Creative Israel---Today and Tomorrow Story by Carmi. M. Siomovitz . .ziround the Trorld... Photos by Efrem ilani TIBERIAS, Israel—Pictures tell the best story—how Israel. 'builds today, how -its present compares with yesterday, what the morrow will be like. . Remembering the difficulties of yesteryears and the hardships the Israelis endured, the conditions today, are heartening - and the future holds much in store for the battling Israelis.' • In photo A we see a view of Haifa, the major harbor city of Israel, from near the top of Mt., Carmel. . B shows a pupil of the Mevvoth-Yam School for Navigation and-Fishery at Mikhmoreth. The pupil is shown "sextant-training." Mikhmoreth is near the Israel diamond-cutting center of N _ athaniah. Its many beaches provide a popular summer resort. C shows Baron Edmond de Rothschild on the golf course he donated at Caesarea. The Baron is planning to build a modern hotel near the golf course and the club house. " In D you see one of the passages to the famous art colony in the historic city' of Safad. E depicts a fisherman on the Sea of Galilee—Lake Kinneret—at Tiberias, catching "St. Peter's" fish. Thousands of tons of fish are caught here yearly. All who contribute to the Allied Jewish Campaign, those who purchase Israel Bonds, can feel proud that they had a share in these developments. The industrial developments described owe their successes in great measure to assistance received through Israel Bonds. • A Digest of World Jewish Happenings from DispatcheS of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency and Other News-Gathering Media. • United States ERIE, Pa.—Local public high schools will award credit for the first-year course in Modern • Hebrew given at the Jewish Center Hebrew High School. HARTFORD, Conn. -- The General Assembly Agriculture Committee appointed a subcommittee to rewrite the humane slaughter bills pending in the State Legislature.. NEW YORK—The 50th anniversary of organiZed communal Jewish, education in New York City will be celebrated Sunday at a program arranged by the Jewish Education Committee of New YOrk . The United States Office of Vocational Rehabilita- tion granted $350,000 to the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University for a study of rehabilitation of hospital patients . . . The national Governing Council of the American Jewish Congress affirmed the right of Dr. Joachim Prinz to express his personal views "from the platform of the AJC as its president, for the purpose of prompting a discussion of a vital issue in Jewish life" ... The New York Board . of Rabbis declared that Governor Nelson Rockefeller's student aid plan, as revised, did not violate the church-state separation provisions of -the Con- stitution. WALTHAM, Mass.-=A $100,000 grant from - Marvin Kratter, New York City real estate executive, to endow five scholarships and fellowships at Brandeis University, was announced here. PHILADELPHIA—The Israel • Government has decided to open a permanent Consulate in Philadelphia, with Michael Deouell serving as Consul. WASHINGTON—Chairman Francis E. Walter of the House Immigration Committee, co-author of the controversial McCarran- Walter Immigration Act, announced that he will retire from Congress after the current session . . . A bill to establish a memorial to Albert Einstein in the District of Columbia was introduced in the Senate by Senators Javits and Humphrey. Israel JERUSALEM=An agreement for the construction of a $16,- 000,000 complex of petrochemical plants was signed by Finance Minister Levi Eshkol and folk groups of investors (among them an American group, including Max Fisher of Detroit) . . . The West German government's action in increasing the value of the mark by five percent will bring a $5,000,000 profit to the State Bank of Israel, which had built up a large mark reserve in anticipation of the mbve . . . An Italian archaeological expedi- tion from Milan will excavate the site of a Roman theater in the ruins of the Byzantine city of Caesarea . . . The Israel Treasury announced a liberalization of currency exchange regulations for tourists and Israelis holding foreign currency . . . A report of rapid and substantial gains in the expert of - Israeli products was coupled by Trade Minister Pinhas Sapir with a warning against the tight credit policy of the State Bank of Israel. TEL AVIV—Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion renewed his plea for immigration .from the United States, particularly of youth,' stating' that this would "strengthen the intellectual forces in Israel." He declared that Albert Einstein had once said to him that American Jewish intellectuals Would come to Israel because they were not fully trusted in America, and that even after the McCarthy era Professor Robert Oppenheimer had told him that many American Jewish intellectUals Would go to Israel because there was no meaning to JewiSh life in America, France and Britain. Africa JOHANNESBURG—The South African Jewish Board of Deputies opposed an effort of Orange Free State University to have Parliament eliminate from the University's statute a clause banning religious discrimination in staff appointments. , Canada MONTREAL—Israel exported $2,500,000 worth of goods to Canada in 1960, against imports of $6,500,000 from this coun- try, Yechiel Narkiss, Israel's Trade Commissioner in Canada, reported. OTTAWA—Israel Ambassador Yaacov Herzog conferred with Prime Minister John G. Diefenbaker prior to the latter's departure for the Conference of Prime Ministers in London. Europe FRANKFURT—President Henrich Luebke of West Germany appealed to Christians and Jews to "strive toward a new era of creative existence," declaring that the German people should squarely "face the depressing knowledge" of past horrons, while the Jews should not, refuse German efforts at conciliation. LONDON--Two Estonian members of the Nazi SS pleaded guilty before a Soviet tribunal in Tallinn to charges of complicity in. the slaughter of 125,000 persons, mostly JewS, during the Nazi occupation of Estonia . . ReportS from Prague disclosed that about 30 Czech Jews imprisoned nearly ten years ago in a purge resulting in the execution of Rudolf Slansky, a Jew who headed the Communist party in CzechOslovakia, have been set free, and that some • have indicated a desire to go to Israel . . Three Lithuanians, charged with responsibility for the murder of 60,000 Jews, Poles, Byelorussians and Lithuanians by the Nazis, were sentenced to death by the State Supreme . Court of Soviet ania in 'Vilna . . . The Council of Jews from Austria in Britain appealed to • Dr. Alphons GorbaCh, the new Austrian ChancellOr designate; to help assure indemnifitation to all Austrian victims of Nazism without discrimination. - BONN—Dr.- Hans : Globke, Chancellor Xonrad Adenauer's State Secretary, who has been under fire for some time for hiS role as a commentator on the Nuremberg anti-Jewish laws under the Nazi regime, was urged by the opposition Social Democratic party to request provisional retirement from his post ... Trapped by Essen police with the aid of .a 25-year-old photograph, Albert Rapp, an aide of Gestapo chief Henrich Hinunler, was arrested and charged with the murder of 1,500 gypsies and Jewish women in 1942 .. . New recommendations for teaching contemporary history in West Germany's school system, aimed at demonstrat- ing "Hitler's false -aims, his extravagance, his criminal methods, and the catastrophe which resulted from his- system," were issued by the Standing Conference of the State Ministries of Education.