Unity, Where Art Thou? Rifts in U. S. Jewry Exposed Michigan ADL Elects Officers; Gets State Reports By Jewish News Special Correspondent NEW YORK—Who said there staff. Thus moves the news and is unity in Jewish ranks? Take its distributing agency. UJA a n d Chicago : Is the a hurried glance at the national UJA in real trouble, in view of _ .e organizatiOns, examine the rift that has been perpetuated in Zionist ranks, listen in :on dis- cussions among national leaders, and you hear all-too-frequent indications of rancor that bor- ders on extreme bitterness. Here are a few indications of continuing disputes in Jewish affairs: Silver vs. Goldmann: Dr. Na- h u m Goldmann, chairmann, of the American Section of the Jewish Agency, recently stated that the UJA in 1949 fell only 10 per cent short of its 1948 in- come. Dr. Abba Hillel Silv e r, Goldmann's predecessor and bit- terest opponent, took exception to Goldmann's report and warn- ed that Goldmann "might have to#, do some tall explaining for the role he played in the so-call- ed Silver-Morgenthau dispute, for the failure of the 1949 cam- paign and perhaps also for the decline in the Zionist political position in Washington." These are serious charges. Goldmann was in London when Silver leveled his guns at him. When he returns, it is expected that a new battle will begin- Goldmann versus Silver — with the World Zionist Organization presidency as the plum and with control of the WZO at stake. It is an established fact that Had- assah is not on Silver's side, that the Cleveland rabbi is opposed by the labor Zionists, that the Zionist Organization of America already is fighting for control of WZO through large sales of Shekolim. If the battle will be kept on a high level, it will be interesting; else, it will be just another petty dispute. JTA's Future: B e h i n d the scenes, a serious personality battle raged during the past year, involving American Jewry's major source of news, the Jew- ish Telegraphic Agency. Jacob Landau, JTA's managing direc- tor, did not get along so well with the former chairman of the JTA board, Jacob Blaustein, who had to quit that job when he be- came president of the American Jewish Committee. The Council of Federations and Welfare Funds stepped into the contest and demanded a revision - of JTA's policies and its abandon- ment of ONA service. There were numerous other issues, too in- volved to be -related at this time. Federations throughout the country stopped sending JTA al- locations. Some of them agreed to give JTA "severance" pay- ments amounting to 30 per cent - of the 1948 payments, but there still are communities — Detroit among them — which have re- - fused to give JTA a dime. For several months, JTA was in real trouble. It was slow in paying salaries and there was danger to the telegraphic service itself. But the issue is coming to a head. This week—possibly be- fore Jan. 20—there may be a re- organization of JTA. Mr. Landau may be retired on a pension, a n e w board chairman may be chosen to succeed George Back- er who has supported Mr. Lan- dau's stand, and there may even be a housecleaning on the JTA last year's decline in income and because of some petty reports brought from \ Israel by unin- formed tourists? UJA's leaders are steering clear of controversy. They seek amity. They won sup- port from the English - Jewish weekly newspaper editors last week-end at a meeting that was attended by editors and publish- . ers from nine cities who are members of the executive com- mittee of the American Associa- tion of English-Jewish News- papers. But in some cities there are real dangers of rifts. Chicago is the major center of trouble. The second largest Jewish com- munity in America fell far short of its goals for UJA both in 1948 and 1949. The charges are that the sponsoring organization — the Chicago Welfare Fund—was much more interested in capital funds and in local agencies than in Israel and the funds for the solution of the problem of sur- vivors from Nazism in Europe. Chicago Welfare Fund leaders retused to meet with Henry Mor- genthau, Henry Montor a n d other UJA leaders, and the UJA was forced to arrange an inde- pendent gathering at the Chi- cago Covenant Club on Jan. 5. Now the battle is in the open. UJA may be forced to conduct its own independent d r iv e in Chicago, thus breaking a 15-year unity in fund-raising. If it can happen in Chicago, why not else- w h e r e, especially in view of charges that in a number of cities UJA suffered because Fed- erations preferred to all o c ate larger sums to building funds and to local causes? Who said there is unity in American Jewry? Hungary Eases Ban On Israel Immigration NEW YORK—Temporarily lifting its total ban on emigra- tion, Hungary granted permis- sion to 3,000 Jews, including 40 leaders of the dissolved Hun- garian Zionist movement, to leave for Israel within the next few months, it was announced by the Aliyah Department of the Jewish Agency. The action will permit the first departures of Jews from Hungary in more than six months. Bulk of the emigrants will be children whose parents are already in Israel, or parents seeking to rejoin children living in the Jewish State. Z-Day Chairman Weiss Thanks Community Ben Weiss, chairman of the Zionist Organization of Detroit's "Z-Day" campaign last Sunday, expressed the thanks of the ZOD to the community for its cooperation in the membership enrollment project. Anyone who was not contact- ed may still participate in the drive by sending membership dues to the Zionist office, 1031 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit 26, Weiss declared. On the Record By NATHAN ZIPRIN (Copyright, 1950, Seven Arts Feature Syndicate, Inc.) 4111111P Ben Gurion Scores The Israeli daily "Davar" has a reputation for linguistic pur- ism but in its zeal to maintain its high standard it recently fell into an error which had the whole country laughing . . . Prime Minister David Ben Gurion had addressed the Knesset and ended his speech with the words "In that day it shall be said to Jerusa- lem: Fear thou not; 0 Zion, let not thy hands be slack" . . . How- ever, Davar's editor performed a word-inversion operation on the Hebrew text ... Ben Gurion immediately sent a letter to the edi- tor saying that while he did not question the right of the editor to challenge the grammatical authority of Israel's chief he doubted the need and competence of the editor to correct the language of the prophets . . . The passage, he wrote, was from the third chap- ter of Zephaniah . . . The newspaper carried Ben Gurion's letter in a boxed space on the front page . . .It occurs to us that Ben Gurion might have called the attention of the newspaper to the coincidence that that very chapter speaks of . purity of language . . Verse sixteen of the third chapter reads: "For then will I turn to the peoples a pure language, that they may call upon the name of the Lord, to serve Him with one consent." At the meeting of the ADL Michigan Regional Advisory Board held in Lansing Sunday, Sam Goldfarb of Jackson was elected chairman. Other officers include; Mrs. Samuel Aaron, Detroit, Ben G r a h a m, Kalamazoo, Rabbi Frank Rosenthal, Jackson, vice- chairmen; Sam Adinoff, Port Huron; Abe Drasin and Sam Himelstein, Grand Rapids; Jus- tin Morrison, Lansing; Dr. Phil Nolish, Saginaw, and Morris Zwerdling of Detroit, trustees. Haskell L. Lazere, Michigan ADL director, reported on 1949 activities. Ben Graham, reporting for Kalamazoo, discussed a recent incident involving discrimina- tion in housing against a young Jewish veteran, and outlined the method by which it was successfully handled with the cooperation of ADL. Goldfarb outlined the scope of commun- ity relations activities in Jack- son, and described the program inaugurated ° by the. Mayor's Community Relations Board of Jackson of which Rosenthal is chairman. A highlight of the Jackson report was the reference to a Christmas Hanukah celebration at which a Protestant minister spoke to a mixed congregation on "What Hanukah Means to Me" and the Rabbi, in the role of the_ Protestant minister, spoke about the Christmas season and its meaning. Abe Dasin reported on activi- ties of the Grand Rapids Inter- Racial Committee. He praised the Grand Rapids YWCA and Community on the fine 'rela- tionship between Bnai Brith and the Inter-Racial Committee. A. Abbot Rosen, Chicago mid- west director for the ADL, ad- dressed the luncheon. Clinton Fair represented Governor Wil- liams at the luncheon. The regional board petitioned Governor Williams to present FEPC to the special session of the Legislature. Young Israel Opens Friday Forums ; List Women's Officers Young Israel will begin its mid-winter season of Friday evening forums tonight, at 8:30, in the auditorium of the Youth Center, 12521 Dexter. The topic, "The Future of -Young Israel in America" will be discussed by Charles T. Gellman, Rabbi. Eugene Greenfield a n d Daniel Schwartz. Rabbi Samuel H. Prero will be the moderator. The program will be followed by a. Oneg Shabbat. The second forum, Jan. 20 will be dedicated to the Women's League. The Position of the Jew- ish Woman on the American Scene" will be reviewed Mrs. Herman K. Cohen, Mrs. Samuel H. Prero and Mrs. Meyer Weis- enfeld. The Women's League at its election meeting Jan. 3, at the home of Mrs. Harry Portnoy on Leslie Ave. elected Mrs. Joseph Grossman, president; Mrs. David Applebaum and Mrs. Herman K. C o h e n, vice-presidents; Mrs. Charles T. Gellman, treasurer; Mrs. Meyer Weisenfeld, secre- tary; Mesdames Abbe A. Levi and Solomon B. Cohen, chair- men of house committee. The officers will be installed Tues- day evening by Rabbi Prero. At the monthly membership meeting on Jan. 11, 24 new mem- bers were initiated into Young Israel. Dr. Hugo Mandelbaum, chair- man of the Institute for Jewish Studies announces that the In- stitute will open its spring term Feb. 7. Registration is being ac- cepted at the Youth Center ; TE. 4-414k . by Hillel L. Abrams, reg- istrar. Faculty members include: Rabbi Samuel H. Prero, Dr. Max H. Kapustin, Rabbi Israel Hal- pern, Dr. Hugo Mandelbaum and Miriam Fishbein. The sessions will be Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings, 8 to 9 with spring sessions running for 10 weeks. by, Israel Rejection of Modified Jerusalem Plan Expected Rejection of the modified Jerusalem internationalization plan was interpreted this week in unofficial statements made in Tel Aviv, but it is believed that Israel may make some conces- sions—such as including Dormi- tion Church and Cenacle on Mt. Zion—if an agreement can be reached with Jordan. But Israel is not prepared to sacrifice its negotiations with Jordan in ex- change for a modified Jerusa- lem proposal. At Lake Success, Brig. Gen. William E. Riley was quoted, be- fore his return to Israel, as stat- ing that he believed there will be peace between Israel and Jor- dan this year. The hope that access to He- brew University buildings on Mount Scopus, on the outskirts of Jerusalem, may be agreed upon by Transjordan was ex- pressed by Prof. Selig Brodet- sky, president of the Univer:7 sity, at a press conference in New York. Government Wins Support JERUSALEM, (JTA) — A vote of non-confidence on the for- eign policy of . the Israel Gov- ernment, proposed by Mapam members in the Knesset, was re- jected by a vote of 63-28 by Knesset. A motion introduced by the Herut demanding the resigna- tion of the entire Cabinet was defeated, 63-11, with Mapam deputies abstaining. The General Zionists cast their ballots both times for the government. How- ever, they demanded that the proclamation of Jerusalem as the eternal and actual capital of Israel be embodied in the Is- rael Constitution as the first paragraph of that document. Their request was referred to a special parliamentary commit- tee now studying the Jerusalem problem. The cabinet decided to submit to the Knesset a bill which would fix the minimum age for marriage for girls at 17. To Erect Sugar Factory TEL AVIV, (JTA)—A sum of $600,000 from the $100,000,000 Export-Import Bank loan to Is- rael has been allocated for the purchase of machinery and oth- er equipment for the erection of a sugar refining factory in the southern part of the Jewish state. Large tracts of land in the immediate vicinity of the factory site will be used for the growing of sugar beets. Turkey has placed its first order for Israel-made Philco re- frigerators, scheduled to be pro- duced in a factory now under construction here. "0 p e r ation Afforestation," involving hundreds of thou- sands of dunams of land and providing employment for many new immigrants, began in Galilee. The plan provides for the- planting of 500,000 trees in Eastern Galilee and 116,000 in Western Galilee. Be- tween 5,000,000 and 6,000,000 seedlings are being raised in Israel nurseries and will be ready for planting next eyar. A thousand tents for six per- sons each and 400 for 60 per- sons each arrived from the United States this week for the Beth Lid Camp. Answering the Jewish Agen- cy's special appeal for tempor- ary accommodation for children of immigrants in the tent vil- lages of the camps, the Israel army took swift action in offer- ing shelter for 300 youngsters in a former British Army concrete hall in a nearby Army camp. More than 2,000 families all over the country have thrown open _ their homes; many offering to accept more than one child. Two Arabs were killed in an exchange of fire between Israel security forces and infiltrating Arabs near Kalkilia, in the "tri- angle" area. Citrus exports for 1949 ex- ceeded 900,000 cases. Britain re- ceived 528,000 cases and Eire, 30,000. In the first half of Jan- uary 300,000, cases of oranges and 100,000 cases of grapefruit are scheduled to be shipped to Britain, with a half-million cases to be shipped in the second half of the month. UN Economic Mission Commends `Striking' Israel Agricultural System LAKE SUCCESS, (JTA)—The final report of the UN Economic Survey Commission on the Mid- dle East, covering Israel, Leban- on, Syria, Iraq and Transjordan, was transmitted to all member states of the United Nations. The report proposes four river deVelopment projects for large- scale and long-range economic development of Lebanon; Syria, Transjordan and the Arab part of Palestine. No project is rec- ommended with regard to the development of Israel. Analyzing the economic situa- tion . in Israel, the report says that a certain degree of .indus- trial development has helped somewhat to reduce exchange requirements, but that there seems little possibility of fur- ther extensive industrial devel- opment that would pay for itself by major import savings or im- provements in exchange earn- ings. Another difficulty described by the report is the insepar- ability of political and engi- neering planning of a major water resource. Thus, the mis- sion found that for the de- velopment of the Jordan river at most 15 percent of the work contemplated could go forward without taking water from neighboring countries. to overcome all _obstacles, the - like of which it would be hard to find elsewhere." While presenting a gloomy picture of the agricultural sit-. uation in the Arab . territories under review by the Mission, - the report emphasizes that the agricultural aspect of Is- rael is "striking." It pays trib- ute to the "well-organized" Agriculture Department of the - Israel Government and its fa- . cilities for research, to the communal and co-operative . system of land settlement, which it analyzes at some _ length and to the "effort be- ing made to bring about a change-over from extensive to intensive farming." It calls the system of land irrigation in Israel "an - object leSson in the economical use of water supplies and in securing the utmost benefit from the limited supplies available." And it lauds the intensity of citrus cultivation, which, it says, "once seen, will always be remembered as something exceptional in the Middle East." Comparing the situation in Israel with that of the Arab countries, the report declares: "There, in Israel, one finds a western civilization of the most modern type which is making prodigious efforts to draw life from the barren soil of Pales- tine. • "On the financial side Israel possesses a reasonably well- equipped and excellently man- aged banking system, a re- markably high rate of savings and a smoothly operating budg- etary mechanism, which has so far succeeded in financing very substantial outlays for develop- mental purposes, as well as cur- rent operating expenses." In the absence, says the re- port, of a peace settlement be- tween Israel and adjoining countries it is unrealistic to sup- pose that agreement on the complex question of interna- tional water rights could be ne- gotiated among the parties. It notes in Israel's favor, how- ever, the high level of education and craftsmanship among the immigrants, the large propor- tion of government expendi- ture for education and public health, and "a spirit of nation- al-racial solidarity, a willingness 20 THE JEWISH NEWS common in- to sacrifice in Friday, January 13, 1950 terest, a faith n in Israel's ability —