Truth About Refugees and Water Project THE JEW'S "T" Fe C)1 11 1" A Weekly Review Editorial Page 4 'Separation': Natural Right of Cultural, Spiritual Identification NIIc iiGA1%.3 f Jewish Events Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper—Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Vol. XLV, No. 14 Printed in a 100% Union Shop Commentary Page Chronicle 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd., Detroit 48235—VE 8-9364—May 29, 1964—$6.00 Per Year; Single Copy 20c Prolonged Court Fight Seen on Anti Jewish Fair Slogans Special to The Jewish News NEW YORK—A prolonged court fight to force cancellation of the World's Fair lease to the Jordanian Pavilion unless Jordan removes its anti- Semitic mural from the walls of its exhibit was foreseen here Wednesday. Legal action was instituted by Dore Schary, chairman of the Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith, against Robert Moses, president of the World's Fair Corporation, and Newbold Morris, New York City commissioner of parks. An order directing Morris and Moses to show cause why the mural should not be removed or the Jordan Pavilion lease canceled was signed May 21 by Justice Joseph A. Sarafite of the State Supreme Court. Meanwhile leaders of the American Jewish Congress fulfilled their warning that they would picket the Jordanian Pavilion. Dr. Joachim Prinz, AJCongress president, and 11 of his associates, were arrested Monday morning when they refused to abandon their picketing at the Fair. Tension was added to the dispute with the con- firmation in Jerusalem of the report that Premier .Eshkol will not visit the World's Fair during his - visit in New York next week. The change in his originally planned itinerary which would have in- cluded a visit to the Fair, appeared to be due to the refusal of Fair officials to take action against the Jordanian anti-Jewish and anti-Israel display. Rabbi Prinz and the 11 other persons, including his wife and other national officers of the AJC, were arrested after the picketing demonstration. They were arraigned before Judge Bernard Dubin, of the Criminal Court of Queens County, and paroled without bail in their own recognizance, pending the filing of motions by their special counsel, Howard M. Squadron. He told Judge Dubin he will challenge the constitutionality of the Fair's ban against picketing. The case was adjourned to June 16. Dr. Prinz had previously requested a permit to picket the Jordanian pavilion, and was denied such authorization by Robert Moses. Monday morning, Dr. Prinz and the 11 others appeared at the Fair entrance with picket signs. Policemen told them they would not be admitted with the banners. They then left the signs and entered the Fair grounds. Proceeding to the front of the Jordanian pavilion, they started marching to and fro. One of their number, C. Irving Dwork, national secretary of the American Jewish Con- gress, lifted a picketing sign reading: "The Ameri- can Jewish Congress Urges Peace Through Under- standing—Jordan Incites War Through Bigotry." The Fair's official slogan is "Peace Through Understanding." When a Fair security officer ordered Dwork to lower the banner, and the latter refused to do so, all members of the group were arrested. All but Dwork were charged with disorderly conduct. He was charged additionally with "resisting ar- rest." Those arrested, in addition to Rabbi and Mrs. Prinz and Dwork, included: Theodore Bikel, pro- minent singer and actor; .Theodore Kolish, a na- tional vice president of the AJC; Mrs. Howard Levine; Harry Schacter, another AJC national vice president; James H. Scheuer, chairman of the AJC executive committee; Mrs. Benjamin Spiegel; Mrs. Martin Steinberg; and two other national vice presidents, Robert Wechsler and Theodore Mann. Rabbi Prinz and all the others were held in the Fair's police detention room for an hour, then Continued on Page 3 White House and State Department Make Elaborate Preparations to Welcome Israel's Prime Minister 2 \- WASHINGTON (.JTA)—The White House and State Department made elaborate arrangements for hospitality to Israel's Prime Minister Levi Eshkol and Mrs. Eshkol when they arrive here next Monday. JERUSALEM (JTA)—Prime Minister Levi Eshkol, preparing to leave for the United States for an official visit with President Johnson to begin next Monday, reported on the details of his American stay to the Cabinet. State Department sources said that protocol considerations prompted Secretary of State Dean Rusk to receive Tuesday afternoon the ambassadors from 13 Arab states who protested the forthcoming visit of Eshkol to this country as a guest of President Johnson. Secretary Rusk told the Arab envoys that the United States was aware of Arab views and would follow its policy in the Middle East from the viewpoint of national interest and its desire to see peace preserved in the area. The Arab diplomats jointly warned the State Department that the real objective of the Eshkol visit was to exploit an election atmosphere here "to destroy Arab- American relations to gain liberty of aggression in the Middle East." The appointment for the Arab group was requested by Ambassador Mostafa Kamel of the United Arab Republic and granted by Secretary Rusk. (Over the objections of the U. S. Treasury, Britain and our Western European allies, the State Department this week ordered a $40,000,000 International Mbnetary Fund loan to the United Arab Republic). In addition to meeting with the President, Eshkol also will confer in Washington with Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Secretary of Defense Robert MacNamara. He will also meet other prominent Americans, including leaders of the Republican Party, among them Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York. Walworth H. Barbour, United States ambassador to Israel, left for Washington to help prepare official American administration arrangements for the Eshkol visit, The government announced that, during Eshkol's absence, Deputy Premier Abba Eban will be acting prime minister. Since Eshkol is also minister of defense, that post will be assumed temporarily during his absence by Pinhas Sapir, minister of finance and minister of commerce and industry. Prime Minister Eshkol is due to meet President. DeGaulle in Paris about a week after returning from his forthcoming United States visit. The prime minister's office here confirmed that a meeting between the two leaders has been scheduled for early July. United Auto Workers Purchases $250,000 in Israel Bonds, Record for Detroit, in Tribute to U.S. Senator Philip A. Hart N /- A record Detroit purchase of a quarter-million dol- lars in Israel Bonds was announced by the UAW Inter- *national at a tribute dinner for Sen. Philip A. Hart Sun- day. The $250,000 check, presented by UAW Secretary- Treasurer Emil Mazey, set the pace for further giving. A total of $370,000 was subscribed by trade unions and individuals at the Cobo Hall banquet attended by 500. Sen. Hart and the State of Israel, on its 16th anni- versary, shared the spotlight, with both being praised by union leaders for their contributions to society. Shimon Moratt, labor counselor of the Israel Em- bassy, presented Sen. Hart with a plaque from the State of Israel. He called the senator "a great citizen of the world," "one of a group whose friendship for Israel, whose concern for her present and future" has been "explicit" and "to whom international solidarity means a good deal." (In an address on the floor of the 'United States Senate on May 19, Sen. Hart called attention to the menacing situation created in the Middle East by the aid given to Nasser by German scientists. He called upon the services thus given to Israel's enemies by means of legislative action. Detailed story on Page 2). Citing the growth problems of Israel, economics, edu- cation and security, Moratt said the labor movement here has taken a great role in Israel's upbuilding. "You were at the cradle of the state of Israel," he said to the union- ists, "and it's good to know we have stanch friends at our side." Sen. Hart, in accepting the award, said Israel "has demonstrated more than any other nation that power is not so important as an idea, that respect for the idea is essential for survival of a decent society." Mazey, who was in Israel recently, meeting with leaders in the labor-socialist government, said that his union's $250,000 subscription will be added to the $327,000 purchased in previous years. "Why does my union support Israel? Because we recognize the persecution, discrimination and oppression to the Jewish people, and because we are opposed to such injustice," he said. "We're for Israel because we recognize that its social planning is important for countries like our own and shows the possibilities of a real democracy." Pointing out that while his union is "one-tenth of one per cent Jewish, we can be for the state of Israel without being Jewish." Special awards to trade unions that have purchased Bonds were announced by Barney Hopkins, secretary- treasurer, Michigan State AFL-CIO. Recipients, who will be inscribed in the State of Israel Bonds scroll of honor, were Ford Local 600, Retail Store Employes Union Local 876, Amalgamated Meat Cut- ters and Butchers Workmen, United Bakery and Confec- tionary Workers Local 30, International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 337 and Hotel and Restaurant Employes Union. Mrs. Myra Wolfgang, accepting the award for the hotel employes, said unions should be assured that "buying Israel Bonds is no gift, it's an investment. "On June 6," she added, "you will have the oppor- tunity to give, not make, money for the state of Israel scholarship in Sen. i%IcNamara's name." (The dinner, a tribute to Sen. Patrick V. McNamara at the Masonic Temple, is sponsored by the American Trade Union Council for Histradrut.) Others who bought Bonds in Sen. Hart's honor in- cluded Congressman John Dingell and the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Clement H. Kern of Most Holy Trinity Church, who de- livered the invocation at the dinner. Tributes to Sen. Hart were made by the Rev. James E. Wadsworth Jr., of St. Mark's Community Church and by Dr. Morris Adler of Cong. Shaarey Zedek. Dr. Adler is chairman of the UAW Public Review Board. Dinner chairman was August Scholle, president of the Michigan State AFL-CIO. Greetings were extended by Irving Kane, Detroit Development Committee coordinator, representing Mayor Cavanagh; and by Sidney Shevit7 president of the Jewish Community Council,