Israel's Lachish District Developed Fa i-ber-Redlich Eflgagemen t Told from Barren Land to 25 Villages Just over five years ago, one had to be an expert on Israel's geography to have heard of the Lachish district. Then one was told of official plans to take this region out of the archaeologists' hands and make it live. Now take a look at the area. There is K i r y a t Gat that forms a crossroads for southern traffic and the region contains a settled population of 16,000. There are 3,200 farm' units. The district of Lachish oc- cupies some 2 2 0, 0 0 0 acres (900,000 dunams) in the heart of the country and at the nar- rows just below Jerusalem and between the Jordan frontier and the coast. Its southwest extrem- ity lies close to the Gaza strip; its northern tip juts out into the Corridor. A battleground through the ages, it was, in October, 1948, the scene of "Operation Ten Plagues", which changed the course of the Arab- Israel War. A barren, open - territory for centuries, Zionist coloni- - zation experts had their eyes on this expanse even in the early thirties, and, starting with Negha, kibbutzim - were established at key points. In 1954, there were 36 villages dotted over the region—each of them a unit on its own, each a lone guardian of its environs, all of them a con- stant security worry to the Israel High Command. The turning point was 1955. A comprehensive plan was in- troduced at a cost of 60 million Israeli Pounds and this pro- vided for the extension of the irrigation network, road-build- ing and -a railway halt at Kiryat Gat, afforestation and reclama- tion with the planting of field crops and orchards. Most revo- lutionary of all was the crea- tion of_ the township of Kiryat Gat as the 'capital' of the area. This urban center concen- trated all the major services of the region, factories and work- . shops for light engineering and processing of agricultural pro- duce. Here were located secon- dary and vocational schools, cold-storage facilities, a hospital and administration off ices. Skilled personnel of profes- sional caliber had to be directed to Kiryat Gat and given the type of housing their special- ized qualifications would earn in the large cities. The Jewish National Fund assumed t h e responsibility for the large-scale land rec- lamation a n d afforestation. Today, the 60 villages farm between them 16,000 acres of irrigated land, sustaining such industrial crops as cotton, sugar beet and ground nuts. There is an immense output of all kinds of vegetables, dairy products and livestock. Cotton production has multiplied seven times since 1957 and sugar beet has doubled. Lachish has proved a pilot plant in which the _vision and energy of Israel's people, com- bined with the generosity of world Jewry, - have brought off an economic and sociological achievement. JNF Afforestation Program No Threat to Israel Water Supply A new graduate program in Hebrew and Near Eastern studies leading to a degree of master of arts or doctor of philosophy has been instituted this semester at New York Uni- versity's Graduate School of Arts and Science. Dean James M. Hester an- nounced that the Graduate School program is planned pri- marily for scholars and re- searchers in Hebrew language and culture. Since 1944, a graduate pro- gram of Hebrew and Judaeo- Arabic courses has been offered in NYU's School of Education for prospective teachers and educational administrators. Dr. Abraham I. Katsh, chair- man of NYU's department of Hebrew culture and education, has been named director of Hebrew and Near Eastern Studies and director of Hebrew Research, Hester said. Jacob Tsur, world chairman of the board of directors of Keren Kayemeth Leisrael in Jerusalem (J e wish National Fund), issued a statement as- serting that a committee of government experts, headed by the Deputy Director General of the Ministry for Agriculture, had approved the Keren Kaye- meth's afforestation program as posing no threat whatsoever to Israel's water resources. The declaration was made in reply to critics who charged that the water supply in certain sections of Israel was being im- paired by the planting of for- ests. The committee of experts, referring to the criticism voiced in some quarters, said "it can- not accept the recommendation to restrict afforestation in cer- tain parts of the country, like the Carmel, the Mountains of Western Galilee, Hartuv, etc.", but instead affirms the planting by the Jewish National Fund of six million trees annually within the next five to six years, which is far in excess of present plant- ing and will require intensified efforts. 'African Genesis' Check Dr.'s Nazi Past NYU Institutes Hebrew, Near Eastern Studies Graduate Program "African Genesis," by Robert Ardrey, "a personal investiga- tion into the animal origins and nature of man," published by Atheneum (162 E. 38th, N.Y. 16), is the result of a long study and of a six-year visit by the author to South Africa. The au t h or, a dramatist, nevertheless found a source for study of a scientific subject and became evident of how man evolved on the African conti- nent from predatory carnivor- ous stock. His "African Genesis" is the brilliant result of his experi- ences. It is a classic in study of human behavior and en- vironment. KIEL, (JTA)—A new inves- tigation of the Nazi career of Prof. Werner Catel, suspected of participation in the "mercy killing" under the Nazi regime of 56 children in the Hamburg-, Rothenburgsort Hospital, h a s been opened, the Kiel Prosecu- tion Office disclosed. Investigations against Catel, a doctor, and 17 other physi- cians were closed in Hamburg in 1949 after the examining magistrate found that the killing of the children could not be prosecuted because the doctors had been "unaware of doing wrong." Catel resigned under fire at the start of this year as head of the pediatric department of the Kiel University Clinic. His resignation followed new charges made against him by Dr. Rudolf Degwitz of New York. 1,000,000 Contributors More than 1,000,000 contribu- tors support Jewish federations and welfare funds throughout the United States, which con- duct their activities in commu- nities inhabited by over 90 per It's no use making haste: the cent of America's five and a thing to do is to set out in time. half million Jews. —Jean de la Fontaine. Jews in Oran Retaliate Against Anti-Jewish Algerian Terrorism PARIS, (JTA)—Jewish youths here from that city. Two Jews were wounded in in Oran seized a Moslem terrorist who threw a grenade into a cafe the cafe bombing by the Moslem in Oran's Jewish quarter and in the latest of a series of at- tried to lynch him but were stop- tacks by the Algerian under- ped by police, it was reported ground movement against Jews in the French colony. Later, other Oran Jews ran- French Jews Are sacked Moslem shops in the Jew- ish quarter in protest against the Eligible for War anti-Jewish outfages. Claims Under Pact MISS MARILYNN FARBER Mr. and Mrs. Harry Farber of Seneca Ave., Oak Park, announce the engagement of their daugh- ter, Marilynn Ilene, to Robert Aaron Redlich, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Redlich of Ken- tucky Ave. The bride-elect attends Wayne State University, where she is majoring in music education. A June 19 wedding at Adas Shalom Synagogue is planned. Third Amateur Bomb Attack Made Against Manhattan Synagogue NEW YORK, (JTA)—Police are hunting the perpetrators of a crude bomb attack on a Man- hattan synagogue, the third in two months. The bomb, a Molotov cocktail, was thrown at the window of Congregation Ahavath Chesed. The jar of flammable liquid with a smoldering wick, broke the window before it fell to the pavement without detonating. The bombers, believed to be several youths, fled. Police reported finding a note fastened to the door which read: "Achtung Juden, Death to the Jewish Parasites of the Word." The last word appare ly was a mispelling for "wor A second .- without a wick, by. Mrs. Alta s t a , widow of Rabbi Benjamin Hal- berstam, who died last Febru- ary, said a brick had been thrown through a window two months ago and t had been fired thro window a week a WASHINGTON, (JTA) Thousands of French survived the be among a French- pay war clai s to French citizens on a more liberal basis than before. According to the report, France will pay such claims to French citizens who were living in France wh,r.a recel gated Fre treaty t ect. n restrictin uch claims only to those who were citizens at the time of loss. Claimants will be indemnified from a 400,000,000- mark ($100,000,000) fund vided in the dement be the two co The agree Fr the eighth na vid damage pa ents for present citizens as well as those who were citizens at the time of loss. The others are Britain, Switzer- land, Belgium, Hungary, Poland, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia. The United State policy still restricts pay i -nt- o Ise were Ameri , s at time of los 50,000 Govern • nt mployees Some 50,000 Israelis are gov- ernment employees, nearly one- third of them working in the field of transport and communi- cations. While the number of Israel's civil servants • has grown over the past decade, their pro- portion to the general population has remained a constant three per cent. ack after two successful years in Europe IRV FIELD and his ORCHESTRA 538-5395 Eric Rosenow And His CONTINENTAL ORCHESTRA UN 3-7626 J. J. CLARKE PHOTOGRAPHY eddings - Bar Mitzvahs Formals, Candids, 3 D's, Movies For Quality Workmanship Call Mr. Rosen UN 1-9000 PLASTIC SL I PCOVERS Custom-Made 8 Gauge - Glass Clear PROTECT-O-COVER DI 1-1000 Make your Simcha Bright ! Book the Band that's Right ! ! From LONDON, ENGLAND n GILBERT & HIS ORCHESTRA "The right mood for the right occasion" CALL UN 1-3065 LAMP SHADES by IDA ROSE Formerly Ida's of Grand Ave. • Shades • • Relined ac tom aire e . cove PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVIC LI 3-2738 — UN 1-7741 bennett bar mitzvahs -portraits eric weddings 8440 W. McNICHOLS RD. black & white and color UN 2-5506 • • A bit of merrie olde England 'right 'ere ? • in Detroit • At the -Motor Bar! We've completely remodeled it in an Olde English motif. (Henry VIII would feel quite at home here.) Hard oak tables, deeply cushioned chairs, stained wood shutters, carriage lamps, an- tique leaded glass windows—very authentic! Tradi ally, the Motor ak bread with e Kino Bar has been the casd; of Auto h your "good e a n lem ast them. Drop in abo dusk. ritii avorite and our st beef Queen Bess." We s gest prime ctly! Settle back and re- ur spe cato specialty) prepar itres ets you something from the bar. Then lax, while the att nes from Leonard - Stanley's piano, and it's very face the music! I good. Enjoy dinner with us this week. Just look for the red and white canopy on Washington Boulevard. Respectfully, the Motor Bar in the Sheraton-Cadillac, Detroit's most accommodating hotel.