Friday, July 14, 1944 THE JEWISH NEWS 'Harvest in the Desert" Page Thirteen eshiva College Awards Degree to Kin of Capt. Dreyfus Maurice Samuel Vi'rites Boob, About Palestine and Zionism Maurice Samuel is a name that needs no introduction . to Jewish audiences—whether it is through the printed or spoken word. . And yet, every time he is pre- sented to any group it is a new experience. He is a weaver of language the like of whom there are very few. He is brilliant not only as writer, but also as speak- er and translator. The language into which he put certain works originally written in Yiddish made them .best sellers. Now we have another book by Samuel — "Harvest in the Desert." It is a fascinating story of Palestine and _the force which made Eretz Israel grow—Zion- ism. these are the heroes of a great movement which introduces HARVEST into the desert. The JNF, Hebrew, Etc. Among the most interesting chapters in the book are those describing the Jewish National Fund, the revival of Hebrew and the workings of the Halukah method of distributing charity— a policy that was possible only in pre-Zionist Palestine. Of course, Mr. -Samuel does not forget the experiences of the first World War, the Balfour Declaration, the endorsement of the Zionist • cause by the U. S., the new WaVes of immigration which made posSible the miracu- lous triumph of Eretz Israel. There is an EXPOSE of Brit- Sponsored by Hillel It is fortunate that this book ish responsibility for the riots was issued by the Jewish Publi- of 1929—a record which should cation Society of America and make the people of England that the Bnai Brith Hillel Foun- ashamed of those whom they dation has undertaken to push had designated to administer the it among its members. It means affairs • of Palestine. • that a circulation of several An All-Inclusive Book thousand is guaranteed for this Nothing relevant to Palestine great work at the outset. But and Zionism is left out of Sam- those who get it—as JPS or uel's -"Harvest in the Desert." Hillel members—owe a duty to Maurice Samuel, who last year spread it, to urge its use by wrote the book for which he schools and in homes which need enlightenment on the Jewish liberation movement. Samuel's "Harvest in the Des- ert" reads like a beautiful poem, yet it is straight narrative. It is a story of Palestine that opens with the background—the ear- liest history of "The Haunted Land," the name for the first chapter; it leads up to "The Descendants of the Ghosts," the follow-up chapter; goes through the decades of the "Waves"— as he calls the various "Aliyoth" or immigration movements of Jews to Palestine; and reaches- the climax not with the "White Paper and Black Days" but with MAURICE SAMUEL the Jordan 'Valley Authority was awarded the Anisfield Prize project of Dr. Walter C. Lowder- . —"The World of Sholom Alei- milk. - chem"—has written a brilliant The Road to the Return The reader will gather at once work and the Jewish Publica- that while Mr. Samuel recog- tion Society, which offers it as nizes the tragedy of fighting part of the membership arrange- against White Paper restrictions ment, has rendered the English —his entire book is replete with readers a great service by pre- references to the struggles our clueing it. This service should pioneers had to endure before encourage those not now mem- they made Palestine a rose-blos- bers of the society to write to soming Jewish territory — he Maurice Jacobs, executive vice- knows and desires to pass his president, 225 S. 15th St., Phila- knowledge on to the reader that delphia, Pa., and enroll now so the only people that is able to that • they may take advantage build Palestine—OUR people— of the offer of Samuel's book and will, as it must, overcome all the other - excellent publications obstacles in the path of the of the society. —P. S. Return. The heroes of the great Zion- Gifts Received for ist reconstruction movement pass JWB-USO Projects in review in "Harvest in t h e Donors to the USO-JWB proj- Desert." Chankin, Herzl, Weiz- ects include the following: mann, Ussishkin; the men and Food packages were sent to women pioneers who have built Fort Brady by Bnai Brith Pisgah. and are building; the children Auxiliary. of Zion who are creating new The food diviSion received a glory for the Jewish people- generous gift from Pioneer Worn- en's Organization. Max• Rosner provided bread for the week. Al Bnai Brith- Explains Koffman, J. Malamud, Bob Sch- Stand on Conference wartz, Dave Applebaum and WASHINGTON (JPS) — Re- Harry Duchman continuted ice plying to "some 'persons (who) cream and ices for the socials at have asked how Bnai Brith can the Jewish Center USO Lounge. Home Relief and Hadassah take no stand one way or the other • on a Jewish Common- hostesses served at the Down- wealth, and yet indorse full par- town USO. Contributions to the Hawaiian ticipation in the (American Jew- ish) Conference, which is on Serv-a-Camp project were re- record as favoring and working ceived from -Infants Service for the creation of such a Com- -Group and Detroit Lodge 55 K. monwealth," an editorial in The of P. National Jewish Monthly, official Contributions to _ the socials at organ of Bnai Brith, explains: Great Lakes Club were sent by "The answer is that these are Carolyn Friendship Club and He- two completely different matters. brew Ladies' Aid.- The first involves the official Hebrew Ladies' Aid and De- position of the organization, as troit Bnai Brith Lodge Auxiliary distinguished from its members contributed to the Sunday break- as individuals, upon an ideologi- fasts at the Jewish Center USO cal question or concept; the sec- Lounge. ond involves participation by the organization in a common pro- Rep. Fish Is Asked gram of action. To Withdraw Candidacy "We have no creedal prere- NEWBITR,GH, N. Y. (JPS) — quisites. A member may be Rep. Hamilton Fish (R., N. Y.), - Orthodox, • Conservative, or Re- mentioned in John Roy Carlson's form. He may be pro-Jewish "Undercover" and repudiated by Commonwealth, or he may be Gov. Dewey in 1942, was asked interested in the rebuilding of to withdraw as a candidate for Palestine on a different basis. He re-election in order to avoid "em- is privileged to think and act as barrassing" Gov. Dewey's presi- he chooses. We ask only- his dential" campaign. The request solemn and sacred pledge of- was made by Republican Party honor to work for the best in- backers of August Bennet whom terests of his country and his Fish defeated in the 29th Con- people." igressional district primaries. At -joint commencement exercises of Yeshiva College, the only college of liberal arts and science in the U. S. conducted under Jewish auspices, and the Teachers Institute, an honorary degree was conferred upon Prof. Jacques Hedamard, interna- tionally renowned mathematician and relative of Our Film Folk By HELEN ZIGMOND (Copyright, 1944, Jewish Telegraphic Agency) The "Benjamin Warner," a new liberty ship will soon glide off the slips. Its name memorial:- izes the father of the Warner brothers—Harry, Jack and Al- bert. * * * Eddie Cantor was ' relected president of the Jewish Theatri- cal Guild the other day . . . with. Ted Lewis filling a vice- prexy chair . . . Joe Schenck, recollecting the days when he hired Cantor to play the People's Vaudeville circuit—four theaters —at $20 for each three days. "Yes," admitted Eddie, "and re- member how you promised me a return engagement if I changed the act?" "Uh; huh," recalled Joe. "Well," confessed Eddie, "all I did was change a few words— did . the same routine—and you said the second act was better than the first. * 5* * - Purpose of Winchell's trip to the -cinema coast is to confer on • a series of historical shorts which he wants to write and narrate. *. * At last Weber and Fields will be glorifilmed. Their story has been an embryonic idea for a long time . . . will crystallize in "Weber and Fields Music Hall." * * * It seems that for years the Loews of Loew's Theatres, Inc. have been trying to educate the public to pronounce the name correctly. Ad campaigns, press campaigns—all to no avail. Even some of the company's -em- ployes continue to articulate. it "Lowie's.". Slogans were invent- ed—"See Loew's for good shows" . . . "Loew is the high in entertainment . . • "Loew and behold!" No results. Topper oc- curred after days of a. strenuous drive during which all ads were captioned, "Lo! Lo! Lo!" A radio announcer blared, "See such and such picture at Lowie's State Theatre!" A Loew is me! * * Things we can do without: In- ability to clear the foreign copy- rights prevented the use of the "Horst Wessel" song in "The Hitler Gang." N. Y. Court Returns Citizenship to Bundist NEW YORK (JPS) — John A. Rossler, German-born resident of Syracuse, denaturalized for his membership • in t h e German American Bund, has been rein- stated to citizenship by - the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals , which ruled that patriotism -"is , not a condition of naturalization any more than it is of continued na- tive citizenship." The ruling sets a precedent for the review of several thousand other, cases of denaturalized Bundists. • Jew New Commissioner of Housing in N. Y. State ALBANY, N. Y. (JPS)—Her- man T. Stichman of New York City was appointed State Com- missioner of HouSing by Gov. Dewey. the late Capt. Alfred Dreyfus. Left to right: Dr, Moses L. Isaacs, dean of Yeshiva College; Prof. Hedamard, Dr. Samuel Belkin, president of Yeshiva and Yeshiva College; the Hon. Samuel Levy, chairman of the board of director, and Dr. Pinkhos Churgin, dean of Teachers Institute. Friedman Nominated Judge William Friedman of the Wayne County Circuit, who was appointed to succeed the late Judge Harry B. Keidan in September, 1943, led the non- partisan ticket at the Primaries on Tuesday. His opponent on Nov. 7 will be Frank Ferguson. Judge Friedman's success at the polls in his first experience as a vote-getter has gratified members of the Bar Association Who endorsed him in a 7-to-1 vote; the Citizens League, all the Detroit newspapers who endorsed him, the CIO and AFL. In fact, Judge Friedman had the almost- unanimous support of all Detroit elements. In first returns, as this issue of The Jewish News goes to press, Joseph H. Cantor led the Mourn- bent, Charles Blondy, for the nomination to the State Senate in the 5th District. netroit Knut Harnsun Joins Jew-Baiting Drive STOCKHOLM (JPS) — Knut Hamsun, Norway's 'leading nov- elist and holder of the Nobel Prize • for Literature, who has been identified with the Quisling movement for a number of years, has now openly joined the cam- paign of Jew-baiting instigated by the Nazis. The writer, always accompanied by a body guard to frustrate patriots' attempts on his life, addressed' a crew of a Ger- man submarine in Oslo and ex- horted them to "fight against Jewish bolshevism." New. Sulfa Cure for Disease CAMBRIDGE (JPS) — A re- port by Drs. David Weinman and Robert Berne of the • Harvard Schools of Medicine and Public Health offers hope that sulfapyr- idine, a new sulfa drug, may be a cure for the almost always fatal disease of toxoplasmosis (a disease similar to spotted fever), Refugee in Army 7' Months, Wins Commission In U. S. Since 1940, Now , Officer in the Army Medical Corps Lt. Roman Kowalek became an officer in the Army Medical Corps the hard way. After pass- ing his medical exams he might have waited to be commissioned before signing up with Uncle Sam. Instead he entered the army as a private. He was a private for more than seven months before he received his citizenship papers and Was subsequently commissioned an officer. Lt. Kowalek, now 31, was born in Poland. He received his M. D. from the Medical School of the University of Vienna in 1938 and came here via England two years later. Before passing the Massachu- setts State Medical Board ex- aminations in 1943 he was af- filiated Wit h the Lutheran Hospital in Cleveland and the University Hospital in Little Rock. He joined the army in 1943. Sophie Tucker started her own Fifth War Loan Campaign days before it opened offic;ally- she crooned to the tune of $900,- 000 •worth of Bonds at the club where she yodels nightly.. * * Jack Benny . . . a green rookie from vaudeville . . . became a film actor in 1929. First pix were "Holywood Revue of 1929" and "The Road Show." MICHIGAN'S LARGEST FLORSHEIM. DEALER RCISHIM 2231-35 Woodward Next fo Fox Theatre Open Evenings REMEMBER THE DESTRUCTION BY RE-BUILDING ! A Call to the Synagogues to Mobilize for the Jewish National Fund on Tisha blAb This h the time for all synagogues to arrange for speakers and appeals on Tisha b'Ab, which this year occurs on Sunday, July 30 Make arrangements NOW for yoar Tisha &Al) appeals. by calling , DANIEL TEMICH1N TO. 8-0730 IRVING W. SCHLUSSEL CH. 7790 TO. 7-8000 RABBI JOSHUA S. SPERKA of the office of the JEWISH NATIONAL FUND 11608 DEXTER TO. 8-8658