-; • Welcome, Eliahu Epstein, Israel's Envoy to U. S. —Story, Page 2; Editorial, Page 4 Reviews of Latest Books 'by Jewish Authors THE JEWISH NEWS A Weekly Review • Prepare NOW For Allied Jewish Campaign To Assure of Jewish Events Continuous Aid for Israel Page 4 VOLUME 14--NO. 24 I 2114 Penobscot. Bldg.—Phone WO. 5-1155 Detroit 26, Michigan, February 25, 1949 The Autobiography of CHAIM WEIZMANN President of Israel By' Chaim Weizmann 34 igiapia• 22 $3.00 Per Year; Single Copy, 10c emend End to Strife, pening UJA Drives American Jewish communities, encouraged by the news from the Middle East of impending peace between Israel- and the Arab states, are demanding immediate commencement of United Jewish Appeal drives and the -end of internal- strife in efforts affecting the future of the Jewish State. Before the .end of the current week there is a possibility that Egypt and Israel may conclude a peace pact. President Truman has infornied a delegation of Jewish editors and publishers on Monday that he has good news from Egypt, Transjordania and Syria. In order to prevent a break- down of morale in _efforts for large-scale settlem cut of Jews in Israel,-many communities, are join- ing with President Chaim Weizmann of Israel, Israeli Finance Minister Eliezer Kaplan, former Governor of New York Herbert Lehman, Berl Locker, chairman of the Jewish Agency Execu- tive, and others in calling for speedy implementation of campaigns for the UJA's goal of $250,- 000,000 in 1949. Dr. Weizmann's message was addressed to Henry Morgenthau, whose return to leadership of the UJA together with Henry Montor has caused one of the most serious rifts in Jewish life. Dr. Weizmann expressed the "fervent hope that all forces in American Jewry devoted to the cause of . Israel" will rally to the support of Mr. Morgenthau "sinking all differences in a supreme united effort." While the resignations from the Jewish Agency of Dr. Abba Hillel Silver and Dr. Emanuel Neumann have met with regret in many quarters, the majority on UJA leaders, represen,tatives of most of the Zionist parties and a large element in the Zionist Organization of America are sup- porting Dr. Weizmann. and his associates in calling for a speedy end to strife and the immediate commencement of UJA campaigns throughout the land. The Committee of Zionist Contributors, on the other hand, has issued an appeal for "peace and unity and an end to the internecine conflict in- flicted on our movement by Henry. Montor and his associates," and Herman .Weisman, national UPA -chairmally Aas--cerinnett Mr. Locker for The American Association of EngliSh- the deciSion to recalf.Morgenthau and Montor to Jewish Newspapers, at its convention in UJA leadership. He called the action of the ma- Washington, Feb. 18-21, unanimously adopt- jority of the Jewish Agency Executive illegal. ed a resolution condemning the division in But Harold J. Goldenberg, chairman of the UPA Jewish ranks at a time when unity is so nec- national council, counteracted by warning that a essary in efforts for Israel's upbuilding. "handful of men guided by the dogma of 'rule or Editors and publishers from coast to coast ruin' are seeking to sabotage the destiny of the expressed a sense of shame over the airing Jewish people." of internal Jewish issues and personality con- flicts in the non-Jewish press and called for It is this sort of strife that li'as aroused indigna- immediate resumption. of unity and com- tion in Jewish ranks and is creating a demand that mencement of drives for the United Jewish 'internal conflicts be ended. The publishers' con- Appeal throughout the country. Jewish lead- vention in Washington on Sunday went so far as ers were severely criticized for jumping into to describe the coflict as the conversion of Jewish print with statements which tend to confuse life into "a public laundry" for the washing of the minds of contributors and which place dirty linens in the demand for a return to _unity. Jewry in a bad light in the eyes of their A decision reached by a meeting of 55 members neighbors. of the UPA national board on Monday to accept The editors and publishers also expressed concern over the fusing of a multiplicity of the decisions of the JewiSh Agency Executive and causes in single drives, placing all sorts of to call for immediate implementation -of UJA ef- movements on a par with the UJA, and urged forts under Mr. Morgenthau's leadership ft ex- the adoption of democratic policies in com- pected to aid in forcing peace in Jewish ranks. munity planning. , Earliest Days The townlet of my birth, Motol, stood on the banks of a little river in the great marsh . area which occupies much of the Province of Minsk in - White Russia; flat, open country, mournful and monotonous but, with its rivers, forests and lakes, not wholly. -unpicturesque. - Jews dived all about, in hundreds of towns and villages, as they had lived for many generation's, scattered islands in a Gentile ocean. Motol was in one of the darkest corners of the Pale of Settlement, • that prison-house ere- - ated by Czaristic Rds- sia for the largest part of its Jewish popula- tion. For centuries, al- ternations of bitter op- pression and compar- ative freedom — how comparative a free people would hardly understand — had deepened the con- sciousness of exile in these scattered com- munities. My family w a s_ among the well-to-do, and it may help -give some idea of the stand- ards of well-being in Motol when I say that our yearly budget was seldom more than five Oser Weizmann or six hundred roubles ($250). Out of it there were a dozen children to be clothed, shod and fed, and given a tolerably good education, considering our circumstances. On the other hand, we had our own hbuse—one-story, *with seven rooms and a kitchen, some acres of (Continued on Page 20) President Welcomes Publishers: On Mon- day morning, PRESIDENT HARRY S. TRUMAN welcomed a delegation from the 'American Association of English-Jewish Newspapers, under the chairmanship of PHILIP SLOMOVITZ, editor and publisher of The Detroit Jewish News and president of the Association, in his office at the White House. The occasion was the celetwation I f the 100th anniversary of the English-Jewish weekly press in America. Mr. Slomovitz presented the President with a resolution commending the Chief Executive for his aid to Israel and nominating him for an - honorary degree by the Leaders Criticized by Editors for Airing. of Issues Among Non-Jews . —International News Photo Hebrew University in Jerusalem, and with a reproduction of the first issue of the Asmonean, the first English-Jewish weekly published in America. In the photo, left to right: Willy Pels, Southern Israelite, Atlanta, Ga.; Albert Golomb, Jewish Outlook, Pittsburgh; Leo H. Frisch, American Jewish World, Min- neapolis; Philip Slomovitz; J. M. Feldman, The Sentinel, Chicago; President Truman; Dr. Alexander Brin, Jewish Advocate, Boston; Samuel Neusner, Jewish Ledger, Hart- ford, Conn.; Philip Klein, Jewish Times, Philadelphia; Eli Jacobs, Jewish Review, Buffalo. ,