$6;000 Fund Honors Hordes' 60th Birthday With. Trees in Negev A gathering of close to 300, a number of them representing local organizations and congre- gations, including a number of rabbis and prominent commun- ity leaders, on Tuesday evening honored William Hordes at a dinner on his 60th birthday. Under the toastmastership of James I. Ellmann, who was chairman of the Hordes Testi- monial Committee, high honors were paid to both Mr. and Mrs. Hordes for their untiring com- munity efforts, but especially to the Jewish National Fund, under whose auspices the dinner was arranged. Mr. Ellmann, in his opening remarks, evaluated Mr. Hordes' activities in behalf of the JNF, the Allied Jewish Community Council, congrega- tional life and many other activities. After the dinner, Mr. Ell- mann announced that a Mile of Trees will be planted in Mr. and Mrs. Hordes' honor in the Negev in Israel. While $4,000 is needed to achieve this task, the sum of $6,000 was con- tributed by those attending the dinner. Greetings were extended to the Hordeses- by Sidney Shevitz, Irving Schiussel, and Mrs. Jules Kraft, in behalf, respectively, of the Jewish Community Council, Jewish Welfare Federation and Ladies' Auxiliary of the JNF. In his invocation, in Hebrew, Rabbi Jacob Chinitz bjessed Mr. Hordes with good wishes for continued community service. There were touching mo- ments when Mrs. Hordes spoke words of affection to her hus- band, expressing the hope that he will have the strength to continue his work for Israel. Mrs. Hordes presented to the JNF a $500 Israel bond as her gift towards the Mile of Trees gift in her husband's honor. Earl Hordes, the elder son, also greeted his father in brief remarks and read mes- sages of greetings from many organizations and congrega- tions and from leaders in this country and in Israel. Especially acclaimed was the messages from the Hordes children, Herbert and Nessia Hordes, from Jerusalem. The daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Edward (Evelyn) Wishnetsky, a n d grandson, Richard Wishnetsky, and Mrs. Earl Hordes, were among those on the dais. The principal guest speaker, Mendel Fisher, national JNF director, spoke in glowing terms of the Hordes' efforts for the JNF and -Israel. He presented Mr. Hordes with a certificate especially engraved for him in Israel to indicate the planting of the Mile of Trees. Sidor Belarsky was guest soloist, ac- companied by Bella Goldberg. In his remarks to the gather- ing, Mr. Hordes, expressing grat- itude for the honors given him, told of his major interest— Zionism. He related the difficul- ties for Zionism in Russia at the hands of the Communists, con- demned Communism as a mur- derous movement and pointed to it as proof that only the end of Jewish. homelessness in Israel could solve the Jewish problem. Friday, March 19, 1954 Prof. Chain Honored in Germany; Fled Nazis FRANKFURT, (JTA) —P r o f. Ernst Boris Chain. co-discoverer of penicillin and world renowned scientist, who was driven from Germany a refugee of Nazism, was presented with the Paul Ehrlich Prize for Medical Re- search for 1954, at a ceremony opening the centennary celebra- tion of the birth of Dr. Ehrlich. _ Dr. Chain, son of Russian Jewish parents who settled in Berlin, is currently head of the department of research in chemical microbiology at Rome's Instituto Superiore di Sanita. At 47, Dr. Chain is chairman of the experts committee on anti- biotics of the World Health Or- ganization, UN affiliate. A Nobel Prize winner, Dr. Chain recently became a member of the board of governors of the Weizmann Institute of ' Science at Reho- voth. The ceremony was held in St. Paul's' Cathedral, now a German secular shrine, and was witness- ed by West German President Prof. Theodor Heuss. half-a- dozen Nobel Prize winners and high German government offi- cials. Also present were two daughters of Prof. Ehrlich, who journeyed here from New York and Los Angeles. Putting Two & Two Together • By RINNA GROSSMAN An American Jewish Press Feature This week I am going to tell you a story—not an ordinary one but a rousing adventure yarn, packed with action and' suspense, and set in an exotic foreign capital, celebrated in fiction for centuries as a site of intrigue and excitement. But this story is a present-day one and unlike most adventure stor- ies—it has a moral. It all started a few weeks ago, on January 3, when a British civil aircraft enroute from Nic- osia, Cyprus, to Teheran, Iran, made an emergency landing in Bagdad. There were three Is- raelis aboard the plane. Two of them were women. One, in ad- dition to her Israeli passport, was also in possession of a Dutch 4 passport. All three were taken into cus- tody and detained. They are still in detention. No informa- tion has been vouchsafed by the Iraqi government as to their welt ar e or whereabouts. No 'queStibr4s, regarding these three abdusCtetl , Israelis have been ans4red by the Iraqis. A !Strange, stony silence has greeted queries made by the Secretary-General of the United Nations, the International Red . Cross and t h e International Civil Aviation Organization. The only statement made at all runs somewhat- as follows: the three Israelis are citizens of an "en- emy" country What are the facts? 1. There are no Iraqis held in Israel. All questions relat- they'll need more than matzoh ing to Israeli or Arab prisoners to make their Seder, of war were settled over five more than the ration allows... years ago. 2. The government of Israel see that your Israel friends has always (with not a single get the food we take example to the contrary) per- for granted, mitted nationals of Arab strictly kosher for Passover... countries to proceed on their journeys under similar cir- send gift Scrip cumstances. $10, $15, $20, $25 or $50 3. The captain of the Bri- and let them shop themselves... tish plane raised no objection or give your choice of to the Israelis being forcibly removed from his aircraft PARCEL certificates nor did the British Embassy, $11.50, $15.50, $20.50 or $25.50 which insisted that the plane itself be released, make any aViN .751.8161 . kind of issue about the release of all the passengers. 4. The arrest and detention of passengers in transit is a flagrant defiance of interna- tional procedure — and a ges- ture so bold that the govern- ISRAEL ENTERPRISES ment of Iraq would surely TO. 8-6896 1 1820 Dexter Blvd. have hesitated to make it had there been the slightest fear RELIABLE PACKAGE SERVICE of any really serious protest by the • UN, the .U.S: or the TY. 8-2560 8917 Linwood Ave. symbolic but they can't live on it DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-17 Austria's New Offer on Jewish Claims Considered Unacceptable VIENNA, (JTA)—An offer by Chancellor Julius Raab of Aus- tria to pay 30,000,000 schillings ($1,200,000.) to the Vienna Jew- ish Community on account of the Jewish claims for restitution and heirless Jewish property was regarded in Jewish circles as a sign of - goodwill but as unac- ceptable in the present circum- stances. Chancellor a a b announced his offer at a Cabinet meeting. He said it had been made to the Committee on Jewish Claims on Austria as an advance install- ment on world Jewish claims— to be used to support aged and needy members of the Jewish community in Austria—pending a final settlement. Austrian government sources stated that the Chancellor's letter, addressed to Dr. Na- hum Goldmann, head of the Jewish claims committee, said that the Austrian government would a d d to this whatever further value might be agreed to in a final settlement. On the other hand, a government spokesman said, the govern- ment rejects Jewish demands for compensation on other Jewish losses which cannot be restored. It was considered doubtful that the world Jewish organiza- tions banded together in the claims committee would accept the offer. They had stipulated an advance payment of 50,000,- 000 schillings on a lump sum settlement of heirless property and the additional sum of 100,- 000,000 schillings as compensa- tion for other losses which can- not be restored. The Vienna' Jewish Community whose rela- tions with the claims commit- tee are of the best, is consider- ed certain to declare Chancellor Raab's offer unacceptable. The Austrian government's latest proposal, foreign observ- ers believe, is a result of the government's uncertainty over what the next move of the Jewish claims committee will be and as a result of diplo- matic intervention by the Is- real government which has called for an early settlement. Dr. Goldmann said in N e w York this week, that no offer had been received from the Aus- trian government. He said: "Our demands are simple. We are requesting only a fraction of the actual amount of o u r losses under Nazi rule. An insig- nificant token amount, however, would neither help the victims nor cancel the moral obligation. Present Austrian legislation for Nazi victims is inadequate. We can settle for nothing less than reasonable advance payment for heirless property to hard core cases." 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Nations and to the U.S. Secre- tary of State, asking that some- one intervene But the story, fantastic and 9726 DEXTER outrageous though it is, seems to have stirred no one's ima- 13137 Dexter 8735 - 12th Street gination outside the borders of BORENSTEIN BROS., PROP. the Jewish State. It is to be hoped, and expected, that one or the other of the mighty powers will eventually persuade Iraq to In Honor of Passover return the captives. But the 2 --- Matzos and moral will certainly not have Food Products been lost on the six other Arab == .-= states. Kidnapping can now be ISRAEL and DOMESTIC Chocolates and Candies added to the list of interna- • GOODMAN Matzos and Products tional crimes that can be "got- Goodman's Famous Tea-Matzo & Midgetea Matzo ten away" with — if the num ber of victims involved is not too large. 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