Keating Charges Bob Kennedy Made Deal
With Nazi Cartel- State Dept. Denies `Smear'

NEW YORK (JTA)—The State former Atty. Gen. Herbert Brown-
Department and the Department of ell, who said other former attorney
Justice refuted a charge by Sen. generals had agreed with him.
Kenneth B. Keating that Robert F.
Despite Kennedy's rebuttal, Sen.
Kennedy, his opponent in the cam- Keating said he would continue to
paign for U.S. Senate, had made a use the General Aniline" settlement
deal with a "huge Nazi cartel."
as a campaign issue.
Kennedy campaign forces de-
The Justice Department spokes-
cried the Keating charges as "a man said there was no reason to
smear."
suggest that any proceeds from the
Sen. Keating later eased up on sale of General Aniline assets
the charge but still insisted that would go to any Nazis or former
Kennedy, as attorney general, had Nazis.
arranged a settlement whereby
General Aniline, which has plants
more than $90,000,000 in assets of in New York, makes Ansco film.
a German firm confiscated as en-
Continuing on his campaign
emy alien property during World
rounds, wooing Jewish voters,
War •1. were turned . over to its
Kennedy stressed civil rights at
former owners.

a synagogue in suburban Mount
Vernon, visited the lower East
Side of Manhattan, called for the
guarantee of Israel's independ-
ence against Arab aggression,
visited the editorial offices of
the two Yiddish dailies published
in this city—and had lunch at a
Jewish restaurant on the East
Side.
At Mount Vernon, Kennedy ap-
peared
at the Free Synagogue of
According to the Department of
State, Rusk wrote to Kennedy in Westchester County to discuss civil
1961, proposing a negotiated set- rights, and on New York's lower
tlement in order to remove a long- East Side he walked among the

A spokesman of the State De-
partment said that Sec. of State
Dean Rusk had initiated the set-
tlement and wrote to Atty. Gen.
Kennedy that a negotiated set-
tlement was desirable. The tran-
saction involves the sale*of Gen-
eral Aniline and Film Corp.,
which, prior to the war, had
been owned by I. G. Farben, a
German chemical combine.

standing source of irritation with Jewish crowds preparing to cele-
the Swiss owners of Interhandel, grate Sukkot.
On his tour of the East Side,
a successor company. to parts of
carrying a Inlay and esrog he was
the old I. G. Farben interests.
Department of Justice officials
said Sen. Keating had been aware
of the details of the transaction for

18 months and had never indicated
opposition. But Keating insists that
the "deal" with a Swiss holding
company involved "a front for I. G. '
Farben."
Sen. Keating said he was not
accusing Kennedy of any "hei-
nous crime" or improper motive"
in the settlement. But, he said,
Kennedy should have waited
until. the Swiss holding company
could prove in court that it was
not a Farben front.
He was supported in this view by

Street Dedicated in Italy to Jews Deported by Nazis

accompanied by David Dubinsky,
president of the International
Ladies Garment Workers' Union.
In regard to Israel-Arab issues,
Kennedy asserted he sought U.S.
backing for Israel against Arab ag-
gression, and also told about being
"involved" in Israel's War of Lib-
eration by driving a tank from, Tel
Aviv to Jerusalem while that war
was on and predicting at that time
that Israel would "get her inde-
pendence because of her courage
and her determination."
He said he supported Israel's
plan to use Jordan River waters
for irrigation of the Negev, and
favored the joint U.S.-Israel plans
for the use of desalinated waters
for irrigation purposes.

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I LOT G—NORTHLAND CENTER

ROME (JTA) — The town of
Saluzzo commemorated Monday the
20th anniversary of the Italian anti-
Nazi resistance against the German
occupation with a "Deportees Day"
which included religious cere-
monies in Jewish, Catholic and
Protestant rites.
Senator A. Caleffi, undersecre-
tary of public educatkons and presi-
dent of the Italian Association of
Former Deportees, recalled the suf-
ferings of the victims of Nazi con-
centration camps. A memorial
stone dedicating a street to the,
memory of Jewish deportees was
unveiled.

During the occupation, Saluzzo
was an important center of parti-
san activity. Many young Jews from

Piedmont fought among the parti-
sans against the Germans, and per- •

ished.

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Israeli Experts
in D.C. for Talks
on Desalination

WASHINGTON (JTA)—A team

of Israeli experts arrived in Wash-

ington for joint American-Israeli
planning sessions to advance the
"LBJ Plan" for nuclear desalina
tion in Israeli. The talks opened
Wednesday at the U.S. Department
of the Interior.
The Israeli delegation is headed
by Gen. Zvi Tsur, of the Mekorot
Water Authority, who was ap-
pointed by Prime Minister Levi
Eshkol to serve as chief coordi-
nator for the desalination project.
Other members of the Israeli team
are Dr. Abraham Katz, specialist on
electricity; Aharon Weiner, head
of the Water Planning Company,
Tahal; and R. Tiberger, expert on
reactors of the Israel Atomic En-
ergy Commission. They will meet
here with American experts of the
Interior Department and Atomic
Energy Commission, who recently
visited Israel for preliminary
phases of the survey.
Together, _ the experts will now
formulate a joint resume to the
two governments on the practical
aspects of the project, its scope,
size, cost, and other details. The
project will use nuclear power to
desalt seawater while simulta-
neously generating low cost elec-
trical power. While in the United
States, the Israelis will view a de-
Salination project at Wrightsville
-
Beach, N.C., and the "Yankee Re-
actor" in New York State.

Friendship that flows from the
heart cannot be frozen by advers-
ity, as the water that flows from
the spring cannot congeal in
winter. —J. Fenimore Cooper

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, September 25, 1964-3

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