Sen. Morse to Open Shaarey Zedek
Men's Club Lecture Series Oct. 7

Senator Wayne L. Morse of
Oregon, liberal, teacher, lecturer,
will open the • Shaarey Zedek
Men's Club calendar of events
with an address
on the subject,
"What Is Politi-
cal Liberalism,"
at the Shaarey
Zedek, At 8:30
p.m. next Wed-
. nesday.
William Nad-
ler, vice-presi-
dent of the
Men's Club- and
chairman of the
program corn-
Sen. Morse mittee, announ-
ces that provision has been made
for non-members to hear this
lecture. MembeEs will be admit-
ted by presenting their member-
ship cards.
The‘second event of the sea-
son, on Nov. 4, will feature "The
New Narrative Theater," with
Israel Welichansky and Ruth
Kobart.
Among the featured programs
this_ year will be a "Meet the
Press" event, on Jan. 13, with
Lawrence K. Spivak.
Sen. Morse (the middle initial
L stands for Lyman) was born
near Madison, Wis., in 1900. H3
was schooled at University of

Arab-Israel Peaces
Possible by Direct
Talks, Israel Says

.

UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.,
(JTA) — Emphasizing that Is-
rael is continuing to seek peace
with the Arab countries, Am-
bassador Abba Ebari, chief of
Israel's delegation to the United
Nations, told the UN General
Assembly Monday that he be-
lieves that "this would not be
achieved until there were direct
negotiations between Israel and
the , Arab states."
The Israel diplomat appealed
to the General Assembly for a
procedure whereby resolutions
which have been superseded
could be dropped. He was re-
ferring to the practice . of the
Arab states in making 'propa-
ganda of past decisions of the
United Nations on Palestine.
Dr. Charles Malik, Lebanese
representative, told the General
Assembly that his government
insists that Jerusalem. be "poli-
tically neutralized." He re-
ferred to the recent protest of
a Catholic organization to the
UN against the transfer of Is-
rael government offices to Jeru-
salem and said that Jerusalem,
as well as an area of ten miles
around the city, must be inter-
nationalized.
The Lebanese delegate also
emphasiied that "the. Arab
world would never acquiesce in
the fait accompli" established
with regard to the Arab refugees
from Palestine. He said that the
Arab refugees were the key to
practically every issue relating
to Israel.
"Things would begin to hap-
pen" with regard to Palestine,
he stated, if the United Nations
made a serious effort to carry
out its decisions, if Israel agreed
to negotiate on the basis of
those decisions, if the great
powers gave a guarantee against
"territorial encroachment by Is-
rael upon the Arabs," if Israel
put an end to its present im-
migration policy, if the Arabs
were "a c ti v ely helped to
strengthen themselves."
Attacking the Israel govern-
ment for seeking to make Jeru-
salem its capital, the Lebanese
diplomat expressed the opinion-
that Israel would never be satis-
fied with the new city but would
attempt to seize the Jordan-held
Old City as well. The only way
to avert this "eventuality," he
said, "is from now on to place
the entire area of Jerusalem
under effective international
supervision."
Dr. piabander, Iraqi repre-
sentative, spoke in a similar
V He attacked Israel. and
ionisrn." and said that the
b refugees are losing faith in
United Nations,

Wisconsin, University of . Minne-
sota, Columbia University, Cor-
nell College, Drake University
and College of South Jersey.
He taught at Wisconsin and
Minnesota Universities before
being namect, in 1929, assistant
professor of law at the Univer-
sity of Oregon. He served that
school as dean and professor of
law from 1931 to 1944.
His - governmental posts have
included chairman, President's
Railway. Emergency Board
(1941). National War Labor
Board (1942-44), and present
membership in the U.S. Senate
His first term in the Senate was
in 1944, and he was re-elected
in 1950. He will serve until 1957.

Dr. Martin Buber Wins
German Peace Prize

FRANKFURT, (JTA) — Prof.
Martin Buber, world renowned
Jewish philosopher, teacher and
author, accepted the 1953 "Peace
Prize of the German Bookdealers
Federation" of West Germany at
a' public ceremony at St. Paul's
Church here, a secularized na-
tional shrine.
T h e Minister - President of
Hesse, Dr. A. Zinn, and Dr.
Theodor Dehler, Hesse Minister
of Justice, attended the cere-
mony.
In his speech of acceptance,
Prof. Buber,said that those Ger-
mans who had murdered mil-
lions of his fellow Jews had re-
moved themselves from human-
ity to the "sphere of monstrous
inhumanity." "Who am I that
I could presume to 'forgive'," he
added
Dr. Buber said that when he
visualized Germans of the era
of Auschwitz and Treblinka, he
saw the "great number who
knew" of the„ horrors which were
occurring without doing any-
thing about them. Knowing hu-
man weakness, he declared, he
refused to condemn such people
for failing to become martyrs.
Prof. Buber concluded by say-
ing that he felt "reverence and
love" for those Germans who
refused to carry out the' orders
of murderers and who revolted
against them, preferring death
or suicide.
Other speakers at the cere-
mony praised the 75-year-old
Professor Emeritus at the He-
brew University as a great hu-
manitarian who had done much
to aid persecuted Jews. The
prize, slightly under $2,500, was
established in 1950 and was first
won by Max Tau, Jewish author
and pacifist.

DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-5

Callaghan and Weisman to Address
Zionist Region Meeting Here Oct.11

Friday, October 2, 1953

Seminary to Award
5 Honorary Degrees

NEW YORK—Paul G. Hoff-
man, former Administrator of
the Economic Cooperation Ad-
ministration, past President of
the Ford Foundation, and chair-
man of the board of Studebaker
Corporation, will deliver the
main address. "The Role of
America in the World Scene," at
the Oct. 4 convocation of the
Jewish Theological Seminary of
America.
Grayson L. Kirk, president of
Columbia University, and Mr.
Hoffman will receive the honor-
ary degree of Doctor of Law
from the Seminary. The honor-
ary degree of Doctor of Divinity
will be conferred upon Rabbi
Herman M. Cohen, St. Paul,
Rabbi Max D. Davidson, Perth
Amboy, and Rabbi Alter F. Lan-
desman, Brooklyn.
Rabbis Eli A. Bohnen, Morris
B. Chapman, Bernard Mandel-
baum, and Jacob Milgrom will
receive the degree of Doctor of
Hebrew Literature for work pur-
sued ,in course.
Daniel G. Ross, of New York
City, Chairman of the National
Planning Committee of the
Seminary, will respond on be-
half of the men to be installed
as officers of the NPC and its
Campaign Committee, including
Louis Berry, Detroit.

Albert Burke to Head
Cong. Ahavas Achim

J. Dorsey Callaghan, music
critic of The Detroit Free Press,
who recently returned from a
visit in Israel and the Arab
states, and Herman L. Weisman
New York ZiOn-
ist leader, will
address•the
Michigan Zion-
ist Region ses
sions h e r e, at
the Zionist
House, Sunday.
Oct. 11. •
An entire day's
events are plan-1
ned, with Mr
W e i s sman
speaking at the
concluding
Weisman
sion.
Mr. Callaghan will address the

noon session, which will follow
a bruncheon.
Leon Kay is president of the
Region.

Three Hillel Foundations
Dedicated by Bnai Britli

•

Catholic Body Protests
Israel's Ministry Transfer

UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.,
(JTA)—United Nations Secre-
tary General Dag Hammarsk-
jold has received a letter from
the Catholic Near East Welfare
Association protesting Israel's
transfer of its Foreign Ministry
from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
The Catholic organization's
protest accused the Jewish State
of violating UN resolution on
the internationalization of Jeru-
salem. Francis Cardinal Spell-
man of New York is head of the
Association.

EVANSTON, Ill.—The dedica-
tion of three new Hillel Build-
ings, bringing to 17 the total
number of new structures con-
tributed by the Bnai Brrth
lel Foundations to American
Colleges during the last six
years, was announced by Rabbi
Arthur J. Lelyveld of New York
City, its national director, in his
annual - I:et:tort to the opening
session of the National Hillel
Commission, at the Joseph and
Gertrude Baumgarten Building
of the Hillel Foundation at
Northwestern .University.
The opening of Hillel build-
ings at the University of Florida
in Gainesville, at the University
of Washington in Seattle and at
Boston University will add to
the 44 Hillel 'buildings already
in use as part of the program of
serving Jewish youth on 208
campuses in the United States,
Canada and Israel, which pro-
vides religious, counseling, edu-
cational and cultural activities
for Jewish college students.

CHARLES WEINSTOCK Says ...

At the recent annual meeting
of Cong. Ahavas Achim, Albert
Burke was elected synagogue
president. He will be assisted
during the coming year by the
following :
Ellis Rifkin, vice-president;
Alex Kraft, treasurer; Philmore
Leemon, Isadore Fidler and Ir-
win Leviant, secretaries; Frank
Benjamin, sgt.-at-arms. Mem-
bers of the board include Irwin
I. Cohn, Julian Winston, Harry
Bodzin, - Arthur Schussler, Abe
Nusbaum, Harold Jeross, Ken-
neth Bolen and William Hordes.
Isadore Leeman, retiring pres-
ident, reported a fifty percent
growth in membership during
the last year. Plans formulated
call for expansion of the pres-
ent building at 19190 Schaefe.r.

You Can NOW Get the Best Deal of the Season
On the Beautiful NEW '53 BUICK

Come in and See Me at the
BUICK RETAIL STORE (near G.M. Bldg.)
CR. 5-9700
6164 CASS

ti

A Loved One Sick?

Thinking of an appropriate gift? TELE-VIEW-
ING WILL BE APPRECIATED MOST! You
can help make confinement hours slip by
quickly and pleasantly. SEND YOUR LOVED
ONE A TELEVISION FOR A DAY, WEEK OR
MONTH. Daily delivery to home or hospital.
Reasonable Rental Rates.

And the tree of the field shall
yield her fruit, and the earth
shall yield her increase, and PHONE TE. 4-2858
they shall be sate in their land,
and shall know that I am the DEXTER TELEVISION COMPANY 11565
Lord.—Ezek. 34:27.

DEXTER

UJA Campaign Cabinet
Asks $25,000,000 Cash

Meeting in emergency session,
members of the National Cam-
paign Cabinet of the United
Jewish • Appeal called upon
American Jews "to assure a har-
vest of $25,000,000 in cash" by
mid-October with which to fi-
nance urgent relief and welfare
programs for more than a half
a million refugee Jews in Israel,
Europe, Moslem countries and
the United States.
The 48-man Cabinet urged
American Jews "to compare the
happy -character of the Succoth
holiday with the unhappy plight
of 515,000 Jewish men, women
and children of four continents."
The UJA Cabinet designated
as "deadline days" the 10 days
remaining in the effort to raise
$25,000,000 in 'cash this fall and
drew attention to culmination
of the dollar drive on Oct. 10
and 11 at a national report con-
ference in Cleveland, 0. Former
UN Secretary General Trygve
Lie, Israel Ambassador Abba S.
Eban, Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver,
UJA General Chairman Edward
M. M. Warburg, and other noted
American and international
figures will address the twb-day
parley.
The Campaign Cabinet meet-
ing, held at the Waldorf-:•Astoria
Hotel, brought reports by Sam-
uel H. Daroff of Philadelphia,
chairman of the Campaign Cab-
inet, and Joseph Holtzman of
Detroit, national cash chairthan
of the UJA and a national cam-
paign. chairman.

AT

AMERICAN

YOUR SAVINGS
EARN

CURRENT
RATE

There's only one practical way to make dreams a reality , . . and that's
through a regular savings program.' At American, your savings will earn
a big 2%, and be insured to $10,000.00. Open your account by the 10th
of the month, receive full earnings starting from the 1st.

AND LOAN ASSOC1A

"Save the

12246 DEXTER at Cortland
TO 9-6611

American Way"

439 WOODWARD at Lamed
WO 5-5800

6060 W. FORT at Military
VI 3-7600
Member of Federal Home. Loan Bank System and Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corp.

