friday, - Argus* 7, 1942 THE JEWISH NEWS Page Eleven Bert "Yank" Levy Teachgs Toughness Born of Experience Ford Hopes Peace Our Film Folk Will Come for All In Lighter Vein By HELEN ZIGMOND Races and Creeds The Week's Best Stories Adventurous Jewish Guer- rilla Fighter Instructs Squads of U. S. Troops Auto Magnate Gives Views PRICE: TWO OY-OYS of Postwar Period on David was accepted—and his 79th Birthday first steps were in the direction By PAUL B. GREENE "The life of a guerrilla fighter s exhausting—physically, men- ally and nervously — lonely, )erilous, hard in every way. The fuerrilla must sometimes work n isolation, must lurk in the ,hadows and take terrifying • sks in broad daylight." That's how Bert "Yank" Levy, world's foremost expert on guer- • lla fighting, defines his craft, a :kill which has saved Yugo- .lavia for the United Nations- mly because of the 250,000 train- rd, savage guerrilla warriors; a rade in war which has made the lussian guerrillas the most eared battalions in the heroic led Army; a type of warfare hich has made possible resist- tnce to the Nazis in such small ands as Greece and Norway, in ,uch outposts as Crete and Java. The man who is teaching Am- nicans how to battle the Axis ' with as few weapons as possible, ith as many ingenious devices the human brain can create, a 120-pound, black haired, ustached Jew, born in Hamil- on, Ontario, in 1897. CHOOLED IN HARD KNOCKS , But Yank Levy's active life- eally began in 1916, when he of a job as a stoker in the erchant service. Before that to he just grew up in Cleve- and and attended public school nd a couple of years' worth of ight high school. "My real •ucation." he declares after the ashion of many self-made men, was in the school of hard • ocks. After his sailoring—to hich he later returned—Yank ught in Palestine and Trans- rdan during the First World as. Not satisfied with that bit f soldiering, Yank took part in few revolutions down Mexico ay, and then did some gun- tinning in Nicaragua. In 1937 e decided to join up with the •yalists in Spain—the first men ho fought Hitler in Europe— d quickly became an officer the machine-gun company of e British Battalion. He was ptured by Franco's troops and nt six months in Fascist pris- -ns. Through with "foreign" wars, vy returned to Great Britain nd became an instructor of the itish Home Guards. For more an 15 months he talked and ed about guerrilla fighting. e is proud of the 2.000,000 ome Guards in Great Britain. e says they will help turn the de if the Germans should ever ecide to invade England. S "GUERRILLA" WARFARE For those to whom guerrilla rfare is new, unknown and terious, a perusal of "Guer- a Warfare," Levy's opus on hat some bright adjective- 'tten phrase-maker has term- "the art of unmodified mur- r," is in order. In this slim -olume Levy pours out his guts. it he includes all the know- •ge he has picked up of guer . - a warfare. He tells about uerrilla heroes from the days 'f William The Conqueror to the oment when the Russian' goer- as began to torture and halt Nazis. It is with consider- `,ble military skill that he ex- lair's the fighting theories of wrence of Arabia, one of the . p-notch guerrilla experts, of c,iddell Hart and of many more •uerrilla men. That Levy is ex- mely. well-read is indicated by ' liberal references to books aling with his particular phase f war. He turns to Ernest Hem- ay's "For Whom the Bell •lls" to point out guerrilla meth- in fighting north of Madrid; e . refers to Edgar Snow's orched Earth" to stress Chi- ese guerrilla methods; E. O'Mal- y's "Army Without Banners" Denis Reitz' "Commando" re other volumes to which Levy udes. Yank Levy lays doiwn the law Henry Ford, once responsible for "The International Jew," which he has since repudiated vigorously, hopes the postwar period will mean peace and se- curity for "all races and creeds." He reiterated this view to an Associated Press correspondent on his 79th birthday. "Unless something of that kind comes out of the present war this tragic human slaughter will have been only a dress rehearsal for another and more terrible conflict as soon as another gen- of his neighborhood jeweler, to buy an engagement ring. He looked at a few, picked one out and asked the price. "This one is exactly one hund- red dollars,' he was told. David grunted with an "Oy- oy." The jeweler did not com- ment. But when David fingered a few more and then asked the price of another ring, the jeweler informed him: "Two oy-oys." * • • eration can be duped by the THE ARAB AND HIS RUGS The story is told about the small group of individuals who famous Jewish sculptor, Jo precipitate wars," Ford said. Davidson, that when he was in Cairo he was approached by an Arab who offered several rugs for sale. Davidson refused to buy. "They are good, I made them "The Plow that Broke the myself, and They are cheap," the Plains," a film epic of the spolia- Arab told him. "Go away, they smell," the tion of the great American plains. will be featured Monday even- sculptor replied. Whereupon the Arab, indicat- ing, Aug. 10, at the Jewish Com- munity Center, on the weekly ing anger and objecting to what Monday evening movie program. appeared to be an insult to him. The movies are presented, weath- laid the rugs on the ground, er permitting, in the outdoor stretched himself to his full courtyard of the Center, Wood- height, and said: ward at Holbrook. "Sir. these rugs do not smell. The secondary documentary It is I." Movie of American Plains to Be Shown sound film to be shown the same evening is "Valley Town," a film about technological unemploy- ment, with a musical background * * FAMILY VARIATIONS Mrs. Selby was introduced to Mrs. Levy at the bridge table. by Marc Blitzstein,. Mrs. Levy: "Are you related Monday evening's program will to the Selbys of Sydney?" be the seventh presentation of Mrs. Selby: "No. The Syd- documentary sound films at the ney Selbys are Silberbergs, Center. The final showing will be while we were Silversteins." held Aug. 17. * * * Gerard Is Elected Advisory Chairman Of Anti-Nazi League Former Ambassador to Ger- many James W. Gerard has been elected honorary president and chairman of the advisory board of the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League. Mr. Gerard, together with the late Samuel Untermyer, was one of the original founders of the League in 1933. Rabbi Leon Fram of Temple Israel was re-elected a vice-presi- dent. for guerrilla warriors: "Know your own territory, and know it both by day and by night." He then goes on to tell of the value of knowing each ridge, every factory, every landmark, all the strong buildings, the blind sides of edifices. HIS "DO'S" AND "DON'T'S" Yank has coined phrases which tellingly describe the job and difficulties of guerrillas. "Invis- ibility is the guerrilla's fortress. The only one he can hope for . . A guerrilla . . must be a dim but sinister shadow, a mosquito in a darkened tent that stings first here, then there, his victims unable to trap him." These turns of phrase reveal that Levy can write as well as lecture, as well as fight. CARDOZO'S CANDOR Meeting Justice Cardozo. short- ly after the latter's elevation to the Supreme Court, a friend said: "It is a great joy to every one that the appointment went to a man of your intelligence and honesty." Justice Cardozo bowed and said quietly: "I am a great deal surer of the second man than I am of the first." THE SULTAN AND THE MONKEY Many centuries ago there rul- ed in Turkey a Sultan who own- wind. Watch the animals in the fields, so that you may get hints as to the `,environment . Carry silent equii,ment. Watch land- scapes carefully. Rest whenever possible. Eat whenever you can. Metal Caps from S'chmidt's %Jeer Bottles ARE 60/NG i-/NTO 31 e it 4 a I S DON'T BLAME HIM We're all out TO WIN THE WAR! Uncle Sam wants some of our beer caps, so when you cannot buy oil the bottles of SCHMIDT'S you'd like to have, remem- ber your dealer is on rations too. sat/doors, the low- ' calorie natural brew, in- vites you to try a gloss of SCHMIDT'S draft beer, its delicious and refreshing — there's plenty of it. SAMSON'S POULTRY MARKET We Specialize in Supplying Kosher Meats for Weddings. Banquets, Etc. 8624 TWELFTH ST. TR. 2-5252 Even if you have eaten an hour CAROL'S FLOWER SHOP ago, eat—for you may not get "SAY IT WITH FLOWERS" another chance to eat for days. Flowers For All Occasions That's what Yank Levy teach- 12131 Twelfth Street, es willing men of the United Na- Corner Richton tions. Ben Stocker, Prop. (Copyright 1942 by Independent TO. 6-9864 WE DELIVER Jewish Press Service, Inc.) the love and tolerance of her play. That Irving Berlin's "Easter (Copyright, 1942, Jewish Telegraphic Parade" sold 30,000,000 copies? Agency, Inc.) Makes its first film appearance in "Holiday Inn." HOLLYWOOD — While poli- That Gertrude Niessen, singer, ticians wrangle in Congress and was born on the "high C's''? Parliament, our hitherto silent Charlie gave voice to the wish of thousands of thinking citizens: A second front—NOW! Chaplin spoke over an NBC wire from Hollywood to a rally in Madison Square Garden, New York. "Rus- sia is fighting with her back to the wall," he pleaded, "and that wall is the Allies' strongest de- fense. We cannot afford to lose Russia . . . What are we waiting for when she is in so desperate a plight? . . ." Coincidentally Elmer Davis' recently-issued pamphlet describes the people of Nazi-occupied countries as ready to welcome and expedite a sec- ond front wherever opened. Hollywood producers! Here's your chance of a life-time! Let's have the most colossal, stupend- • ous, fabulous film ever, depict- V ing the gargantuan movement of millions of B.E.F. and A.E.F. crossing the Channel to Norway, Holland, Belgium, Denmark, France. An invincible armada! Visionary? Perhaps . . . but a goal to strive for. An irresistible morale-builder. And it conceiv- ably would serve a second pur- pose—inoculate the Nazis with some of their own terror germs which they attempted to spread with "Sieg im Westen" and oth- ers of that bloody ilk. * A little Russian boy becomes the hit tune of American patriot- ism—Irving Berlin is the verse and chorus of columnists these days. He is pouring his life's breath into "This Is the Army" . .. and reaping millions for the Army Reief Fund. Besides the New York run, it will have a road tour, a broadcast deal cal- culated to net $10.000 a week, a movie version, and even a Decca album of the tunes. Ber- lin's goal is $10,000,000 for the fund! Jack and Harry Warner de- serve a hit of eulogizing. Their purchase price of a quarter mil- li.pn was considered magnani mous . . then further increased it by agreeing to split the profits But later reversed their decision . . . they would take NO profits if Your Beer Dealer from the film. * • • Runs Short ©f Lauding Berlin, Alexander Woollcott says, "He can neither read music nor transcribe it— ides in Bottles he can only give birth to it." * * ed a remarkable monkey. The beast could do everything but Cineman: William Lasky, Jes- talk. One day the Sultan called se's youngest, becomes an induc- the heads of all religions before tee this month. That makes two him and commanded them to o.: Lasky's sons in khaki. Garson teach his monkey to talk. He Kanin is expected to soon leave reminded the men of the mir- the OEM where he has been su- acles they claimed for their sep- pervising training films. and go arate religions, and ordered them back to the Army. This week to perform one on his monkey it's Arthur Hornblow and Bub- and make him talk. The pen- hies Schinasi. Story of the eight alty for failure was to be death. Nazi saboteurs is already knead- The various church heads were ed into Sammy Goldwyn's film brought forward and one by one dough. Emil Ludwig wrote the they failed and were decapitated. original and the scenario for At last it was the turn of the Seymour Nebenzahl's production, "The Hangman." chief rabbi. With a cheerful smile he declared that he could perform the miracle very easily, Did-you-knotes: That Hitler mentioned Anne but only upon one condition, five years in which to perform his Nichols' "Abie's Irish Rose" in miracle. The overjoyed Sultan his "Mein Kampf"? She treasures readily agreed. Friends thereup- on asked the rabbi how he in- "Coolest Spot in Michigan" tended to carry out his promise to the Sultan. "Listen," he smiled. "five years RESORT is a long time. During that North Shore Drive time many things can happen. South Haven, Michigan The Sultan can die, or I can die, or the monkey can die!" He offers, in his book, prosaic, invaluable advice. You must not forget to use the leaves of trees; remember not to carry anything that reflects light. Learn how to walk so that you always lift your feet clear off the ground. Don't tip-toe; don't slide your feet along the ground. 1. MARGOLIS The side-crawl is useful; so is Meating Detroit for Century the belly-crawl. Move with the KOSHER MEAT & his venomous words as proof of Complete Vacation Accommodations You need not drive your own auto. Our bus and private cars available at all hours. We meet our guests at nearest bus and train depots. • Write For Illustrated Folder or Phone Ruby Samson NO. 0576 3840 Elmhurst Detroit or F. Sampson, Prop. South Haven, Michigan NO SUGAR OR GLUCOSE ADDED sta-sosow IMICUMNI VS. MOM