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May 01, 1953 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1953-05-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Al! Divisions in Allied Jewish Campaign Spur
Efforts; Report Rallies Set for May 1, 5, 8

With the series of report
rallies of tne Allied Jewish
Campaign already underway.
figures show that the food serv-
ice council, under the chairman-
ship of George D. Keil, main-
tains a commanding lead, with
80% of last year's achievement
already reported.
At the.•report rally held last
Tuesday, which was addressed
by Ruth Gruber, author and
kcturer, announcement was
made that pledges made so
far in the 1953 drive tot2tI
$3,000,000.
Keil told the gathering that
approximately 50% of the food
service council's prospects have
been covered and efforts to close
the gap toward total coverage
are being made. Indications are
the. food division will top last
year's achievement of $396,000,
he said.
Singled out by Keil for out-
standing coverage of prospects
were Morris Music, chairman of

retail meats; Tom Borman, pre-
campaign associate chairman,
food division; Andor Feldheim,
co-chairman, beverages; Samuel
H. Greenberg, chairman, retail
markets; Charles Litt, co - . chair-
man, bars and restaurants; and
Nathan Metz, chairman, fish..
The super-market section, un-
der the chairmanship of Mervin
K. Grosberg, has already raised
more than its achievement last,
year, Keil reported. Following
close behind are the food brok-
ers,. under Abe Gurwin, chair-
man, and Peter Copeland, asso-
ciate chairman; and processors,
led by Julius Mehler, chairman;
Alfred Loewenstein, Jr., whole-
sale meats section; and whole-
sale grocers under Meyer Ber-
man.
The second report meeting will
be held at 12:15 p.m. today, in
the Butzel Memorial Building,
and will feature additional re-
ports, including a progress an-
alysis by the Mercantile Divi-
sion, under the leadership of
James Wineman. Vice-chairmen
DETROIT JEWISH NEWS - 3 of the section are Bernard Pin-
cus, Samuel H. Schwartz, Alex
Friday, May 1, 1953
Sklar and Stanley Winkelman.

Next week, two more report
rallies will be held. The first,
at 8 p.m., Tues-
day, May 5, in
the Jewish Cell.
ter, on Wood-
ward, will be
addressed by
Rabbi Jacob E
Segal of Con-
gregation Adas
Shalom. The
second . will be
held at 1 2 : 1 5
p.m., Friday Rabbi Segal
May 8, in the Fred M. Butzel
Memorial Building, 163 Madison.
Miss Gruber, special foreign
correspondent for the New York
Herald Tribune and author of
the recent best seller, "Israel
Without Tears," told the Tues-
day group that Israel, during
her first five years, has known
five freedoms — freedoms un-
known in most of the Middle
East. These, she listed as "free-
dom of education, worship, opin-
ion, and speech, of the press,
and of- the courts." She described
ISrael as "a mirror image of the
United States and of Western
Democracies."

Israel May Bring Charges to UN
Against Arab Border Attacks

JERUSALEM, (J T A) — Israel
may bring the problem of con-
tinuous Arab violation of its
frontiers to the United Nations
Security Council for solution. A
high Israeli military source
stressed that the army was "pre-
pared' to handle any further ag-
gression • like the two-hour ex-
change of rifle fire set off here
last week when Jordanians
opened fire on Israeli civilians.
This incident, in which four
Israelis were wounded and at
least four Arabs, including two
members of the Arab Legion,
were killed and five wounded,
was halted by the intervention
of UN truce officials. However,
Israeli sources indicated that
they felt that the truce super-
vision machinery was inade-
quate at this time to end the
series of increasingly-serious
border violations and that what,
was needed was "high political
action."
The Israelis reported that at

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Hanover Court Refuses Settlement Near Tel Aviv
Named for American Zionist
To Indict Jew-Baiter

HANOVER, (JTA)—The local
district attorney has refused to
indict a Jew-baiting pamphle-
teer, Arthur Goetze, against
whom a complaint had been
filed by the Hamburg Society for
Christian-Jewish Cooperation.
Such agitation, the district
attorney argued, is not covered
by the legal definition of "in-
citement to violence" or "incite-
ment to violate existing laws."
Goetze, who blamed "Jewish
high finance" for the rise of Hit-
ler, quoted Mathilde Ludendorff,
widow of the German field mar-
shall, who led the Axis armies
in World War I, and who is the
founder of a neo-pagan cult
which considers the Nazis too
moderate on the Jewish ques-
tion.
In Frankfurt, Max Levy, pres-
ident of the Jewish community
of Kassel, has been acquitted of
"publicly insulting?" former top
Nazi Karl Weinrich, who was
sentenced to a maximum penal-
ty of 10 years imprisonment, but
later freed.
Levy, a member of a Kassel
sports club, protested Weinrich's
appearance at the club, and told
a newspaperman that he could
not endure the presence of a
prominent Nazi upon whose
shoulders rested part of the guilt
of the death of Jews of Kassel.
A report from London on a
statement made by H. A. Good-
man, chairman of the European
executive of World Agudas Is-
rael, indicates that the Agudah
will ask West Germany to re-
turn to the Jewish community
Jewish children who were left
with Christian families during
the war.

Israel-Jordan Mixed Armistice
Commission the Arabs, aided
by the UN chairman, Brig.
Gen. Bennet De Ridder,
"whitewashed" themselves byt
voting Israel responsible of
"trumped up" charges in con-
Arise, walk through the land
nection with the shooting of in the length of it and in the
two Jewish guards near Wadi breadth of it; for I will give it
Fuken.
unto thee.—Gen. 13:17.
Gen. De Ridder refused to put
to a vote an Israel motion de-
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When Gen. De Ridder refused to
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Israelis refused to participate in
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whose removal they seek.
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Jordanians are reported to 12226 DEXTER
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have lodged a new protest with
the armistice commission on the
Jerusalem shooting fray. The
"battle" opened when an Arab
Legionnaire on the wall of the
Old City fired at and wounded
an Israeli civilian in the Mus-
rara quarter of the New City.
Israeli sentries replied and then
other Jordanians joined in and
soon bullets were being ex-
changed all along the Jerusalem
frontier. On Israeli source esti-
mated that the Jordanians
might have suffered as many as
25 casualties.
(In Washington, Israel Am-
bassador Abba Eban called on
Henry A. Byroade, Assistant Sec-
retary of State for Near Eastern
Affairs, to bring to the atten-
tion of the United States Gov-
ernment the increasing number
of violations of Israel territory
by Jordan and Egyptian Arabs.)

'2 "

-

PITTSBURGH, (JTA)—A new
settlement, Neve Moshe-Cha-
nina, named after Zionist leader
Morris Neaman and his son
Chanina, will be built on Jewish
National Fund land near Tel
Aviv, as a result of an agree-
ment signed here by Mrs. Rose
Neaman and Dr. Abraham Gra-
nott, chairman of the JNF board
in Jerusalem.
Mr. Neaman was an early
Zionist leader and chairman of
the Tri-State area United Jew-
ish Appeal. His son was killed in
an accident. Mrs. Neaman is
making a gift of IL25,000 to the
JNF for the site.

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Anti-Israel Sentiment Grows
LONDON. (JTA) — Anti-Israel
sentiment has been intensified
in the Arab states by develop-
ments in Damacus and Bagdad,
according to dispatches from the
Middle East.
In Damascus it was reported
that the secretary of the Arab
League had approved a sugges-
tion by the Iraqi Minister to
Syria that the Arab world boy-
cott only those German firms
which fill reparations orders for
Israel. This device, the Iraqi
said, would avoid a general boy-
cott of West Germany and con-
tinue the traditional Arab-Ger-
man friendship.
At Bagdad, the Iraqi Foreign
Minister told Parliament that
the boycott question would again
be discussed by the Arab League.

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