Shoshana Damari, Moshe Oysher at Landsmanshaften B and Event Dec. 4 THE JEWISH NEWS - 5 Friday, November 7, 1952 JNF Allocates 250,000 An "Evening of Song and All groups within the Lands- Acres for Settlements Story," starring Moishe Oysher, manshaften, as well s a num- the internationally renowned ber of unaffiliated groups, are promoting the event. The Landsmanshaften Coun- cil; of which Harry Kaminer is president, has set up a commit- tee under the chairmanship of Louis Levine, to handle ar- rangements. Members of the committee are Samuel Belkin, Israel Burnstein, Max Char- ness; Sam Freedman, Aaron Eckshtat, Ben Gelman, Joshua Joirich, MLrris Kaplan, Morris Malin, Louis Nathanson, Jack B. Orgtond, M. Rose, Jack Sher- man, Isidor Sosnick, Michael Taich, Meyer Terebelo, Joseph Weiner and A. Weinerman. Admission will be by purchase of an Israel bond. Reservations can - be obtained at Halevy Music Center, 13965 Damari Oysher Linwood; through Alex Prujan- cantor, and Shoshana Damari, sky at. American Savings and concert artist known as the Loan Association, Dexter and "Star of Israel," is announced Cortland; Norman Cottler, Dex- by the Landsmanshaften Coun- ter Davison Market, 18207 Wy- cil of Detroit for Dec. 4, 8 p.m.,\ oming; and Pioneer Women, 111818 Dexter. at the Latin Quarter. Eban Hits Arabs in United Nations For Handling of Refugee Problem UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., ("JTA)—Ambassador Abba Eban, head of Israel's delegation at the United Nations, told the UN Ad Hoc Political Committee that if the Arab countries did for the Arab refugees what Israel had clone for its new immigrants, there would be no Arab refugee problem. He emphasized that it was Arab politics that h - d pre- vented re-integration • of .Pales- tine refugees in Arab countries. Eban said that Arab refugees were "in the truest sense, at home in the Arab countries," particularly in those • with a shortage of manpower. There could have been "spontaneous re-integration," but it had been c-o nsciously prevented," he charged. The Arab governMents, he declared, had initiated "an ill ;7 considere military ad- venture" and bore primary re- sponsibility for . the refugee problem. "You cannot let loose a war and wash your hands of all • responsibility," he stated. .Eban announced that Israel would support the resolution submitted by France, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States, authorizing the United Nations Relief and Work Agency to increase its relief budget for the present year to $23,000,000. He said that this was an expression of confidence in the United Nations Relief and Work Agency. The resolu- tion was carried by a vote of -50-0 with seven absentions in- eluding Iraq. Eban told the session that Israel had received two requests from the United Nations and, despite ; the cost and the hardships they caused to, the country's economy, had complied. They were the re- lease of the bank deposits of the Arab refigees and the as- sumption of the responsibility I for 19,000 Arab refugees now in ! Israel. 1 Earlier, Israel delegate Arthur Lourie told the committee in a sharp retort to persistent Arab attacks on Israel during the de- bate that "the voice of Nazism. is being heard in the United Nations." Referring to a violent speech by Dr. Fadhil al-Jamali, Iraqi delegate, who, asserted that the Jews have- forfeited any moral or material claims unless they granted the legitimate rights of the Arabs in Palestine," the Is- rael spokesman denounced the Iraqi as one known for his Nazi sympathies during World War II. Incensed by the Iraqi's comparison of treatment of the Jews- by Hitler with treatment of the Arabs in Palestine, the Israel spokesman had leaked to his - feet to challenge the Arab assertions in advance of the formal Israel reply. JERUSALEM, ( J T A ) — The Jewish National Fund has set aside 1,000,000 dunams (250,000 acres) for the establishment of n e w agricultural settlements next spring, Joseph Weitz,.direc- tor of the JNF agricultural de- partment, announced here. 1 He explained that work is pro- ceeding on the preparation of soil for the new settlements and reported that some 90 kilometers (55 miles) of road has been paved between existing settle- ments and main roads. Afforest: ation work continues at top ! speed, he added, stating that some 5,000 ;000 saplings will be planted this year, most. of them , in the • Forest of the Martyrs, near Jerusalem, which honors the memory of the 6,000,000 Jews murdered by the Nazis. The Children's Village oiler- ' ated by the Pioneer Women of !America at Ein Karem, west of Jerusalem, was converted into an agricultural school. Some 250 young Israelis will receive a four-year agricultural training course at the new school. Egyptian St-: lent Enrolls In Dropsie College Course Miss Iris Habib elMasri, - of Cairo, Egypt, re- cently returned lfrom an az- ' chaeological ex- pedition. in Is- r a_e 1, has en- rolled in Drop- s i e College of Hebrew and 'Cognate Learn- ing. About 10 percent of Drop- Miss elMasri sie's student body comes from foreign countries. Israeli Mayor Gives Hebrew Bible to New York's Mayor NEW YORK, (JTA) — Mayor Oved Ben-Ami of Nathanya, Is- rael, presented to Mayor Vincent R. Impellitteri a specially bound and inscribed Hebrew Bible sent by the citizens of his city- as a token of friendship for the peo- ple of New York. Sees Former Bueltenw' ald Inmate Daniel Temchin, one of the outstanding Mizrachi and con- gregational leaders in Detroit, will be honored by his associates with a Forest that is to bear is name, in Is- rael, on land of the Jewish Na- tional Fund. Irving W. Schlussel, w h o was named chairman of the Temchin -f u n d - raising committee to raise the $15,000 required for the planting of a minimum of 10,000 trees in a JNF forest, stated that this move is aimed at paying "deserved honors to a man who has rend- ered great service to the Zionist cause and our orthodox corn- `munity." - - The -committee assisting Mr. Schlussel includes the following: Rabbi Isaac Stoliman, Abe Nus- baum, Morris Snow, Max Stoll- man, Isadore Sosnick, Solomon Rubin, Jacob Nosanchuk, David Berris, Louis Ellenbogen, Louis Kukes, Jacob Gorman, Max Kap- lan, Isadore Rosenberg, H'a.rry E. Citrin, Meyer Friedman, and Emil Spielman and Percy Ber- man of Grand Rapids. BUENOS AIRES, (JTA)— President Juan Peron has agreed to a request that stu- dents in rabinical seminaries be exempted from military service. The request was submitted to him by Rabbi Amram Blum, a member of the DATA, central representative body of Argentine Jewry. 4roix ..... . ..... woo DWARD4 a M IL e ROAD OPENING SUNDAY Limited Engagement "THE MUD LARK" With Alec Guinness as Disraeli and Irene Dunn as Queen Victoria Also on Some Progreet W. Somerset Moughn's "QUARTETTE" Raymond K. Rubiner and Company Real Estate Investments Management 3323 Cadillac Tower WO. 55233 N OPEN LETTER To the President. of - Detroit's Sinai Hospital Dear Mr. Osnos : CHICAGO; (JTA) --Gov. Stev- enson has named Norman N. Eiger, chairman of the Illinois - state board of review on unem- ployment compensation, to the Municipal Court .bench here. Forest in Israel to Honor 'Temchin • We take this means of presenting the question of Kashruth in the Jewish _Hospital before the public, since our repeated presentations to the Board of Sinai Hospital have failed to meet with success. We maintain that Sinai Hospital as an institution of the Jewish community must fully adhere to the tradition and discipline of the Jewish dietary laws. It is, of course, understood, that certain special diets dictated by purely medical considerations shall not be- covered by the general policy of Kashruth. A hospital known by Jews and non-Jews as a Jewish hospital must not violate traditions sacred to many Jews. We have no desire to exert coercion in 4lie private conduct of an individual. An institution, however, is representative of the Jewish community and of Jewish life as a whole and has no right to flout -practices which have been part of the Jewish way of life throughout the ages, practices which still claim the loyalty of large numbers of our people. The refusal of your Board to reconsider its original decision to have kosher : facilities for only a fraction of its patients, violates the basic principles expressed above and runs counter to the sentiments of the majority of Jews in our commun- ity. • In the face of failure in our negotiations with the Board we convened a meeting of Jewish organizational representatives on Monday, October 27th. The spontaneous response Surprised even us who had always believed that we were expressing- the wilt of Detroit Jewry. Men and women came in such large numbers that we had to take the meeting to the auditorium of the Jewish Center on Davison. Even here the space was insufficient. Landsmanshaften, lodges, fra- ternities, veterans' groups, synagogues—all spoke as with one voice through their representatives-2-expressing their indignation at the thought that our Jewish hospital should be anything but completely kosher. Observant and non-Observant Jews alike were unanimous in their demand that our hospital should honor the traditions by which our people has lived. Their sentiment was deep and strong. It revealed an unwavering determ- ination to resist any decision which, in the words of one of the speakers, would "build a ghetto for Jews who wish to keep Kashruth." Prayerfully we ask you to reconsider this entire matter, to respect the will of multitudes of Jews and to make the Jewish hospital worthy of its sacred func- tion as a Jewish institution. It is no shame to admit error. It is a trait . of greatness to review one's judgment and to accept the overwhelming wish of the community. (International Soundphoto) Campaigning in Brooklyn N. Y., General EISENHOWER re- mived a candelabrum from Rabbi ' MENASCHE KLEIN, their first meeting since liberation of the Nazi's Buchenwald concentration wimp, where the rabbi was a prisoner We look forward with eagerness to your early reply. The responsibility now rests with you and your colleagues on the board of Sinai Hospital. —COMMITTEE ON KASHRUTH IN THE DETROIT SINAI HOSPITAL.