Page 111,t'ee THE JEWISH NEWS Friday, March 22, •1946 AMG Thwarts Boy's Hunt For Nazi Who Killed Father Romanian Lad and Pal, Who Survived Concentration Camp, Liable to 10 Years' Imprisonment for Fracas Agent With Belligerent Sister of Gestapo FRANKFURT, (JTA)—Two Romanian-Jewish youths are in jail here, facing a possible 10 years imprisonment, because they attempted to find the Nazi who murdered the father of one of them. Their story begins in Oct. Oct., 1943, in Cluj, Romania, where the was arrested and murdered father of 18-year-old Andor by a Gestapo agent. Shortly afterwards, Andor and his mother and five younger brothers and sisters were sent to Oswiecim. Last May, only Andor remained alive, somewhere in the Austrian Tyrol. He returned to Cluj and obtained a photograph of the Gestapo agent from a local photographer. Across the back of the photo was written the name of a Bavarian town. After travelling hundreds of miles, Andor reached the town, where he enlisted the aid of UNRRA, the military police and the local burgomeister. The latter recognized the photo and mentioned that the agent had a sister named Schneider in Hoechst, a suburb of Frankfurt. Through the aid of UNRRA, he was transferred to the Lamper- theim Camp, about 50 miles south of here. There he met a friend, Ber Blum, who also came from Cluj. Although both desired to get to Palestine as soon as possible, they decided to find the Gestapo agent. When they arrived at the home of the agent's sister, they found a woman washing clothes, who denied that she knew anyone named Schneider. However, Andor spied a photograph similar to the one in his possession. The woman admitted that the agent was her brother, but said that he had been killed at Leningrad. When Andor replied that he had seen him in Cluj after the Battle of Leningrad, the woman shouted: "This country isn't Pal- estine" and "it's a pity that some Jews are still living." She at- tempted to strike Andor with her washboard. He ducked and shoved her back. She fell against some furniture and arose screaming for help. When American military police arrived, they arrested both boys and laughed at Andor when he asked that they help him retrieve the photo. That was on Feb. 11, and they are still in jail awaiting trial, which has been scheduled for this week. Capt. Alan Fraser, a Texas lawyer, attached to the legal section of AMG here, displayed a complete lack of interest when questioned by a JTA correspondent. He revealed that he will be the sole officer presiding at the boys' trial before the AMG Intermediate Court. Weekly Review of the News of the World (Compiled from Cables of Independent Jewish Press Service) AMERICA Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Chief of Staff of the United States Army, paid tribute to the work of Jewish chaplains in the armed for- ces in World War II, in a special message to the Jewish Institute of Religion on the occa- sion of its Founder's Day dinner, March 17, cel- ebrating the birthday of Dr. Stephen S. Wise, founder and president of the Institute. The Arab Information Offices in London and Washington, official conduits of Arab propa- ganda in Britain and United States, were or- ganized by Musa Al-Alamy, Palestine repre- sentative of the Arab League in Cairo, with the assistance of Lord Kellern and Pinckney Tuck, British and United States Ambassadors to Egypt, respectively, it was disclosed in an ar- ticle in the Arab weekly "El Vhada," of Jeru- salem, by Al Haldi, former mayor of Jeru- salem. A protest against the appointment to the New York City Board of Education of George A. Timono, who is charged with associating with the Christian Front, was lodged with Mayor O'Dwyer by the American Jewish Congress. The New York City Council, in a resolution adopted with only one dissenting vote, went on record as favoring the ending of tax exemp- tion for non-sectarian schools which practice racial or religious discrimination in admission of students and selection and promotion of faculty. Establishment in Brooklyn of a $2,000,000 college to train Hebrew teachers and grant degrees in Hebrew literature was proposed in a bill introduced in the State Legislature by Assemblyman Bernard Austin. Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, former president of the India National Congress, in an interview with the Moslem newspaper Morning News, of Calcutta, assailed "British imperialist demands" as responsible for the crisis in Palestine, and stated that if Arabs and Jews had tackled their problem directly, a solution might have been found, Reuters reports in a Calcutta dispatch to the Christian Science Monitor. The Hindu leader paid tribute to the "constructive effort" of Jews in Palestine. The Toronto Globe-Mail, in an editorial, ex- presses sympathy for the plight of European Jews, but declares that "it is a pity" that Zion- ist leaders do not show more "restraint and ordinary accuracy" in placing the "mantle of Hitler on the British people. If . the Jews have had a friend in the world during the past fifty years, that friend was the British people," the editorial says. Seigfried Lonner, German-Jewish restaurant owner, who came to New York from Nazi Ger- many 10 years ago, told reporterS here that he Vas assaulted, beaten and arrested \nithout provocation by a policeman who said he was a German and "You're afraid to tell me you're a Jew and not a Nazi." Edgar J. Nathan Jr., former Borough Presi- dent of Manhattan, has been appointed by Gov- ernor Dewey to an interim term in the State Supreme Court to fill a vacancy caused by the resignation of Justice William T. Collins. Mr. Nathan is a cousin of the late United States Su- preme, Court Justice Benjamin W. Cardozo. Mrs. Archibald Silverman of Providence, Zionist leader, for more than 30 years, left by air March 10, to tour the British Isles on behalf of the United Palestine Appeal of England. OVERSEAS Pope Pius XII, in an audience with a United States commission studying immigration prob- lems in Europe, appealed, in the name of "Christian charity" to the United States to re- lax its immigration bars to helpless Europeans, and assailed present moves for forced repatria- tion of displaced persons and refugees in Europe. Two Jewish soldiers, David Glicenstein and Simon Getreuhendler, who deserted from the PoliSh Army in England, in 1944 because of anti-Semitism, and subsequently were arrested, have •been sentenced to indeterminate prison terms by a military court - representing sections of General Wladyslaw Anders' exile army now stationed in Scotland. The two soldiers deserted with 200 other Jewish troops who later joined the British Army. (See also Page 26) New Settlement Left Intact as Troops Withdraw DETROIT WILL GIVE TO THE RED CROSS Incident at Birya Creates Tension; Jews in Haifa Protest Brutality • JERUSALEM (JTA) — Troops withdrew from the vicinity of the Birya settlement, leaving intact a new settlement which was erect- ed Friday by several hundred Jewish veterans and other youths, who labored in a pouring rain, within a cordon established by British military units. The incident at Birya—which resulted in a four-hour general strike by Jews in Haifa March 15 to protest police and military brutality—began at dawn March 14, when several thousand Jews converged on the settlement, which has been occupied by troops since an attack on a nearby Arab Legion camp, a fortnight ago. Their first attempt to found a new settlement was frustrated the previous evening, when 3,000 troops forcibly dispersed the set- tlers, some of whom attempted to cling to rocks and other foot- holds. Many were beaten and several hundred were arrested and taken to Tiberias. They sub- sequently were released. After the troops had destroyed the huts which had been erected by the first group, a second de- tachment of several hundred young Jews arrived after dusk, and began re-erecting the build- ings. They also were driven off. Canadian Officer Given U.S. Award MONTREAL, (JTA) — Squad- ron Leader Gerald Bronfman, of the Royal Canadian Air Force, has been presented with the U. S. Legion of Merit for "outstanding services from June, 1943, to August, 1945, while assigned to the RCAF division of the Can- adian Joint Staff, Washington, D. C." The presentation Was made by North Winship, U. S. Consul- General, at his office here. The 34-year-old airman, who joined the RCAF as an aircraftsman in 1940, was commissioned in 1942 and held several appointments prior to going to Washington. He retired from the air force last October. The Detroit Garden Center and Hudson's Invite You t the Second SPRING FLOW ER AND GARDEN SHOW In Hudson's Twelfth Floor Auditoriums Continuing Through March 26 10 A. M. to 5 P. M. DAILY See These Special Features • FLOWER ARRANGEMENT GALLERY • MINIATURE ROOMS • SPRING TRAIL • ORCHID GARDENS • FORMAL ROSE GARDEN • CACTUS GARDENS • BACKYARD PLANTING • LILY GARDENS • CERAMIC EXHIBITION The J. L. Hudson Company