- The Women's Pre-Campaign Division of the 1961 Allied Jew- ish Campaign will hold its first fund-raising meeting noon Thurs- day at the Great Lakes Club, an- nounces Mrs. Benjamin Jones, Division vice president in charge of campaign. John Stanley Grauel. .a crew member of the refugee ship "Ex- odus," will be guest speaker. Mrs. Jones has named Mrs. Theodore Bargman as chairman of the Women's Pre-Campaign Division, consisting of women who have contributed $500 or more. Mrs. Bargman said 250 wom- en contributors in this Division gave $383,769 in 1960—more than a $25,000 increase over 1959. Women's Division officers di- recting the 1961 Campaign are ... Mrs. Bargman .. . Mrs. Jones The 10 MOST PROFITABLE DAYS OF THE MONTH... was a key factor in the series of events which brought about the United Nations Resolution for the partition of Palestine. Women having special re- sponsibility for the fund-rais- ing meeting Thursday, are Mrs. Hyman C. Broder, in charge of special assignments; Mrs. Seymour J. Frank, Mrs. Charles H. Gershenson, Mrs. Ivor J. Kahn and Mrs. Frank A. Wetsman. Arrangements chairmen Mrs. Samu•-yin and Mrs. S' man repor own" lunch will be s• a e club. Mrs. Ivor J. . n is chain an of the hos•• • ity committee. ost- esses Are mesdames Charl . E. Feinberg, Harry Goldman, Irwin If Does Make A D. Where You Mrs. Mrs. Joseph H. Ehrlic Henry Wineman, • rary chair- men; Mrs. E. August, Women's D• on president; and Mrs. Euo J. Arnfeld, campaign You have extra n- adviso ing days at a rdian aign .Co-ordinators are t \-` Savings ev month. You The Women's Pace Setters Di- '0'1 John C. Hopp, fund-rai can say s late as the vision of the 1961 Alli•Jewish etings; Mrs: Harry L. J' es, Ca -rais- 1** I Oth earn the same Hebrew Corner ecial events; Mrs. Sidi J. $200 31 o current rate as if arbel, assignments and cruit- to $5 13-1()\sk . 13 at u had put it in your he ment; and Mrs. Lewis B. • aniels, the at s Clu announce account on the 1s• briefing meetings. 1 0 °'\ Mrs arol A. Robinson, c A motor-boat left Sodom on shores of the Dead Sea northw Grauel began his ma Hills, rocks and a desolate w r- the Protestant mi auel, who is ng the mess were revealed to the eye of the passengers. "Here is served several parish nt New Women's Pre-C ,n Division Massada!" exclaimed one of the as- England. He subsequently be- the day bef as consented to. sengers. Suddenly a cry of w er burst from the mouths of came interested in the post-war stay an he ess the Pace Setters. passengers. "What is this? fata OT- problems of the surviving Jews eo Mellen is Pace Setter gana!" "No", said the steer n, "this is En-Gedi". in Europe. Grauel helped to or- isor and Mrs. Nathan Schlafer En-Gedi shich is situated in e ganize and later was n is chairman of fluid-raising ar- heart of the desert, and is compl y ecutive director of rer- rangements. covered with an abundance of t and shrubs. Here there are cu ican Christi stme Com- Vated fields covered with green, the adelphia, an or- fruit of the toil of the members of En-Gedi. Because of the great heat, ganization which befriended Green, Louis Hamburger, Samuel CURRENT RATE Vegetables ripen here much earlier homeless Jewish victims of Hamburger, Joseph Holtzman, and are the first to reach the mar- ket. Nazi brutality. He enlisted in Jack 0. Lefton, Nathan W. Lurie, Near En-Gedi there is a spring 185 the forces of Haganah, the un- Meyer L. Prentis, Nathan Shaye, metras above the Dead Sea, and derground military service of Nathan Simons, Isidore Sobeloff, adjoining it. plots of cultivated land COME IN with primitive irrigation canals dat- pre-Israel Palestine. or C. William Sucher, A. Alfred ing from antiquity. The weary trip- SAVE Taubman, James Wineman and pers bathe in the waters of the In 1947, Grauel voluntarily BY MAIL spring. joined the crew of "Exodus", a !Isadore Winkelman. En-Gedi was inhabited in the days of Joshua, the son of Nun. It had vessel which set out from Europe vineyards and "the finest date palm" with 4,500 Jewish displaced per- Israeli Ship Drops Anchor grew there — so Josephus, who lived during the Second Temple relates. ' sons from the German concentra- at Guatemala for 1st Time In this period En-Gedi was the tion camps, all of whom were GUATEMALA CITY, (JTA) Centre of the districts of Judea. It Downtown: CADILLAC SQUARE Corner RANDOLPH was destroyed at the end of the seeking a haven in Palestine. The —An Israeli freighter, the SS great rebellion against the Romans, ship was overtaken by units of Yehuda, weighed anchor in Northwest: 13646 WEST 7 MILE Corner TRACEY a short while before the destruction Both offices open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday of Massada, the last stronghold British Navy and its passengers Port Champerico, marking the against the Romans. Northwest office open Thursday Night till 9 were removed to prison ships and first time than an Israeli vessel After the war of liberation a r eturned to Germany. Downtown Friday till 6 has ever visited this country. Nahal (initials of Fighting Pioneer Youth—special military agricultural , Grauel submitted a graphic re- formation) unit and youth from the Moshavim (cooperative villages) set port to the United Nations Spe- up a farm at En Gedi which is a cial Committee on Palestine, tell- flourishing spot in a desolate wilder- i ng of the British naval attack on tress. FABULOUS MARKDOWNS ON the "Exodus" and the sufferings Translation of Hebrew column. of the passengers. This report Published by Brit Ivrit Olamit. En-Gedi IAN SAM <;> rif Lpvtg ntt??? nt$4 , T Vir? .ripD4 n'n.pti-n: n o n4s?'?t? trTpian ; -143" iz-r??1 n yin -Trni rp4,71 nwir niRr)p •r3,47 wrryi,pr? niltn7. nr.1 - rriy- n" •n7piari tryixr T i int$ N';71 rIxt- nt? rqq??4r.J n'4V i74/.7?n trrrttn 'IP ,PT rvitD 7?ti ni-147n vtr4ri.nin •Mmri 41. tr4r1 '; n4tg:7? "7.747 r;:i .111- p 17Virr. 1 /Tzr;)ti147 - '7-41.41 1 '71 ; rip7i 1 4'4 `11V ,1;1:1)/.1n. •'4,1# rr.1 "1. r' nr,r;TI 11 ~ 1nll'7nn 1 .2tg nitinnf Inti L 5 lupin 9'104 `114.1r.T. •;1/ T rr. rtt, 3 L2i-ro 147:1 41.0 r14P. ,trk? pinwri /1-11.4p- z7 tg tY?. 7.9 17. anp?ivl trrri. rn pitri nhri '2'744 tr47,4n1 ninn 1 '7;7 intitt.?ri •intth n ., 4ivx1 d in n'1'1141 (nrlit7 '41'71 rin4 1:47n, 4..7 . — n7 1'2? (185) ntrp?rn mTvp PV.4 no-17z tip4, irg 7-p-rs7 ,ritppri - n; 1 7,177 `1 tin •n/ittj•i 14I7pz - "n? t.9V;""nir?t"1 it14 1 •yTtp nitnp? •04.1 (Anitps) row? lin? nx4irii) On our comp! styled coats, in Persian • • • • • • Trimmed With Luxurious MINK COLLARS FURS By and up Herzberg & Keystone 19179 LIVERNOIS OPEN THURSDAY EVENING 'TIL 9 P.M. UN 1-5441 5 — THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Friday, January 6, 1961 Allied Jewish Campaign Women to Hear 'Exodus' Crew Member at Fund-Raising