undeniable may commit against the helpless people allowed to hold her in his arms along with him on his own way
and spending hours following her of thinking.
fact is that the deep rooted dissatisfac- of the occupied countries.
around. Now it's springtime for
He had not imitated those who
tion of the native populations can no
The the
first
thing
accomplished
to him again and the rose-bower is stand in prominent places of Is-
longer be dismissed as a superficial mani- raise
spirit
of it the
people of the was
con-
in bloom again and the butterflies reel handing down opinions with
festation of discontent of a few educated
flutter in and out.
such a pretense of authority as
tittered
areas.
These
people
know
now
natives. It is a popular dissatisfaction and that the nation that has no territorial
The season has come to turn God, in His wisdom and His
has affected all classes and sects. It means ambitions will see that just punishment another page. Mr. Segal, who is grace, would nit assume. These
a person well versed in the facts always had given Mr. Segal a
that the peoples feel that they are cap- is meted out to these barbaric and fero- of life, knows already how the pain and he was resolved never to
able of self rule and if they continue to cious men who have ruled their unhappy story will end in time. There be like them.
remain part of the British Commonwealth country since its occupation.
Well he knew that to have a
will be a neat funeral without
of Nations they should have the same
any tears, he hopes. There is printed page or a platform gives
To raise the spirit and maintain the nothing to cry about for one who a man's words no special import-
status as the white Commonwealths.
morale of a people of an unoccupied had lived long enough and had ance. He is just another man
with opinions to which he k
The day of the color bar and the white country is a great achievement but it will a fairly good time of it.
privleged to give utterance in a
I f I
man's burden seems on the way out. perhaps achieve less than the assurance
UT THESE intimacies of Mr. public place.
Modern technology is being and can be given to the people of Germany that just
I 1 I
Segal's personal life have
applied everywhere, and men can be tech- punishment will be according to orderly
I , [. THIS caused him to feel
nothing to do with the subject
nically trained despite color, race or legal processes.
/ he may have been somewhat
of this week's column. I shouldn't4.
former backward industrial or technologi-
have
allowed
them
to
intrude
on
There
are
many
of
our
()I a gentleman during the year
cal condition.
ople who do the attention of the readers but that
was about to pass. A gen-
not believe in undermining
pe the morale for the fact that when a transi- denim], he thought, is one who
Those who have this point of view point and the working efficiency of the German tion
occurs in the calendar it is is humble in opinion and kindly
to the transformation of Japan from a people by means of assurrances; that
excusable for a man to be in a tolerant of people who refuse to
i
feudal to a highly industrial country in only those who are guilty of atrocities; memorial mood. agree with him. A gentleman is
75 years, despite the handicaps of lack of and only those who are responsible for
so vulgar as to believe he
Mr. Segal, mindful of the old never
•
natural resources, over-population and
year going and a new one coming t is the exclusive possessor of the
the
aggressions
against
innocent
peoples
very limited tillable land.
in, was in deep meditation, chalk- .. nth. To make a .1 s' show of exclu-
will be assumption
punished. They
on the
The Japanese idea of a co-prosperity taken
that a go
whole
p mis- ing up a mental accounting of sive poesession o f toe truth in
sphere is j
people himself. It is proper at the end arrogance as obnoxious as the
,just as unacceptable and unten- can be guilty and consequently ll Ger- of a year for a man to figure the
(Continued on Page 9)
able as the Nazi theory of a new order mans should be punished. That is a exactly
for Europe, based upon Aryan race super- what
Joseph Goebbels wants them to be-
iority. Both can be dismissed as National
lieve. But if once they were persuaded
PALESTINE JEWISH SOLDIERS HERE ON SECRET MISSION;
Megalomania.
that only the Nazis would he held respons-
DESCRIBE U. P. A. AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
The peace conference must deal with ible and would be punished under legal
the whole problem and must recognize procedures and processes, their fears of
the fact that these peoples are determined what might happen to them would be
to be citizens. The status of Colonials, dissipated and they would no longer be
minorities, mandatories belongs to a pre-
the victims of fear so persistently inspired
technological age.
by the propaganda ministry.
Our president says that it is the sober
Refugee Doctors
judgment of mankind that the punish-
ments should be according to law. And
Representative Jennings Randolf of those who fear that they will not be pun-
West Virginia, chairman of the House Dis- ished should bear in mind that the wit-
trict Committee, has introduced a bill nesses will be so numerous, and their evi-
which would allow refugee doctors to dente so overwhelming that not a guilty
practice in the District of Columbia with- one may hope to escape. What is even
out taking the usual examinations, for the more to the point will be the fact that
duration of the war. those witnesses will know that they can
There is no good reason why a bill testify to the brutal facts without fear of
such as this should not be enacted into reprisals by those who were their masters
law, and in the event it is then the vexa- during the days of occupation.
tious problem of refugee doctors should
It is the considered opinion of the his-
be near a solution.
torians of the last war, that the defeat
This bill has been approved by the Dis- of the Kaiser was caused by the disinte-
Four Palestine Jewish soldiers, members of the Pa leqine Bull•. I.
trict of Columbia Medical Society and gration of the home front. When the
rived in the United Stales on an undisclosed military mission.
the
authorizes the Board of Licensure to issue workers became so weary, hopeless and
headquarters of the United Palestine Appeal, the men described th.
one-year permits, if in the opinion of the disillusioned that they no longer believed
development Of the U.P..A..built agricultural settlements in the
homeland in which they had been farmers before the 1111Ibre: , k 1/ ► tht
board, the refugee physician has adequate victory possible they ceased to produce
war. The Jewish soldiers said that food production was being great', in
creased in the Palestine settlements
medical training. sufficient quantities of munitions, with the
.1,1-
to supply the allied iir iii l
tioned
It has been a hardship upon the refit- consequence that the armed forces could
1011
in the Middle East. Shown in the photo pointing out the b
of
the
colonies
Irons stliicli they came are, from left to right:
gee physician who has had many years of no longer carry on.
Bonah of the colony of Shaer Ha plan in the Jordan Valley: Sgt. snui
practice and is qualified and competent
It is our hope that the message of Preai-
Leichter of Jerusalem; Pst. Samuel
Schwarz of Tel Aviv and PSI. I•a.le
but who was not a citizen of the United dent Roosevelt will be spread
Puttermilk of Ein liahoresh. Funds for the United Palestine 1pp• , 1 1. •
States. if a bill such as that intro- all the Axis countries so that throughout
all may
defense and upbuilding program in Palestine are provided through the
United Jewish Appeal for Refugees, (herseas Needs and Palestine in
duced in Congress should be passed by know what they may expect when peace which
the U.P.A.
is represented together with the Joint Distribut 'On COM.
the legislatures of those states that do finally comes.
mittee and National Refugee Service.
PLAIN TALK
•
"This Aeeountant"
T
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dt
C. mei