Local Sisterhoods Join in Honorin g
Dr. Pierre van. Paassen on Sept. 16

Members of the combined De-
troit Sisterhoods will join in
honoring Pierre van Paassen,
distinguished novelist and lec-
turer, at a "Life-Line to Israel"
reception, 1 p.m., Monday, Sept.
16, at Temple Israel.
The event is being arranged
to spur the High Holy Day ap-
peal for Israel Bonds.
The Sisterhoods have set a
goal of $100,000 for the sale of
State of Israel Bonds at this
event. The needs of new immi-
gration in Israel, their integra t
tion and housing, have
prompted the Sisterhoods for
the first time in the history of
Detroit to unite thdr organiza-
tions in one great sustained ef-
fort for the sale of Bonds.
Dr. Van Paassen, interna-
tionally famous author and ana-
lyst of world affairs, is the au-
thor of "Earth Could Be Fair,"
"Jerusalem Calling," "The For-
gotten Ally" and other best sell-
ers. He is one of the most wide-
ly read authors of our time. His
"Days of Our Years" is one of
the classics of our generation.
Long an ardent champion at
the Zionist cause, van Paassen.
made his first visit to Palestine
in 1925. David Ben-Gurion said
that "van Paassen's work is one
of the foundation stones of the
Medinat Israel." The Prime Min-
ister called van Paassen "the
chief of the spiritual Haganah."
During the Arab riots of 1929 in
Jerusalem, he was attacked and
wounded by the Grand Mufti's ,

mobsters.

An ordained minister of the
Unitarian Church, van Paassen
is a noted foreign correspon-
dent. He covered the Riff re-

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Israel's Strength Plan Sept. 22 Dedication Banquet
Research Efforts for Hayim Greenberg LZ Institute
Three
guest personalities, Schaver, Morris Lieberman
Evaluated by B-G along
with a host of local com- Irving Pokempner.

,

(Direct JTA Teletype Wire to
The Jewish News)

DR. PIERRE

van

PAASSEN

volt in Morrocco, the Pilsudski
Putsch in Poland, the Ethiopian
War, the Spanish Civil War, and
numerous other historic events.
He interviewed Hitler and Mus-
solini and when the Nazis as-
sumed power, he was one of the
first to be expelled from Ger-
many.
A native of the Netherlands,
van Paassen served in the Brit-
ish Army during the first World
War. He was decorated with
the Croix de Guerre with gold
palm by the late King Albert of
the Belgiums.. He is a Doctor
of Divinity and a Doctor of He-
brew Letters.
His latest book, "A Pilgrim's
Vow," describing a walking
tour through the Holy Land,
has been called "a masterpiece
of glorious •writing" by Dr.
Daniel Poling, editor of the
Christian Herald.
A highlight of the Sept. 16
program will be the first fall
appearance of the Music Study
Choral Group under the direc-
tion of Don Frohman. The
group will be accompanied by
Mrs. Isadore Mendelsohn. Mrs.
Victor Vizer, chairman of the
group, has planned a diversified
program.

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JERUSALEM—Without "the
aid of one of the great pow-
ers," the Arab states could not
defeat Israel, "but Israel natur-
ally could not stand alone
against a great power attack,"
Prime Minister David Ben-
Gurion declared in an inter-
view published Wednesday.
Asked by the military cor-
respondent of Davar, Israeli
daily, whether there was "any
sense to a policy of retalia-
tion," the Prime Minister, who
also serves as Defense Minis-
ter, replied, "there's no dog-
matic answer to such questions.
At the present time, there is
relative tranquility along our
borders, but Israel will not be
caught napping" if the situa-
tion changed.
Discussing the Sinai Opera-
tion, the Prime Minister said
that the Army General Staff
was engaged in correction of
some "organizational and imple-
mentational shortcomings noted
in the campaign," with the re-
sult that the Israel army was
now even more effective "than
during the Sinai campaign."
The Prime Minister said
there had been "no little prog-
ress" in the field of atomic re-
search in Israel and that there
were "considerable prospects
for further research, but we
are still in a state of 'he who
girdeth his armor' and not in
a state of 'he who putteth it
off'."
Ben-Gurion stressed the sta-
tus of equality in the Israel
army as well as the importance
of the army in the absorption
of immigrants in Israeli cul-
ture.
He said, in response to a
question as to whether "Hatik-
vah" could continue to serve
as Israel's national anthem
after establishment of the Jew-
ish State, that "there are im-
portant arguments for a new
national anthem to express the
mission of the State of Israel,
but since less than 15 percent
of the nation lives in Israel,
there is still reason to retain
the Hatikvah anthem."

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I NO CERTIFICATES
I NO RED TAPE

WASHINGTON (JTA)—
Romuald Spasowski, Polish
Ambassador to the United
States, admitted there were
abuses of regulations permit-
ting Jews repatriated from the
Soviet Union to occupy prem-
ises left by other Jews who
had emigrated to Israel.
He made the admission to
representatives of the Ameri-
can Jewish Congress who had
called to confer on a report,
published in the Warsaw Yid-
dish daily, Folkstimme, that

two Jewish families were as-
saulted in Wroclaw recently
when they moved into such an
apartment.
The Ambassador told the
AJC delegation that acute
housing shortages in Poland
prompted such "inequities" as
the one that led to the as-
sault on the families in Wroc-
law. He is returning to Po-
land, Spasowski said, and will
look into the situation there
regarding the treatment given
Jewish repatriates.

Asks End to Tax
Returns Publication

A

proposal that the Israel gov-
ernment abandon its practice of
publishing an annual list of the
names of individuals and corn-
panies paying income taxes was
put forth here by the man re-
sponsible for publishing the
document.
Zeef Sharef, the government's
revenue commissioner, said that
publication of the list had not
paid off in information of in-
come tax evasion. Informers'
reports of evasion, he said,
rarely held up under investi-

gation.

and

Tickets to the banquet are
available at the Institute or by
calling the dedication commit-
tee, DI. 1-0669 or DI. 1-0670.

O )-4 •

4.o

West Berlin Contributes
$250,000 for Jewish Center

BERLIN (JTA) — The West
Berlin municipality announced
its agreement to provide the
equivalent of $250,000 toward
the construction of a Jewish
community center in the west-
ern sector of the city. The
structure will rise on the site
of Berlin's largest synagogue
which was destroyed by the
Nazis in 1938.

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Polish Ambassador
Admits Abuse to Jews

JERUSALEM, (JTA) —

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munal leaders, will jointly par-
ticipate in the dedication ban-
quet of the Hayim Greenberg
Center, 19161 Schaefer, on
Sept. 22.
The banquet, scheduled for
6:30 p.m., in the center's Morris
L. Schaver auditorium, will be
addressed by noted author and
lecturer Maurice Samuel in the
main speech of the evening.
Also present on the occasion
of the dedication of the build-
ing, also known as the Labor
Zionist Institute, will be Mr.
Greenberg's widow, Mrs. Leah
Greenberg, and Nathan Bar
Yaacov, Labor Attache at the
Israel Embassy in Washington.
In addition to the greetings
Bar Yaacov will bring from
the Israel government, Pinchas
Cruso, chairman of the Execu-
tive of the Labor Zionist Or-
ganization, and Louis Segal, na-
tional secretary of the Farband,
will bring national greetings.
A music program will be
highlighted by the appearance
of Detroit soprano Emma
Schaver, who will be accom-
panied at the piano by Rebecca
Frohman.
A plaque ceremony and the
announcement of the first an-
nual Hayim Greenberg Memo-
rial Award will be other fea-
tures of the program.
Participating in the program
will be Rabbi Morris Adler,
Harry L. Schumer, Morris L.

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