Early Deadline for May 30 Issue On account of Decoration Day and the First Day of Shevuoth occuring concurrently on Friday, May 30, there will be an earlier deadline for all copy for that Photographs for that issue must be in our hands not later than at noon on - Friday, May 23. All copy for that issue must reach us before 10 a.m. on Monday, May 26. Regular Jewish News deadlines are at noon on Mondays for photographs and at 2:30 p.m. on Mondays for editorial copy. Sugarman Resigns Presidency of PEC Electioneering By Zionists; NEW YORK, (JTA) — Joseph Sugarman, who assumed active duty as president of the Pales -N tine Economic Corporation in September, 1952, announced his resignation. In a statement, he said: "I have been unable to agree with the executive committee of the board of directors upon what should be the program and methods of operation of the Corporation for the fulfillment of what I consider to be the Corporation's proper role in the upbnilding of the economy of Israel." Short Memory About Nazis By ALLEN LESSER tAn American Jewish Press Feature) ELECTIONEE RING: In a trict voted in favor of a praesi- startling reversal of position, the dium instead of a, president for Louis D. Brandeis District of The New England Zionist Re Washington, D.C., passed a reso- lution indorsing the candidacy gion surprised campaigners by its of Rabbi Irving Miller for ZOA indorsing Dewey Stone as president. The District also in- "favorite son" candidate. (Editor's Note: As we go dorsed I. S. Turover as a candi- date for national vice-president. to press, we learn that Dewey Stone, Rudolph Son- Last February, the Brandeis Dis- - 1 nenborn and a group of Progressives have launched a movement to back the candidacy of Ezra Shapira of Cleveland for the ZOA presidency.) Indorsement of candidates is not binding upon regional . dele- gates to the ZOA convention in • June, but is only expression of approval. Candidates who have officially thrown their hats in the ring so far include Abra- ham A. Redelheim, Rabbi Irvi,ng Miller, Mortimer May and Max Bressler. Mr. Shapiro has not yet announced an intention to run. SHORT MEMORIES: Sad The Dean of Golfers, Jimmy Demaret, three-time winner of the Masters, is the Concords new golf professional. Let Jimmy and his faculty of experts, including Jack Redmond and Jim . Basile, polish your game at the Concojds new Golf Practice Range. NOT 1, BUT 2 GREAT GOLF COURSES AT THE CONCORD! The Par -. 4 1 , 1S-hole INTERNA- TIONAL...7100 downhill yards. in an uncrowded 300-acre paradise. The picturesque 9-hole CHAL- LENGER...no sportier short course anywhere. -The Concord INTERNATIONAL Golf Course is one of the really great courses of the country. It should be a must on an -one's golfing calendar. - ■ New.indoor Ice Skating Rink guarantees terrific skating, night and day, in all weather. 10, Complimentary instruction, and exhibitions by world-famous pros. SWIMMING ROWING VOLLEY BALL SUNBATHING DANCING HANDBALL BASKETBALL TENNIS BASEBALL RIDING SOFTBALL BADMINTON PING-PONG BARBECUES PICNICS SCENIC s H(KING TELEVISION FISHING After a day of sports, relax and enjoy a sumptuous dinner and top entertainment in the Cordillion Room. Ed Sullivan, Milton Berle, Sam Levenson, Billy Eckstine, Sophie Tucker—have all appeared at the Cordillion Room. Dancing nightly to two orchestras. For Reservations call New York CHickering 4-0771 or, Monticello 1140 Honeymooners: Write or call for Honeymoon Folder HOTEL commentary on the brevity of American memories of Nazi war criminals. is provided by a recent U. of Miami gag re-, ported by the Jewish Floridian (Miami). The University .newspaper sent out .a reporter to get signatures for a petition to elect Ilse Koch as secretary of t h e student association. Out of 300 students who were approached, 270 signed the petition with hardly a ques- tion about the "lady's" iden- tity. Somes thought she was a professor's daughter. Only 30 students realized t h a t Use Koch was the wife of a Nazi concentration camp com- mander, that she is a con- victed mar criminal now serv- ing a life sentence. Her spe- cial brutality wa making lampshades out of, the skin of concentration camp prisoners. SHORT SHORTS: Speeches at the - Carnegie Hall Independence Day r a 11 y, sponsored by the American Zionist Council, were relayed to Israel by the Voice of America on its Israel-beamed program next day . . Israeli Ambassador Abba Eban sent special greetings in Hebrew to the people of Israel . . Observ- ers, noting Eban's ' tired voice, commented on his superhuman efforts during recent weeks on behalf of Israel's fund appeals; shook their heads in concern as they recalled how the hard- working Ambassador collapsed from sheer exhaustion last May following his equally strenuous efforts on behalf of the Israel Bond campaign ... "Israel Free- dom Festival. - recently - Chicago for bond drive. is de- nounced by the Sentinel (Chi- sago) because it **was in utter bad taste, .vulgarized Israel. and degraded the memory of out six million •Kedoshim'." In an editorial headed "A fter the Striptease — What Next?" the Sentinel called on Chicago Bond Committee for public apology . Premier performance of "A Hymn to Israel Reborn," a ean- - tata for chorus of mixed voices, string ' orchestra, clarinet and piano. was held at Forest Hills Jewish Center (Queens, N.Y.) for Independence Day celebration.. Composer is cellist Abrasha Bor- odkin, f o r to e r Carnegie Pop Concerts conductor; text is by Zachariah Subarsky . . . Noted composer Frederick Jacobi's "Sacred Service for the Sabbae Eve" will be premiered by the Park Avenue Synagogue (N.Y.) on May -23 . . . Description of a book written more t h a•n 100 years before Herzl by an Italian Senator named Benedetto Mus- olino, which proposed establish- ment of a Jewish principality in Palestine with Hebrew as it na- tional language, was broadcast by Kol Zion Lagolah. Entitled "Jerusalem and the Jewish Peo- ple," the book is now being tran- slated into Hebrew .