Prosectaing Vs Like Communists THE JEWISH NEWS Incorporating the Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with issue of July 20, 1951 Member Ameritan Association of English-Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Association, - Ni.tional Editorial Association Seven Mile Road, Detroit 35, Meta., VE. 13-9304 Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co 17100 West Subscription $4 a year. Foreign $5. I Entered as second class matter Aug. O. 1942, at Post Office, Detroit, Mich., under Act of March 3, 1879 FRANK. SIMONS SIDNEY SHMARAK PHILIP SLOMOVITZ City- Editor Advertising Manager Editor and Publisher January 14, 1955 Page Four VOL. XXVI. NO 19 Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the twenty-first clay of Tebet, 5715, the following Scriptural selections will be • • read in our synttOoques: Es. 1.:1-6:1. , Prophetical portion, Is 27:5-28A 29:22, 29. Pentateuchal portion, - • • Licht ae41shea, Friday,:Jan. 14, 5:02 13._111. "` ti Budgeting and the Multiple Drives' Problem When the annual pre-campaign IcTudget- ing conference is held on Jan. 23, in behalf of the Allied Jewish Campaign of the Jewish Welfare Federation, the basic facts will be presented to our community regarding the status of the • past year's income, the availa- bility of funds and the prospects for the ap- proaching 1955 campaign. Participants in the conference will learn that reductions had to be made in alloca- tions to a number • of national movenients" which benefit from our campaigns. It was Inevitable and unavoidable — due to a drop in income from contributions in the last drive. The only way of assuring undim- inished distribution of funds is by increasing incomes—increases for local causes becoming, vitally necessary in view Of the greater de- mands for our expanded educational pro- grams, for the enlargement of health and care-for-the aged facilities and for the ex= panding Jewish Center program. ._• This, in turn, raises anew the serious question of the multiplicity of drives and of an overlapping of communal activities. The following Jewish Telegraphic Agency report from Milwaukee emphasizes the problem: , "The Milwaukee Jewish Welfare Fund has established, a special committee to study the problem created here by multiple fund cam- paigns which, according to a Federation financial report, siphoiled off $1,200,000 in capital, and current operationi campaigns in this `city in 1953. The multiple campaigns, some of them conducted without clearance from the welfare fund, are considered one of the major reasons for the diminishing -returns in the all-community, one fund annual cam- paign. The committee will seek to acquaint the Jewish community with the problem, to make remedial recommendations and to work out adequate methods of control." The "multiple drives" problem is not limited to any one community. It affects us all. It is challenging and it does not lend itself to an easy solution ,because of the numerous needs which call for extra help and for funds in addition to those raised in the great and major Allied Jewish Cam- paign which includes the United Jewish Appeal as the major, beneficiary. Thus, the Technion and the Hebrew Uni- versity are in dire need of capita l funds. lVfizrachi urgently needs the means — with which to finance its new university, the Bar-Ilan. Histadrut depends upon income ;47 rer.? from .American Jewry for continuation of its numerous projects in Israel. HadasSah and the Jewish NationM Fund remain vital functions in • the Jewish state. Brandeis The Interpreter's Bible' University, Yeshiva University and a score of national agencies in this country continue to ask for our support. One of the very •great creative efforts in Biblical studies as; While all these needs are vital, the mul- tiplicity of appeals must cut into the income "The Interpreter's Bible : A Commentary in Twelve Volumes," - the of the major fund-raising effort: the Allied first of which already has been issued by the publishers, Abingdon.- Press, Nashville 2, Tenn. Jewish Campaign; and this chief undertak- Cokesbury The country's leading Bible scholars, under the guidance of ing in our community can not afford to suf- the editor of Abingdon-CokeSbury Press, Nolan B. Harmon, and fer -further diininishing returns. That is why the editorship of the Rev. George Arthur Buttrick, have compiled the problem is 90 vital. That is why it is more than 1,100- pages of Volume I which contain general articles necessary that the problem should be on the Old Testament, the Bible and expository articles on Genesis Awned, that men of vision should come and ExOdus. Seven maps illustrate the text. forth with a solution that will eliminate While it is entirely the work of Christians it is a thoroughly overlapping and will avoid multiplicity of labor in the gathering of funds, while, at unbiased work and is certain to be- helpful to Jewish as well as none religious leaders and Bible students: the same time, assuring support for all of . Jewish with the presentatiOn of the text, this comnieni- the Israeli and educational movements tary • Simultaneous presents the exegetical expositions. which must lean upon American Jewry for In its general review of the Hible, the scholars review its. support. Is there a solution at hand? Are significance and authority (Herbert H. Farmer), the Old Testa- there men and women of wisdom who can ment Canon and its text and ancient versions (Arthur Jeffery), cure our communal illnesses and solve this the Canon and ancient versions of the New Testament--(Edgar a. I -Goodspeed and Ernest C. ColWell). mounting problem? 1 Impressive, Scholarly Volume Of special interest is the article "The English Bible" by Allen Wikgren. The student acquires excellent knowledge from him on the. methods and types of translations, dating back many centuries and including the 14th century Wycliffite Bible, the 15h t t I th Kin J'ames g Version the later t century rans a e No one dares to imply that prominent Except for the few years during which all revised versions and the Jewish and Ronian Catholic Versions. phases of anti-Semitism were held in disre- Government officials, are in any sense im- The works of Rabbi Isaac Leeser and the Jewish Publication bued with anti-Semitic ideas. We have too pute, because we were at war with the Nazis, Society are given special mention. - vicious _propaganda against the Jews always much faith in the good sense of Americans Then there are the articles on the history of the interpretation was in evidence in Washington. Our nation's to believe that right-thinking people can be of the Bible through many periods, ancient, medieval and refor- capital continually is flooded with the vilest misled too often. But the-American Jewish mation and modern. Essays on the literature of the Old Testament type of literature disseminated by anti-Se- Congress and t h e Jewish Labor Cbmittee and on Prophetic literature will be -found to be of great merit. Norman H. Snaith's "The Language' of the Old Testimen0 mites T- h e desks of all members of both seemed to agree that a man who was ready. similarly will claim great attention by Hebrew students and literature in a securi- .to employ anti-Semitic Houses of Congress often are cluttered with those interested in the languages of Biblical times, including fit to hold an 'important office. ty case is not the filth distributed by the bigots. Our Con The Ladejinsky Case arose almost simu - ' the Aramaic and Arabic. The author comments interestingly, gressmen and Senators showed the good on modern recovery of Hebrew words. sense of ignoring the trash, of relegating it taneously with. the release of the report of The Old Testament World, the history. of Israel, the history of ,[ of Representatives Select Com the House to the wastebaskets. Israel's religion and the faith. of Israel are subjects of special essays Aggression in which by William F. Albright, Theodore .11. Robinson, James muilenburg, -. But there comesa time when men in mittee on Communist anti-Semi • •• inues t tism con it was _revealed that and G. Ernest Wright. high positions, who. should know better, - fall _ to t- . A exist be in the Iron great commentary is a. welcome addition to Biblical.liter.#.,.. This prey to the lie of anti-Semitism. That is ex- that is alert, as ours is, to the dangers - of ature, and is a remarkable compilation of Christian viewpoints on actly what had happened in the Wolf Lade- anti-Semitism .in foreign lands, must not major subjects related to the Bible. It will be cherished by all who'-: " Anti-Semitism Gets a Hearing in Washington - • • . . - . jinsky case. A vile piece of literature reach- - ed the desk of the executive assistant of the Secretary of Agriculture. It struck him as "classic,7 and the naive fellow released it. The result of it may have been the meting out of justice to the accused, Mr. Ladejinsky, who, while fired as a "security risk" by the Secretary of Agriculture, has now been as- signed .to the Foreign Operations Adminis- tration by the FOA director, Harold E. Stassen. In a sense, the reassignment of Wolf Lade- jinsky to the FOA is an indictment of the entire security investigation poliey in prac- tice in this land at this -time. Mr. Ladejin- sky's innocence is virtually admitted by his reassignment to another Government agen- cy, yet the department that has blundered refuses to admit the error of its ways, and instead of retaining its innocently-accused employe it becomes a party to a_n anti-Se- mitic scandal. We are in accord with the statement of the American Jewish Congress that while the appointment of Mr. Ladejinsky to the. FOA "rectifies a serious injustice to an in- dividual, it does not lessen by an iota the need for a thorough overhaul. of the entire Federal employe security program." Per- haps the stupidities that create scandals like this one will force the clarification of the entire security issue. At the moment, we are concerned' with the anti-Semitic issue and with the_shocidng manner in which an im- portant Government official had been 'taken in" by crackpot literature. blunder into the error. of giving a. platform possess it. to anti-Semites in this country. This is our chief warning to naive officials who believe they can atone for blunders with half-heart- -ed apologies. -INCIDENTS OF TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE Far West Adventures IN THE FAR WEST. By Solomon N. Carvalho. Introduction by Bertram W. Korn, Jewish Publication :society. The "Inequifable' Act The exploration and settlement of the Middle and Far West is one of the most dramatic episodes in the history of the United of adventure was in every AMeridan heart; and President Eisenhower, who has referred States. The spirit perhaps even more than the discovery of gold, that was *that, it to the McCarran Immigration Act's "inequi- lured and made Easterners look with longing towards the Weat. table" and "discriminatory" provisions, in John C. Fremont vas the embodiment of this spirit. Young, gifted his message to Congress, is being reminded of and courageous, he stood out as the hero of the day. All A _ meriei : his 1952 campaign pledge to revise the un- was interested in the expedition which he undertook in 1854, to find an easier route to link the Atlantic communities to the newer . just law. ' It is generally agreed, as the New York ones • along the Pacific Coast. When Fremont invited Solomon Nunes Carvalho to accompany Times stated it editorially,_ that . the Presi: Carvalho probably dent should give "more push" to his efforts the expedition, he could not refuse. Indeed, considered it an honor to accompany an explorer so lionized by for the revisions of the unjust -measure. the nation. Carvalho was an artist. His job was to 'record the In the meantime, however, reports from journey. in pictures, since he was also a daguerreotypist. Strange- Washington indicate that the unfortunate ly enough, while the pictures and drawings which he made of the Republicans and Democrats who alliance of trip appear to have been lost, his verbal description has remained. so staunchly suppOrted the bill, in spite of it iS, in fact, the only full description we have of this-adventurous the warnings 'against it by liberals through journey under Fremont. • The book was originally published in 1856 and has- been out out•the land and in definance of the strong print for many years. The Jewish Publication Society has now f was over which wofded Truman veto ly ridden overwhelmingly continues to .domi republished it as part of its contribution to the tercentenary: celer-. bration of Jewish life on this continent. But while reissuing Car— nate the scene. Predictions are that there valho's account, without any change, the Society's edition also the measure is no hope of revision and that number of important additional features. Dr% Bertram will remain in force. contains a an authority on 19th century American Jewish history, W. Korn, of enlightenment against The campaign has written an introduction to the volume which gives the biogra- the 'reactionary measure must, therefore, be phy of Carvalho and describes the background of the expedition. continued with renewed vigor. Perhaps even Carvalho emerges, from this introduction, as an ardent Jew„ deeply: . ' concerned with the fate of Judaism and the. Jewish community. the , mild words of President Eisenhower will Moreover, Dr: Korn has added to the volume whatever examples,. sere as a, aaiion- - - - — — - o - - discrimination. • of Caxvalho's art were obtainable.