8—THE JEWISH NEWS

Direct JTA Teletype Wire to
The Jewish News

JERUSALEM—The Israel Par-
liament, prior to its recess for
Passover, began consideration . of
a measure designed to guarantee
the "security of the borders"
and to combat infiltration by
Arabs from the nearby states.
The law defines an infiltree
as one who intentionally and
illegally entered Israel since
Nov. 29, 1947, and was a citizen
of Lebanon, Egypt, Saudi Ara-
bia, Iraq, Jordan or Yemen or a
citizen or resident of Israel or a
resident without citizenship who
had left sine e that date and
who returned illegally. Punish-
ment for such action is five
yeirs imprisonment or 3,000
pounds fine or both.
Any per sons defined above,
who served in an irregular force
against Israel is liable to seven
years' imprisonment or 4;000
pounds fine. An infiltree who
carried out an armed attack on
Israel is liable to life imprison-
mdnt. Persons who aid or trade
with infiltrees are liable to five
years imprisonment and a fine
of 4,000 pounds, while persons
who sheltered such infiltrees or
helped them evade the author-
ities are liable to 15 years in jail
or a fine of 10,000 pounds or
both.
From Tel Aviv, it was reported
that 16 Arab infiltrees were
killed in clashes with Israeli
border patrols. Two other Arab
raiders were wounded and eight
were arrested. A total of 33 cat-
tle was stolen.
Israeli border troops repulsed
Jordanian forces in a sharp
clash near Beit Jibrin, an Is-
raeli military spokesman re-
vealed. The spokesman said that
the Jordanian forces crossed
over into Israel territory and
were driven back with an unde-
termined number of casualties.
The Israel government has
granted 31 oil prospecting li-
censes to seven different com-
panies, two of which are Is-
raeli corporations, Pinch as
Saphir, director of the govern-
ment's development depart-

Re-Elect

Circuit Court Judge

THOMAS I

MURPHY

Find Herzl Document in Austria

Friday, April 3, 1953

Israel Drafts Law to Assure
Security of State's Borders

VIENNA, (JTA)—Austrian police authorities have handed
over to the Jewish Community for transmission to Israel a
police registration card filled out and signed by Theodore
Herzl.
The card, dated May 15, 1901, was found by police chief
Karl Holoubek in a file of old police records. He handed the
document to Dr. Emil Maurer, president of the Vienna Jewish
Community, who turned it over to Israel consul Arieh Eshel.
Mr. Eshel will send it to Israel where it will be placed in
the Herzl Museum.

Pilot to Pilot

ment, announced here Mon-
day.
The companies involved will
be notified formally next week
that they have the licenses.
They will pay 100 pounds for
each license and five additional
pounds for each 1.000 dunams
(250 acres) in which they are
permitted to prospect.
The companies which received
licenses are Husky Oil Corpora-
tion of the U. S., six licenses
c o v e r in g 1,665,000 dunams;
Brode and Company, three li-
censes covering 910,000 dunams;
New Continental Oil Corpora-
tion, Canada, eight licenses cov-
ering 2,700,000 dunams; Saks-
Ben Tuvim Group, Canada, four
licenses covering 1,130,000 du-
nams; Israel Company organized
as Lapidot, which actually con-
sists of the Mekroth Water
Company and Ampal, which
received three joint licenses;
Mechspei Neft Company, in
which Swiss, Israeli and Ameri-
can investors are involved, one
license covering 215,000 dunams.
and the Hayarden Company or-
ganized by the sNovorneisky-Lord
Glenconner Investment Group.

Airborne Loan for JNF

The JNF has received a loan •
in the amount of 1E700,000 from
the French national aviation
company, Air France.
The Air France loan bears an
interest of 2% and is repayable
over a period of 10 years in
semi-annual installments which
will not start until 1955.

Pledged
to serve all

-ASK FOR

Marina Svetlova, prima-bal-
lerina of the Metropolitan Opera
Co., compares notes with El Al
Israel Airlines pilot, Capt. Sam
Lewis. Mme. Svetlova herself
holds a pilot's license, which she
received at 16. She now has 450
solo hours to her credit.

AUFMA N'S

KOSHER DILL & NEW DILL

PICKLES

AT YOUR FAVORITE GROCERS
OR DELICATESSEN DEALER

TR. 5-4379

Elect
WILLIAM D.

29 City UJA Hookup
Hears Drive Speakers
Blast Red Anti-Semitism

MERRIFIELD

NEW YORK—More than 100,-
000 Jewish community leaders
meeting in 30 principal cities, in-
cluding Detroit, in a pre-Pass-
over National Freedom Mobili-
zation sponsored by the United
Jewish Appeal, Sunday, pledged
themselves to "save every life
that can be saved and to pro-
vide for the strengthening of
Israel," as their answer to the
current anti-Jewish campaign
of the Soviet Government and
its sateliites.
Adopting a resolution which
"noted with deepest concern the
campaign of incitement by the
Communist regimes" a g a i n s t
their Jewish populations, the
State of Israel and the Ameri-
can Jewish Joint Distribution
Committee, a UJA relief agency,
the community leaders urged all
Americans to give fullest sup-
port to the 1953 United Jewish
Appeal for $144,524,250 as the
practical response to the emer-
gency presented by the Soviet
attack and a means of support-
ing "the free way of life."
Participants in mass rallies
heard addresses by Abba S.
Eban, Israel's Ambassador to the
United States, and Edward M.
M. Warburg, general chairman
of the United Jewish Appeal,
over a special radio-telephone
hookup originating from the key
rally in New York, in the grand
ballroom of the Hotel Astor.
William Rosenwald, UJA na-
tional chairman, served as chair-
man of the mobilization and
presided at the New York
meeting.
Congressman Jacob K. Javits,
of New York, Dr. Israel Gold-
stein, president of the Ameri-
can Jewish Congress, General
Sessions Judge Jonah J. Gold-
stein, Rabbi Irving Miller, Presi-
dent of the Zionist Organization
of America, and Mrs. Jakob Mi-
chael, co-chairman of the New
York UJA Women's Division,
were among the other speakers

a member the

DETROIT BOARD
OF EDUCATION

DESERVES
PROMOTION

APRIL 6

MERRIFIELD

favors a representative
Board of Education—one
that represents all the
people of Detroit and is con-
cerned - with the educational
welfare of all the children. .

JUDGE NEAL FITZGERALD

Indorsed for Promotion to the

Circuit Court Bench

By the Following Outstanding Attorneys:

Hon. William Friedman

Hon. Charles Rubiner

Irving Kroll

Harry Okrent

Courteous

Carl Gussin

Charles Shere

Herman Schmier

Donald Barris

Norman Rom

Morry M. Fenton

Sol Levin

William J. Weinstein

Norman Feder

(Former Probate Judge)

Tolerant

CIIICUIT COURT

This advertisement paid for

No. 53

b1' Jewish Friends

MERR FIELD

wants the best possible
schools and equipment for
the tax-payers' dollar with
elimination of half-day ses-
sions and the need for spe-
cial buses.

advocates adequate salaries
. both minimum and max-
imum . . . and a practical
retirement program for all
employees of the school
system.

Samuel Charfoos

Jerome Keliman

IFFI

Capable

seeks a realistic educational
program that will give max-
imum help to the 85 % of
our students who will not
go on to college.

VOTE MONDAY

is dedicated to support our
system of education as the
best means of safeguarding
our freedom and our form
of government.

I,ELD

insists on improved Public
Relations—a program to
keep parent and community
groups fully informed of
each school problem and of
what they can do to help
solve it.
* * *
A Detroiter for 40 of his 44
years. Educated in the High-
land Park public schools.
Holds A.B. degree from
Georgetown University and
M. Ed. degree from Univer-
sity of Kentucky. Now
Director of Industrial Edu-
cation, Chrysler Corpora-
tion and past president,
James Vernor P.T.A. For-
merly high school teacher
and principal for 11 years.
Special lecturer in Educa-
tion, Wayne University.

He's the kind of man
we need on our school board

1111111 ■

•

