dell L. Berman, chairman, and Dr. prospects to make the dollars Norman Brachler, associate chair- count instead of counting their dol- man. lars." Avrunin Presses for Stepped-Up Prospects' Coverage in the Allied Jewish Campaign The need for stepped-up cover- age of prospects in the 1965 Allied Jewish Campaign Was emphasized at the first of three Campaign Re- port Meetings by William Avrunin, executive director of the Jewish Welfare Federation. Avrunin point- ed out that over 11,000 prospects still had to be solicited before the May 12 closing of the Campaign. "Without these pledges," he re- marked, "the victory which seems so close will never be ours. Work- ers must redouble their efforts and move into the breach now as never before. All teams must mobiliize to cover their slips before we can complete a successful campaign." At the same report meeting, three divisions announced they had already received pledges amount- ing to 100 per cent or better of their 1964 dollar achievement. The mechanical trades division, under the leadership of Eugene J. Ep- stein, announced 105 per cent; the Arts and Crafts Division, Harvey Willens, chairman, and the Wom- en's Division, Mrs. I. Jerome Hau- ser, chairman, each reported 100 per cent. Two other divisions, real estate and food, were well into the 90 per cent bracket. Chairmen whose sections have achieved high results will be hon- ored at the third and final report meeting of the campaign. The lunch meeting will be held at the Phillip Stollman, vice-chairman of the campaign, said: "As cam- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS paign workers we must get our 6—Friday, April 23, 1965 Butzel Memorial Building, at 12:15 p.m. April 30. Workers are asked to bring their completed pledges to the meeting. A campaign activity forged ahead under the leadership of the general chairmen, Sol Eisen- berg and Irwin Green, and bene- ficiary agencies began present- ing their annual budget requests for the coming fiscal year for the approval of the budget and plan- ning divisions of Federation. Currently hearing agency budget reports are the health and welfare division, Alan E. Schwartz, chair- man, Samuel J. Greenberg and Dr. Irving Posner, associate chairmen; community relations division, Stan- ley J. Winkelman, chairman, Lewis S. Grossman, associate chairman; and the education division, Man- Official Green Light Given to Ribicoff Draft Against Soviet Discrimination Nazi Performance WASHINGTON (JTA) — State Soviet Jews are trying to print a Department spokesman R o b e r t prayer book "for all seasons" and Panned at College McCloskey made known that the department has decided not to ob- ject to the Ribicoff resolution which provides for congressional condemnation of Soviet anti-Semi- tism. It was learned that the State Department, in view of criticism of its opposition to the Ribicoff resolution, noted the deterioration in American - Soviet relations and felt that the previous reasons for America's opposition to the reso- lution no longer applied. In Buenos Aires the Christian- Jewish Brotherhood issued a pub- lic statement deploring the dis- criminations against Soviet Jewry. The statement was signed by the Rev. Adam Sesa, a Protestant; Dr. Carlos Cucchetti, a Catholic priest; and Chief Rabbi Guillermo Schle- singer. Rabbi Yehuda Leib Levin, chief rabbi of Moscow, told the Associated Press in Moscow that his Central Synagogue has no library or Hebrew school. He said applicants for the yeshiva in his congregation from other parts of the Soviet Union cannot come to the capital because there is no place for them to live in the crowded city, and resi- dence permits are refused to them, the AP reported here. The last graduating class of the yeshiva completed its studies there three years ago, Rabbi Levin told the American news agency, the class of " less than 30" including a few rabbis, schochtim and can- tors, the report stated. The rabbi also said, according of the report, that no Hebrew prayer books have been printed in the Soviet Union since 1956, when the only other edition was published since 1917; and that hope that, eventually, a Hebrew Bible will be published. Rabbi Levin told the AP re- porter: "It is difficult for us to realize all these objectives at once." Other statements attributed to the rabbi in the Moscow report included an assertion that Moscow has no Jewish -cemetery, Jews and Christians being buried in com- mon burial grounds; that there are few Bar Mitzvahs in the syna- •ogue because "almost 90 per cent of the children are Pioneers," (a Communist organization for chil- dren); that the Jewish "believers" contribute money to the synago- gue, but need no help from abroad; and that: "In the Soviet Union we have no anti-Semitism, but maybe there are some anti-Semites." * * * California Bill Seeks to Outlaw Nazi Party SACRAMENTO, Calif. (JTA) — The California State Senate Judi- ciary Committee unanimously ap- proved a bill to outlaw .paramili- tary organizations, after a report by State Attorney General Thomas Lynch had urged such action against the American Nazi Party and other similar groups in the state. The attorney general's r eport, which described private army groups as "a threat to the peace and security of our state," listed, in addition to the American Nazi Party, the Minutemen, the Black Muslims, the National States Right Party and the California Rangers. The bill, which was sponsored by State Sen. J. Eugene McAteer, of San Francisco, defines private armies as organizaitons that are agencies of neither federal nor state government, but that "en- gage in instruction or training in guerilla warfare." ATHENS, 0. (JI'A) — George Lincoln Rockwell, leader of the American - Nazi Party, addressed 2,800 students of Ohio University here and was subjected to derisive laughter. He then complained that he had "a totally different recep- tion here than at any other of the 40 or 50 schools where I have spoken." Rockwell had been invited to the campus by the residents of Bush Hall, a men's dormitory, as part of a program to raise money for a scholarship fund. University officials had refused requests by some students and faculty mem- bers, as well as by Jacob Mirviss, director of the Hillel Foundation here, to bar his appearance. The officials held that the students are entitled to "an open and free cam- pus." Dr. David Levinson, professor of economics, had advocated picket- ing Rockwell but, at the request of Mirviss, Jewish and other anti- Rockwell students, pledged not to picket or to throw eggs at the Nazi. The lecture went off peacefully, but when many of the students laughed at him, Rockwell said: "Next year, I will run for gover- nor of Virginia, then you will laugh out of the other sides of your mouths." Promise YOU the Finest Deal, the Finest Service in the Area ! ! ! EARL ORR'S HODGES DODGE, INC. Oakland County's Largest Dodge Dealer IIRV KATZ Sales Manager 23000 WOODWARD AVE., FERNDALE 2 Blks. No. LI 1-3032 of 9 Mile , . • .1,A,C-0-,LAC SOLD. LAST YUR ► OVER IN latIOti- CPAS. 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