(Continued from Page 1) posing as a racist. He testified that Bright and others accused of The Temple bombing were at a meeting in May. At that meeting, a member reported on the death of 100 Jews in the Hungarian uprising in 1957. When they heard a description of the Jewish deaths, partici- pants in the meeting displayed "glee," according to the witness. The witness said Bright told the others at the meeting that "if local conditions ever develop we will go to our homes and get guns and shoot Jews down in the streets, stores and shops . . wherever we find them." The witness testified further that he attended a convention of the National States Rights Party, an anti-Semitic racist g r o u p. He learned that this underground organization is established in 26 state s. He testified that he was told its membership included Senators Strom Thurmond, South Caro- lina Democrat; Herman Tal- madge, Georgia De mo c r a t; William Jenner, Indiana Repub- lican, and John Stennis, Missis- sippi Democrat. The state offered as evidence against Bright an FBI report on Bright's lie detector test. An FBI agent from Washington headquarters testified that the test showed Bright lied in answering .questions concerning the bombing of the Temple. Judge Pye withheld a ruling on admissibility of lie detector re- sults as evidence. The jury was excused while the matter was debated by defense and prosecu- tion attorneys. Detective R. E. Little told the jury he f o u n d a note in Bright's home that Bright ad- mitted w r i tin g. The note, addressed to Rabbi Jacob Roths- child of the Temple, contained the phrase, "you are going to experience the most terrifying thing in your life." Little said Bright had told him he wrote the note during a period in which questions had been put to the rabbi about the Jewish religion at a Baptist c h u r c h meeting last May. The state announced before testimony against Bright began, that it intended to prove that Bright "not only participated in the planning but that he was there at the time" the syna- gogue was dynamited. That statement was made by Torn Luck, assistant prosecutor. Luck told the Superior Court that state prosecutors expected to show that the 31-year-old Bright was a member of a group who had violent anti-Semitic feelings and had f or m e d an organization to create unrest. A Baptist minister testified that Bright called Rabbi Roths- child "a Christ-killing Jew." The Rev. William Arnold Smith of the Atlanta First Baptist Church told the court that Bright made the remark at his church meeting last May. The Close As Your Phone AMBASSADOR CLEANERS and CURTAIN LAUNDRY • Drapes •Curtains • Lamp Shades Pick-Up and Delivery TO 8-8044 Cash & Carry 12813 LINWOOD 10% OFF 3-THE DETRO IT JEWISH NEWS—Friday, December 12, 1958 Anti-Jewish Terror Revealed at Trial of Defendants in Bombings meeting, attended by about 1,200, was one of a series held to familiarize church members with other religions of the world. Rabbi Rothschild was speaker of the evening. Rev. Smith said Bright objected to the rabbi's statement that the Nazis were responsible for 6,000,000 Jewish deaths. Rev. Smith said Bright's con- duct created a disturbance. T h e r e f ore he later went to Bright and asked his purpose in stirring up t r o u b l e in the church. Rev. Smith quoted Bright as replying: "I object to you having a Christ-killing Jew speak at the church." Rabbi Rothschild, who ap- peared in court as witness, testi- fied that he spoke on Judaism at the Baptist Church May 28. He said Bright was in the audi- ence and asked him to give the number of Jews in the world. He told Bright there were about thirteen million. Bright con- tended there were several mil- lion more. Rothschild said he commented that Hitler had killed 6,000,000 Jews in Europe and that Bright objected to that statement. Defense attorney James Ven- able, in cross-examinating the witness, said, "You don't feel kindly toward Hitler for killing Jews." Rabbi Rothschild replied he did not think any civilized person felt kindly about it. Newman Re-Elected Home for Aged Head Gus D. Newman was unani- mously re-elected president of Jewish Home for Aged, at its annual election meeting. Other officers elected were Sidney J. Allen, Edward Fleischman, and Leonard N. Simons. vice-presi- dents; Arthur A. Fleischman, treasurer; Her- man Mathias, secretary; and Ira I. Sonnen- blick, assistant secretary. The Home cares for 310 aged persons, and offers a total program for the resi- dents, includ- ing therapeu- tic activities, medical and nursing c a r e, rehabilitation, Newman recreation, religious and cul- tural activities and social case- work. The home is a constituent agency of Jewish Welfare Fed- eration and receives its operat- ing deficit from the Allied Jew- ish Campaign. Writes Letter to Dead Son TUCSON, Ariz., (Special) — Wide attention was given to a letter written by David Greenberg to his 13-year-old Boy Scout son, who perished in a blizzard with two other scouts while attempting to climb 9,400-foot Mt. Baldy here. The letter, printed in a Tucson newspaper, reads, in part: "Some of your friends and mine tell me that you failed to reach your goal. Not so, your great adven- ture led you to the very top itself. Not the mountain, it is true, but to the very heavens. 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