• ■ 111.11 0411 o:4 ■ 0111111.1.1=1111.04 ■0■ 411•1=1, 04 ■ 0•11111•04111•114 ■ 1111111, 111111 ■ 601111 ■ 13••• ■■■•■ 0411 ■ 041 Boris Smolar's 1 'Between You • .. and Me' i I I (Copyright, 1963, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) By BORIS SMOLAR Red Faces The faces of the leaders of the American Council for Juda- ism are still red over a "shocking" episode at their 20th annual conference . . . I do not mean the fact that the delegates at the conference anticipated a message of greetings from President Kennedy and no such • message arrived . . . I mean the strongly pro-Zionist speech by one of the principal non-Jewish speakers . . A pro-Zionist speech at an annual conference of the Amer- ican- Council ofr Judaism? • . . . Yes, and—to the great em- barrassment of the Council's leaders-1--it came from William J. vanden Heuvel, president of the International Rescue Committee, through whom the Council for Judaism sends its philanthropic aid abroad . . . Mr. vanden Heuvel was obviously not aware of the Council's hatred of anything that is pro-Israel .. . He came to the conference as one of the featured speakers- to address the delegates on the needs of refugee aid . . . But when he heard the anti-Zionist vituperations. of the Council's officers, he decided to disassociate himself • from their views and to make his stand clear . . . He started his prepared address with an unprepared "introduction" which shocked all the rabid anti-Zionists as- sembled at the conference . .. He not only declared his admira- tion for Israel . . . He also rebuked the Council for Judaism for its propoganda that American Jews helping Israel could be accused of "dduble loyalty." A Courageous Statement The text of this remarkable statement speak for itself . . . This is exactly what Mr. vanden Heuvel told the delegates of the Council's national conference: . . "I think it is proper, as a matter of courtesy, to state my own personal attitude toward Israel . . . If I were a Jew, I would be immensely proud of Israel . . As a young man I thrilled at Israel's creation, and I have since marveled at the extraordinary life both its people and their government have breathed into democratic institutions in a part of the world where democracy has notoriously foun- dered . . . The establishment of Israel, in my judgment, was the obligation of a world that had found itself in capable of stopping the most" shhameful barbarism in the recorded history of civil_ ized man . . . Encircled as it is by nations hostile to its being, I believe Israel is entitled to our pledge of defense and support . . . I admire those who have pioneered Israel's great achieve- ments . .. I honor those who have given so generously to make Israel's growth possible. . . . And I believe that all of us can con- tinue to be proud of. Israel's stature in the family of nations without losing either our identity as Americans or our independ- ent judgment concerning our own country's purposes and best interests" . . . Will his words open a new avenue of thought in the minds of those who heard his views? . . . And will the Council have the courage to carry these views in the records of the conference as part of vanden Heuvel's address? Knesset Rejects Motions to Debate. Visit of West Germany's Ex-Foreign Minister JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Three France had invited both Strauss strong police cordon will cut off motions calling for full-scale de- and West German Chancellor the main building of Lydda Air- bate of the government's invita- tion to former West German De- fense Minister Franz Josef Strauss to visit Israel were de- feated in the Knesset. The motions were beaten by votes of 47-30, with nine absten- tions, after Finance Minister Levi kol, as spokesman for the government, requested their re- jection. He asserted that the only criterion to be applied is whether the visit—scheduled to start next Sunday — "will help Israel in its need to obtain sup- port for its security." The motions, placed by the Knesset presidium on the im- mediate agenda because of their urgency, had been introduced by Menahem Beigin for the Herut party, by Israel Barzilai for Mapam, and by Shmuel Mikunis, of the Communist party. These three parties voted for a full- scale debate, while the Ahdut Avodah, which is a member of the government coalition, and the Liberal party abstained. Each of the opponents of the proposed Strauss •visit in- sisted that the invitation ex- tended to him violated a deci- sion taken by the Knesset last March, when it voted unani. mously that the German - gov- ernment is responsible for the work being done in Cairo now by German scientists engaged in the development of noncon- ventional weapons intended for use against Israel. Konrad Adenauer, adding: "Un- doubtedly, we want continuing good relations with France." He implied that the desire for good relations with France was also a factor in the invitation to Strauss here, and assured the Knesset: "Strauss is against the activity of the Germans in Egypt." TEL AVIV—A group of former victims of the Nazi era appealed Tuesday in a letter to Prime Minister Ben Gurion for can- celation of the invitation to for- mer West German Defense Min- ister Franz Josef Strauss who is due in Israel next Sunday. "Our wounds have not yet healed," the letter said, "and we cannot make peace with Ger- many where there are still tens of thousands of. veteran Nazis and neo-Nazis who fill important positions in their country. We do not want a visit by a, man who is among those responsible for the activity of neo-Nazis." Other organizations of Nazi victims, including the Former Concentration Camp Inmates Association and the Partisans and Invalids, were still discuss- ing their attitude toward the visit. Youth of the rightwing Herut Part y, meanwhile, proceeded with plans for demonstrations on Strauss' arrival and the Mapam Party also was considering a protest demonstration. Police Beigin told the House that also were proceeding with pre- Strauss should cancel his pro- parations for the arrival. A jected visit to Israel "as a hu- manitarian duty." He said Strauss, should cancel his pro- jected visit to Israel "as a hu- manitarian duty." He said Strauss, as Bonn's Minister of Defense, knew about the German scientists and technicians who went to Egypt, and said "Strauss knows that his visit will create deep controversy both in Israel and among Jewry, and cause great injury to the people in Abstract Art Whatever your feelings about abstract painting, you will be Israel, whether a majority or a strongly impressed with the paintings of Rivkah, who is dividing minority." Mikunis described the Strauss her time each year between New York and Israel . . . Rivkari is • the wife of Dr. Mordechai M. Kaplan, the "father" of the Re- visit as "an irritant to the Soviet constructionist movement, and she comes from Jerusalem, where Union," asking how the Strauss her parents have been residing since 1920 . . . She now has a invitation squared with the re- one-person exhibition of 40 colorful abstract paintings in oil cent assertion by. Prime Minister and gouache at the D'Arcy Galleries in New York which is David Ben Gurion, who had re- attracting wide attention . . . A serious painter even before she quested joint guarantees of Is- moved to the school of abstract art, she displayed mastery in rael's security from both the communicating sensitive moods and delicate feelings. in her Soviet Union and the United canvasses . . There is originality in her compositions as well States. Barzilai said that Strauss "per- as elegance of form, warmth in her means of expression which is missing in the works of most of the abstractionist painters. . . . sonified the renewed German She is a painter whose works had been exhibited in Salon d'Hiver militarism." He charged that in Paris, at the Royal Institute of Painters in London, and in European Socialism, in Germany numerous exhibitions in the United States, Israel, South Africa itself as well as in Britain and and Latin America . . . She studied at the Art Institute of Chi_ France, regarded -Strauss as cago, the Bezalel School of Art in Jerusalem, and at the Grande "anti-democratic and dangerous." In reply to the government's Chaumiere in Paris. critics, Eshkol intimated that Strauss had, in the past, "aided Israel on many occasions in West circumstances that cannot be disclosed here." "Relations between Bonn and (Direct JTA Teletype Wire receiving that punishment for Israel," he said, "exist on vari- to The Jewish News) murder in three cases. The jury COBLENZ—A jury court in courts also sentenced Starke to ous levels." He recalled that Coblenz sentenced 11 former an additional term of eight Nazis in the Minsk ghetto to years for complicity in murder Inquiry Finds Swedish terms ranging from life im- in five other cases and to life- Nazi's Radio Talk prisonment at hard labor to time deprivation of his civil TaCked Objectivity' three-and-a-half years imprison- rights. (Direct JTA Teletype Wire ment Tuesday at the conclusion Artur Wilke, 51, was sen- to The Jewish News) of a seven-month's trial on tenced to 10 years and depriva- STOCKHOLM—The Swedish charges of mass murders of tidn of his civil rights for three Broadcasting Board declared Jews and Russians. years. Rudolph Schlege re- Monday after an investigation George Heuser, 50, the prin- ceived a term of eight years of a talk by a neo-Nazi on the cipal defendant was sentenced and loss of civil rights for three Swedish radio network that the to 15 years imprisonment and years. Friedrich Herbach, 51, re- talk "lacked objectivity." deprivation of his civil rights ceived a term of -seven years The board said that the for five years. The prosecution and loss of civil rights for three Swedish Radio Corporation, in had asked a life term. The 11 years. Wilhelm Kaul, 56; Jo- presenting the talk by Ingemar defendants had been accused of hannes Feder, 51; and Eber- Donar-Joelsson, who intended to the wartime slaughter of 35,000 hard Von Toll, 52, each were "illuminate reveal and combat Jews in the ghetto. In an un- sentenced to four years and six neo-Nazi tendencies" in Sweden. usual statement for a defen- months. Johann Oswald, 52, and Donar-Joelsson, a Swedish ele- dant in the West German Nazi Karl Dahlheimer, 56, each re- mentary school teacher, assail- crimes trials, Heuser had ac- ceived terms of four years im- ed Israel and world Jewry. He cepted full responsibility for his prisonment, and Artur Harder, said his text had been approved guilt. 52, was sentenced to three-and-- in advance by the network. The investigation was started The severest sentence was im- a-half years at hard labor. posed on American-born Franz In all cases but that of after protests were made by Starke, 51, a Nazi Party mem- Starke, detention pending trial the Swedish branch of the ber since 1920. He received the was taken into consideration in World Jewish Congress and the Swedish Zionist Federation. only life term in the judgments, determination of sentence. port to prevent demonstrators from approaching. As in previous cases of visits of West Germans, Herut demonstrators planned to line up on the road leading from the airport. The former West German cabi- net member was reported to have decided to make his visit despite the protests and the an- ticipated demonstrations. FENCE Nobody UNDERSELLS GREAT LAKES FENCE CO. DON'T EVER FORGET IT ! ! ASK FOR "Morrie Sherman" Sales Manager GREAT LAKES FENCE 16540 GREENFIELD VE 6-6080 '63 CHEVROLETS Sale or Lease "Service Is Important" Best Location in- Area .. 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