--11 . 1 50 I 9 4 2-1992 .1111110.11 1 THE JEWISH NEWS COMMEMORATIVE ISSUE . In The Beginning A major community newspaper is born at a time of personal, national and international adversity. BY ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor I t took a bit of dar- ing to begin a news- paper four months after the onslaught of Pearl Harbor. Maybe it was necessity. Maybe it was fate. But Philip Slomovitz was forced to launch his new Jewish newspaper at one of the bleakest times in history for America and American Jewry. Faced with a war in Europe and in Asia, and with news of the Holocaust Philip Slomovitz: Jewish News founder. trickling out of Europe, Mr. Slomovitz had his own bad news to contend with: dismissal from the Detroit Jewish Chronicle after 20 years as editor. Mr. Slomovitz rallied his resources, rallied his corn- munity and some of its big- gest names behind a new Jewish newspaper. Within months of its inaugural issue on March 27, 1942, The Jewish News had out- distanced its rival with a total of 3,000 subscribers to 1,800 for the Chronicle. But it wasn't easy. A major backer withdrew his finan- cial support within weeks of the first publication, asking the return of $10,000 from the initial support of $19,000. And the U.S. Post Office created a major finan- 4 cial hardship by refusing to issue second class mailing privileges to the fledgling publication. Mr. Slomovitz drew upon his national contacts to meet with postal officials. U.S. Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg, who later became the acting vice pres- ident when Franklin Delano Roosevelt died, arranged the meeting. An agreement with Detroit's Jewish Federation had blocked the second class privilege. Mr. Slomovitz had helped his brand new paper by winning agreement from Federation to pay for 12,000 Detroiters to receive the paper monthly. This was in addition to the 3,000 weekly subscribers who paid $3 per year. Postal officials finally agreed to award the money- saving second class status for the weekly subscribers, if the monthly subscribers were mailed separately. "Two weeks after the deal," Mr. Slomovitz recalls, "we got a check from the post of- fice for a $2,200 refund. From then on, we were in the black." The deal with Federation only lasted a year. Mr. Slomovitz asked Isidor Sobeloff, Federation vice president and Jewish News board member, for an in- crease in payment for the monthly subscribers. When Mr. Sobeloff refused to raise the payment from 40 cents to 50 cents a year per subscriber, the agreement ended. The paper was on its own. In those early years, the paper slowly grew. "My guess," Mr. Slomovitz says, "is that it went up 2,000-3,000 subscribers in the first few years." The first issue had 12 pages, but within a few mon- ths the paper grew to 24 pages weekly. With Yiddish still predominant among the adult Jewish community, THE JEWISH NEWS COMMEMORATIVE ISSUE From top: The Jewish News office on Seven Mile; the 25th anniversary party in 1967; Sharon, Carmi, Anna and Phil Slomovitz at the Butzel Award presentation to Mr. Slomovitz in 1982. English-language news- papers were not yet in de- mand. "Even Shaarey Zedek people were Yiddish news- paper readers," he says. "The exception was Temple Beth El." Playing to that generation, the Chronicle often printed the weekly sermons of Beth El's Dr. Leo Franklin as major news. And The Jewish News, during its first decade, employed a society editor to write about social events and confirmations. "It was not an overwhelming column, but it played a big part," he recalls. The leading columns in the paper were Mr. Slomovitz' "Purely Commentary," which he has written weekly in Detroit since the 1920s, and Jewish Telegraphic Agency editor Boris Smolar's "Between You and Me." Danny Raskin's "Youth's Listening Post" — with several name changes — has been a highly popular feature since that first Jew- ish News issue in 1942. The major emphasis of the paper was on the World Jew- ish Congresses —"most of which I covered," Mr. Slomovitz says — and the re- birth of Israel and the battle against anti-Semitism. In the post-war years, the_ changing Jewish educa- tional system was a central focus. "When the curriculum changed from five days to three afternoons, and then it dropped to two, it was the greatest blow to Jewish ed- ucation," Mr. Slomovitz says. As World War II conclud- ed, he covered one of The Jewish News' biggest stories, the founding of the United Nations in San Fran- cisco. For six weeks in 1945, Mr. Slomovitz attended the meetings as a Zionist dele- gate and associate of Zionist leader Stephen Wise. But as a working journalist, he says, "I could get into ses- sions with my press card that other Zionist delegates could not attend." Through his 43 years as publisher of The Jewish News, Mr. Slomovitz saw no drastic changes in the paper. "Only within the last dozen years or so did you have the contending movements in Israel," he says. One of the mainstays of the paper while Mr. Slomovitz was actively at the helm was his family. Wife Anna served as treasurer of the company and helped with the early classified advertisements. Son Carmi learned how to use the Addressograph machine at the age of 12, stamping out the address labels with the noisy metal plates. Carmi joined the news- paper full-time after his military service during the Korean War and was busi- ness manager until the mid- 1980s. Carmi's wife, Sharon, helped out in the office for many years and her mother, Pauline Max, continues to help with the mail and other office duties during the warm-weather months. D . .." -