Allied Jewish Campaign Certain of $100,000 Increase Over Last Year May Exceed Total of $4,700,000; Dore Schary Inspires Campaigners The 1964 Allied Jewish Campaign is certain of a total of $4,640,000, but may go $100,000 above that, Charles H. Gershenson, chairman, announced Wednesday night at the concluding dinner meeting of the drive at the Jewish Center. Gershenson said that at the sim- ilar event last year, at the closing dinner of the 1963 drive, a total of $4,314,620 was recorded and the anticipated $4,520,000 was exceeded by $30,000. At Wednesday's meet- ing, the total raised was $4,438,648 and a minimum total of $4,640,000 seemed assured from the large number of prospects yet to be reached. "We may even go above $4,740,000," Gershenson said. The concluding dinner Wednesday heard an inspired message by Dore Schary, na- tional chairman of the An t Defamation League, who called upon all liberty-loving people to shun silence when basic chal- lenges are involved. "Silence," he said, "has brought terrible memories. Unwillingness to speak out has brought many miseries on the world. Silence permitted the murder of mil- lions of Jews." Declaring that the ADL allies itself with the cause of justice for the Negro, Schary said that "now there must be an act of justice after a century of injustice. We must put in perspective the irresponsible acts of some Negroes and we must ally ourselves passionately with those who back the civil rights bill." He called attention to a recent Washington conference aimed at attacking the civil rights bill and said it was sponsored by anti-Jew- ish and anti-Catholic elements as well as anti-Negroes. Warning that anti-Semites are becoming more articulate, Schary admonished the gathering not to be afraid to speak up, not to be indifferent. "The place of the Jew is on the side of immediate rectification of the wrongs to the Negroes," he declared. Speaking on the merits of the Allied Jewish Campaign, he urged greater education efforts and said "we must refresh ourselves with more Judaism which is our replen- ishing power." Winding up two years of chair- manship of the campaign, Gershen- son commended his fellow workers for their devotion to the many causes included in the drive. Al Borman, his cochairman, asked the workers "never to quit, to finish the job, to continue solicit- ing until every prospect has been reached." As president of the Jewish W e If a r e Federation, Hyman S a f r an commended the cam- paign workers for adhering to highest community responsibil- ities and for carrying the drive's message to 25,000 prospects. The gathering campaign workers gave a standing ovation to Isidore Sobeloff who addressed the gather- ing on the conclusion of his 27th campaign year here, prior to as- suming his new assignment in Los Angeles. - Recalling the experiences of the past 27 years, listing the many great names of world leaders who assisted in the sponsorship of Allied Jewish Campaigns, Sobeloff said he looked back with pride to the growth of the community, to the increased interest in Jewish activities. "The Federation is Jewish in its ethical concepts and is American in its social aspects," Sobeloff said. He said he and Mrs. Sobeloff are leaving the city "with fond thoughts" of the many friends they had made here. He commended many of his co- workers, with special mention for Miss Esther Prussian, and with good wishes to his successor as director of the Federation, his "most sea- soned" associate, William Avrunin. Irwin Green and Max Shay e called for campaign reports which were given by Mrs. I. Je r ome Hauser, Alfred W. Keats, Joel D. Tauber, Marvin G. Alexander, Har- old S. Norman, Aubrey H. Etten- heimer, Charles Milan, Milton J. Miller, Eugene Epstein and Irving Goldberg. Rabbi Leon Fram gave the invocation. Charging "the reckless and careless politician with creating the record of violence," Schary called for an end to witch hunts. "The United States is no 'here- for-a-day' republic," he declared. "But we have a record of violence. Bloody riots, lynchings, vigilante justice, overt prejudice against Catholics, Mormons, Italians, Irish and Jews have shamed the basic concept of American freedom. Witch hunts have been part of the national scene, street brawls and homicides stain our blotter of achievement. Four Presidents have been assassinated. Two others in our lifetime have almost been murdered. Early politicians have either died for 'honor' or shed blood. Senators and congressmen have assaulted each other in their sacred halls of debate. We have fought a deadly Civil War. We still have not defined, after such a war, the victor or the loser—nor what the issues were over which that war was fought. "And out of the angry debate, men are shot in the dark; children are blown up in churches; riots and clubbings and stabbings strike down citizens of the United States of America. And the warnings are clear. Trouble boils in a covered kettle of unrest and unless quick progress is made we will see vio- lence that will shock and shame us. "I charge the hate mongers and plotters—from Aaron Burr to Joe McCarthy. I charge their cohorts who dealt in slander, deceit and hate. I charge irresponsible gover- nors such as Barnett, Faubus and Wallace who in the name of states' rights defied federal law. "I charge quasi-political groups such as the Birch Society—with fomenting unfounded distrust— with telling monstrous lies—with spreading hate. "I charge them all with distort- ing the truth and bearing false witness and if they then say, "Well, all is fair in politics"— I charge them doubly, because their sins bear the added curse of cynicism." Again, the professional divi- sion, led by Dr. Abraham Becker and attorney Milton J. Miller, turned in the largest number of pledges. This division reached the $700,- 000 mark and has vowed to pass the 100% mark. Abraham Satovsky is division adviser. Pre-campaign efforts are in the hands of Attorneys Arnold E. Frank and Joseph Handelman, and Dr. I. Jerome Hauser and Dr. Max B. Winslow. First section over the 100% mark this year was the schools and synagogues, whose total of more than $14,500 put them 106% ahead of last year's contribution of $13,- Leaders Congratulated by Pioneers Srere and Enggass ••:•• TWO PIONEER DETROIT LEADERS—Abra- ham Srere and Clarence H. Enggass—second and third from the left—congratulated the 1964 Allied Jewish Campaign leaders on their efforts in this year's drive, at the concluding 660. Section chairman is Rabbi Hayim Donin. Also over the top with 103% is the health services section whose chairman this year is Dr. Harold C. Melinsky. Top money-raising section is the attorneys, whose achievement to date has passed the $250,000 mark and who are approaching 100% of last year's total of $264,199. Co- chairmen of this section are Albert M. Colman and Milt o n Lucow. Advisers are S a in u e 1 J. Rhodes and Lester S. Smith. Second in amount of money raised is the physicians section whose chairman is Dr. Samuel J. Hyman. Dr. Ben G e r t ow is co- chairman. Their efforts to date have obtained more than $190,000 and put them over the 90% mark. Pharmacists and pharmaceutical suppliers section has Jack A. Robinson as chairman and Louis Silver as co-chairman, with David Dunsky and Morris Karbel as advisers. A. Richard Tischler is chairman of the accountants section, with Samuel L. Moss and Julian S. Tobias as advisers. The optometrists and opticians section is led by Dr. Ernest M. Gaynes, chairman, and Dr. Robert Feldman and Dr. Ben R. Ravitz, co- chairmen. Adviser of this unit is Dr. Donald Golden. Chairman of the podiatrists sec- tion is Dr. Bernard Levin. The osteopathic physicians sec- tion is headed by Dr. Mortimer B. Levin. Dr. Fred Benderoff and Dr. William Stoler are co-chairmen, and Dr. Sydney F. Ellias is adviser. Dr. Huldah Fine is chairman of the educational services sec- tion. Assisting her as co-chair- men are Dr. Arnold Glovinsky, Abe S. Gornbein, Samuel Filan, Dr. Albert Schiff and Dr. Wil- liam W. Wattenberg. Walter E. Klein is chairman of the social service section. Mrs. Samuel Chapin is co-chairman. Government services section chairman is Leon a r d Edelman. Lawrence Gubow, Bernard Panush and Irving J. Rubin are co-chair- men. Adviser is Julius C. Pliskow. Chairman of the engineers and scientists section is Dr. Henry Brown. He is assisted by George H. Amber, Paul S. Amber, Dr. Jacob E. Goldman and Julius Harwood. Gershenson announced at the report meeting last Friday that three divisions and more than a score of sections had passed the 100% mark in the effort to help Jewish causes and services every- where in the world. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, May 15, 1964 48 dinner meeting on Wednesday. Others in the photo are (from left) Al Borman, Charles H. Gershenson, Mrs. I. Jerome Hauser, Dore Schary, the guest speaker, Hyman Safran, and Max M. Fisher. In trades and professions, arts and crafts, led by Irving Goldberg, reached the 100% mark. Two sec- tions in this division also topped last year's figures. They are flor- ists, with Irwin W. Feldman, Max Weinberg and I. William Sherr co- chairmen, whose 1964 total to date is $3,800; and printers and pub- lishers, whose co-chairmen, Leon- ard R. Frenkel, Richard Kux, Ben Nathanson and Samuel Schiff, an- nounced they had secured nearly $100,000. The Women's Division has reached the 100% figure, Mrs. I. Jerome Hauser, chairman, an- nounced. The pre-campaign sec- tion, chaired by Mrs. Max M. Fisher, achieved more than $400,000; and the pace setters, led by Mrs. N. Brewster Broder and Mrs. Merle Harris, reached the $60,000 mark. Also past last year's total is the Junior Divisidn whose chairman is Joel D. Tauber, with a 110% achievement totaling more than $22,000. The special gifts section chaired by Ivan Boesky has ob- tained $16,000 in gifts for a 128% accomplishment. The mechanical trades division, whose chairman, Eugene J. Ep- stein, is assisted by Merle Harris and Malcom S. Lowenstein, reach- ed the 99% figure last Friday, and vowed to surpass the 1963 achieve- ment of $1 million. Top money-raising section among those that have surpassed last year's giving, is steel, with Fred M. Ginsberg, chairman, and Joseph D. Feldman co-chairman. To date, this unit has obtained more than $270,000 in gifts for 101%. Two sections in the mercantile division, under chairman Marvin G. Alexander and co-chairman Peter D. Brown, passed last year's totals. Men's wear representatives, with Martin Felder and Norman Wachler, co - chairmen, covered nearly $4,500 in slips for 109%; women's wear representatives top- ped $5,200 for an even 100%. Another leading campaign unit with seven sections over the top is the services division led by co- chairmen Paul Broder and Harold S. Norman. Tops in money raised is the finance section whose achievement is more than $50,000 for 101%. NYC Council Gets Bill to Remove Jordan Mural From World's Fair NEW YORK (JTA)—A Brook- lyn member of the New York City Council introduced in the Council a bill aimed at removal of a mural at the Jordan pavilion at the World's Fair which has been sharply criticized by Jewish or- ganizations as anti-Israel and divi- sive. Joseph P. Ruggieri, Democratic councilman-at-large, prepared the bill to forbid public display in the city of "any material which por- trays depravity, criminality, un- chastity or lack of virtue of a class of persons of any race, color, creed or religion." He said the "broad purpose" of the measure would be to ban material "which defames racial and racial groups" but that the immediate objective was removal of the "inflammatory and malicious mural" in the Jor- dan pavillion. The measure was referred to committee. Hadassah, Pioneer Women and the New York Board of Rabbis urged the World's Fair Corp., in separate statements, to remove the mural. Mrs. Siegfried Kramarsky, Ha- dassah president, made her appeal in an address at the World's Fair in celebration of "Child's Day for Youth Aliyah." The event, pro- claimed by Gov. Nelson Rockefel- ler, is under joint auspices of Hadassah, Pioneer Women and the Mizrachi Women's Organization of America. Mrs. Kramarsky told 500 rep- _ resentatives of the three organ --\--- zations at the ceremony that k„ was "regrettable" that the World's Fair Corp. "permitted so flagrant a violation" of the Fair theme, "Peace Through Understanding." Mrs. Blanche Fine, president of Pioneer Women, said the organiza- tion had sent a telegram to World's Fair president Robert Moses, declaring that "Pioneer Women exhibiting in the Ameri- can-Israeli Pavilion at the World's Fair vehemently protest the use made of the Jordan pavilion for propaganda which insults Israel and Jews throughout the world." Rabbi Max Schenk, president of the New York Board of 'Rabbis, said that a similar telegram had 1' been sent to Moses, urging removal of the mural "which is calculated to stir up hostility towards the state of Israel, people of Israel and Jews of the entire world." The board said the mural violated "the spirit of the Fair and will bring neither peace nor under- standing to those who will wit- ness it." K