(Continued from Page 1) "The achievements, by you and by us, is the greatest suc- cess story in history," Dafni said. "No atomic bomb has been invented which can kill only Jews. No longer will the Jew be killed separately. We now share the fate of the entire world. There will be no more extermination camps." He described the continuing needs—to assure Israel's ability to defend herself, to provide an education for children of newcomers, to assure that new settlers will have proper medi- cal care and housing. Dafni protested against the use of the term "gimmick" as an education for children of drives and he said he would rather not depend on a crisis to raise funds. He emphasized that this is a privileged generation that has been given the glory of witnessing the emergence of Jewish political independence, and he commended the role played in Israel's rebirth by the Jews of America. He expressed confidence that Detroit Jewry will remain in the forefront of communities that are sharing in the great reconstruction effort in Israel. Phillip Stollman, in brief marks prior to the closing of the meeting, admonished his fellow workers that "the eyes and ears of our people every- where are upon us." He de- scribed the great needs in Israel and the responsibility to share in fulfilling them and he announced, in behalf of himself and his brother Max, a gift of $50,000 to this year's campaign. Rabbi Haim Donin, this year's chairman of the synagogues and schools section of the Allied Jewish Campaign, gave the in- vocation at the dinner. Report; by division chairmen were called by the co-chairmen of the pre-campaign section, Irwin Green and A. Alfred Taubman. Mrs. I. Jerome Hauser, chair- man of the Women's Division, reported a total of $593,139 — which is 96 per cent of last year's contributions. Others who submitted reports included: Alfred W. Keats, metropolitan division; M r s . Brand Marwil, who stated', in behalf of the junior division, that tweens and teens now also are being solicited; Abe Lapides, Pontiac, merchantile t r a de s; Harold Norman, services; Al- fred L. Deutsch, real estate, building and finances division; Max Sosin, food division; Dr. Abraham Becker, professional, and Irving Goldberg, arts and crafts. Volunteer workers' report meetings will commence next Tuesday, at a luncheon in the Fred M. Butzel Memorial, 163 Madison. German Sailors Fined for Insult to Jews at Seder in Haifa Home TEL AVIV (JTA)—Two Ger- man sailors, who broke into a home in Haifa on Passover Eve with shouts of "Heil Hitler," were allowed to return to their ship after being arrested, and sentenced to fines of $500 each and a week in jail. Dieter Kielbase of Lubeck and Foiyerdirks of Hameln had their fines paid by the agent of the ship, the Annemarie Heiger, which sailed later. The sailors had been in jail since the inci- dent. The sailors were convicted of entering the home and demand- ing a drink. When they were refused, they shouted anti - Jew- ish insults until they were ar- rested. They told the court they thought the house was a bar. Jews in. Pinsk testified on the issue of what happened to SS men if they refused to obey commands for torture and mur- der. Dr. Manfred Roeder, a for- mer German- military judge, said that commands had to be obeyed without consideration as to their criminal nature. He said it would have been im- possible for a man with the rank of squadron commander in a cavalry regiment to re- ject an order handed down from Hitler to carry out exe- cutions. He said that it would have been up to the generals to pro- tect their subordinates from being given criminal commands. Dr. Hans Globke, who quit under fire as a key adviser to Chancellor Konrad Ade- nauer, also was a witness. He said he first learned of the shootings in the East at the beginning of the inva- sion of Russia. He said that in discussions with other of- ficials in Berlin at the time, the unanimous opinion had been expressed that the man who did not carry out an or- der to shoot must reckon with being shot himself. Globke, who was then an official in the Interior Minis- try, added that he was not aware of any cases where this had happened. He also testified that he knew of a ministry Dr. Hans Buchheim, of the Munich Institute of Contem- porary History, said that SS men had plenty of opportu- nities to dodge carrying out or- ders to shoot civilians, but that most of them lacked the cour- age to refuse to obey such orders. Meanwhile, at Frankfurt, a vivid description of the man- ner in which one SS officer, with pistol in hand, drove a dozen Jewish children to their deaths in the Birkenau gas ovens in 1943, was given to the court here. The trial continues against 22 Auschwitz-Birkenau officers, accused of murdering many of the 4 million Jews executed at the death factory. Monday's principal witness was Ludwig Woerl, who said he had been transferred from another camp to the infamous Auschwitz Arrest Bloc 11. There, one day, he testified, "a dozen little Jewish girls, aged 3 to 11, came up to me, begged me to save them from the gas chambers. They said they were strong and could work and didn't want to die. I couldn't help them. There was Oswald Kaduk, with gun in hand. That murderer Kaduk drove them away to the gas chamber." Woerl pointed his fingers at Kaduk, one of the defend- ants. Kaduk leaped from his tators yelled "Beat him to death!" It took presiding Justice Hans Hofmeyer sev- eral minutes to bring order back to the court room. Woerl's most sensational tes- timony concerned Kaduk; he also implicated two others among the defendants, Joseph Klehr and Wilhelm Boger. He told of a girl prisoner who was shot to death in a room with doors closed. "I didn't see Boger shoot her," he said, "but he was in there and no one else besides the girl. I heard two shots. The girl was dead." He told the court that Boger As for Klehr, Woerl said he had seen records showing that Klehr had killed 250 or 300 persons. "Add some zeros to those figures, and you will have a more correct figure," he said. • GEORGE OHRENSTEIN Certified Master Watchmaker and Jeweler 18963 Livernois Ave. UN 1-8184 OPEN THURS. TO 9 P.M. KAPLAN BROS. • • • • • • • • • Strictly Kosher Meats and Poultry Specializing in: Fresh, Cutup Chicken Parts Ready Made Hamburger Patties Oven Ready Turkeys Mock Chicken Seasoned Meat Balls Veal for Scalopini Beef for Scalopini Tenderloin Chip Steak Boneless Chicken Breasts • • • • • Cartwheels Cube Steaks Kosher TV Dinners Beef Ribs Seasoned Meat Loaf 18229 WYOMING WE DELIVER UN 1-4770 Member Detroit Kosher Meat Dealers Association AMERICAN FINANCIAL QUIZ #2 • • I am the owner of a small business. Where can I safely keep my capital reserve and at the same time have it working for me? Place that money in a high-earn- ing, insured savings account at American Savings and Loan Asso- ciation. There your reserve capital will be safe, earning 4% per year and available to you on request. AMERICAN SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION MICHIGAN'S LARGEST STATE-CHARTERED SAVINGS AND LOAN INSTITUTION Main Office: Woodward & Congress, Telephone: WOodward 5-5800 Telegraph Road and Maple Road / Other offices throughout greater Detroit Livernois at West 7 Mile Rd. / Dexter Blvd. at Cortland / West 9 Mite near Coolidge 3 - THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Friday, April 10, 1964 Big Boost for Globke Testifies on Orders to Nazis to Kill Jews or Face Death BRUNSWICK, (JTA) — Ex- official who, on learning about chair at the defense table, had so much influence at the Drive on Way to pert witnesses in the trial of the mass shootings, got a trans- shouting "You lie!" The wit- camp that even SS men feared former SS cavalry officers fer from the Jewish department ness repeated his accusation, death at his hands. $5 Million Goal five in the wartime murder of 5,200 to another department. calling Kaduk "a pig." Spec-,