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January 01, 1965 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1965-01-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

January Will Be Histadrut Month
Among Pioneer Women Chapters

The Detroit Council of Pioneer
Women has declared January as
"Histadrut Month" within the or-
ganization. Mrs. Nathan Glenner,
Council Histadrut chairman, an-
nounced at a special Histadrut
leadership meeting that the 15
local chapters will devote them-
selves exclusively to solicitation of
pledges on behalf of the Histadrut
Campaign during this period.
Activities in each of the chap-
ters will be directed by a Hista-
drut chairman under thhe over-all
supervision of Mrs. Glenner.
The organization's activities on
behalf of the Histadrut campaign
will culminate with an afternoon
tea Jan. 21 given by Histadrut
in honor of the Pioneer Women
Council in the Labor Zionist In-
stitute. Guest speaker will be
Mrs. Alexander Quaison-Sackey,
wife of the president of the
United Nations General Assem-
bly.
A prize will be awarded to a
member who has turned in her own
personal pledge to the Histadrut
Campaign by that date. An extra
chance will be given to those who
have increased their pledges.
There will be no admission
charge, and refreshments will be
served. •
At a special meeting of. the
Pioneer. Women Histadrut chair-
men, it was recommended that the
organization raise 20 per cent more
than last year, with the proceeds
to go towards a joint-Histadrut-
Pioneer Women Project, the Car-
miel Community Center in Israel.

CJFWF Will Study
Mental Impairment
Among Jewish Aged

NEW YORK (JTA)
Mental
impairment in a constantly grow-
ing population of aged persons
and the impact of this develop-
ment on Jewish homes for the
aged will be studied by the Coun-
cil of Jewish Federations and Wel-
fare Funds.
The project, started this year,
is financed by a three-year grant
of 5224.640 by the federal govern-
ment and involves homes for the
aged throughout the United States
and Canada.
In outlining the background of
the project. the CJF'WF said the
greatly increased survival rate of
persons into advanced old age, as
well as changes in the average age
and condition of applicants for in-
stitutions for the aged since the
start of social security and federal
public welfare, had created a large
and growing reservoir of depen-
dent aged persons needing care.
At the same time that the age
of persons in homes for the aged
nursing homes and other institu-
tions for the long-term sick in-
creases, the number of mentally
impaired persons among them also
is growing. the CJFWF reported.
It cited an earlier health services
coordination study at five Jewish
homes for the aged whiCh showed
that mental impairment was the
most common affliction in more
than four out of ten residents
studied.

Where's a
1 1-in-33 chance
you'll have a
mentally
retarded baj

here's how to lower the odds.

F

Write for the free booklet from th";s1
President's Committee on Mental I
I Retardation, Washington, D.C.

i

Name

Address

City

State

lip Code

Published as a public service in coop
oration with The Advertising Council

j

The project will signify the
close ties between the Israel
Histadrut Campaign, which is
concluding its 40th anniversary
this year, and Pioneer Women,
whose 40th anniversary celebra-
tions commence this month. The
idea of a joint venture was born
during the past summer, when
leaders of the two groups held
joint sessions in Tel Aviv, to-
gether with heads of Histadrut
and Moetzet Hapoalot, the Work-
ing Women's Council.
Histadrut chairmen of the Pio-
neer Women chapters are Mes-
dames Mary Garnick and Ida Katz,
Club One; Pauline Liberson, Club
Two; Estelle Wilk, Avodah; Mil-
dred Buch, Brandeis; Gladys Kami-
iier, Chana Czenesh; Sandra Sab-
bata, Alonah; Pearl Nusbaum,
Business and Professional; Sulamis
Goldoftas, Dimona; Mollie Stein,
Golda Meir; Ida Bailey, Hanita;
Pearl Lieberman, Israel; Rebecca
Warren, Kinneret; Betty Karbal,
Massada; Lillian Klein, Negbah;
and Mattie Fredrick, Sharona.

Jews From Algeria
Ponder Immigration
Woes at Conference

PARIS (JTA) — Measures to
deal with the religious, cultural
and social problems arising from
the immigration into France in
recent years of the more than
100,000 Jews from Algeria and
other North African countries.
were discussed here last weekend
at a conference sponsored by the
Association of Jews from Algeria.
Among the resolutions adopted
was one calling for the immediate
establishment of a regional corn-
mission for cultural and educa-
tional affairs to deal with specific
problems posed by the influx.
Another resolution appealed to
all French Jews and institutions
as well as international Jewish
bodies to give aid generously to
help resolve. this problem which
is. "seriously imperiling the Jewish
personality of thousands of these
uprobted persons."
The meeting also called for con-
tinued efforts to secure compen-
sation, for property lost by Jews
who left Algeria.

Whimpering Arabs at the

UN
End Their Hate With Whine

Keren Hayesod Appeals to Jewry
of World for Increased Assistance

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Premier
Eshkol told the final dinner ses-
sions of the world convention of
Keren Hayesod that if world Jewry
will "give us the means and the
Jews, we shall double our number
within two .decades." Israel now
has over 2,000,000 Jews.
Premier Eshkol called the Keren
Hayesod the "strongest link" in
the chain joining Israel with Jews
outside of Israel. Dr. Israel Gold-'
stein, Keren Hayesod world chair -
man, also asked world Jewry for
increased aid. He said that in ad-*
dition to physical pioneering in
Israel there should be a readiness
to aid Israel with financial help.
Louis Pincus, the Jewish Agency
treasurer, warned that unless the
needed funds for Israel were made
available, there would be no way
to avoid cutting essential services.
Reports of the delegates revealed
generally an increase in income,
but those from South America and
South Africa reported that diffi-
culties had arisen stemming from
foreign exchange regulations and
devaluation affecting campaigns in
several countries.
Bernard Ferster of Australia
suggested an appeal be made to

UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—Some
people like to start a venture that
concerns them with a bang, even
when they know they must end
with a whimper. The Arabs are
different. Between mid-November
and the end of 1964, first in the
Security Council. then in the Gen-
eral Assembly, they opened with a
whimper and ended with a whine.
Everybody here, they complained
from beginning to the closing cur-
tain, is out of step — except of
course. the Arabs.
Of 115 members at the United
Nations. 102 insisted on peace and
international cooperation. But the
13 Arab states knew how wrong
this majority was. Not that the
Arabs were opposed to peace—
on their terms. Not that they hated
international cooperation, so long
as that doctrine was applied to
them only. They even approved
of liberty—for the Israel-hating
Arabs. They had no hesitancy
whatever endorsing the principle
of territorial integrity—so long as
Israel were to be excluded from
the application of such a rule.
Due to the stubborn fact that
the 102 members could not agree
with the novel thesis put forth

by the recalcitrant 13. the Arabs
had a miserable holiday season.
Even their Russian pals were
sorry for them. For the Russians,
say what you will, strut with

confidence. But the Arabs mere-
ly wring their hands in total
frustration.
Take the Security Council's five-
week-long debate on last Novem-
ber's shooting affray between
Syria and Israel, for instance. It
was the Syrians who had rushed
to the Council with a complaint
against I s r a e li aggression. This
time. they were sure. they had a
tight case. Didn't the Israelis not
only admit that their air force
crossed Syrian air space, pounding
the Syrian gun positions that had
done nothing but shell Kibbutz
Dan mercilessly? Israel, to be sure,
not only admitted that fact—it
even boasted about the success of
its air arm.
And what did the Council do? In-
stead of condemning Israel, it
wanted to put through a resolu-
tion equating "innocent" Syria
with "aggressive" Israel by call-
ing upon both sides, equally, to
stop shooting from the hip.
Morocco, as the sole Arab
member of the Council, did, in-
deed, present a resolution se-
verely condemning - Israel. But
Morocco could get only its two
Communist pals to help it vote
"yes," these being the USSR
and Czechoslovakia. A 11 other
eight members of the Council
abstained; since there must be
at least seven affirmative votes

the United Nations

in the Council for the adoption
of any resolution, the Moroccans
—and the Arabs as a whole-
' suffered an ignominous defeat.

To be sure, the Russians tried
their best—on the suface. When
the mild American-BrLish resolu-
tion came to a vote, the Russians
exercised their veto — and that
draft failed to pass. At the Coun-
cil's very first of its 10 sessions
on this issue, Syria had made a
very long speech. When the Rus
sians had finally cast their expec-
ted veto, Syria again delivered a
long speech. Syria cried at the be-
ginning, wept at the end. And no
one even bothered to hand the
Arabs a towel.
* * *
Then, take the General Assem-
bly. Nine Arabs had spoken and
had declared war against Israel.
One Israeli, A b b a E b a n, had
called for decency and for peace.
Eban replied to the nine, reaffirm-
ing the wish for peace, at the same
time warning that the so-called
"A r a b Liberation. Organization,"
which he called an "Israel Liqui-
dation Organization." would not
get very far because (al Israel will
defend itself in the future as it
has in the past; the rest of the
world. as shown by the peace calls
of 102 nations. does not happen to
agree with the Arabs.

With typical chivalry, the
Arabs could not let Eban's solo
voice stand by itself. If not nine
against one, they could afford
at least two. Two Arabs an-
swered. The General Assembly
yawned — almost audibly. On
that note, the A s s e m bly ad-
journed for the holidays.

Eban and Michael Comay—Is-
rael's permanent representative
here—walked out with their heads
held high. Once again, the Arabs
had made fools of themselves. But
Eban and Comay had no time to
gloat. They were off to an import-
ant luncheon appointment—with
the Ghanaian president of this
year's General Assembly.

Was that very luncheon with
the leading African here an addi-
tional slap at the Arabs? The Arabs
seemed to think so. As the season
opened—so it closed, with a cry of
pain from Balaam's ass. But maybe
the animal should not have opened
his mouth in the first place.

St. Paul Center Opened

ST. PAUL (JTA) — Governor
Karl Rolfaag and Mayor George
Vavoulis joined other civic and
political leaders, Jewish and non-
Jewish, when the entire Jewish
community participated in the for-
mal opening of St. Paul's new
$1,500,000 Jewish community cen-
ter.

The delegates adopted a resolu-
tion that world Jewry should as-
sume responsibility for two-thirds
of the cost of immigration and
absorption costs with Israel paying
the other third. Another resolu-
tion called on Jewries outside of
Israel, with the exception'of Ameri-
can Jewry. to increase fund-rais-
ing by a minimum of $20,000,000
over the next four years. The dele-
gates sent their best wishes to
Moshe Sharett, chairman of the
Jewish Agency executive, who is
in a hospital.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, January 1, 1965-9

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