Yeheskel Barnea, Consul of Israel in Chicago for the Mid- west, will be the guest of honor at the Israel Bond Women's Division "Toda Raba', luncheon, Tuesday, Oct. 29, at the Jewish Center, it was announced by Mrs. Morris L. Schaver, chair- (JTA) — A protest against a United Nations decision to hold no session of the UN Human Rights Commission this year was filed here by the Interna- tional Confederation of Free Trade U n i o n s. The Human Rights Commission deals with anti-Semitism. The Economic and Social Council, parent body of the Human Rights Commission, had d e l e t e d the annual Human Rights Commission's meeting from this year's schedule, due to the fact that the facilities at the United Nations headquar- ters in Geneva will be taxed by a conference scheduled to be held there on trade and devel- opment. In a 29-page memor- andum, detailing various human rights violations around the world, the ICFTU requested that the Human Rights Com- mission be authorized to hold its annual meeting in West Berlin. YEHESKEL BARNEA man of the Women's Division. The luncheon will climax the High Holy Day cash collection campaign. Born in Transylvania, Ro- mania, Consul Barnea was active in the underground in Hungary and Romania against the Nazis. He was arrested by the Nazis in Hungary and escaped, and he was sentenced by the Romanian government to five years' im- prisonment. He immigrated to Israel in 1944 after the sur- render of Romania and worked in a kibbutz for two years. He joined the Haganah and saw service in the Israel War of Liberation. After the War of Independence he entered the Hebrew University, specializing in Middle Eastern affairs and political science. He received his degree in 1953 and then studied for his Master's degree in London. He joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1955 and was later appointed attache to the Israel Embassy in Rangoon. In 1960 he was appointed charge d'affairs of the Israel legation in Ceylon, and was named Con- sul in Chicago last year. For reservations to t h e luncheon, call the Israel Bond Office, DI 1-5707. Israeli Gold Medals Issued in Netherlands In commemoration of the 15th anniversary of the birth of Israel, the State-Mint of the Nether- lands, has struck some gold medals, which are distributed through Schoene's Handel in Edele Metalen, The Haag, Neth- erlands. The medals weigh 6 and 12 grammes, have a diameter of 22% mm and have a gold fine- ness of 900/1000. The obverse bears the heads of King David and King Solomon. The reverse side bears the Menorah and the Hebrew word for Israel and 50 shekel, 100 shekel, with as orna- mental border the symbols of the 12 tribes of Israel. Mapai Party Gets Beersheba Mayoralty TEL AVIV, (JTA)—The Mapai party obtained the Mayor's post in Beersheba in negotiations with the Religious Party and ap- peared likely to win the mayor- ship of Ashdod as well. Former Judge Eliyahu Nawai was elected Mayor of Beersheba. He will lead a coalition of Mapai, Mapam and the religous parties. In Ashdod, a Mapai-religious bloc will be headed by Mapai and a religious party member will be Deputy Mayor. The agreements left by some of the younger reli- gious party members resentful. They contended that the reli- gious par ties could get the Mayor's post in Ashdod. Schayes Holds Record Dolph Schayes now holds the record for the most games played in the National Basket. ball Association with 1,035. Wisdom is b e t t e r than strength . . . The words of wise men are heard in quiet. —Ec- cles, 9:16, 17. rael's cabinet, at its Sunday ses- sion, requested a full . report from Minister of Police Behor Shitreet about a demonstration staged Saturday when heavy police reinforcements narrowly averted a clash beween mem- bers of the League Against Re- ligious Compulsion and resi- dents of the ultra-Orthodox quarter of Mea Shearim. The cabinet request followed a complaint voiced to the gov- ernment by Interior Minister Moshe Shapiro, who charged that the organizers of the League demonstration had gone beyond the conditions laid down when they were given a permit for Saturday's demon- stration. Several hundred members of the League, many of them arm- ed with clubs,, tried to pene- trate into the Mea Shearim quarter. They called for support of • the League's demands for civil (instead of religious) mar- riages, permission of automobile traffic on the Sabbath, and abolition of Israel's blue laws. About a dozen trucks carry- ing the League's demonstrators, many of whom had come from leftist kibbutzim, were halted by the police, and the demon- strators were forced to walk afoot. Policemen standing shoul- der to shoulder kept the secu- ligious population, as the League demonstrators brandish- ed their clubs and shouted in- vectives at the Orthodox. Finally, the secularists held a rally attended by about 2,000 persons, while police kept the religious elements from break- ing up the demonstration. As religious persons heckled the secularist speakers, police once again intervened to keep the two sides separated. Book on Bene Israel Published in Bombay BOMBAY, (JTA) — The first volume of "The Origins and Early History of the Bene Is- rael," a major new work by Pro- fessor Samuel Shellim, was pub- lished here with an introduction by M. S. Kannamwar, Chief Min- ister of the State of Maharashtra of which Bombay is the capital city and where the Bene Israel community lives. In his introduction to the work, Kannamwar notes that the Bene Israel Jews arrived in In- dia 2,000 years ago and have since made their contribution to Indian life in every generation and have played their part in the s t r u g g l e of India for inde- pendence. Want ads get quick results! Denver Community Disputes Opening of Center on Sabbath DENVER (JTA)—Officials . of the Denver Jewish Community Center and of the Denver Rab- binical Association announced here that a series of meetings would be held to develop a mutually acceptable solution to differences over opening of the Center on the Sabbath. At the first meeting of repre- sentatives of the two organiza- tions, Sanford Solender, execu- tive vice-president of the Jewish Welfare Board, and Rabbi Aryeh Lev, director of the YWB chap- laincy division, attended as guests. The meetings were agreed on after the Center, bowing to the wishes of the rabbinical group, cancelled plans for a poll of members as to whether the Cen- ter should be open on the Sab- bath. Solender discussed at the initial joint meeting the experi- ences of other Centers with the problem, particularly in Detroit, Cleveland and Chicago. _ It was agreed that the first step should be creating a climate of harmony, common u n de r- standing and common objectives. For that goal, the broad aspects of Center - synagogue relation- ships will be studied at future meetings, as well as specific questions of Center Sabbath pro- grams. That - if/Tann)/ And Despotism May Perish. August Bondi's life was spent in battling injustice. When not quite fifteen, Bondi took part in the Revolution of 1848 in his native Austria. After the revolution failed, the Bondis emigrated to America. That was the beginning of the odyssey of August Bondi which was to place him beside John Brown in Kansas. An ardent abolitionist, Bondi arrived in Kansas in May, 1855, in the company of Jacob Benjamin. There they were joined by Theodore Wiener. The three immigrants settled on the Mosquito branch of Pottawatomie creek, near Osa- watomie. Bondi's abolitionist statements soon brought him to the attention of the pro-slavery border ruffians. His life was threatened and Bondi enlisted the aid of John Brown's sons. When Brown himself arrived, Bondi and Wiener promptly joined his military company. In the civil war that followed the Pottawatomie Mas- sacre, in which John Brown executed five border ruffians, Bondi took part in almost every battle as a follower of "God's angry man." During the Civil War Bondi served for three years in the 5th Kansas Volunteer Cavalry. He was finally invalided out of the service because of serious wounds suffered in Arkansas. At the war's end Bondi settled in Salina, becoming one of its leading citizens. Bondi's credo, stated in his autobiog- raphy, is still relevant to modern prob- lems. "I do not regret," he wrote, "a single step or instance in my long life, to further and assist the realization of my devout wishes that tyranny and despotism may perish, and bigotry and fanaticism may be wiped from the face of the earth." August Bondi devoted his life to these aims. P. LORILLARD COMPANY . ESTABLISHED 1760 .7 E■ 'n o • I algrZ[11(,. , First with the Finest Cigarettes through Lorillard research 01963 P. Lorillard CO. 1 5-THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS—Frida y, October 18, 1963 Free Trade Unions Israel Midwest Secularists Clash With Extremists Protest Shelving of Consul Guest at Rights Sessions at UN in Jerusalem; Cabinet Asks Report Women's Lunch JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Is- larists separated from the re- UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.,